In addition, I’ve used a Rosewill powered USB hub to power both the Raspberry Pi and the monitor, and a T-amp amplifier to power a pair of JBL in-ceiling speakers. The parts required may vary based on what kind of a system you want but here I use a Raspberry Pi Model B and a Mimo UM-720F USB Touchscreen Display ( ). This project shows how to both build the hardware and set up a Raspberry Pi with the correct software. Since the server software is open source, and because I continue to have several network players around the house that only work off of the Logitech Media Server (originally called the Squeezebox Server), and finally because a few intrepid souls in the Squeeze forums ( ) built software emulators for a network music player and its interface I decided to put together this project. I built this project because Logitech has stopped making its “Squeeze” line of networked music players. Build a wall-mounted “SqueezePlayer”-based network music player using Squeezelite, Jivelite and a Raspberry Pi.
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