If you refer to an internet radio app for broadcasting on a mac at this moment the simplest and easiest is Audio Hijack 3.5 Update Adds Support For Broadcasting Audio On Mac - Internet Radio & Audio Streaming. By • 10:30 am, February 25, 2014 • Internet Radio has some fierce competition. Since the launch of iTunes Radio in 2013, it became much harder to single out one service in particular that reigns supreme. Does the popular US service Pandora still have what it takes to surpass all others? Is Slacker Radio more your personal preference? Either way, following on from where we compared on-demand music services, we have taken it upon ourselves to narrow down the competition, including iTunes Radio, Pandora, Slacker Radio, iHeartRadio, Last.fm and TuneIn Radio; see the table below. We’ve also done some hands-on testing and in-depth research in order to determine just who has the leading edge and what they offer in terms of functionality, catalog size, features and usability. ![]() ![]() Comparing all streaming radio services. THE WINNER – Last.fm Not long after Last.fm restored its personal radio service by operating a limited early access beta of its newly reformed YouTube-operated music player, the music service announced it was joining forces with Spotify in order to build an option to listen to any track on its site through the most popular on-demand music service. Music itself will play through Spotify (which means being a Spotify subscriber is highly beneficial) but listeners will have the ability to browse without leaving the site itself. Last.fm already offers the option to listen to tracks through services such as Rdio, and Deezer, but integrating with Spotify itself opens Last.fm users to a whole catalog of music whilst it focuses on maintaining its recommendations by use of its intelligent Scrobbler. It was only recently that Last.fm was struggling to keep afloat due to the success of other, better supported services such as Pandora and even Spotify itself, with the abandonment of its service altogether in almost every country except the UK, US and Germany, for which it announced its intentions to put its desktop radio service behind a paywall. However, with this most recent collaboration, alongside the YouTube partnership, all Last.fm web users worldwide will not only have access to a vast majority of exclusive and obscure music, but they’ll also have the ability to choose from a vast catalog comprising the two libraries, for both free and premium users. Sadly, it’s worth mentioning that it is not currently supported on mobile or tablet browsers, so those hoping for the ability to listen while on the go may have longer to wait for such an option to become available. Those who also have no access to Spotify in their territory unfortunately also will miss out on this exciting new development. Last.fm is probably most commendable for it’s fantastically engineered Scrobbler system, which tracks what you listen to from external sources (such as iTunes, for example) and tailors great recommendations based on this.
0 Комментарии
Оставить ответ. |
АвторНапишите что-нибудь о себе. Не надо ничего особенного, просто общие данные. Архивы
Март 2019
Категории |