Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghoulish Delight
Question the first) Does Firefly handle iTunes DRM protected material
Question the second) Does Firefly have an interface that will allow me to play music remotely on via the web interface (i.e., if I hook up a system running Firefly to a stereo, can I then, from a different system, hit play on the stereo-connected system or will it only play on my local system?)
Question the third) Have you compared it to VLC? If so, how does it compare?
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1) I don't know because I don't own any iTunes DRM'ed material. You could try it, it's free.
2) a) You run Firefly on the computer where the music is stored.
b) The web interface is for configuration only.
c) You use iTunes or any daap aware music player (ie Rhythmbox in Linux) to play the music remotely. The Firefly server shows up in iTunes on any computer on the local network. Roku also sells a box that you can hook up to the stereo instead of using a computer. I don't know if it will work with an AppleTV. I haven't researched that.
It's also possible, although I haven't tried it, to connect to the Firefly server from outside the network as well, so you can listen to your music from anywhere in the world. You'd have to configure your router to forward the port. And there's probably another step that I'm forgetting. This will, however, open a major security hole. So I don't recommend it.
3) VLC crashes my Windows computer and my tiny Linux server doesn't have the resources to run it. So, no.