By roblord

Founder & CEO of Pioneers of the Inevitable, the developers of Songbird.

Apple and the Media Web, Part II

By roblord roblord

Ask Apple about the competition-obviating iTunes + iPhone tight-binding and it will be your last interview question. Valleywag has the story.

A Songbird Orange

By roblord roblord

“Yarbles, great bolshy yarblockos to you!”

Droogs and malchicks, come celebrate the launch of Songbird 0.3 with us! We’re co-hosting a real horrorshow party with the hooligans at Get Satisfaction!

Kubrick & Cupcakes: A Satisfaction Appreciation/Songbird 0.3 Party

  • Thursday Nov. 15 7pm-1am
  • Terra SF 511 Harrison St. 2nd floor San Francisco, CA 94105. Map
  • RSVP: Facebook and Upcoming.org

All-white dress, false eyelashes, and fancy bowler hats strongly encouraged.

Today’s Media Web Meet-up…

By roblord roblord

Thanks so much to you, the 50+ media service developers, Media Web innovators and entrepreneurs, birdbuilders and birdwatchers who came to the first Media Web Meet-up. I’ll post video from the meet-up just as soon as we polish in post-production.

Special thanks to Mike Linksvayer of Creative Commons for first an overview of CC’s lawyer- and machine-readable Some Rights Reserved licenses, services and software followed by a compelling State of the Union update of music on the Web. I’ll link to his slides as soon as they’re posted.

Mike also mentioned that Creative Commons is fundraising and offering a limited edition, smirk-worthy tshirt:

Also my thanks to Tara and crew from Citizen Agency for driving this and future Media Web Meet-ups. Thanks to our operations crew Sharon and Marion for producing another flawless event!

As mentioned, a supporting OpenMediaWeb.org web site is forthcoming. I’ll blog its launch.

chirps,
Rob

Songbird 0.3 Is Launched!

By roblord roblord

Bowie 'bird

Birdwatchers,

Big news! Today Songbird shows some wing, shows some leg and leaps media players into the next era of innovation.

Today, Pioneers of the Inevitable launches Songbird 0.3 “Developer Pre-release”, also know by its codename Bowie, available here at Songbirdnest.com. So much to say. Let’s get started.

Songbird Webpage API

If you’ve tried previous Songbird releases, you know that Songbird is a desktop media player mashed-up with the Web. Now the tables are turned: Web developers can mash-up their websites with a desktop media player. Songbird’s Webpage API makes media player features accessible to the webpage author, collapsing the barrier between media player and website.

Early feedback from Webpage API implementors including indie music store Insound.com and music blog aggregator HypeMachine is that the integration is easy and that they anticipate their users will prefer a simpler, more integrated player-Web experience.

“Integrating Hype Machine into Songbird makes it even easier for our users to discover, play and buy music they love. Using the API we were able to customize the experience and highlight all important aspects of our site - music blog content, merchant links and, of course, the music.”

Anthony Volodkin, The Hype Machine

“Insound implemented Songbird’s Webpage API because we wanted to
simplify our customers’ purchase experience. With Songbird, Insound customers can buy digital albums from within their media player and the music appears in their music library. Songbird allowed Insound to have an iTunes-like purchase experience with just a few lines of Javascript.”

Joe Weber, Insound.com

Starting today, Songbird is open to download stores, subscription services, radio services, social networking services, recommendation services, locker services, music blogs and other digital media services a crafty Web developer may devise.

Songbird Add-on API

Songbird 0.3 also lands documented, supported APIs for add-on developers. Firefox extension and Winamp plug-in developers should check it out. Like Firefox Add-ons, Songbird Add-ons are simply mark-up and Javascript in a zip file. Like Firefox, Songbird notifies users when a fresh add-on update is available, keeping the love alive.

Update: Greasemonkey and mashTape add-ons just released for Songbird 0.3 and kick ass.

Songbird Feathers API

Songbird’s Feathers have been meticulously preened, making it easier than ever for visual designers to customize Songbird’s appearance and share their own feathers with other ‘birders. Styling Songbird’s Feathers and webpages both use CSS, so visual designers can extend their Web design expertise to Songbird Feathers.

Update: The Feathers Wizard walks visual designers through the steps of creating and sharing feathers. You’ll find “Create New Feathers” under the Songbird 0.3 Tools menu if you installed the Developer Tools Add-on. Also, check out iBird. ;)

The Songbird Community is the Mozilla Community

Finally, I’d like to thank and recognize the exceptional work of the 20+ full-time Songbird product designers and developers here at Pioneers of the Inevitable and the 1,800+ Songbird community developers and QA volunteers who directly contributed to Songbird 0.3. You are rockstars.

Moreover, Songbird is built on the Mozilla platform, so we ‘birders give a pterodactyl squawk to the Mozilla community. Mozilla’s Chief Lizard Wrangler Mitchel Baker recently blogged that 10,000 Mozilla community developers contributed to Firefox 2 in 2006, that the Mozilla community has grown so much recently that its prepared to move “beyond sustainability.” This is extraordinary news for all Web surfers, and specifically the Mozilla community, Mozilla platform, Firefox and Songbird.

Enough for now. Please install 0.3, experiment with the Webpage API, try the Insound.com or HypeMachine integration, port your Firefox extension to Songbird or create feathers. Play the Web!

Chirps,
Rob Lord

We’ve been Dugg. Add your digg.

Apple and the Media Web, Part I

By roblord roblord

Om Nom Nom Nom

As both Fake Steve Jobs and the real Steve Jobs charismatically attest, Apple handily dominates the Internet digital media commercial markets of music, mobile players (e.g., iPods, iPhone, etc.) and increasingly audiobooks, music videos, TV shows, movies and other segments. Apple has more market-share than all of its competitors combined. And Apple achieved their enviable position by the book, as Ian Rogers points out, by innovating and marketing better than its competitors.

Well, mostly by the book. Apple latest generation of iPods, for example the iPod classic, are hindered with new cryptography that prohibits syncing your music, podcasts, audiobooks, movies and TV shows to your iPod if you choose to use any software other than Apple’s own iTunes. Ouch.