The trick to designing an all-purpose music player is to make it work the way you want. The Tomahawk Music Player performs that trick very well. It could well be a better listening choice than any other cross-platform music player application. It runs on a variety of Linux distros, Microsoft Windows and the Apple OS platforms. This flexibility is important to me as a user because I work on all three. Tomahawk is intuitive, with a very uncluttered display. That holds true for its interface on all of its supported platforms.
I keep all my files on a seperate harddrive which Tomahawk fails to read which makes it useless to me. I dont have this problem with most music players which is why I use audacious and vlc.
Not sure about the Tomahawk Player, but I have had this problem with other players. I would select the music I wanted on the separate drive and then use open with the music player. Make a playlist and the the player will find your music.
Tomahawk Music Player Takes Listening to a New High
Posted by: Jack M. Germain October 31, 2013 05:00 AMThe trick to designing an all-purpose music player is to make it work the way you want. The Tomahawk Music Player performs that trick very well. It could well be a better listening choice than any other cross-platform music player application. It runs on a variety of Linux distros, Microsoft Windows and the Apple OS platforms. This flexibility is important to me as a user because I work on all three. Tomahawk is intuitive, with a very uncluttered display. That holds true for its interface on all of its supported platforms.