Search results (1)

[Login]

Billy V1.03   
Suggested by Andrew Lee - Added on 4 Apr 2005
804KB (uncompressed) - Popularity score (426)
Website - Screenshot - Download - Comments (4) - Post comment - Permalink

 
Synopsis: Billy is a lightweight audio player that quickly plays an entire folder of MP3, WAV or OGG files. It uses very little CPU and memory, and is fully controllable via the keyboard.
Writes settings to: Application folder
How to extract: Download the "no setup" RAR package and extract to any folder of your choice. Launch the program by double-clicking on Billy.exe.
Unicode support: No
License: Freeware
System Requirements: Win95 / Win98 / WinME / WinNT / Win2K / WinXP

Posted comments:

[Anonymous] natethe thing has a very small footprint (ram, hdd, etc.) and runs very smoothly. it reads ogg and mp3 excellently. [2006-04-20 04:38]

[Anonymous] USB_KxYep, instant favorite here. I never thought there was something more minimal in terms of footprint to features ratio than 1by1. [2008-01-24 09:51]

[Anonymous] WizI recommend the latest (and unfortunately the last) beta 1.04b of Billy. It is much better than 1.03 and also works like sharm. [2008-02-06 03:38]

[Anonymous] OpenboxThere's a new beta. Check the site out. Looks like there's ongoing development. [2008-03-09 22:14]


Post your comment:

All HTML tags will be removed from your comment. URLs (http, https, ftp) will be automatically detected and hyperlinked. I reserve the right to delete irrelevant, frivolous or offensive comments. For more general topics (eg. whether apps that write to the registry, leave traces on the host machine, rely on certain versions of IE etc. can be considered portable), please post to the Portable Freeware Discussion forum. If your virus scanner has detected a virus in the application, please email the author directly or post to the forum. Note that false positives (i.e. flagging a virus when there is actually none) are extremely common for virus scanners. When in doubt, try an online scanner like Online Malware Scanner or VirusTotal, which scans files using multiple anti-virus engines. It is very likely to be a false positive if only a few engines raise the red flag.

Your name: Remember me
Comment:

Turing test:


All rights reserved. Copyright © 2010 Andrew Lee (mailto: andrew at portablefreeware dot com)