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.
CMS Portal is a place where users can put their reviews about various things, like programs, games, movies, ..., then various devices like computer hardware components, etc.. Please read Portal Rules to find out what is allowed and what is forbidden to publish on this site.
Spice up your videos, games, applications or just make system alerts a little more hilarious by downloading sound effects from Soundsnap. Whether you're an electronic musician using Ableton Live or a budding YouTube auteur looking to flesh out the audio on a Final Cut Pro project, libraries of free sound effects, loops and samples are like mana (I'm a longtime fan of The Freesound Project). All the sound effects at Soundsnap are uploaded by creators, so if you've already done some foley work or futzed around with a Moog to produce sci-fi ambience, help out others by contributing. There are already many thousands of audio clips already available. If you're a multimedia maker, what sound effects sources do you use?
Muzicons has to be one of the simplest music-sharing tools I've ever seen, and also the one with the most personality.
Unlike current Web 2.0 darling Muxtape, which lets you create a nice mix of music uploaded from your hard drive, Muzicons is a single-song affair. You still upload the music from your machine for it to host; the only difference is that there's no track list, no song title, and just a single button to play and pause the music. In fact, whoever creates the mix can tweak the buttons the listener will have access to, determining whether they can skip around the track and what song information is listed.
What makes Muzicons an especially memorable Web app is the care and attention that's been built in to the simple ways you can customize its look and feel. There are just two tweaks: one for color and another for the icon. If you've ever played the popular puzzle game Lumines, the icons feel very similar, and you've got a pick of more than 50 to choose from that will sit on the left side of the player.
When it comes time to share your creation you've only got two options: one set of code for blogs and Web sites, and another for BB code enabled forums or blog comments. If you're looking for some of the simple sharing options seen on other mixtape sites you're out of luck--for now at least.
I've embedded a Muzicon above with the song "She Sells Sanctuary" by The Cult. To make your
AirAlbum is a mobile multimedia catalog, developed and operated by inTouch that allows user to :
* Preview : graphics, video & games
* Pre-listen : ringtones & fulltrack songs
* Purchase : via operator billing/AirVoucher, without having to know the content code & shortcode
* Share : send via Infrared/Bluetooth or SMS the link to download AirAlbum
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.