Alpha web service Lib.rario.us is del.icio.us for your media collection.<br /> <br /> Bookmark, review, tag and share your books, music, DVD's and games with automatically-supplied cover images and links to Amazon. RSS feeds are available by user and media type, and it looks like an item discussion feature is in the works. Lib.rario.us is much prettier than del.icio.us, but my only wish for it and the rest of the tagging/Web 2.0 world? Drop the domains with w.ithdot.sinwe.ird places. At first it was cute, but now it's just maddening.
Hailing from the very heart of hip-hop culture (Ann Arbor, Michigan) Tadd Mullinix aka Dabrye is back on the shelves at your local record store (if you are lucky enough to still have one) with his third full-length release Two/Three. The enigmatic and fractional title is the follow up to his 2001 debut One/Three and 2002 sophomore release Instrmntl. Mullinix, who is quite the busy beaver, also makes house, techno, and industrial music under other monikers. So it's not surprising that his brand of hip-hop is a little bit left of center. A Dabrye album is as likely to feature white noise, sawbuzz analog synths, and found sounds, as its title is to include numbers or consonants, it seems.
share your views, get your own gnutella webpage loaded with features:<br /> - journals<br /> - web cams<br /> - send and receive messages<br /> - and stay informed!<br /> <br /> Gnutella是简单又方便的网络交换文件软件,提供另外一种更简单的交换文件方式给大家选择。理论上,只要所有连接网络的人都把文件分享出来,那么大家的需求就可以得到解决。不管你是想要图形文件、音乐甚至是食谱,只要有人分享该文件,我们就应该可以透过Gnutella找到。
Probably the most exciting piece of digital music news to come out of CES 2008 was that Napster was planning on offering its complete catalog of more than 6 million tracks in the unprotected MP3 format. Today, with the launch of version 4.5 of the software and store, that announcement becomes a reality. Although digital music stores such as eMusic, Amazon MP3, and even Napster itself already had MP3s on offer before this point, the collective catalogs of all three didn't even come near the volume of tracks you can find in the entire Napster library. This is a huge day for digital music, as all four major labels and thousands upon thousands of indies are represented in the store, and every track will be available at the standard 99-cent price point.
Napster's Web-based store with the online media player window open.
(Credit: Napster)
More good news is that Napster's Web-based store, which is all that is required for MP3 purchases and downloads, is compatible with every operating system. And--of course--the MP3s can be played on any MP3 player, portable video player, or music cell phone. Currently, 95 percent of the catalog is encoded at 256kbps, which is reasonably high-quality for an MP3, and each track comes with hi-res album art (at least 1,000x1,000-pixels). Although Napster has quite an international presence, the MP3 store will only be available to U.S. residents for the time being.
Napster will continue to offer its online and To Go subscription services for $12.95 or $14.95 per month, respectively. The music associated with a subscription will remain in the protected WMA format with the time-out capability. The company did make some improvements to its online interface. It now features a "liquid layout," which resizes everything within both the store and media player windows when you adjust the size of either window. Napster has also improved its download management system so that users can better view what has been purchased already and whether it was eve
mp3 files and listen to them on your 'puter or iPhone with SeeqPod, an intriguing search engine that looks only for media files on the Web. (Yes, even David Hasselhoff music is fair game.)
This is a really interesting service. You can find specific artists and listen to them play as you surf, share music with friends, even embed the tunes in your Web site or blog. My favorite feature so far? The "Discovery" button: listen to a cornucopia of the most recently discovered music that SeeqPod has found on the Web.