My friend has a Linux PC and when he inserts a CD or DVD, it popups up the 
cover art automatically and displays all sorts of extended data, like the 
actors in the film, the studio that released the cd, etc.  And we tried 100 or 
so discs and it recognized every one perfectly, just as good as Windows XP 
Media Center does, and it even seems to cache the entries since the 2nd time 
you insert the disc the recognition is instant (first time takes a few 
seconds).  None of the other Linux media players I've used do this--they all 
use freedb which doesn't work for DVD's, doesn't have extended attributes, and 
doesn't display any cover art.

Since this is way better than freedb, and it's Linux-based, and it's open 
source, I figured all the other Linux media players could use the same code to 
do this too.  But today I think I've tried 100 media players/rippers, etc., and 
I've posted messages everywhere, and I keep getting told to "try something or 
other", but in the end it's the same thing--it uses freedb.  I tried Juk for 
KDE, and RhythmBox for Gnome, but also no luck.

The open source project my friend uses is plutohome.org.  But I can't use it 
because it's a big home automation and media server that does all sorts of 
stuff.  All I'm looking for is just the 1 tiny piece--the accurate CD + DVD 
recognition engine that shows cover art and all the attributes for a disc.  
Preferably integrated into the KDE or Gnome desktop, like Windows does, so you 
always see what's now playing.  Anybody know if there's a module that does 
this?  Or if not, why nobody else is doing this for Linux?

Thanks.

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