Search and filter
Search locally by station name, genre, and country, then sort by name, bitrate, or votes.
A lean Linux desktop radio player that plays music and gets out of your way. Fast station browsing, solid playback controls, MPRIS integration, and tray behavior without any heavy media suite overhead.
$ yay -S bearwave-git
Powered by the Radio Browser API. No nested menu labyrinths, just search and start listening.
MPRIS, media keys, system tray icon, and cached state fit into your daily desktop workflow.
BearWave will never manage podcasts, organize files, or scan a music library. It just plays radio.
Features
Focused core capabilities for daily listening on KDE Plasma with reliable integration.
Search locally by station name, genre, and country, then sort by name, bitrate, or votes.
Persistent local favorites and last-station resume keeps daily usage fast and simple.
Browse stations by countries, flags, and popular genre tags from one focused dashboard.
Add custom streams manually when you want a station outside the normal discovery flow.
Track metadata, notifications, and local cover caching add polish without heavy overhead.
Qt 6, QML, KDE Frameworks, and QtMultimedia keep the app aligned with modern Plasma desktops.
BearWave is licensed under the GPLv3. No ads, no tracking, no mandatory accounts. The entire source code is hosted on GitHub and open for contributions.
Technologies
BearWave stays Linux-first and integrates seamlessly into your desktop workflow.
System
BearWave is currently in public beta. It is built for contributors, testers, and technically comfortable Linux users who prefer control over fully polished consumer packaging.
Install
BearWave is source-first and is developed and tested primarily on Arch Linux and KDE Plasma. Here are the three clean paths today.
Arch Linux
Use the official `bearwave-git` package if you want the shortest route on Arch.
yay -S bearwave-git
Source
Build from source if you want the documented upstream path. Recommended for developers and contributors.
cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build build -j"$(nproc)"
cmake --install build --prefix "$HOME/.local"
Flatpak
If you are running an immutable Linux distribution (like Fedora Silverblue, SteamOS) or simply prefer sandboxed applications, you can install BearWave directly from our independent, GPG-signed repository.
flatpak remote-add --user bearwave-repo https://flatpak.bearwave.app/bearwave.flatpakrepo
flatpak install --user bearwave-repo de.nerdbear.bearwave
Updates
Provider Information (Section 5 DDG)
Sebastian Palencsar
Senior Infrastructure Architect
Bahnhofstrasse 8
17213 Malchow
Contact
Email Security
For email communication, I use Zoho Mail, hosted on EU servers in Amsterdam. The service provides high standards of data security and privacy with end-to-end transport encryption:
End-to-End Encryption (OpenPGP)
For confidential communication, you can encrypt emails using my public OpenPGP key.
Trust & Transparency
This information is provided to meet legal provider identification requirements. For legal matters, please contact directly.
Copyright & Design
© 2026 Sebastian Palencsár. All rights reserved. This website is a project landing page for the BearWave desktop application.
All content, works, website design, and graphical elements created by me are protected by German copyright law. Reproduction or use of these elements without explicit permission of the author is not permitted.
Data Protection
This website is a pure online portfolio and does not collect personal data for analysis. No tracking tools are used.
No external CDN services are embedded and no profiling is performed.
A temporary PHP session may be used for the contact form. PHPSESSID This is used exclusively to protect against abuse and is not stored permanently. The webserver does not process user data. access_log off Error logs are only created for critical system errors, without permanently storing IP addresses.
Disclaimer
The content of these pages has been created with great care. However, no guarantee can be given for correctness, completeness, and timeliness.
Operators of external websites are solely responsible for their content.
Used Frameworks & Tools
This website uses the following frameworks and libraries among others:
These tools are used according to their respective license terms.
External Links
This website contains links to external third-party websites. These links are marked as such.
I have no influence on the content of these linked websites. The respective provider or operator of the linked pages is always responsible for their content.