From the Amarok wiki:
The moodbar officially returns as of Amarok 1.4.4! It shows
you the "mood" of a track, which you can then use to figure
out when something interesting happens in the song.
http://amarok.kde.org/wiki/Moodbar
This is the aRts module from KDE CVS.
A multi-channel MPEG encoder, using the ISO13818 standard and the dist10
source code. Multi-channel files may have up to 6 defined channels:
Left(L), Right(R), Center(C), Left Surround (LS), Right Surround (RS) and
a Low Frequency Enhancement channel (LFE).
ISO13818 defines 5 multi-channel modes (on top of the normal stereo mode),
each of these modes may have an optional LFE channel:
3/2: L, R, C, LS, RS
3/1: L, R, C, mono surround
2/2: L, R, LS, RS
2/1: L, R, mono surround
3/0: L, R, C
The "standard" surround sound encoding of "5.1 channels" is achieved by
using mode 3/2 plus an LFE channel.
A multi-channel MPEG file should decode OK on any MPEG decoder. If the
decoder doesn't recognize the multi-channel extensions, then you'll just
get a stereo file containing a down mix of the 5 channels.
A multi-channel MPEG encoder, using the ISO13818 standard and the dist10
source code. Multi-channel files may have up to 6 defined channels:
Left(L), Right(R), Center(C), Left Surround (LS), Right Surround (RS) and
a Low Frequency Enhancement channel (LFE).
ISO13818 defines 5 multi-channel modes (on top of the normal stereo mode),
each of these modes may have an optional LFE channel:
3/2: L, R, C, LS, RS
3/1: L, R, C, mono surround
2/2: L, R, LS, RS
2/1: L, R, mono surround
3/0: L, R, C
The "standard" surround sound encoding of "5.1 channels" is achieved by
using mode 3/2 plus an LFE channel.
A multi-channel MPEG file should decode OK on any MPEG decoder. If the
decoder doesn't recognize the multi-channel extensions, then you'll just
get a stereo file containing a down mix of the 5 channels.
This is the aRts module from KDE CVS.