TuneWiki Mac

About TuneWiki

TuneWiki’s Windows Media Player plug-in is part licensed lyrics spooler for your own songs and for streaming YouTube videos, and part social project. TuneWiki’s interface reskins Windows Media Player’s “Now Playing” window. As the music from your library plays, TuneWiki checks its online wiki database for song lyrics–which members mostly contribute, Wikipedia-style–and plays them in time with the music. If you search for YouTube videos through TuneWiki’s plug-in, it will similarly serve lyrics, if available. The lyrics tools include support for language translations, the ability to manually scroll through lyrics rather than stream them, and a process by which you can easily manually reset the timing between a song’s audio track and its associated lyrics. In addition to TuneWiki’s primary visual lyrics experience is a secondary social one. TuneWiki displays music maps on which other TuneWiki users are plotted. You’ll be able to see who in close proximity is playing which song, or where in the world others are playing the same song as you. Clicking an individual’s name can pull up the YouTube video of the song they’re rocking so you can watch along, or can show the song’s real-time influence on the globe. While TuneWikie’s lyrics database especially enriches the basic Windows Media Player experience, it harbors some flaws. Some tools aren’t immediately intuitive, like the resyncing process, and the fact that only TuneWiki-approved editors can edit existing lyrics. A text notice on the editor-only area would wipe away potential confusion and frustration. Also, we’d like the size of the YouTube video to be adjustable. If the YouTube video stops, as it did once during testing, we want to refresh it without closing and reopening the app. When searching for songs, we’d like a more elegant display of the artist and album information returned in the results. TuneWiki’s plug-in is good enough to use now–the lyrics and music maps adding utility and interest–but will benefit from a few more development iterations.

How to Run TuneWiki on Mac

Mac Version May Be Available

Option 1: Use Parallels

Parallels is the fastest, easiest, and most powerful option to run Windows on your Mac. Data can be shared between Mac and Windows and switching between the two is as simple as switching screens. Run it On Mac recommends Parallels as the #1 best way to run TuneWiki on your Mac desktop or laptop.

Pros: Very Cost-Effective; Easily transfer files; Easily switch between Windows & Mac.

Cons: May see a slight decrease in performance; Cost varies from $50-80 for a personal license.

Option 2: Use Bootcamp

Boot Camp is a boot utility included with most Apple desktop and laptop products that allows users to install a Windows operating system alongside the native macOS/OS X operating system. Using Bootcamp is a relatively technical process and should probably only be undertaken by someone who understands the process.

Pros: Free; Good option if you need high performance or are using an older machine.

Cons: Switching between operating systems requires a restart; difficult, technical installation process.

TuneWiki System Requirements

Windows XP/Vista/7 Also Windows Media Player 11 / iTunes 10.4

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