HOWTO - stream music from your iPhone in Ubuntu

ubuntuiphone_20071013.jpg

Listening to music on your Linux desktop doesn't mean having to duplicate all your audio onto your local harddrive. By streaming your music over WiFi from the iPhone or iPod Touch, you can keep your music portable.

Using two programs called FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) and sshfs we can mount the iPhone filesystem in Linux, then configure ssh key pairs so we can connect without needing to sudo or login as root every time we want to sync the phone, then we'll install beta versions of Libgpod and Rythmbox to end up with something insanely great.

We've talked about the sshfs FUSE filesystem before, but this is a pretty cool application for it. You're basically turning your iPhone into a wireless harddisk. Unlike a normal portable drive, you can access it from multiple machines at the same time. This allows a couple people to listen to different tunes off the same iPhone library simultaneously.

How To: Stream Music From The iPhone In Ubuntu - Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Oct 13, 2007 08:29 PM
Music, Ubuntu, iPhone, iPod | Permalink | Comments (1) Bookmark and Share

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Posted by: GogGremlin on October 13, 2007 at 10:44 PM

I think the title of this entry is misleading. I dont see any streaming used here, Just playing music off a network share.

I was expecting some sort of cool hack like airtunes or something involving ESD.


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