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* [http://reviews.cnet.com/4660-10621_7-6743226.html?tag=vid.1 CNET Video Review of Democracy Player - Dated]
* [http://reviews.cnet.com/4660-10621_7-6743226.html?tag=vid.1 CNET Video Review of Democracy Player - Dated]
* [http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20080207173143823 Groklaw interview with Nicholas Reville], February 2008
* [http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20080207173143823 Groklaw interview with Nicholas Reville], February 2008
* [http://forums.avg.com/ww-en/avg-forums?sec=thread&act=show&id=127673 Miro Installs Malware - AVG forum], November 2010
* [http://forums.cnet.com/7723-6142_102-405033/miro-horrendous-add-on-which-caused-crashes-and-corruption/ MIRO: Horrendous add-on which caused crashes and corruption], August 2010


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{{BitTorrent}}

Revision as of 13:44, 22 May 2013

Miro
Developer(s)Participatory Culture Foundation
Initial release21 February 2006, 11:42 (2006-02-21UTC11:42) (0.8.0-rc4 = earliest known)
Stable release6.0 (April 16, 2013; 11 years ago (2013-04-16)) [±][1]
Repository
Written inPython using GTK
Operating systemCross-platform
GNU/Linux
Mac OS X
Microsoft Windows
Size~2.0 MB (GNU/Linux)
15.28 MB (Mac OS X)
28.50 MB (Microsoft Windows)
9.28 MB (source code)
(all archived)
Available inMore than 40 languages
TypeInternet television
RSS+BitTorrent
Media player
LicenseGNU GPL v2 or later/GNU LGPL/BSD license (free software)
Websitegetmiro.com

Miro (formerly named Democracy Player or DTV)[2] is an Internet television application developed by the Participatory Culture Foundation. It runs on Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, FreeBSD and GNU/Linux and supports most known video file formats. It offers both audio and video, some in HD quality.

Miro is free software, released under the terms of the GNU General Public License.[3]

Features

Miro can automatically download videos from RSS-based “channels”, manage them and play them. The application is designed to mesh with other Participatory Culture Foundation (PCF) products such as Video Bomb, a social tagging video website, and the Channel Channel, a TV guide for Internet television.

Miro integrates an RSS news aggregator and podcatcher, a BitTorrent client (based on libtorrent), and a media player (VLC media player under Windows, QuickTime under Mac OS X, and xine media player or GStreamer under GNU/Linux and FreeBSD). Since 2.0, Miro supports the adding of website bookmarks under the “Sites” category; by default, ClearBits.net is preloaded in Miro as a bookmark.

Examples of supported video files are QuickTime, Windows Media Video (WMV), MPEG, Audio Video Interleave (AVI), XVID as a video player. It also supports RSS BitTorrent. When a new video is available, the program will notify and download if possible.

The Miro Video Converter converts video formats.[4] It is based on FFmpeg with profiles for the Theora (.ogv), .mp4, and WebM video formats supported by various devices.[5]

History

The application was first launched in 2005 as Democracy Player (sometimes abbreviated as DTV) and later on as Miro in 2007. Video searching of web-based video archives was included in 2007, with access to various archives changing over time.

Miro is mostly written in Python, although it links to various libraries written in a variety of languages. Versions through 2.x had an almost entirely HTML/CSS based UI. Miro uses embedded WebKit in a GTK window on Unix/Linux (Mozilla Gecko/XUL until 3.0.2), WebKit in a Cocoa window on OS X, and Mozilla in a XUL window on Windows. Since version 3.0, the OS X port uses Cocoa and others use GTK. The embedded web browser is used only for web pages.

Version history

Release Date Features
Democracy Player 0.8 February 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.1 March 9, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.1a March 22, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.2 April 16, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.4.1 June 23, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.5 July 20, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.5.2 July 25, 2006
Democracy Player 0.8.5.3 August 4, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.0 September 11, 2006
Democracy 0.9.0.1 September 16, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.0.2 September 22, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.1 October 19, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.2.1 November 27, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.2.2 December 30, 2006
Democracy Player 0.9.5 February 13, 2007 Interface refinements and an update to VLC Player 0.8.6.
Democracy Player 0.9.5.1 February 21, 2007
Democracy Player 0.9.5.3 March 19, 2007
Democracy Player 0.9.6 (Miro RC1) June 4, 2007 Adds a "folder watching" feature, the ability to resume playback, and the ability to minimize to the system tray.
Democracy Player 0.9.8 July 18, 2007
Miro 0.9.8.1 (RC2) July 30, 2007 Name change, Veoh search engine, and Windows system-tray functionality improvements.
Miro 0.9.9 September 4, 2007
Miro 0.9.9.1 September 6, 2007
Miro 0.9.9.9 (RC3) October 31, 2007 First-time user guide, generates thumbnails, remembers search terms, has permalinks for videos, and bug fixes.
Miro 1.0 November 13, 2007 Startup guide, permalinks, search-result memory, unicode-related error fix, better thumbnail generation, and delete while playing video.
Miro 1.1 January 10, 2008
Miro 1.2-rc1 March 17, 2008
Miro 1.2 March 20, 2008
Miro 1.2.1 March 27, 2008
Miro 1.2.2 April 9, 2008
Miro 1.2.3 April 23, 2008
Miro 1.2.4 June 9, 2008
Miro 1.2.6 August 2, 2008
Miro 1.2.8
Miro 2.0 February 10, 2009
Miro 2.0.3
Miro 2.0.4
Miro 2.5 July 23, 2009
Miro 2.5.1
Miro 2.5.2
Miro 2.5.3
Miro 2.5.4
Miro 3.0 March 25, 2010
Miro 3.0.1 April 15, 2010
Miro 3.0.2 May 24, 2010 Linux version switches from gtkmozembed and XULRunner to WebKit
Miro 3.0.3 July 26, 2010
Miro 3.5 October 22, 2010 Miro now remembers the previous selected view under Library and features the addition of new video conversion capabilities for a variety of devices. Users can now cancel all queued auto-downloads.
Miro 3.5.1 December 6, 2010 Minor bug fixes
Miro 4.0 May 26, 2011[6] Music manager and purchasing capabilities added.[7]
Miro 5.0 May 1, 2012
Miro 6.0 Apr 8, 2013

Reception

A link to download Miro and Mozilla Firefox appeared on the front page of The Pirate Bay in July 2009 underneath a notice "We love free software."

Miro received a favorable review from Josh Quittner who wrote "I have seen the future of television and it’s an application called Miro."[8] In May 2011, Seth Rosenblatt of CNET wrote, "Providing one-stop shopping for all your video and audio management desires, open-source and cross-platform Miro deserves much of the praise that's been heaped upon it."[9] The Softonic review gave the software a score of 9/10, and described the software as "a perfect example of how video content from different sources can be integrated into one single application and served directly to your PC in a fast, easy and elegant way."[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ ftp.osuosl.org :: Oregon State University Open Source Lab, 7 Oct 2012, retrieved 2013-01-04
  2. ^ Nicholas Reville (12 March 2007). "A Name Change". Retrieved 2007-09-03.; Nicholas Reville (17 July 2007). "Announcing Miro". Retrieved 2007-09-03.
  3. ^ "Get Miro download page". ...the software code, which is licensed under the GPL.
  4. ^ Miro Video Converter
  5. ^ "Miro Video Converter FFMPEG Conversion Matrix". Participatory Culture Foundation. 2011-04-08. Retrieved 2011-10-11.
  6. ^ Lahey, Chris. archive/miro-releases "Participatory Culture Foundation's Launchpad page". Retrieved 2011-05-31. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help) (Archived by WebCite® at webcitation.org)
  7. ^ Ryan, Paul. @Accessdate= 2011-05-31 "Hands on: Miro 4.0 offers music management, Android syncing". Ars Technica. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help) (Archived by WebCite® at webcitation.org)
  8. ^ Quittner, Josh (November 13, 2007). "The future of Internet TV". TechLand blog. Fortune.CNN.com. Retrieved 2011-10-27. I have seen the future of television and it's an application called called Miro.
  9. ^ Rosenblatt, Seth (May 25, 2011). "Miro - CNET Editors' review". CNet.com. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  10. ^ Santos, Elena (July 25, 2011). "Watch internet videos like you watch TV". Softonic. Retrieved 2011-10-27.