
Something else
Randomness, part 1
February 27, 2009
Cheese is awesome. It tastes good. And I am abusing my executive powers by ruining this blog! Ruining it, I say!
But here’s a question: if cheese goes mouldy, can you eat the mould or will you die? The answer may solve all of life’s mysteries. In addition, I hate and revile Roxio Media Manager because it has broken Faz’s computer (a bit). I tried to delete it and now I pay the price of its constant attempts to reinstall itself. What programmer would add that feature? How big must their ego be? “Oh, this program is freaking AWESOME! It’s so good that nobody will ever want to uninstall it. In fact, if they do, it must be an accident! So we’ll make the program reinstall itself automatically every time it gets deleted. SWEET!” And then I’ll bet they all pranced around the office singing ‘Whistle While you Work’ in nine part harmony. And then the men in white came to take them away and force feed them mouldy cheese… FOR THE GOOD OF HUMANITY!
I’m off to eradicate this foul ‘program’ from my hard drive. It shall die a terrible, terrible death.
Spotify – why we probably won’t see it on the iphone
February 19, 2009
gotta get me some of those tasty tunes…
Spotify is a music streaming application that uses a desktop media player interface to allow you to browse through a catalogue of tracks owned by major record labels. It has been in development for awhile, but most importantly it has the backing of the major record labels so all of it’s content is legal. It is also ad funded – yes the ads are intrusive rather than passive (audio ads that play after every 10 songs or so) but that is a small cost and hey, they might be useful… someday.
Now Spotify never claims to replace all music streaming websites. It would be foolish to think that it is infact a competitor to services such as Pandora or Lastfm. Both aforementioned sites offer an established service that plays to the “experience” facet of music – rather than actively deciding on your musical journeys you can leave the music to the track selection algorithm based on your musical likes and dislikes. Lastfm/Pandora expect you to be … absorbant like a sponge. Spotify on the other hand relies on your interaction with the player – creating playlists, searching for music and physically (well digitally) selecting the music you want to hear. In this vain it is much more like the mp3 media libraries that have become so intrinsic in today’s consumption of music. This may be both a blessing or it may be it’s future downfall… let’s assume that the simplicity of use and the familiarity is a good thing.
As standard you have to set up an account with them in order to use the service which comes in three flavours – the standard free access (ad funded), the 24 hour pass (no ads) and the monthyl subscription (again no ads). I suppose this is for the potential of added social aspect such as sharing playlists with other members. You can also link your Spotify account with a Lastfm account and scrobble away… as I said previously Spotify is not so much a competitor of familiar streaming music players as a different beast altogether.
So cut to the chase – why won’t we be seeing Spotify on the iphone anytime soon? Well I’m sure you have come to the same conclusion as I have – it looks like the streaming equivalent of iTunes. Not just in functunality – the skin even looks like iTunes (check out the circular controls, the search bar, even the greyness!).
But then again, iTunes doesn’t stream music so why should Apple care? Spotify could add another facet to it’s music service by adding an option to purchase streamed tracks from iTunes keeping Apple… sweet. Currently Spotify does not have any such functunality and as such music featured on the service is tied to an internet connection. Also, Spotify does not download full mp3 tracks – rather music tracks seem segmented to prevent any unwanted piracy… possibly… this is a quick conclusion after an even quicker look at the temporary download folder. My point – Spotify is for streaming and thus music whilst your stationary – iTunes is for the pod.
But this hasn’t stopped Apple from allowing streaming music applications onto the iPhone. The Lastfm is one (and only..?) application that has enjoyed some reasonable success on the platform. So Apple isn’t altogether against the idea of using the iPhone as a music streaming device and allowing third party developers to develop these services. However Spotify is not Lastfm. They offer two different services – and the Lastfm iPhone application makes this very clear. Whilst you can start a new station within the Lastfm app, that’s where the search ability ends. For Spotify to work as an app, a search functunality would have to allow the user to browse through Spotify’s catalogue of music. The user would then select an album or build a playlist from selecting tracks from multiple search results. And doesn’t that sound just too iTune-like. Apple are reknowned for protecting their intellectual properties – be it hardware (palm) or software (countless thanks to the restrictions in place on the old App Store). They have made it quite clear that they are unlikely to allow any application that duplicates functunality of Apple iPhone applications (they have only recently allowed alternative but basic iPhone web browsers. In it’s current state Spotify would be unlikely to make it past the starting line.
Of course this article is all speculative – I’m not entirely sure what Spotify has in the pipeline when it comes to expanding their product line into the mobile platform. In theory Spotify could be a great way of promoting iTunes if they worked in conjunction with one another. If Spotify was able to link directly to the iTunes store then there could be a fantastic “try before you buy” element to the iPhone music offerings. Yet, the more I think about it, the less convinced I am that this is a viable option. I mentioned previously that iTunes does not stream music; infact it does. But only for 30s max. Whose to say that iTunes isn’t taking notes on Spotify’s successes in readiness for a streaming feature of their own.
Finally would Spotify really work on the iPhone? Sure it would be great when in range of a strong wi-fi connection, but for 3G it is likely the buffering would render the seemless streaming unworkable. Especially if the signal fluctuates. I suppose one simple possibility could be a playlist storage application whereby you construct a Spotify playlist to listen at home – but this just sounds like a notepad. If anyone has any suggestions about how a Spotify iPhone app could work please let Spotify know. I’m sure they will be VERY interested!
taa!
[edit 20/02/09]
Just found a blog that contained a potential visual of the iPhone Spotify app. – Don’t know whether it’s the real deal but it looks quite nice… still heavily question whether it will make it onto the platform in that form.
here is the vid
edit 15/11/2011:
So I was horribly wrong and should perhaps stop predicting things like iphone apps and the like… I tried the Spotify app on my iphone just before 2010 and it was quite nice – subscription required but that was fair enough. The nice feature was the fact that you could download the tracks for offline mode which meant that the longer tube journeys and the out and aboutness was catered for… and that was the start of my love for spotify! I’ve been a subscriber since way early 2010 and really do love the accessibility of the app on my android phone (Samsung Galaxy S2 for those interested). The only problem is that some artists are pulled from the catalogue which conversely effects the predownloaded tracks when the app syncs with the database… but I guess these things happen yoooooooo…!
Cogs
February 18, 2009
Lets keep ticking over boys. Site is looking good and first bit of content is underway with this film. I am excited. Turned down Maersk today is which was a tough call. I feel like I have just pulled the safety net out from beneath me. Pretty scared right now ad I hope to channel this anxiety into something a touch more productive

Scouting


