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I feel like I have no brains. I am having trouble copying and pasting. Specifically, I want to copy
the code on Playlist.com and paste it to my page on Sodahead.com. I know all about ctrl - C, ctrl -
V, I even bought a rt and left click mouse. I highlight the appropriate code, go to Edit or rt.
click mouse to copy. When I move the cursor to where I want to paste it, the paste is no longer an
option because it brings the Sodahead page to the front. I've been able to add pictures and text to
the site, (questions and answers) and I've 'added media' to my profile. But to save my life I can't
get my playlist to paste on my profile page. Has anyone who has a MacBook had the same problem or
am I the only 'dense' one of the bunch.:confused::confused:
Branchez les micros, laissez tomber les guitares. La musique se prépare une fois de plus
à investir votre salon de ses plus amples largesses vocales ... enfin les vôtres. Il
faut dire que tout le monde fait de son mieux pour rattraper la dernière mode du jeu
musical. Nous avions eu le droit à un Rock band sur Xbox 360 qui nous offrait une
très agréable playlist pleine de surprises mais restait orienté sur la
synergie de groupe et offrait donc plus que de l'amusement, un véritable...
Is there a way to build seperate profiles for my iPod Touch and iPhone 3G in iTunes to sync music
and apps off of as opposed to having to sync the same thing on both of them?
The only way I can see doing that is building a playlist - which I really don't want to have to
do...
I have all the songs placed in my library, but now I'm trying to restore the play counts, ratings
etc. back and it isn't working. I have the Library XML file, but I'm not sure what to do with it,
and Apple's help section on their site still refers to iTunes 7.
First I tried adding all my music, then hitting import playlist > Library.xml, but it said none
of the song files could be found. So then I removed all my music and replaced the files in the
iTunes folder with the Library.xml and iTunes Database files from my old computer, which caused all
the ratings and play counts to display properly, but also gave an (!) file not found error.
Auteur: a href=http://www.freeplayer.org/profile.php?mode=viewprofileu=48147
target=_blankzaquarius/abr / Sujet: Lire et charger des clips avec Vista et Nortonbr /br / span
class="postbody"Bonsoir, br / Je viens d'installer Homeplayer 1.5.6b et apparemment tout marche
sauf les clips que je ne parviens ni à lire ni à charger. br / Le test ftp est vert
sauf pour lecture playlist où il est orange en position multiposte. br / Le contrôle
parental est désactivé.J'ai lu que ce contrôle parental devait etre
désinstallé mais ce n'est pas prévu par Vista et je ne sais pas faire. br /
J'ai lu aussi qu'il fallait ouvrir le port 8081, alors que tous les tutoriaux indiquent qu'il faut
ouvrir les ports 8080 et 1234.Qu'en est-il réellement? Et s'il le faut, faut-il configurer
ce port exactement comme le 8080 ou le 1234 ou autrement? En effet, j'ai vu qu'il y avait une
adresse a href=http://127.0.0.1.8081. target=_blankhttp://127.0.0.1.8081./a Est-ce elle qu'il faut
entrer completement? Je ne vais dans le pare-feu de Norton que sur la pointe des pieds. br /
Question complémentaire et sans doute naïve: d'où et comment se procurer des
clips? Je ne saisis pas bien la difference entre clip et web video. br / Je vous adresse mes
remerciements pour toute l'aide que vous pourrez m'apporter. br / Ah j'oubliais. Je ne saisis pas
bien si je suis dans un forum Freeplayer ou Homeplayer /spanbr /
CULTURE – C'est la crise, il fait moche et Noël approche... Trois
bonnes raisons pour être morose. 20minutes.fr vous propose deux playlist: une pour aller au
bout de sa déprime et l’autre pour s’en sortir. Faites votre choix!
img class=face src=http://planet.ubuntu.com/heads/jono.png alt= pWhen I was a kid, I owned a a
href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sega_GenesisSega Megadrive/a (Sega Genesis for my American
friends). I spent hours on that thing. Sonic The Hedgehog. Streets Of Rage. Desert Strike. Toejam
And Earl. I loved it./p pOne game that was released was a
href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmen_SandiegoWhere In The World Is Carmen Sandiego?/a Back then
it was marketed as emedutainment/em: essentially a sneaky way for parents to infiltrate their
kid#8217;s leisure time with learning under the premise of it being #8220;fun#8221;. Of course,
kids are smarter than parents give them credit for. Kids were wise to this and often avoided games
like that like the plague. The mind of a 12 year-old concluded that enough time is spent in front
of teachers, workbooks and exams without it invading precious Sega time. I was one such kid. I
emhated/em the idea of edutainment. I didnt want to learn with my Megadrive, I wanted to shoot
things with very large, very loud, deeply pixelated guns./p pThings change when you grow up (yes, I
have grown up, smart arses). I now love learning. I love reading. I spend hours drowning in
Wikipedia and exploring our world, our history and our patchwork of cultures. I love learning about
people#8217;s experiences, perspectives and attitudes. I no longer have the 12 year-old mentality
that learning is for school time. Learning really is genuinely emfun/em./p pNaturally, there are
some subjects I like to learn about in more detail. Community (zing!). Computers. Free Software.
Free Culture. Music. There are however some subjects that I develop a curiosity about and feel an
urge to investigate. These subjects are not part of my daily interests and hobbies, but are
temporary avenues of curiosity./p pOne recent example for me is emHistorical Jesus/em. A few days
ago I read everything Wikipedia had to offer about about the subject. This was triggered originally
by a history TV show which in turn inspired me to buy a book about significant events in human
history. In this book I read about Jesus#8217;s Crucifixion and decided to further refresh my
knowledge of the subject by hitting up Wikipedia. In this example we see two distinctive concepts:
emPassive Education/em and emContent Aggregation and Linking/em:/p ul liemPassive Education/em - in
my example of Historical Jesus, my primary focus was gathering the facts and the story. I was happy
for this subject#8217;s learning to be passive. I was happy to merely consume the content and not
interact with it much more than selecting what to learn./li liemContent Aggregation and Linking/em
- learning has links and connections. I first watched a show about history. This intrigued me to
buy the book on historical events. A section in that book inspired me to access specific content on
Wikipedia. The thread that connected these different resources together was the subject of
Historical Jesus and I aggregated the different pieces of knowledge together in my brain. My
current knowledge of Historical Jesus draws from these different resources./li /ul pWhen we learn
about our primary interests, learning is different. Our desire is often for emActive Learning/em.
We not only want to know the subject, but we want to immerse ourselves in the execution and debate
of it too. Much of this is not only collating general knowledge, as I did with Historical Jesus,
but learning about more localised information too. When I learn about music, I want to know about
local bands. I want to know when my favourite bands are coming to my area. I want to hear about
music groups, gigs, and conventions near to me. I want to know about special offers in local music
stores. In a nutshell, I don#8217;t just want to consume, I want to emparticipate/em./p pIn recent
years, computers and the Internet have made both Active and Passive Learning incredibly accessible.
The web has bolstered passive learning resources, and active learning has been thrusted towards us
with online communities, social networking, community groups and discussion boards. No matter what
you want to know about, the Internet can help you in both Passive and Active ways/p pBut lets get
back to emWhere In The World Is Carmen Sandiego?/em. Although I could not stand the concept of
emedutainment/em at the time, what that game emdid/em do that intrigues me is that it delivered
education to people automatically. The education was emassociative/em: topics and concepts were
delivered to you as you played the game./p pI find this really interesting. I find the concept of
linking and associating different types of education and resources fascinating. This also holds
huge opportunity for the desktop./p pA great example is a
href=http://banshee-project.org/Banshee/a. For those who have been living under a rock for the last
three years, Banshee is a media player. I have it open all day, delivering a fresh dose of metal to
me all day long. Banshee not only plays music, but it brings many diverse music related activities
together under the same roof: digital music, Internet radio, CD playing and ripping, meta-data
editing etc. The Banshee bods have done a great job./p pBut the most interesting feature to me is
its a href=http://www.last.fm/Last.fm/a integration. When I listen to a song (such as Hammerfall
right now). The artist and track is posted to a href=http://www.last.fm/user/jonobaconmy Last.fm
account/a. This in itself is not all that exciting. But what Banshee does that emis/em exciting is
look up the artist of my current playing song and use Last.fm to make recommendations. It delivers
those recommendations to me inside the application. That is emwicked cool/em. Sure, I could go and
look up these recommendations on the Last.fm website, but I am unlikely to do that. Banshee does
the work for me. The result is that this simple feature has helped me discover literally hundreds
of new bands. Banshee linked and aggregated the data, and this resulted in better learning for this
important part of my interests./p pYesterday I installed the a href=http://getsongbird.com/new
1.0.0 release of Songbird/a. Songbird is an iTunes like Open Source media player that holds some
stunning promise. They have used Mozilla technologies and GStreamer to build a cross-platform media
player. I know some of the guys who work on Songbird and wanted to give it a try: I had last used
an early snapshot. While I don#8217;t want to turn this into a review (if you folks want a review,
let me know and I will write one up), it ships with some interesting features that build on some of
the concepts seen in Banshee. Oh, and Amarok folks, I know your media player has probably been
doing all of this for years, so hold fire. img
src=http://www.jonobacon.org/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif alt=:) class=wp-smiley / /p
pIn Songbird, for the artist of the song I am currently listening to, Songbird will go and look up
data from a number of resources and bring it together. It grabs a summary blurb, discography,
members, tags and links of the artist from Last.fm, a photo slideshow from Flickr, videos from
YouTube, and News from Google News. Again, I could find this information separately without ever
installing Songbird, but Songbird not only aggregated this content, but it linked it to an
opportunity of curiosity (what I am listening to). I might never typically go and look for more
details about emHammerfall/em, but when I am listening to it, it often triggers my interest.
Songbird satisfies that curiosity before I even know I have it./p pAnother great feature of
Songbird that builds on emactive learning/em is that it uses a
href=http://www.songkick.com/Songkick/a to look up all of the artists in my playlist to see if
there are concerts and shows in my area. With this feature I now have a list of all the up and
coming shows for the artists I like (including all those obscure metal bands). This provides me
with direct access to the local community and opportunities. That is one stunningly helpful and
outrageously cool feature. My media player is stopping being a place to merely consume music, and
instead becoming a place to aggregate everything these is about the music I listen to and the
artists that make it./p pThis is an even more valuable proposition for a desktop. Just think of the
range of types of media we consume and the applications that we use to consume them. Now mix this
with the range of online sources of education and content. It could be really interesting to pull
together these threads into one cohesive experience. I love that Totem in Ubuntu can stream BBC
content to me, but I would love it to show me some information and products about that content too.
I would love Evolution to provide me with an ability to easily look up terms, acronyms and products
in my emails with a single click. When I look at photos in F-Spot I would love to see pricing for
prints and frames to put my pictures in./p pIt would also be fascinating to identify the work-flow
of education in a computer. From sourcing content in Wikipedia, how does it flow through text
editors, communications tools, online services and publishing mediums? How can we identify these
links in the chain and optimise them?/p pBig subject. I know. But huge potential./p
I need to convert my iTunes palylists into m3u so that I can export them onto my Numark D2. I use
to have this program on my Powerbook, now I need it for my Macbook. My PB died.
Guitar Hero : World Tour étant disponible en magasin un peu partout dans le monde,
Activision s'attache désormais à enrichir sa playlist et annonce plusieurs vagues de
contenu à télécharger pour le mois de décembre sur Xbox 360, PS3 et
Wii. A partir de demain, un pack The Smashing Pumpkins fera donc...
I have just bought a 16gb iPhone, but have a >100gb collection of music. How to fill my iPhone
with the minimum of effort has been causing me a bit of a headache. The two ideas that I have come
up with for giving me (different flavours of) a satisfactory fill are:
1: I want to set-up a smart playlist to fill my iPhone with 14gb of ALBUMS at random. I can see how
to do this for single tracks, but is it possible to do it for albums?
2: Even better than my first one, but slightly more complicated; I'd really like to be able to do
this and had thought I had nailed roughly how to do it. I have set up:
"1 x smart playlist - Added In The Last 3 Months
1 x smart playlist - 4gb of Most Often Played
1 x smart playlist - 4gb of Most Recently Played
1 x smart playlist - 4gb of Selected at Random"
Then, what I wanted to do was to set up another playlist to merge the 4 I had created and, as the
others exceeded the capacity of the iPhone, and to add a touch of randomness (I had read elsewhere
that this was possible):
"Match ALL of the following rules:
Playlist = Added In The Last 3 Months +
Playlist = 4gb of Most Often Played +
Playlist = 4gb of Most Recently Played +
Playlist = 4gb of Selected at Random +
Limit to 12GB selected by random"
But this for some reason doesn't generate any results. If I change the first bit to "Match ANY"
then I'm pretty sure that this only uses one of the options, no? Any idea why this isn't
working?
MobileMpd.Net is a small program that can be used to control a MPD (Music Player Daemon) server
using a WiFi enabled Windows Mobile device. The software supports the start, stop, next, prev,
repeat, and random functions, volume control, playlist addition and removal, and a music directory
treeview.
Changes: In this release, a problem was fixed that crashed the program when the stop button was
pressed twice. More...
TITRE ORIGINAL : Cowboy Bebop
(カウボーイビãƒãƒƒãƒ—)
ANNÉE DE PRODUCTION : 1998 STUDIO : [SUNRISE] GENRES : [ACTION] [ESPACE & SCI-FICTION]
AUTEUR : [YATATE HAJIME] VOLUMES, TYPE & DURÉE : 26 EPS 25 mins Après
l'explosion de la Gate sur la Lune, la Terre fut dévastée et les hommes ont
dû fuir sur d'autres planètes telles que Mars. Spike et Jett sont deux chasseurs de
primes fauchés à la recherche de fugitifs afin d'arrondir les fin de mois.
D'aventures en aventures, ils se font de nouveaux compagnons de route tel que Faye Valentine qui
n'a aucun souvenir de son passé, Ed une fille passionnée d'informatique et Eins un
chien qui vaut de l'or. Cependant, malgré son apparence "je m'en foutiste", Spike traine
derrière lui un lourd passé qui le rattrape. EN PLAYLIST===
http://www.dailymotion.com/playlist/xr1j4_BRAKEURRR_cowboy-bebop
TITRE ORIGINAL : Cowboy Bebop
(カウボーイビãƒãƒƒãƒ—)
ANNÉE DE PRODUCTION : 1998 STUDIO : [SUNRISE] GENRES : [ACTION] [ESPACE & SCI-FICTION]
AUTEUR : [YATATE HAJIME] VOLUMES, TYPE & DURÉE : 26 EPS 25 mins Après
l'explosion de la Gate sur la Lune, la Terre fut dévastée et les hommes ont
dû fuir sur d'autres planètes telles que Mars. Spike et Jett sont deux chasseurs de
primes fauchés à la recherche de fugitifs afin d'arrondir les fin de mois.
D'aventures en aventures, ils se font de nouveaux compagnons de route tel que Faye Valentine qui
n'a aucun souvenir de son passé, Ed une fille passionnée d'informatique et Eins un
chien qui vaut de l'or. Cependant, malgré son apparence "je m'en foutiste", Spike traine
derrière lui un lourd passé qui le rattrape. EN PLAYLIST===
http://www.dailymotion.com/playlist/xr1j4_BRAKEURRR_cowboy-bebop
Songbird is like an open source version of iTunes that handles just about
everything that program does, while swapping out the iTunes store interface in favor of the
world's music blogs.
You can stream music from those sources directly within the program (try that with iTunes'
browser), purchasing whatever music you encounter there that strikes your fancy from multiple
sources: Amazon, Amie St., eMusic or iTunes. Or, if a blog or other site offers songs as free
downloads, those are gathered neatly at the bottom of the screen as well (see screenshot to the
right).
At its core, though, Songbird is a solid music playback program -- albeit one that can be
customized with add-ons from Songbird and other developers, a strategy we've seen before from
Songbird founder Matt Lord, formerly of Winamp, which itself had a wide variety of plug-ins.
Lord set his
sights squarely on iTunes when he launched Songbird a couple years back, accusing the program
of being "like Internet Explorer, if Internet Explorer could only browse Microsoft.com."
Songbird, with its emphasis on unfettered access to the web's music sources, proves his point.
Aside from being a solid local player with Web 2.0-friendly music discovery built-in, Songbird
can sync music to your iPod, so long as it's not protected by Apple's Fairplay DRM. Although a
mechanism exists for playing Fairplay-protected music in Songbird, it didn't work for us
(screenshots below).
Beta versions of Songbird
have been kicking around for ages, but today's official 1.0
release offers several improvements over the program, including a switch to the open source
GStreamer multimedia playback system, which the team says
makes this version perform better and with more reliability.
Songbird also added a meshTape feature that harvests images from Flickr, videos from YouTube,
artist bios from last.fm and news from Google, all related to the currently-playing song. Minor
tweaks include revamped keyboard shortcuts, a new Linux installer (the program runs on Windows,
Mac and Linux), the ability to find out where a file actually lives, and the ability to nest one
smart playlist inside another.
Here's what the program is like to install and use:
First you import music. You can add more directories later if you want. Note the option for
importing directly from iTunes:
Then it's time to choose some add-ons from Songbird's recommended list, which includes
synchronization with Apple iPods and Microsoft-based MP3 players, support for Quicktime and
protected WMA files, access to free Shoutcast radio stations, concert listings from Songkick, scrobbling to Last.fm
and mashTape, which lets you augment your local library with custom mixtapes from remote web
sources such as Hype
Machine:
Songbird seems to import music as quickly as processor and RAM allow:
Here's the default playback and library view, featuring automatically downloaded album art and
bio. Songbird has improved album art support in this version, and harvested correct artist bios
from Last.fm. If the album art happens to be wrong, or you want to switch it just for kicks, you
can drag-and-drop new art into the program:
One slight hitch: Windows Vista muted Songbird by default, so we had to unmute it before we could
hear the music. Your results may vary (Vista is finicky):
Clicking on Hype Machine brings me there in Songbird's browser (the program is based on Mozilla).
Note how I can see the blog in the top area, while the bottom area lets me cut to the chase and
stream all the music embedded on the page. The tabs near the top of the window let me switch
between the web view, library and a video demonstrating how to customize Songbird with extensive
options. You can bookmark any music blog for easy access. Smooth:
Pretty much everything worked as advertised with Songbird, except that when we tried to play
protected content that had been purchased from iTunes, it wouldn't play. First, Songbird asked us
to enter our iTunes password into iTunes:
However, iTunes told me my computer was already authorized, but the song still wouldn't play in
Songbird. Oh well -- DRM is a headache, as we all know. It might be too much ask Songbird to be
able to handle protected content, and we can't get too down on this program, because it does so
many other things so well:
In addition to local song playback and music blog streaming, Shoutcast radio stations also worked
perfectly. However, it would be nice if you could purchase songs that stream from Shoutcast the
same way you can those that stream from web-based music sources:
Songbird says 160,000 people use the program every month, and that was before this final release
became available. If you're interested in a solid open source audio player with great web
integration, give it a try.
Songbird 1.0Songbird is a desktop Web player, a digital jukebox and Web browser
mash-up. Like Winamp, it supports extensions and skins feathers. Like Firefox, it is built from
Mozilla, cross-platform and open source.
WHAT'S NEWVersion1.0:
Improved Audio/Playback Functionality
We now use GStreamer as our main media playback system, across all platforms - giving us
higher performance, better reliability, and a platform for much more media-related functionality
in the future.
Songbird supports MP3, FLAC, and Vorbis on all platforms; WMA on Windows; and AAC on Windows
and Mac.
UI Experience Improvements
User experience improvements include these significant visual and functional changes:
Many new keyboard shortcuts added. The list of those supported per platform can be
viewed via "Keyboard Shortcuts" selection in the Help menu.
We’ve refined the column heading property list and made it easier to enable the
properties you care about. Just right click on any column heading in a library or playlist to
give it a try.
"Show File" now available for any selected track via File menu or right click on track
contextual menu. This provides an easy way to find the media file location on your
filesystem.
Smart Playlists can now be used as rules within other Smart Playlists.
Ability to show/hide display panes via individual buttons for service pane, bottom and right
sidebar display panes
Performance Improvements
This release provides improved performance:
Faster Media Importing
Drastically Faster Search
Reduced Startup Times
Snappier Sorting
Efficient Scrolling of Large Libraries
Reduced Memory Usage (When importing and using large libraries)
Stability
Many miscellaneous top crashers were fixed for this release.
Une nouvelle contribution pour le podcast, de la part cette fois du groupe The Shoes. Voici le
39ème numéro du Fubiz Broadcast, toujours disponible en streaming et téléchargement.
pFiled under: a href="http://www.downloadsquad.com/category/audio/" rel="tag"Audio/a, a
href="http://www.downloadsquad.com/category/windows/" rel="tag"Windows/a, a
href="http://www.downloadsquad.com/category/web-services/" rel="tag"Web services/a, a
href="http://www.downloadsquad.com/category/web-2-0/" rel="tag"web 2.0/a/pdiv align="center"a
href="http://www.songbeatplayer.com/en/"img hspace="4" height="350" width="550" vspace="4"
border="0" align="top" alt="Songbeat"
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.downloadsquad.com/media/2008/12/songbeat.jpg" //abr //div a
href="http://www.songbeatplayer.com/en/"Songbeat/a is a desktop application for accessing web-based
music search and discovery services including a href="http://www.seeqpod.com/"Seeqpod/a, a
href="http://www.playlist.com/"Project Playlist/a, a href="http://spool.fm/"SpoolFM/a, and a
href="http://www.last.fm"Last.fm/a without a web browser.br /br /When you fire up the application
you're greeted with a search box. Just type an artist or song title and Songbeat will attempt to
find songs from the music search engines mentioned plus a few more. Or you can click on the Station
tab and enter an artist or song title to launch a Last.fm audio stream. br /br /Songbeat lets you
listen to as many songs as you want for free. But you can also use the program to download music or
record audio from Last.fm. Once you hit 25 downloads, you'll have to pony up some cash to keep
downloading the free music. A full license costs 19,99 Euros or $29.99 US. br /br /There are a few
kinks to be worked out. While I found the search and playback features worked fairly well, once I
tried recording an audio track Songbeat went hog wild and started downloading a bunch of songs I
hadn't asked for. In a matter of minutes all of my 25 free downloads were used up.br /br /[via a
href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/12/01/songbeat-makes-searching-for-music-online-really-simple/"TechCrunch/a]p
style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"a
href="http://www.downloadsquad.com/2008/12/02/find-play-and-download-web-music-with-songbeat/"Find,
play, and download web music with Songbeat/a originally appeared on a
href="http://www.downloadsquad.com"Download Squad/a on Tue, 02 Dec 2008 09:00:00 EST. Please see
our a href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/"terms for use of feeds/a./ph6 style="clear: both;
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Voici une liste non exhaustive pour faire une bonne playlist pour une soirée dansante,
c’est vrai que ce n’est pas facile d’en trouver une bonne sur internet, donc je
vous met la mienne (j’en rajouterai au fur et à mesure (car on peut en mettre
beaucoup) Comme ça vous pourrez piocher dans ce que vous avez. (et on ne commence jamais par
la danse des canards ^^ )