I just posted a comparison of iTunes versus Amazon. Guess who wins? Hint: It's not Apple.
Amazon offers all the same benefits, only better, faster, and cheaper, in most cases.
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Apple iTunes Versus Amazon Music
Posted by billspaced | 3:18 PM | Amazon, Apple, digital music, iPod, iTunes, mp3 | 0 comments »Is Songbird an iTunes Killer? The Verdict
Posted by billspaced | 4:44 PM | Burn CD, CD Rip, iTunes, Media Monkey, Songbird | 0 comments »In a word, no, Songbird is not an iTunes killer.
I am no iTunes hater, as some have suggested (or is it Apple that I hate? I can't tell.) In fact, I still use iTunes for a few things (once in a while it's just easier to burn a CD of iTunes-purchases songs. It's way quicker, too, if you bought an entire collection on iTunes).
However, I always look for "a better way." I like finding "better mousetraps."
You'll no doubt know that I'm a huge fan of Media Monkey. I love it. But in the interest of trying something new for the sake of finding something better, I thought I'd give Songbird a try.
And I like it. It's got some really cool add-ons, just like its browser-cousin, Firefox (which I love, too). Some of the neatest add-ons are LyricMaster and MediaFlow. There's SongTapper (rap the tune with your fingers like a drum and this add-on finds the tune! How cool is that?), Flickr Extension, and SHOUTcast Radio.
The music library is set up a lot like iTunes.
Songbird didn't crash my computer.
But the limited features crashed my enthusiasm. As previously mentioned in Is Songbird an iTunes Killer?, Songbird does not rip CDs, nor does it offer burn capabilities. It also cannot convert mp4 (protected) to DRM-free (I know, technically illegal but so much bullshit nobody will entertain the notion of prosecution. Plus, the economy is in such a crapper that nobody has any money and hence no reason to sue. Deep pockets are gone).
So my verdict is that while Songbird is cool, it really doesn't differentiate itself from iTunes enough to warrant further consideration until those "must-have" features are built-in. Of course, Songbird's project leaders claim that some of the missing functionality is on the "roadmap," so there's at least some hope.
It's a nice attempt. It's free, but so is iTunes. The add-ons make it compelling, but not compelling enough for me to switch from Media Monkey.
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Is Songbird an iTunes Killer?
Posted by billspaced | 10:24 AM | CDEx, doubletwist, Floola, iPod, iTunes, Mozilla, Songbird, StumbleUpon | 1 comments »I wrote a while back about How I Have Achieved iPod Nirvana, which got a lot of Stumbles and a few comments (I wish more of you would comment!); in that post, I talked about using Media Monkey to manage my music library and iPods, and installing Floola and CDEx on my iPods to enable two-way synchronization and ripping a CD without using (or even having) iTunes.
Now, it seems as though Songbird has reached a level of maturity that requires that I try it (again -- hated it the first time around). If it does the things it promises, then I think we've got a serious contender on our hands, all for the low, LOW, LOW price of FREE! Songbird is free, open-source, from the Mozilla folks and it promises to be a great replacement for iTunes, offering much of the same capability, with some of its own new functionality, both native to the app and with the use of add-ons.
Check back here in a few days for a first-impression review. Time permitting, I'll get to play with Songbird for a few days and tell you what I think. It looks like you'll need to keep doubletwist, Floola and CDEx on your iPod, if you want that functionality.
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I have done it. I have dropped iTunes for all but purchased downloads. My iPod and associated music has been liberated.
I feel fresh.
Here are the steps I took to achieve iPod nirvana:
- In iTunes, check in the Preferences, manually manage music. This also causes you to enable your iPod as a disk drive.
- Download double twist, Media Monkey, Floola, and CDEx. Once downloaded,
- Install Media Monkey and double twist.
- Convert all AAC-encoded music to mp3 using double twist
- Import all music into Media Monkey
- Move the Floola and CDEx executables to your iPod in a folder called Apps.
Now, when you want to move tunes from your iPod to any other computer, open Floola on your iPod. You can drag and drop any music anywhere.
Got a CD you want to rip but aren't at your iTunes computer? Open CDEx, rip the CD, use Floola to move it to your iPod.
The only reason to use iTunes now is to purchase music through Apple. Amazon also offers an excellent variety of music, often at slightly lower prices than iTunes and they're in mp3 format (no DRM! yay!).
This works for most songs in iTunes, except for those that don't have artwork...works great for those tunes that have wrong artwork.