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  2. Winamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winamp

    The Winamp skin format is the most popular, the most commonly adopted by other media player software, and is usable across platforms. One example is the XMMS player for Linux and Unix systems, which can use unmodified Winamp 2 skin files.

  3. Audacious (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audacious_(software)

    Audacious has full support for Winamp 2 skins, and as of version 1.2, some free-form skinning is possible. Winamp .wsz skin files, a type of Zip archive, can be used directly, or can be unarchived to individual directories. The program can use Windows Bitmap (.bmp) graphics from the Winamp archive, although native skins for Linux are usually ...

  4. XMMS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMMS

    XMMS2 is a project started (in late 2002) by one of XMMS's original authors - Peter Alm - to produce a "kick-ass music player" (much like the world's 347349739921 other music player projects). In short, XMMS2 is the next generation XMMS. So, XMMS2 is definitely an audio player. But it is not a general multimedia player - it will not play videos.

  5. Wasabi (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasabi_(software)

    Wasabi is a "mostly open source " cross-platform application framework and skinnable GUI toolkit. It was developed as the framework for Winamp3, but designed to be flexible and extensible enough to be useful for other programs. Although most of Wasabi was zlib licensed, it depended on code still owned by Nullsoft, the creators of Winamp. Since ...

  6. qmmp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qmmp

    Qmmp (for Qt-based MultiMedia Player [5]) is a free and open-source cross-platform audio player that is similar to Winamp. It is written in C++ using the Qt widget toolkit for the user interface. It officially supports the operating systems Linux, FreeBSD and Microsoft Windows. In most Linux distributions, it is available through the standard ...

  7. MediaMonkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MediaMonkey

    MediaMonkey also supports the Winamp 2 API, allowing a user to use any of the many input, output, DSP, and visualization plugins developed for Winamp. History Songs-DB. MediaMonkey was first developed in 2001 under the name Songs-DB. Songs-DB version 1.0.0 was released on October 12, 2001.

  8. WinCustomize - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinCustomize

    WinCustomize is a website that provides content for users to customize Microsoft Windows. The site hosts thousands of skins, themes, icons, wallpapers, and other graphical content to modify the Windows graphical user interface. There is some premium or paid content, however, the vast majority of the content is free for users to download.

  9. DeviantArt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeviantArt

    DeviantArt was loosely inspired by projects like Winamp facelift, customize.org, deskmod.com, screenphuck.com, and skinz.org, all application skin-based websites. Sotira entrusted all public aspects of the project to Scott Jarkoff as an engineer and visionary to launch the early program.