The GNOME CD Player will be available to you in the Main Menu in
the Audio menu and can also be invoked in the command line with
$gtcd
.
IMPORTANT:
You must have the correct access rights to your CD-ROM drive for this
application to be successful. Some systems, will normally grant you the
necessary rights automatically when you log into the console. The
mechanism that does this is called the
pam_console
. If your system doesn't give you
the necessary rights to the CD-ROM, then you will need to be given those
rights. If you have the root password type the following in a terminal
window.
$ su
$ Password: [type in root password]
$ chmod a+r /dev/cdrom
$ exit
|
If your CD-ROM is located somewhere other than /dev/cdrom make
sure you change it in the commands above.
The GNOME CD Player works like any CD Player with common buttons such as
Play, Stop, Pause, etc. Plus a track selector button that displays the track
titles in a drop down menu. You have access to change various properties by
pressing the
Preferences
button. This will bring up
the GNOME CD Player Preferences dialog.
There are three tabs in the GNOME CD Player Preferences dialog: Preferences,
Keybindings, and CDDB Settings.
-
Preferences Tab - In this dialog you can
specify:
What you would like the GNOME CD
Player to do when first started, and when exited.
The location of your CD-ROM on your system. This is
usually
/dev/cdrom
.
The
Color to display the Track and CD Title.
The
Font to display the Track and CD Title.
Whether you would like handles on the title window which will
allow you to drag the title window off of the CD Player to
float on the desktop.
Whether tooltips are
enabled when your mouse is over the buttons.
-
Keybindings Tab - In this tab you can change the key bindings associated
with the GNOME CD Player. These keybindings allow you to use the Player
without using your mouse. If you want to change one of the bindings, select
it with your mouse and type the new key in the
Click here to
change
text box. Press Apply to save the changes
-
CDDB Settings Tab - CDDB stands for CD Database and is a huge global
database of CD information. Each CD has an identity, which the CD Player
can read. If you are connected to the internet, it will then search a CDDB
server for that CD identity and return any information it has on it. This
usually includes CD Title, Artist, and track titles. It can also include
notes and lyric information. Once this data is retrieved, the GNOME CD
Player will store the information on your hard drive for future access. In
the CDDB Setting tab you can change the CDDB server and edit your local
CDDB database. You can read more about CDDB by visiting the
CDDB Website
.
Another feature in the GNOME CD Player is the Track Editor. The
track editor can be launched by the
Track
Editor
button on the main GNOME CD Player window. The
Track Editor allows you to edit the CD track information in case
it is incorrect or there was no CDDB entry for your CD. You can
also check the status of the CDDB information by pressing the
CDDB Status
button at the bottom of the
Track Editor. This will show you what messages, if any, were
returned from the CDDB server.