Blog Archives

Best Deal-Hunting Site: Slickdeals [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite deal-hunting web sites, then we rounded up the top contenders for a vote. Now we’re back to highlight your favorites. More »







Five Best Book Recommendation Services [Hive Five]

It’s disappointing to haul a book home from the library or shell out hard-earned cash at the bookstore only to settle in at home and find you don’t enjoy it one bit. Stock your reading list with these five great recommendation services. More »







Five Best Personal Money Management Sites [Hive Five]

Web-based financial management tools have grown in sophistication to the point where many people manage their entire financial lives with online tools. Here’s a look at five of the most popular personal money management sites. More »









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Best WYSIWYG Editor: Adobe Dreamweaver [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) HTML editor. We rounded up the top contenders, you voted, and we’re back with the results. More »









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Five Best WYSIWYG HTML Editors [Hive Five]

You can make a strong argument for hand-coding HTML, but the appeal of a What You See Is What You Get editor for beginners is undeniable. Here’s a look at five of the most popular WYSIWYG HTML editing tools. More »









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Five Best Personal Web Hosts [Hive Five]

The web’s full of services happy to host your photos, blog posts, and other online data, but if you’re control- or privacy-minded, you can do better. If you’re thinking about hosting your own site, check out these five popular personal web hosts. More »









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Best Windows 7 Tweaking Application: Ultimate Windows Tweaker [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite tool for tweaking Windows 7, then we rounded the top five for a vote. Now we’re back to highlight the winner and the runners up. More »






Best VPN Tool: OpenVPN [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite VPN tool, then we rounded up the top five contenders for a vote. Now we’re back with the results. More »







Five Best Music Streaming Services [Hive Five]

The internet has revolutionized nearly every form of media, and music is no exception. This week we look at the five most popular music streaming services to see how people are getting their music fix.

Photo by CarbonNYC.

Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite music streaming services, and now we’re back with the top five contenders. Read on to learn about the services and then cast your vote in our poll at the end.

Grooveshark (Web-based, Free)


When you’re ready to listen to some tunes online, Grooveshark allows you to jump right in. Unlike many services that require a subscription to use, Grooveshark lets you search for music and build a playlist as soon as the site loads. If you want to save the playlist, however, and access other session enhancing features like flagging songs to enable the music suggestion service, you’ll need an account. Aside from manually building a playlist, you can also listen to Grooveshark Radio, their suggestion engine. One of Grooveshark’s most unique features is that if you can’t find a song or artist you love, you can upload the music from your own collection to build the Grooveshark database.

Spotify (Windows/Mac/Mobile/Web-based; Basic: Free/Premium: €9.99 month)


First the bad news about Spotify: as of this writing, 02/28/2010, Spotify isn’t available in the U.S. due to various legal issues and licensing requirements. The good news is that Spotify is an incredible music service, and we're always hearing whispers that it'll soon be available stateside. You can collaborate on and easily share playlists using the service—as easily as you share a link to a YouTube video for comparison's sake. A premium account adds more features, like commercial-free listening or the ability to listen to your playlists on your mobile phone. Premium service also enables offline mode for local storage of music, higher quality streaming, and travel access—so should you visit a country like the U.S., where Spotify isn't available yet, you can still enjoy it.

Pandora (Web-based; Basic: Free/Premium: $36 per year)


Pandora is the easy-to-use front end for the massive database of attributes generated by the Music Genome Project. The Music Genome Project analyzes songs with up to 400 different attributes so when you tell Pandora "Play me something like the song Punkrocker by The Teddy Bears featuring Iggy Pop" it doesn't just return a song that people who liked "Punkrocker" also liked—it returns a song that is also "genetically" related to your suggestion. Pandora may not have the most bells and whistles of the music sharing services rounded up today, but the power of the Music Genome Project and ease with which you can create and rate personalized streaming radio stations has won Pandora many fans. Upgrading from free to premium service allows you to stream more than 40 hours a month, gives you access to a dedicated desktop client, and increases the quality of your audio stream.

Last.fm (Web-based/iPhone, Basic: Free/Premium: $3 per month)


Last.fm is another service that not only streams music but generates suggestions for new music based on what you like. In addition to building playlists and enjoying tunes on the web, you can "scrobble" your own music collection to Last.fm—which basically means you let Last.fm track the songs you're listening to and add them to your Last.fm profile, allowing you to both listen to them and use them to increase the scope of Last.fm's suggestion engine for better personalized picks. In addition to listening to streaming radio and building personalized stations, Last.fm also allows direct music download—when authorized by the copyright holder—so you can expand your personal collection as you listen.

Lala (Web-based, Free with per-song fees)


Lala's claim to fame is the ease with which you can listen to both your own music over the web and purchase new music inexpensively. Lala has a database of 8 million songs that you can listen to once for free, purchase for online play for $0.10, or buy as a DRM-free MP3 for $0.79. If you have a song in your personal collection—on your computer at home—you can add it to the Lala database to allow unlimited play without paying a fee. Lala doesn't sport a hefty music recommendation engine like some of the other contenders in the Hive Five—although we didn't find the one they have lacking—but instead focuses more strongly on connections between people to drive music suggestion. As a result Lala supports easy rating and playlist sharing with friends to encourage organic music discovery.


Now that you’ve had a chance to look over the top contenders for champion of the golden earphones, it’s time to cast your vote in the poll below to decide the winner:

Which Music Streaming Service Is Best?polls

Have a favorite that didn’t get a nod? Have a creative way to use one of the Hive Five nominees above? Let’s hear about it in the comments.






Best Public BitTorrent Tracker: The Pirate Bay [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite BitTorrent tracker, then we rounded up the results so you could cast your vote on the top five contenders. We’re back with the results.

Before we dive in, it's worth noting that this week's Hive Five required a little in-progress clarification. Our initial call was a request for best public trackers, but a lot of votes were for best indexers—to read more about the differences, see the actual Hive Five. We chalked that up to us not explicitly stating the difference between a tracker and an indexer and when the Hive Five was compiled, we opted to focus on the aspect of the two that the end user really cares about: downloading and using torrent files. With that in mind, the results:

The Pirate Bay, though no longer a tracker in its own right, took home the largest number of votes to weigh in at 29%. Following with a not-so-shabby second place was Demonoid (27%) and then the popular isoHunt with 19%. Rounding out the Hive Five was BTJunkie (15%) and KickAssTorrents (5%).

Have a BitTorrent-related tip or trick? Let’s hear about it in the comments. If you have an idea for a future Hive Five, send an email to tips at lifehacker.com with “Hive Five” in the subject line.






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