Quick check. Lots of metal and folk. Some local stuff (Scandinavian). Seems to be little jazz and world (balkan folk, arabic, etc. Had e.g. Natacha Atlas and Susheela Raman.) Problems with Unicode.
Really really good start. Now just needs to add lots more esoteric stuff I can find! (Unicode would be nice.)
The problem with spotify is that its only supported on Windows and Mac, and the only way to run it in Linux is via Wine. This is miles better and it just embeds into the browser which is nice.
http://thefeelgood.com seems to have been around for awhile, and it's full of user-uploaded copyrighted content... so while they'll probably have trouble raising money from VC's, as long as the ad revenue is sustainable, I'd venture to guess "awhile"
In case anyone from Grooveshark is reading this, here are two minor UI suggestions:
- It's rather easy to miss the volume control since it's so far removed from the other play controls. Perhaps it would be an idea to move it over there.
- A button to queue up all the songs in a search result. If it exists already I'm not seeing it.
Also the "delete from queue" button is tough to get to (being on the right of that pop up div), I'd consider adding it either to the middle of that div, or on the main thumbnail in the queue.
Wow, so no one knows about http://deezer.com ? It's been around for years. It's lack of popularity probably stems from the fact that it's French, same as http://jamendo.com (Creative Commons music)
I like the design and ease of use and it is definitely a site I would use.
The only problem for me, and the thing that it lacks that YouTube doesn't, is music that isn't mainstream and hasn't been released by a label. Songs that make it on mixtapes and other singles that artists use to promote themselves and their future albums don't seem to be available from the searches that I've run. But they are available on YouTube.
You may register an account then, and upload what you see missing.
Just like with YouTube. But with an Java app that would upload folders in batches.
I did so back in september. At the time there was even some scheme in which uploader would get money for uploading popular stuff, but I don't remember any details.
This is, by far, the best music site I've been to.
Mostly because of the perfect UI, autoplay and no DRM.
deezer.com, musicme.com pale in comparison
No flaw detected so far, have you found any ?
I'm really impressed by this site. Huge selection of music and a very friendly UI. I like how when you add a song for immediate playback, it prepends it to your queue instead of overwriting your queue.
Facebook Connect / OpenID would be nice. Also, when I signed up with a taken username it gave me an "unexpected error" message, a bit sloppy.
http://www.playlist.com/ which was announced on HN a while back provides this service too. It's worked quite well for me so far and their UI has drastically improved since it launched.
Neat site. I got it to work in IE6 but like an earlier poster think that the volume control should be in a more logical/visible place.
Some of the metadata appears to be messed up, as well. I clicked on what I thought was a Lemonheads album and got Presidents of the United States of America covering "Video Killed The Radio Star" instead.
And the billion-dollar question: How can this possibly be a sustainable business model? Ads for Verizon surely won't cover the development, licensing, and operating expenses for this site, will it?
Actually it uses the flex framework (as you can see by looking at the scrollbars and the tooltips) that then produces an edible binary .swf for the flash player :).
Back to the topic, as a music site developer myself, I can assure you that everything (except streaming[1]) you see on grooveshark can be implemented using XHTML, a JS framework (I love jQuery über alles) and an HTTP backend. Wheter or not do it depends mainly from the target of your audience and the browsers they use, because to achieve 100% browser compatibility, especially when dealing with older IE versions, imposes a bit of headbanging over their quirks and issues. Another point is performance: on older machines, animating big elements on the page (like grooveshark does) causes flicker and a clumsy experience for the user. The last point is maintainability and integration: after all, flash software is another piece of the stack you have to coordinate, implement, integrate and deploy.
So, it's a bit controversial which path to choose; on our project we're following a mix of the two, by reducing the flash implementation to the bare minimum to accomplish streaming, upload (ajax upload via iframe is a bit of a mess) and a set of JS interfaces to implement the rest of the interface via XHTML. Similar to http://playlist.com 's approach.
The last consideration that comes to my mind is purely ethical/political: I prefer to use open standards and contribute back to open projects via source code, and not be forced to use closed technologies and tools and contribute back via cash, having to read clumsy documentation, little opportunity to improve anything, and the list could go on and on.. :).
Surprised to find some nice international selections on there; usually have a hard time locating some non-Western music so it's refreshing to find some good World genres out there especially in such high quality and with such a nice, clean interface.
May I ask when you run flash blocker what benefits it provides you? Are you able to enjoy Youtube, Hulu and other flash video sites without configuring the plug-in?
1) It protects me from any security, privacy, and correctness flaws that might exist in the Flash implementation on my computer.
2) It makes my computer snappier by not letting poorly written Flash ads eat my CPU, RAM, and battery.
3) It keeps the blinky flashy ads to a minimum while I read content.
It is one click on the content area to load and run a flash, so if I go to a web site and really want to see the flash content that isn't too high a price to pay. (modifier click to white list).
Alternatively, perhaps your bandwidth is too low. :) If "takes too long" is your actual objection, then a music streaming site is probably not something your connection could handle easily anyway.
Well, slowness is part of my issue. But both flash and slowness are fundamental usability issues. Anyone ought to be able to visit a landing page and quickly see some indication of what the site is about - and at least be informed in the case that disabling of flash or of javascript is preventing proper functioning.
I agree that that would be ideal, but I don't know whether it's worth doing the extra work for people who have flash disabled but who could possibly be convinced to turn it on. I think that they might assume that all seven of you together aren't worth the additional advertising revenue. :) I haven't even visited the site yet, so I dunno if they actually have ads.
For me, this is groundbreaking. It's like last.fm done right. I feel the same elation as when I first used Napster.