Blog Archives

ShairPort Turns Your Computer into an AirPlay Destination [Airplay]

Developer and hardware hacker James Laird reverse engineered Apple’s AirPort Express and packaged the important bits into a Perl script that turns your computer into an AirPlay destination. More »







mSpot Ups Its Streaming Music Storage to 5 GB [In Brief]

mSpot, the stream-your-own-music service that covers Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS, has raised the online storage for its free accounts to 5 GB. It is, of course, a challenge to Amazon’s Cloud Drive/Cloud Player debut, but mSpot does have more developed apps, both in uploading and mobile streaming, than Amazon at the moment. [mSpot] More »







Audiogalaxy Desktop Streaming Service Now Available to All [Downloads]

Windows/Mac/iOS/Android: Audiogalaxy, the surprisingly simple app for streaming your own music between computers and smartphones (surprising in how rare that is, at least) is out of beta and open for registration. Download it, activate it, and listen to your tunes anywhere. More »







Sad Steve is a Minimalistic, Ad-Free MP3 Search Engine [Music]

We’ve featured more than one MP3 search engine before, but most nowadays are filled with ads and confusing layouts. Sad Steve is a plain but effective MP3 search engine and player, complete with profiles on new bands to get you started. 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.






CitySounds.fm App Streams Local Music to Your iPhone [Downloads]

iPhone/iPod touch: We dig CitySounds.fm’s geo-focused streaming site for being good working music. Its iPhone app, just arrived in the App Store, complements that role, and also makes for great headphone fare when you’re strolling a new city.

The app can use your phone’s location devices to automatically stream you tracks made in, or at least making headway in, your current locale, at least if you’re in a city. It’s a mix fairly skewed toward electronica and ambient tracks, but that’s probably a good thing, given the nature of headphones-in walking and head-down working. Don’t like the mix? Shake your iPhone or iPod touch, and you’ll get a random other city’s tracks.

CitySounds.fm is a free $2.99 download for iPhones or iPod touch models running at least the 3.0 firmware. (Ed. note: Apologies for the initially misquoted free price).

Check out our study on the best sounds and songs for getting work done if you’re interested in perfecting your everyday soundtrack.






Lala Lets You Sample Whole Music Tracks Before Buying [Streaming Music]

Online music site lala allows you to listen to song after song and album after album for free. The catch? You can only listen to them once, unless you pick up a web album or MP3 version for cheap.

We’ve been playing around with lala for several days now and haven’t had too many qualms with the service. Yes, we have our own extensive music collection, access to sites like Pandora or MixTape.me (developed by Adam) but lala has a few notable services of its own to recommend it.

You can choose to listen to songs by typing in an artist (LadyGaGa), theme (Christmas), or genre (Jazz), and lala will pull up a listing of tunes matching your search results. Without registering, you can listen to any song by clicking on the play button, but if you’ve taken the 30 seconds to register, you can hit play on a whole album to listen to while you go about your internet musings.

At first we were annoyed with the idea of not being able to listen to things more than once, but the more we started to play, the more we really got into the swing of things. There’s been so many albums we’ve passed on downloading, not having heard the whole album, and it’s been kind of refreshing to listen to new things outside of our own record collection.

It’s an easy interface to look at and operate, and might allow you to check out a new release album before deciding to download or buy it for real. Lala isn’t a brand new service by any means (it was originally a CD-trading service, incidentally), so if you’ve been using it recently, let’s hear how you like it in the comments.






Mugasha Mixes Party Sets So You Don’t Have To [Music]

Need some ambient music for your next party? Stream some long-play music sets from Mugasha and focus on enjoying the party instead of working on the perfect play list.

Mugasha catalogs long-play electronica sets by prominent DJs. Unlike some music sharing services where you have to pick and choose through songs and create your own master playlists, Mugasha already has the music sorted into sets for you.

You can search for songs and artists to play individual songs, but the songs themselves are part of a greater set. You can subscribe to artists to keep abreast of when they release new sets, share your favorite tracks and sets via social networks like Facebook and Twitter, and purchase music when available from iTunes and Amazon.com.

Browsing and listening requires no login; if you want to save favorites and participate in the site, you’ll need to create an account or login using Facebook Connect.






Apple Approves Music Player Spotify’s iPhone Application [Spotify]

Earlier this month we named Spotify as the best music player we’ve ever used. Today, despite quite a bit of speculation to the contrary, Apple approved Spotify's iPhone application—in Europe. Though not yet available for download in the U.S., Apple confirmed to tech blog PaidContent that Spotify has been approved and that the company hopes "to add the app to the more than 65,000 apps on the app store very soon." If you're not yet familiar with the streaming service, check out our first look at Spotify, then check out the posted YouTube video for a rundown of the iPhone app.






Spotify Is the Best Desktop Music Player We’ve Ever Used [First Look]

Imagine a music app with instant access to any song you wanted to hear. Imagine creating a playlist from those songs and quickly, easily sharing it with friends. Such an app does exist, it’s called Spotify, and it could change music forever.

Hyperbole alert! I admit it, I'm over-the-moon about Spotify—both over what it currently is and more importantly over the potential it has. If you get a chance to try it out, I think you may feel the same way.

(Click any of the full-width images for a closer look.)

What Is Spotify

In short, here’s how it works: Spotify is a peer-to-peer music streaming service; it’s a desktop application, but its content all comes via the cloud. Think of it as though the entire iTunes Music Store were actually just your library, and that instead of the poorly designed mess that it is, imagine that it was refreshingly streamlined, fast, and easy to search and use. That gives you a little bit of an idea what Spotify is like. It also works under Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux (using Wine).

The best part: It’s completely legal. Spotify seeks out licensing deals with the music industry before going live, meaning it sits comfortably in the 100% legit territory.

The catch: Oh, you knew there’d be a catch, didn’t you. Although they’ve told me they hope to make it stateside before the end of the year, Spotify is currently only available in Sweden, Norway, Finland, the United Kingdom, France, and Spain.

But after just one day of playing with Spotify, I was convinced it could change the way I listen to music. After a week, I’m absolutely hooked.

What’s So Great About Spotify?

First, just because it’s really well done, let’s take a look at the official Spotify commercial:

The best part about Spotify is that it could not be easier to use. Currently Spotify boasts around 3.8 million tracks (not as impressive as iTunes’ over 10 million songs by any stretch, but they’re adding songs regularly and could easily someday match iTunes). Here’s a quick overview of the best features you’ll notice as soon as you fire up Spotify for the first time:

You can access your music from any computer: Each time you open Spotify, you log into you Spotify account—meaning that no matter where you're logging in from, all of your playlists are ready and waiting for you. It's not synchronization—it's better than that. That's because you don't have to worry about moving gigabyte after gigabyte of music from one computer to the next. Spotify simply streams the music to wherever, and so logging into the application is essentially like logging into your Gmail account—except instead of all those emails, you've got all your music ready and waiting to play.

Sharing any of your playlists is as easy as sharing a link: iTunes and other desktop players do a fair job of playlist creation, but if you want to share a playlist with a friend, your best bet is still to burn the mix to a CD. Yeah… old school, right? We’ve featured plenty of web-based music players designed to make sharing playlists a breeze, including MixTape.me (particularly notable to me because I created it).

With Spotify, sharing a playlist you’ve created is as simple as right-clicking any playlist in the sidebar and selecting Copy HTTP link or Copy Spotify URI. Send either link to a friend via email and clicking on it should send them straight to that playlist in Spotify. It’s dead simple. A web site has already sprung up dedicated to sharing Spotify playlists. On top of that, Spotify already has tools built in for quickly sharing a playlist via Facebook or Delicious. Pretty cool stuff.

Collaborating on playlists is a breeze: But let’s say you’re not impressed with the simple playlist sharing. Spotify also lets you turn any playlist into a collaborative playlist by, again, simply right-clicking the playlist and then clicking Collaborative Playlist.

It’s clean and easy to navigate: Spotify’s navigation is a little like a hybrid between traditional music players and the web. (Don’t let that confuse you, it’s not like Songbird.) All you get when you start is a search box, a home page, some Spotify radio stations, and a play queue.

The first time you search, you’ll notice that Spotify saves your most recent searches in the sidebar. As soon as you start creating playlists, they show up below your saved searches. Click on any artist to go straight to every song by that artist in Spotify, along with their top hits, a biography section, and a radio station for that artist. Likewise, clicking on any individual album will take you to an album overview page containing all the tracks for that album and an album review. You can navigate backward and forward through your history with the forward/back buttons in the top left of the app—just like in your web browser.

But What About Quality?

In Spotify’s free version, your music streams at approximately 160kbps using the Ogg Vorbis q5 codec (an open-source codec). Premium subscribers (that is, folks who pay 10 Euros a month, or around $14) stream at a higher bit rate of 320kbps (among other benefits).

Wait… I Have to Pay for It?

No, you don’t have to pay for it, but yes, there are different versions of Spotify. The free version is supported by ads, but apart from those ads, supports all the same search, radio, and sharing features I mentioned above.

Spotify ads are actually audio ads occasionally inserted into your playlists. I haven’t actually heard one in the time I’ve tested Spotify, but presumably they’re there, and yes, one might imagine that such ads could get a bit annoying. (One user described Spotify ads thusly: "It was streets ahead of most desperate, shouty radio ads: polite, informative and reasonably unobtrusive. The ad for Watchmen that turned up a dozen songs later was a bit more traditional "In a world…" movie trailer voiceover fare.") Of course, that's where the Premium subscription—or even the $1 day pass if you just want a breather for a day—comes in.

What’s Not So Great About Spotify

Now that I’ve hyped it up, it’s time to acknowledge where Spotify isn’t quite ready to replace your traditional desktop music player (like iTunes).

First, these songs are all trapped in the cloud: So how does one go about playing music when no internet connection is available? Actually, Spotify automatically saves some of the music to your hard drive as it plays (you can adjust just how much in the Preferences), so you’re not entirely out of luck. Still, those 3.8 million songs shrink pretty quickly when you can only cache a portion of the music.

You can’t sync the music to your MP3 player: If you want to Spotify music with you on your MP3 player, you really can't, right? Well, actually, that's partly—but not entirely—true. Spotify will probably never work on your old MP3 player, but if your player has Wi-Fi access (or, better yet, 3G access), that's another story. In fact, Spotify already has submitted an iPhone app to Apple, which you can see in the video below:

Let’s pretend for a second that Apple would ever consider approving Spotify, despite their lame, indefensible app approval habits. Think about how convenient Spotify on the iPhone would be: You would never have to plug in your iPhone to sync your music. Just fire up Spotify and stream any of your playlists and tunes using your iPhone's data plan or Wi-Fi connection. It even supports offline playback the same way the desktop version does. (Okay, so we cheated on that one. It's not really that much of a bad thing—in fact, it's exactly the kind of easy "syncing" we'd like on an iPhone, Android phone, Pre, or any other cellphone.)

If a song isn’t in the Spotify catalog, you’re out of luck: Spotify has a finite catalog, and unfortunately—for the time being, at least—you can't add anything of your own to that catalog. (I was knocked on my face when I wanted to play some ELO and realized they didn't have Flashback in their catalog, for example. In fact, it actually demonstrates another Spotify annoyance of mine: Artist pages are often filled with kind of lame compilations; it'd be nice if you could filter artist releases and compilations.)

This, to me, the inability to add your own music is clearly the biggest limitation of Spotify's potential. Even if the service managed to support every major and even relatively minor label in the world, there'd still be those tracks—like from your friend's band—that will likely never make their way to Spotify. Naturally, the folks at Spotify are aware of this problem, and they've even said they’re considering some form of personal uploading, but right now it’s not available, and implementing it is likely problematic for their licensing.

It’s not available in my country yet: Okay, so I said the library limitation above is the biggest problem with Spotify. To be fair, that’s the biggest problem for people who can actually use the application. For the whole of the United States and several other countries, Spotify’s biggest problem is that it’s not even available. As I said above, Spotify is working to change that; they’re already in talks with the major U.S. labels (Wired quotes founder Daniel Eks as saying that “the labels want to see Spotify in the U.S.”), so it’s likely just a matter of time.

Your Thoughts

I realize this review is awfully glowing, but I also know that some of the problems with Spotify I've mentioned above are absolute showstoppers for some. In fact, some folks, the digital packrats—likely the people who have a hard time getting rid of their old CD collection despite having burned it all to their computer—may have no desire to ditch their hard drives full of music for a cloud-based alternative. We respect that.

Whether or not you’ve had the chance to play around with Spotify, love it or lump it, let’s hear what you think about the app in the comments.





WP Like Button Plugin by Free WordPress Templates