

That software would make co-creators Justin Frankel and Dmitry Boldyrev richer in the ’99 tech boom (AOL snapped it up), which also cleared the way for Justin to go on and make beloved DAW Reaper. Before iTunes, there was Winamp ( still officially at ) – the prototype MP3 player jukebox of 1997, back when the idea of playing your whole music collection digitally from your computer was still novel. So now we just need a player to match, whether you miss Winamp – or even if you miss vintage Soviet hi-fi machines. Of course you'd need to download foobar2000, install it and run it once before replacing the existing configuration files with the attached ones.2020 is the year enthusiasts revived their love of downloaded music – thanks, Bandcamp. If anyone decides to try my configuration, please report back as to whether it worked as expected. There's a text file included with instructions as to where to copy the configuration files and how to do same basic GUI configuring stuff etc. Items can be added to existing/new playlists via the left and middle mouse buttons (once the media library location has been set and foobar2000 has scanned it). It includes the decoder plugins I use so once the files are copied to the correct location foobar2000 should decode all the common formats. I've always thought there should be a place for foobar2000 users to share their configurations, given setting it up nicely can be a bit time consuming, especially if you're not familiar with it, and especially as sharing them is quite easy to do. Is there something that's kind of an equivalent to PotPlayer but for audio? Thanks. I use PotPlayer for video and it seems like the last video player I will ever need, plus it does it all with its own built-in codecs.

I refuse to use iTunes or any Apple products.

Media Player Classic and WinAmp don't seem to do what I need either, although at least they have freaking menu bars and with enough codecs, they can handle just about any type of audio file. But of course, only the atrocious Media Player 12 is usable on Windows 7. Like just about every aspect of Windows XP, Windows Media Player 11 did all the above perfectly. Also, I don't have any need for fancy media library management. Heavyweight audio editors like SoundForge or WaveLab are not on the table I just need a quick and easy player. I need an audio player for Windows 7 64 bit that 1) can handle more or less any conceivable bit depth, sampling rate, and audio file format, 2) gives me a large, easy-to-see spectrum analyzer and graphic equalizer, and 3) has a recognizable menu bar with things like File, View, Help, etc.
