Ape eats Apple: Why MediaMonkey is an iTunes killer
At least on the PC, iTunes' performance has been less than stellar. Sure, it set the standard for jukeboxes early on, but most of that was probably tied to its then-exclusive ability to sync with the ubiquitous iPod. Now that device syncing, and especially iPod syncing, is a must-have feature, iTunes' other flaws are standing out like a mohawk in Mecca.
MediaMonkey provides a slick look, deep customization, and excellent playback.
(Credit: CNET Networks)Swinging in to the rescue on one heck of a lengthy vine is MediaMonkey 3. The latest free version of this Windows stalwart, which has been beating its chest since the beginning of the decade, showcases some great new features married to all the solid basics that you expect from your daily-use jukebox. The end result makes it a wonder that more people aren't using the Monkey for their boogie sessions.
iTunes is notorious for being a memory hog, for being a poor podcatcher, for having weak tag support, and for being stodgily uncustomizable. On all four counts, MediaMonkey takes big bites out of Apple.
As a WinAmp user, the feature that most impressed me was the tag support. WinAmp's tag support is overly complicated where MediaMonkey makes it a dead-simple procedure to accurately tag. Once you've selected your track or album, hit CTRL-L and the Monkey searches Amazon.com for album art, track names, and basically every field you could want attached to a song. Check boxes help you easily eliminate songs and discrete attributes from being changed, so it's quite easy to grab just the artwork, for example, without changing your tag for the track titles.
Tagging and downloading album art are easier than strumming an A chord in MediaMonkey.
(Credit: CNET Networks)MediaMonkey's interface is modular and customizable. Users can move around, show or hide, and skin pretty much every aspect of what you look at when you're looking at it. Drag the playback controls around, so that they live above or below any other module, in any of the three columns that make up the UI or across all of them. Hide the Now Playing playlist as you need it, maximize it to your heart's content. Shrink down the album art panel, blow it up to absorb your attention, or hide it completely.
Longtime Windows users especially will appreciate the tree-based navigation, but don't worry about getting lost in your own intricate jungle of folders. Right above it lives a row of quick buttons to help you navigate your way around. Conveniently, they're all linked to hotkeys, and because this is MediaMonkey and not iTunes, you can remap those keys however you like and change the display so you only see the ones you need. These nodes collapse the tree and highlight the Now Playing folder, which great for searching, playing, searching for something else but jumping back to what you are still listening to. Other nodes include one for your Podcasts, and one for Shoutcast and Icecast Internet radio. You can also use the node to focus on Artist, Album, Genre, or any other criteria you've set up.
It should be noted that WinAmp's high level of customization for creating playlists is free, while the more advanced choices, such as beats-per-minute, remain reserved for MediaMonkey Gold, but for the features I use the most, the Monkey was a far better match. The Monkey also supports WinAmp plugins, playlists, and even uses the same audio engine.
MediaMonkey lets you customize how your MP3 player syncs.
(Credit: CNET Networks)MediaMonkey also supports extracting audio files from your portable devices, great for, backing up your player to a secondary hard drive or transferring your collection onto a new computer. Other features that the Monkey has include multiple device support, so you can sync your MP3 player and your MP3-playing cell phone separately, an extensible visualizer, an Auto-DJ function that works like a "smart" shuffle playlist, and, cliched as it may sound, more. Plug-ins give the Monkey the superpowers, like the ability to videos. DSP audio plugins also boost the not-insignificant built-in audio equalizers, bolstering the Replay Gain and MP3 Gain tech that comes included. Support for scripts and an online database of user-written scripts truly make MediaMonkey extensible enough to satiate even the hungriest of music gorillas.
On Macs, iTunes is still the standard, but MediaMonkey 3's intuitive layout, deep level of customization, device support, and all-out attention to sound quality make it the one you should be going ape over.
Seth peers into the deep, dark corners of software so that you don't have to. He has yet to suffer a single nightmare about OS/2. You can follow him on Twitter. 
First off, Media Monkey gives no discount for those who own v2.5 to 'upgrade' to v4. For extra $, you can buy v3 WITH 'upgrade insurance' so that when a new version comes out you can have it. Otherwise, if you buy a single liscense for v3, thats it. Winamp atleast takes care of its own with that aspect.
Media Monkey's auto-tagger is the best out there, even if you just use the free version. being able to auto-tag from a filename and from Amazon have brought new life to my old MP3 collection.
Another huge difference between MediaMonkey and Winamp is that Winamp stores a song's rating in a single database file that isn't portable. MediaMonkey writes the rating to the mp3 itself, so it can show up on your portable MP3 player, and ratings come in handy when you are using the Auto-DJ to fill an MP3/thumbdrive with songs. You can give more weight to better-rated songs to be included in what Auto-DJ fills your MP3 disk/thumbdrive.
The iPhone is just an iPod that makes calls.
I'm considering switching from Yahoo jukebox plus (which I got stuck with when MusicMatch sold out to Y!) as a way to commemorate Yahoo's latest bout of stupidity. What features would I lose?
Any suggestions??
It comes with LAME for MP3s but you can add plug-ins use other encoders.
I would suggest Tag and Rename of the whole lot. for plain tagging and organising MP3, wma, WMV etc. It has checkboxes to select files so that you know which files are the once that will have the change.
The bonus being remaning all your Files in a consistent format. ( i do Artist - Album - Title)
MM is a good free alternative for mass tagging and playing., but i have my instances of mass messups with it (fortunately i have backups)
WMP11 is very good as a music player, Audio ripper /audio Cd maker. and the search is just awesome after everything is tagged.
Jriver is good especially for managing Videos. and has a lot of features.
Hogs a lot of memory. but the biggest is it want to connect to internet for a lot of reasons, though i am least interested in the internet features.
- by mr cap May 5, 2008 7:52 PM PDT
- Why you don't get it!
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Showing 1 of 2 pages (30 Comments)It's not about whistles and bells. Or about a jukebox that does well with music and has lots of options. It's about working with movies, AppleTV, iPhone, PodCasts, Music videos, syncing etc., etc. MM might have competed with the early versions of iTunes but most of us are way beyond just a jukebox!