Categories
Music

Trying out Songbird Media Player

Songbird

iTunes is a fantastic media player that does almost everything I want, but when Raffel prodded me to check out Songbird, I knew this has the potential to be awesome. Here are some initial thoughts:

    A couple of gripes I had, (because it’s always good to start with gripes):

  • Keyboard shortcuts absent – can’t select it and start/stop/browse songs with Space / Arrow Keys.
  • It crashes. A fair amount. It’s still in pre-release tho, so i can’t start going off on that yet.
  • Weird lockups which are almost exactly like Firefox. Grrr. Can’t get away from the Mozilla core.
  • It keeps asking me to import my iTunes library – even though it’s already there.
  • Interface is slooooow to resize. At least on my aging Macbook Pro.
  • Too slow.
    Things I like:

  • I’ve only been using it for a short while, but I find myself returning to it regularly – a good sign! I particularly like the way it intelligently adds songs it discovers on sites such as The Hype Machine into the standard iTunes Store style. This is a fantastic innovation.
  • Overall, I love the design. It’s smart, thoughtful and not excessive.
  • Love the music browsing functionality. It’s smart that it figures out what you were listening to and adds that as a link.
  • Grrr. Locked up again.

There’s quite a few other things to love and I can see lots of ideas for how this could be vastly improved.

What I want to know is what their strategy for getting users / growing market share without hardware is. iTunes had the iPod, Windows Media Player had Windows PCs (and er… the Zune… heh.). What is Songbird going to do to change the game? iTunes is so entrenched right now with the iPod, iPhone and the iTMS crowd, that it’s going to be difficult to move in and take away that market share without tying this to a similarly strong hardware/software/media brand. This is still early days, but I have to say, Songbird Developer Pre-Release 0.3 – you’ve certainly made an impression on me.

Categories
Fun

Light Sabre for N95

It’s time. Download the accelerometer library, grab this light sabre and unleash your inner office Jedi. Those fools will rue the day they ever called you a nerfherder.

NB: Install everything in phone memory, not the memory card. Remember to switch your profile off silent before using this.

Via AllAboutSymbian

Categories
Life Tools Travel

A great quote at the VLAB panel

Earlier this week, I participated in an MIT-Stanford VLAB event entitled “Introducing the Seventh Sense: Location Awareness”. The VLAB is a volunteer, non-profit organization promoting the growth and success of high-tech entrepreneurial ventures by connecting ideas, technology and people. From my own experience helping out as a volunteer at Mobile Monday NY, I know how much effort it takes to produce these events. Congratulations to Hironmoy Paul, Gigi Wang, Celeste Cooper, Chai Geller and all the other volunteers for putting on a great one.

Sam Altman, CEO of loopt was the speaker and his presentation was a rapid fire summary of the opportunities, issues and applications around location awareness, in the style of Dick Hardt or Lawrence Lessig.

As a panelist, I was in some distinguished company, including Rick Witham from Nokia, Jodi Sherman Jahic from Voyager Capital and Russ McGuire, Head of Strategy at Sprint.

Rajeev Chand, Director of Research at Rutberg & Co was a great moderator and he mentioned a great quote in passing which has lodged itself in my mind ever since. A client of his who had spent a number of years in the LBS market once said:

We always knew we were going to get the hockey stick curve with location based services, what we didn’t know was that we’d have to ride down the handle to get there.

So true. Nielsen Mobile (ex Telephia) says that “51% of the $118m mobile downloads market consists of LBS applications”. Is this the end of the handle? I think so.

Categories
Fun Language

Cliched quotes I love, #22 & #23

“The future is here. It’s just not evenly distributed yet.” – William Gibson – as channeled by Tim O’Reilly.

“Work like you don’t need the money. Love like you’ve never been hurt. Dance like nobody’s watching.” – Satchel Paige.

Categories
Tools

Google acquires Jaiku

Google eats Jaiku

Congratulations to Jyri and his team. Jaiku is an excellent product and I hope they’ll get better treatment at Elgoog than Dens did.

Read all about it here, here and here.