The Squeezebox Boom (an Audiophile's Dream)

And Getting Squeezecenter Up and Running on Fedora 9

Stoneskin
I'm afraid that if you're popping by for some of my usual witty observational drivel you'll be disappointed. For once, I'm writing on something technical. It you are a technophobe then I would leave now. On the other hand, if you are an audiophile, or simply love cool things that just work, then read on.

The Squeezebox Boom is a gorgeous all-in-one network music player with an integrated amplifier. A mere thirteen inches long and five inches high, this baby will rock your joint, look and sound awesome, and make you smile like one of the goons in the Listerine advert.

It hooks in to your home network, over wireless or Ethernet, and allows you to access your digital music collection via a cute little LCD interface. Best of all, it plays virtually any digital music format, including MP3, FLAC, WMA, WMA Lossless, Ogg Vorbis, AAC, Apple Lossless, WAV, and AIFF.

This is a big win for me, as all my music is in Ogg Vorbis (I can hear you technophobes starting to wail, but I did warn you not to read on), which generally offers better quality sound at similar file sizes to, say, MP3.

The software required is called SqueezeCenter, which is open source and available for Windows, Mac and Linux, which is a joy for someone like myself who refuses to run Windows or Mac.

Setting it all up is a breeze. Download and install SqueezeCenter (instructions online), and point it at your music collection.

Turn on your Squeezebox Boom. It will gracefully lead you through connecting to your network (wireless or Ethernet) and finding your SqueezeCenter. Then you can browse and play your music to your little heart's content. The sound quality really is fantastic.

I can't speak for other distros, but I set up SqueezeCenter on Fedora 9, Fedora being one of the loves of my life (somewhere behind God, my lovely wife and my little baby girl). Installation was a painless as eating a Jelly Baby, and just as juicy.

On Fedora, simply do the following as root:

rpm -Uvh http://repos.slimdevices.com/yum/squeezecenter/release/squeezecenter-repo-1-4.noarch.rpm

/dev/sdb1

then do:

yum install squeezecenter

to install SqueezeCenter.

You then need to open the following ports in the Fedora firewall:

9000/tcp

3483/tcp

3483/udp

Note, if your music is (sensibly) on an external hard drive then you will want to auto-mount this using fstab. Otherwise SqueezeCenter will start before your drive mounts (How are you technophobes doing?). You probably want to make sure that it is only mounted read-only for most users, but as a starting point a root do:

mkdir /

vi /etc/fstab

And add an entry

/ vfat auto,defaults,umask=000 0 0

After rebooting this will auto-mount ready for SqueezeCenter.

Reboot, and SqueezeCenter will be up and running. Browse to http://:9000 to access SqueezeCenter. It will lead you through the setup, pointing at your music collection etc. etc.

A delight.

Published by Stoneskin

I am an eccentric, irritable computer programmer from Sussex. Real ale enthusiast, avid reader.  View profile

6 Comments

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  • Kofi Bofah11/17/2008

    Witty Drivel? Never.

  • Bat Canary11/11/2008

    Okay, laughing like a fool at EVERYBODY'S comments, here. Dammit, why do you all have to be so funny? Sets the bar so high for comments, and I'm already feeling inadequate in the brain department after reading this article (you DID warn me, though, Jon).

  • Lorelei Logsdon11/10/2008

    How many times do I have to tell you to speak English? Sheesh.

  • Linda Johnson11/10/2008

    I'm going to check this out immediately at doyourownmountingathomeandsavemoney.com. Thanks!

  • Maria Roth11/10/2008

    Oh, I'm laughing like a fool at Morag's comment, too.

  • Maria Roth11/10/2008

    Well, I AM a technophobe, and, you're right, this article almost made my head explode. What's all this about mounting? Mounting "read-only"? Good Lord, the only "read-only mounting" I can comprehend is the sort I find in romance novels, which does nothing for my music collection, but soothes my lusty, romantic soul. Anyway, my husband will probably appreciate this article. I'll make him read it later. Too bad you're a Brit. This might have fetched a nice upfront payment, Jon. :(

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