Filed under Sightings

MacLife sings about the bird

By stevel stevel

We got a pretty good review in MacLife recently on an article they did covering music blogs, and the best user agents for consuming them. It’s nice to see some more in-depth coverage of the bird in some commercial press beyond “it’s an iTunes rip-off!”

You should see the plumage on that 0.5!

By stevel stevel

“Remarkable bird, the Songbird, idn’it, ay? Beautiful plumage”
(with apologies to Monty Python for the slight edit… but we have yet to make a Feather called “Norwegian Blue”)
There have been some great sightings of 0.5 so far, so I wanted to call out some of them here:

Eliot over at Wired has some kind words. While [...]

Connect me up, Operator!

By stevel stevel

Just saw the latest version of the Semantic Web-loving, Microformat-parsing goodness that is Operator now supports Songbird!

Birdwatching

By stevel stevel

Some recent reviews and sightings of Songbird crossed my radar recently. Mostly words of love (thanks guys!), with some good feature requests. Given that I’m a glass-is-half-full kinda guy, I choose to interpret them as RFEs instead of criticisms
So howzabout it? I’ve summarised the RFEs from the 3 blogs here, [...]

Washington Post on the Media Web

By roblord roblord

“Because the Internet has changed how people discover and share music, the rules of marketing it and the hierarchy of who determines what’s hot have also changed. As radio-music listenership declines, the industry finds itself spending more time courting a broader field of tastemakers who, through Web sites, are popularizing songs that never get radio play. The primary tool in this transition is the playlist — a sequence of tracks posted on blogs or shared on music purchase sites such as iTunes.”

Read the full article on WashingtonPost.com.