Bug 105184

Summary: Wishlist: rip stream and save playlist songs to disk
Product: [Applications] amarok Reporter: Karim Ryde <karye2004>
Component: generalAssignee: Amarok Developers <amarok-bugs-dist>
Status: RESOLVED DUPLICATE    
Severity: wishlist CC: artturi.marko
Priority: NOR    
Version: unspecified   
Target Milestone: ---   
Platform: Compiled Sources   
OS: Linux   
Latest Commit: Version Fixed In:
Sentry Crash Report:

Description Karim Ryde 2005-05-06 12:59:16 UTC
Version:            (using KDE KDE 3.4.0)
Installed from:    Compiled From Sources
OS:                Linux

Amarok is THE media player :-D
I like to listen to shoutcat streams, and it would be great to be able rip the streamed songs at the same.
2nd wish: I've created playlists and would like to share their content to friends. The only alternative is burn then to disc. Saving the content of playlist to disc would be a great to organize my music, and prepare it for sharing via ftp.
Cheers!
Comment 1 Stefan Siegel 2005-05-06 13:20:23 UTC
Your first wish is a duplicate of bug 84051, your second wish is implemented already: simply use drag and drop from the playlist or the playlist browser to a konqueror window with your target directory.

*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of 84051 ***
Comment 2 Karim Ryde 2005-05-08 15:20:53 UTC
Great! I look forward for the implementation of rip streamer.

Dragging from playlist creates a list of files. It would be very useful to have Amarok organize the dragged songs in folders by Artist or Album.
I would extend this wish to "Burn ..." also.

Rationale:
The Amarok playlist is useful to organize music and rate it while listening.
Then one would to share these collections to friends.
It seems to me it would be very efficient way to solve this by saving to disc.
Especially if one have 3000+ songs.
Comment 3 Artturi 2008-10-26 18:34:00 UTC
Dragging from playlist does a simple copy. 

It would be nice if amarok could rename the files in order to preserve the order.

Benefit for me : My usb enabled Hi-Fi player has a very limited way of reading a usb stick. It creates its own list, alphabetically sorted and plays it from the top to the end. This feature would be helpful for that player :)