Clementine Mac Not Working



The Walking Dead is a graphic adventure, played from a third-person perspective with a variety of cinematic camera angles, in which the player, as protagonist Lee Everett, works with a rag-tag group of survivors to stay alive in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. I am having trouble making Spotify plugin work on Clementine v. 1.2.3 for Linux. I am using Ubuntu LTS 16.04 (also tried on MATE 16.04) on Dell Inspiron 5000. Just to be give some context: I am also a premium user of Spotify (required to be able to use this kind of service) and the official Spotify.

Install clementine on your Linux distribution Choose your Linux distribution to get detailed installation instructions. If yours is not shown, get more details on the installing snapd documentation. If the function keys on the top row of the keyboard are not working as expected, see Mac OS X: How to change the behavior of function keys. If the issue persists, use Keyboard Viewer to help isolate the issue: Click the Language & Text pane (Mac OS X v10.6) or International pane (Mac OS X v10.5.8 or earlier) in System Preferences.

  • Search and play your local music library.
  • Listen to internet radio from Spotify, Grooveshark, SomaFM, Magnatune, Jamendo, SKY.fm, Digitally Imported, JAZZRADIO.com, Soundcloud, Icecast and Subsonic servers.
  • Search and play songs you've uploaded to Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive
  • Create smart playlists and dynamic playlists.
  • Tabbed playlists, import and export M3U, XSPF, PLS and ASX.
  • CUE sheet support.
  • Play audio CDs.
  • Visualisations from projectM.
  • Lyrics and artist biographies and photos.
  • Transcode music into MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Ogg Speex, FLAC or AAC.
  • Edit tags on MP3 and OGG files, organise your music.
  • Fetch missing tags from MusicBrainz.
  • Discover and download Podcasts.
  • Download missing album cover art from Last.fm and Amazon.
  • Cross-platform - works on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
  • Native desktop notifications on Linux (libnotify) and Mac OS X (Growl).
  • Remote control using an Android device, a Wii Remote, MPRIS or the command-line.
  • Copy music to your iPod, iPhone, MTP or mass-storage USB player.
  • Queue manager.

Clementine is a modern music player and library organizer

Clementine is a multiplatform music player. It is inspired by Amarok 1.4, focusing on a fast and easy-to-use interface for searching and playing your music.


Clementine Remote

Control Clementine remotely from your Android phone

Playlist tab, while listening to songs from multiples Internet services

Subsonic integration

Browsing playlist from the Android app

Controlling playback from the Android app

Version 1.3.1 released - Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Fixes a bug where ratings are deleted when upgrading from older versions.

Version 1.3 released - Friday, April 15, 2016

This release is compatible with the Clementine Remote application for Android which lets you control Clementine remotely from an Android device.
This release also adds support for accessing your music in Vk.com and Seafile.See the full changelog for more information.

Working

Version 1.2 released - Sunday, October 13, 2013

This release is compatible with the Clementine Remote application for Android which lets you control Clementine remotely from an Android device.
This release also adds support for Subsonic. And you can now listen to your music stored in Box, Dropbox, Skydrive and Ubuntu One. Last major new feature is the ability to 'star' your playlists, so you can safely close them and restore them later from the new 'Playlist' tab we've added in the left sidebar.
See the full changelog for more information.

Version 1.1 released - Thursday, October 25, 2012

This release adds long-awaited Podcast support including integration and synchronisation with gpodder.net. Music from Soundcloud and jazzradio.com is available in the Internet tab in the sidebar, as well as any songs you've uploaded to Google Drive. Clementine will also now show moodbars for the music you play from your local disc. See the full changelog for more information.

Clementine Mac Not Working Together

Version 1.0 released - Tuesday, December 27, 2011

This release adds Spotify, Grooveshark and SKY.fm/Digitally Imported support. We've also added a Global Search feature that allows you to easily find music that's either in your library or on the Internet. Other features include audio CD support, more transcoder options, an improved settings dialog, smarter album cover searches, and loads of bug fixes. See the full changelog for more information.

Version 0.7 released - Sunday, March 27, 2011

In this release Clementine gains a brand new edit tag dialog with autocompletion and the ability to automatically identify music and fetch missing tags from MusicBrainz. CUE sheets are now supported - they are detected automatically when scanning your library and each track will show up separately. We've made a load of smaller improvements as well such as showing album covers in the Library tab, greying out deleted songs, a 'Show in file browser' option, support for network proxies, a 'Full library rescan' option, and a new tooltip for the track slider that helps you seek more accurately to a specific place in a song. See the full changelog for more information.

Version 0.6 released - Saturday, December 11, 2010

This release features two new information panes that show lyrics, song statistics, artist biographies, photos and lists of tags and similar artists. We've redesigned the sidebar (although you can switch back by right clicking on it), and also added ratings, play counts and skip counts. You can create smart and dynamic playlists from songs in your library, and also now listen to music from Jamendo and Icecast radio stations. See the full changelog for more information.

Version 0.5 released - Saturday, September 18, 2010

This release adds support for using portable devices with Clementine. You can now copy songs to your iPod, iPhone, MTP, or USB mass storage device. See the wiki for more information. Support for using a Wii Remote as a remote control has been added. Other features include a Queue Manager, an Organise Files dialog, automatically stretching columns in the playlist, loading embedded id3v2 cover art, more library scanning options, drag and drop between playlists, and a hypnotoad. We've also reduced startup time by more than half, fixed a load of memory leaks and reduced CPU usage while playing music. See the full changelog for more information.

Version 0.4 released - Tuesday, June 29, 2010

This release features tabbed playlists, playlist search, projectM visualisations, Magnatune integration, ReplayGain volume normalisation and music transcoding. We've fixed loads of bugs too - searching large libraries is now much faster, playback is much more reliable on Windows, character encoding problems are fixed, and remote playlists should load correctly all the time.

Version 0.3 released - Saturday, May 8, 2010

Clementine

In this release we've switched to GStreamer on all platforms, meaning the analyzer and crossfading between tracks will now work on Windows. New features include an equalizer, more library grouping options, a nicer OSD, remote control from command-line and MPRIS, and easier tag editing.

Version 0.2 released - Tuesday, March 23, 2010

It's been just over a month since we released the first version of Clementine. This new version features album cover-art, better 'Various Artists' detection, support for loading playlists, and much more.

If the sound on your Mac has stopped working, there are several possible explanations and solutions. The first thing to check is that the sound definitely is not working. Below we'll explain what to check.

No sound on Mac? Check these things first

1. Check the volume

As simplistic as it may seem, the first thing to check is that the volume hasn’t been muted intentionally. Tap the volume up (F12) key to turn up the sound level.

Pro tip: If you hold down Option+Shift when you press F12 or F11 to increase or decrease the volume, it will move in smaller increments than the full step changes that occur when you use the keys on their own.

2. Is it an app problem?

It may be that there’s no sound on your Mac because it won’t play audio in a specific app. If, for example, you can’t hear sound from a video in Safari, make sure the audio isn’t muted by clicking the volume control in the video. You should also check other sound sources, like iTunes and QuickTime movies, to find out if they can play sound.

Tip: if you’re fed up with websites you visit automatically playing video with sound when you’re working, go to Safari>Preferences and click the Websites tab. Click Autoplay, and in the bottom right of the window, choose Stop Media with Sound.

3. Run Maintenance scripts

If you’ve determined your Mac’s sound definitely isn’t working, consider running CleanMyMac X’s Maintenance scripts. These optimize the performance of your Mac by running a number of routines such as repairing disk permissions, verifying your startup disk, and rebuilding the launch services database.

Here's how to run Maintenance scrips:

Download CleanMyMac X here (it's free to download).

  1. Launch the app.
  2. Click Maintenance.
  3. Choose Run Maintenance Scripts and click Run.


4. Check for hardware issues

Next, check there’s nothing plugged into the headphone/line out port and look to see if there’s a red light on that port. If there is, it could be there’s a problem with the port or something blocking it. Try blowing on it to clear dust, if that’s the case.

5. Are you running the latest version of macOS?

If there’s still no sound on your Mac, Apple’s advice is that the first thing you should do is make sure you’re running the latest version of macOS.

To check which version of macOS your Mac is running, click the Apple menu and then About this Mac. The window that opens will have the name of the version of macOS currently installed at the top. Now the latest version is macOS High Sierra. If you’re not running High Sierra, you should consider installing it by going to the App Store app and clicking on it in the sidebar on the right-hand side of the main window.

If you don’t want to install High Sierra, at least make sure you’re running the latest update to whichever version of the OS is installed. To check that, click Software Update in the About This Mac window. That will check for updates and let you know if there’s one available. If there is, install it.

Before installing either a new version of the OS or an update, back up your Mac using Time Machine or whatever backup tool you normally use.

How to check your sound settings

If you’re running the latest macOS version and your sound still isn’t working, the next step is to check your Sound settings.

  1. Click on the Apple menu and choose System Preferences.
  2. Click on the Sound pane.
  3. Select the Output tab and choose built-in speakers. If that’s not available as an option, contact Apple Support.
  4. Check if the volume slider is low; if so, slide it to the right and recheck the sound.
  5. Make sure the Mute box isn’t checked.

If you check your sound settings, you see a USB device selected rather than built-in speakers, and you can’t change it, disconnect all USB devices from your Mac and try again.

Is there an app interfering with the sound?

Some applications, like screen recorders, install their own audio output drivers so that when you record the screen, you can direct your Mac’s output to the recording app. It’s possible that if you’ve installed an app like that, its driver could be interfering with your Mac’s sound output.

  1. Go to System Preferences and choose Sound.
  2. Click on the Output tab.
  3. If there’s an output option that looks like a software app and it’s selected, that may be why the sound is not working on your Mac.

Clementine Mac Not Working Windows 10

The best thing to do in that instance is to uninstall the app. You could just drag the app to the Trash, but that won’t uninstall it properly or remove all the files the app has placed on your Mac. To do that, you should use a dedicated uninstaller like CleanMyMac X.

CleanMyMac X makes it very easy to completely uninstall any app so that it doesn't leave any fragments or stray files behind. By using CleanMyMac X, you can be sure you’ve deleted all the files associated with the app and that it hasn’t left anything behind. You can download CleanMyMac X for free here.

Restart the sound controller

If no software audio drivers interfere with your Mac’s sound output, nothing plugged into the headphone jack, USB, or Thunderbolt ports, and your sound still doesn’t work, the next step is to restart the sound controller. This requires launching Activity Monitor and quitting a process, but don’t worry, it’s not too scary!

Clementine Mac Not Working Mac

  1. Go to Applications > Utilities and double-click on Activity Monitor to launch it.
  2. In the search bar, type 'coreaudiod’ to locate the Core Audio controller.
  3. Click on coreaudiod, then click ‘X’ in the toolbar to quit it.
  4. Coreaudiod will restart.

Why is the volume low on Mac?

If you've faced issues with the speaker volume on your Mac, it's likely a software-related problem. Maybe some app conflicts with your speaker settings, or maybe there's something else. The first thing you can do to troubleshoot the issue is to reset NVRAM/PRAM. These are small parts of your Mac's memory that control sound volume, time zone, display resolution, and other settings on your Mac.

To reset NVRAM/PRAM, shut down your Mac, and press Option-Command-P-R on its start-up. Release the keys after about 20 seconds. After your Mac restarts, check if the volume is back to normal.

Mac volume not working and stuck on mute?

If the volume control is not working on your Mac, either using the keyboard or the slider in the menu bar or System Preferences, it could be ’stuck’ on mute. The most common occurrence of this problem is on pre-2015 Macs that had digital audio output support in the headphone jack.

On those Macs, there was a sensor in the port that detected whether a headphone jack or a digital audio device was plugged in. The Mac would then change the output to headphones or digital output accordingly. However, sometimes the sensor failed to recognize when a digital audio device had been unplugged, and so the audio output remained locked on digital output, with no way to change it. With no digital audio output connected, there is no way to change the volume or hear a sound.

In that case, the solution is to plug the cable back into the socket and remove it again. Try it a few times, if necessary, to ‘trip’ the sensor and make the Mac recognize the digital audio device is no longer connected. If that doesn’t work, there could be some gunk blocking the socket. Try blowing on it to remove any dust. If that doesn’t work, buy a can of compressed air and, carefully, spray the socket to bow out the dust.

If that still doesn’t do the trick, buy a foam-tipped swab (don’t use a cotton bud as these leave tiny threads behind) and dip it in rubbing alcohol. Put the swab into the headphone jack and clean it, wiping away as much of the link as possible.

Bluetooth sound not working on Mac

Your Mac can play audio wirelessly via Bluetooth, so if you have Bluetooth speakers or headphones, you can use those to listen to music or anything else on your Mac. Sometimes, however, they don’t work.

Make sure Bluetooth is switched on

  1. Go to System Preferences and click the Bluetooth pane.
  2. If it says, Bluetooth turned off, turn it on.

Make sure your headphones or speakers are connected.

Clementine Mac Not Working Remotely

  1. Look in the list of devices in the main window to see if your headphones or speakers are listed.
  2. If not, put them in pairing mode (you’ll need to refer to their instructions to find out how to do that) and when they appear, click Connect.
  3. If they are listed but not connected, make sure they’re switched on and Control-click on them in the main window and choose Connect.

Tip: If you check the box labeled Show Bluetooth in the menu bar in Bluetooth preferences, you can connect from the menu bar item.

Once your headphones or speakers are connected, click on the volume control in the menu bar and choose them. If you don’t have the volume control displayed on the menu bar, go to System Preferences, choose Sound and then the Output tab and select the Bluetooth speaker or headphones. While you’re there, it’s a good idea to check the box labeled Show volume in the menu bar — it’s in the Sound Effects tab.

To conclude, there are a number of reasons why the sound is not working on your Mac. If you follow the guide above and take it one step at a time, you should be able to fix the problem. If none of the steps above work for you, the next step is to contact Apple support and, if possible, make an appointment at the Genius Bar of an Apple Store. If that’s not possible, Apple will advise you on the best course of action to get your audio working again.