Monday, August 29, 2011

Grooveshark : Does It Have Byte?




Pandora, Slacker, Spotify, Google Music...these are just a few of your many options out there to stream music to your ears wherever there is an internet connection. Grooveshark is just another player to add to that list of services...or is it?

I've been an avid user of Pandora with some Slacker thrown in there for good measure. The second I received an invite I registered for Google Music and Spotify. Google Music I used once just to test it out and haven't used it since (primarily because there isn't an iPhone app yet). Spotify I've used many times just for the pure fact that it was exclusive for a while in the U.S. and I was part of a select few of my friends who had access; which allowed me bragging rights.

I started using Grooveshark about a month ago just because I heard through the grapevine that it had a wide selection and a lot of people were wondering why it hasn't been shutdown because its use of every user's uploaded music amongst the public selection. Meaning: you upload your music, I can listen to it. This is great because then there is a vast selection of music on Grooveshark that isn't readily available on other services, but it's not so great for duplicate entries and bad music quality. Grooveshark isn't too clean when it comes to metadata since it's mostly run by the users and not governed by the creators. Don't get me wrong, there is tons of information flowing into Grooveshark's servers all the time and it would almost be near impossible to keep it all perfect, but when they don't have their #1 song's album cover art I start to wonder...

Now for listening on the go, they require you to register for their service and pay for mobile listening - but don't worry you can get a 14-day trial to test out all the glory that is Grooveshark.

PROS:
  • Pick a song, listen to it.
  • Upload your own music.
  • Download any song for listening without an internet connection.
  • Start listening to music without having to register at all.
  • Social media integration.
  • Take surveys to gain credit towards a Plus account (great for college students!)
  • Listen in browser or via Boxee app, Android app, iPhone app (jailbroken only - kinda a con)
CONS:
  •  Some music won't play on mobile app.
  • Metadata isn't always correct. Missing album artwork.
  • Radio stations aren't always correct (back to metadata being wrong).
  • iPhone app crashes quite a bit.
  • Not as streamlined and fluid listening (takes a few seconds between each song to buffer if internet isn't blazing fast).
Overall, I like Grooveshark and I want to love Grooveshark, but I can't because of a few hangups that come along with this unique music service. Hopefully they remove these tiny speedbumps because then they'd be the perfect service with limitless possibilities...or I would at least be able to an awesome Dubstep radio station that wouldn't randomly throw crappy punk bands in the mix.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Upgrade Your Home Office This Weekend


Chances are you're reading this article right now at your desk (others may be reading from their mobile devices, but this can still apply to you!), and your desk may or may not be cluttered (mine is - BUT I'M WORKING ON IT). The folks at Lifehacker are always showcasing their readers' desks and providing unique ideas to spruce up your desk and provide a clean and refreshing work environment for us "users". Here is an article provided by them that gives an overall look at many ways you can make your workspace a"funspace"; or at least a clean workspace. If you have a neat setup, I'd love to see what you got. Post it in the comments or email it to me to put up.

Click to go to Lifehacker's article

(via Upgrade Your Home Office This Weekend @ Lifehacker)

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

iOS 4.1 - 4.3.2 Jailbreak methods Summarized


I know many of you out there are thinking "Man, I love having a jailbroken iPhone/iPod/iPad but I hate having to keep updating it and then re-jailbreaking it over and over." So we often just sit and wait on one iOS through a few updates and then update to the latest one and jailbreak. I'm currently on 4.2.1 (jailbroken) on my iPhone 4 and 4.3.2 is out (with 4.3.3 on the horizon).

So I did a little searching and found that a great figure in the jailbreaking scene has summarized up many different methods to jailbreak the last few iOS updates, and that great figure goes by the name GeoHot. Here's his list with the corresponding iOS firmwares with the tutorial of how to jailbreak them on each computer OS. Enjoy...

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Now This is the Droid We're Looking For | Popular Science

Now This is the Droid We're Looking For | Popular Science

PopSci reader Brian De Vitis's R2-D2 cooler, converted into the ultimate mobile gaming 'droid with eight consoles, a projector and a sound system.
Read more @ source...

Friday, January 21, 2011

It Doesn't Get Much Gnarlier Than a Bullet-Time Surfing Video Shot With 52 Cameras [Video]

It Doesn't Get Much Gnarlier Than a Bullet-Time Surfing Video Shot With 52 Cameras [Video]: "

After ten years of bullet-time, you'd think the effect would be completely played out. But you haven't seen crazy surfing shot in bullet-time with 52 Canon Rebel T2is. More »"

How to Create a Portable Hackintosh on a USB Thumb Drive [Hackintosh]

How to Create a Portable Hackintosh on a USB Thumb Drive [Hackintosh]: "

There are tons of awesome live, bootable Linux systems, but what if you need to run OS X? Reader Will shows us how to put a portable version of OS X on a thumb drive and boot it on (most) Intel computers. More »"

 
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