Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
Firefox has a new program coming out that looks pretty impressive. Songbird, I think.
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Firefox has a new program coming out that looks pretty impressive. Songbird, I think.
go on please.
It's a music program, by firefox... What the fuck does he need to expand upon. It probably plays music. It's probably fast and efficient. It probably has similar traits to firefox...because it is made by...firefox!
Also if you type the word "S O N G B I R D" into google (it's pretty new so i understand if you don't know it) it returns a website that SEEMS to be songbird...
Joined: Tue Sep 19, 2006 5:53 pm Posts: 388 Location: Chicago Gender: Male
NEW YORK, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Online retailer Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Thursday its digital music store will now offer songs from Sony BMG Music Entertainment without copy-protection technology, or digital rights management.
Amazon said the deal makes it the first retailer to offer customers DRM-free songs from all four major music companies in the MP3 format.
Songs in MP3 format can play on the widest range of digital music players including Apple Inc's (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) iPod, Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research) Zune and various mobile phones.
Sony BMG, which is the second largest music company in the world, is home to such artists as Beyonce, Britney Spears and Celine Dion.
Earlier this week, Sony BMG became the last of the four major music companies to start selling its digital songs without copy protection with the launch of its MusicPass service.
The music industry posted a 15 percent drop in U.S. album sales in 2007 as fans bought fewer CDs. Though digital music sales have been rising, they have not made up for the revenue shortfall, forcing executives to consider new business models and methods to boost sales.
One of the issues for music companies in 2007 was whether dropping DRM protection would help drive digital music sales.
Fans have been frustrated by the limitations imposed by DRM, which can prevent a user from playing a digital song on an incompatible PC or portable media player.
Music companies had originally required digital music retailers use DRM to prevent customers from making multiple copies or sharing songs with friends for free.
EMI, the number four music company in market share, became the first major company to drop DRM in April. It was soon followed by Vivendi's (VIV.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) Universal Music Group, which ranks No. 1, and Warner Music Group (WMG.N: Quote, Profile, Research).
Sony BMG is jointly owned by Sony Corp (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research) and German media group Bertelsmann AG (BERT.UL). (Reporting by Yinka Adegoke, editing by Leslie Gevirtz)
Joined: Mon Mar 14, 2005 9:57 pm Posts: 598 Location: the wire Gender: Male
i've been researching the songbird app and would like to hear some comments from the users here. anyone care to discuss their experience, pros and cons? thanks
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Joined: Sun May 01, 2005 2:06 pm Posts: 2539 Location: France
I use Songbird at work and it has all the features that I need from an audio player : it manages tags pretty well, has the collection option, some good plugins (available at songbird's site). The only thing is that it is quite long to load on my PC but it's not a powerful one.
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Owl_Farmer wrote:
this thread is the dumbest idea in the history of the internte
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