![]() ![]() We are also proud to release official packages of Last.fm Scrobbler for the Raspberry Pi today. Today we release an updated set of packages featuring the latest version of Last.fm scrobbler (2.1.33). Just go to and find out how to install them. The source code is available on GitHub if you want to have a go at building it yourself, but we also provide ready built packages for those of you who are using Debian or Ubuntu. For our desktop application Last.fm Scrobbler, Linux is a first class supported operating system. Not only does it power almost all of the server machines that bring Last.fm to you, it is also the operating system of choice of many of our developers at Last.HQ. You know who you are and you’re all very wonderful! Last.fm Scrobbler for Linux It’s been a long road getting to this point and I’d like to thank all the client team members, contributors, and believers past and present for making it happen. If you’d like to get involved with development then head over there and fork us! With a large change such as this there are bound to be teething troubles and we’ve been taking your feedback on the client support forum and making sure we address problems and implement anything we might have missed that you loved in the old app.Ī reminder that, like our iOS and Android apps, the desktop Scrobbler is open source and hosted on our Last.fm github page (both the liblastfm and lastfm-desktop repositories make up the desktop app) where you’ll also be able to find other things Last.fm have open sourced. There’s been a few ideas bubbling away that we can’t wait to add, but for now the focus is stability. We’re looking at the app as a baseline with which we can add and improve upon. There’s also a radio tab where you can start all your usual Last.fm radio stations including a history of your recent ones. ![]() A friends tab where you can see what your friends are listening to and start their library radios. A profile tab where you can see your scrobble charts. A scrobbles tab where you can see a history of what you’ve been scrobbling and find out more about those tracks. Tracks played from radio stations will also show you a little context as to why the track is being played. There’s a now playing tab where information about your currently scrobbling track will show up, including related artists, tags, biography, and scrobble statistics. The app comes with a new design and some features we hope you’ll really love. Here’s a video of us reaching 200,000 authenticated users on the new app. A couple of weeks ago (15th Jan) that launch day finally arrived and we pushed it out to everyone on Windows, Mac, and Linux! If you’ve not already got it you can head over to our download page for a fresh copy. We released this new desktop scrobbler as a beta a little under a year ago and have been spending the time since getting it ready for launch. Please note that as this fix was to the update mechanism it will only be corrected in the update after this one so please make sure you don't have two versions of the app running after this update.Hello, scrobble fans! Were you wondering where your desktop app updates had gone? Well wonder no longer! With the last major version released back in 2007 (those were the days, eh?) you’d be forgiven for thinking there weren’t any more coming, but we’ve actually been hard at work on an update to bring us crashing into 2008, a little late. Added the ability to use SSL for all web services callsįingerprinting was causing crashes so has been temporarily disabled until we find a proper fixįixed an issue where it was possible to get two running versions of the applications after an update. Users can now hide both the dock icon and the menu bar icon (restart only required when hiding dock icon on 10.6)īinary delta updates will be supported from the release after this one Systray/menu bar icon is greyed out when scrobbling is disabled Exclude directories! You can now exclude music in certain directories from being scrobbled ![]()
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