playlist - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/playlist en Copyright 2012 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Wed, 15 Feb 2012 07:00:00 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.35-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Live Streaming Coming to iPhone? Apple Submits New Spec to IETF It looks like live streaming could be coming to a future generation of the iPhone and/or iPod devices. We've just come across this IETF submission containing Apple's spec for HTTP Live Streaming which describes a protocol for transmitting unbounded streams of multimedia over HTTP. According to the document, the protocol supports encryption of the media and the provision of alternate versions of the stream. The media data can also be transmitted after it's created, allowing it to be received in near real-time.

Could this mean live streaming is coming to our iPhones?

]]> From our understanding of the documentation, this live streaming functionality will work using Playlist files located on the internet with a unique URI (uniform resource locator.) The Playlist itself will consist of a list of URIs each of which will point to a media file which is a segment of a single media stream.

The Playlists will be Extended M3U Playlist files, a standard playlist file format originally implemented by the Winamp player. These M3U files are plain text documents that contain the location of the media files that should be played. Originally, M3U files only supported audio playlists, but over the years they came to support video as well.

In the new specification, the M3U Playlist will extend the standard file format by defining additional tags called EXTM3U and EXTINF. The first of those two simply designates this playlist file as an extended M3U file and the second, EXTINF, is the record marker that describes the media file identified by the URI that follows it in the following format:

   #EXTINF:<duration>,<title>

The document then goes on to describe how this new specification should operate in more detail - you can read it in its entirety here.

The big question is, what does this really mean? Is a future version of iTunes going to support streaming music and video from our PCs to our iPhones and iPods, or will we be streaming directly from an Apple server instead? Either way, having that option could free up our disk space considerably on our devices - perhaps so there's more room for apps?

Perhaps it's in preparation for the upcoming camcorder functionality rumored to be coming in the next gen iPhone. Once people start saving video files to their hard drives, those disks could fill up fast. Why not make some room by letting us stream our media instead?

Then again, maybe Apple just felt it was time to take advantage of cloud computing and stop limiting how much we carry with us based on iPhone/iPod disk size and the size of our PC hard drives. If so, that would be a fantastic feature. This author knows from personal experience that, in our household, we recently purchased all five seasons of a particular hour-long TV show and lost 30 some GBs on our PC's hard drive in the process. Being able to stream instead of download, in this case, would have been a huge benefit.

A final theory is that Apple is simply getting the jump on Microsoft, who proposed a similar adaptive video stream a year ago called Smooth Streaming but didn't submit it to IETF to make it an RFC.

We don't know how live streaming is going to be put into use right now - we can only theorize. All we know is that it's been developed so we're hoping we'll find out sooner or later. Take a gander at the spec yourself and share your theories with us in the comments section below.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/apple_submits_new_spec_for_live_streaming_to_ietf.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/apple_submits_new_spec_for_live_streaming_to_ietf.php Apple Mon, 04 May 2009 06:30:37 -0800 Sarah Perez
MixTape.me is a Brilliant Musical Mashup A few days ago, over at Gina Trapani's new Smarterware blog, I read about another new web-based music player and playlist creator, MixTape.me. I've reviewed several takes on the same basic concept recently, so I didn't immediately write this one up. But I went ahead and gave it a spin, listening to a few of the popular playlists and searching for my favorite artists on the service. And, as it turns out, this application hits all the right notes in terms of interface design, plus its mere existence is a testament to the power of mashups.

]]> On the surface, you wouldn't be able to tell that this web application is in fact a mashup. But after using the site for a while, you will start to notice that it grabs data from a lot of different places. Artist bios from last.fm. Lyrics from LyricWiki.org. Music videos from YouTube.  And the music... where does the music come from? Good question. The answer is, a lot of places: cloud storage, web sites, SeeqPod. In fact, the site is careful to keep that information behind the scenes. What you are left with is a clean, very desktop music player-like experience.

That experience, we can assure you, is quite addictive. Even if you aren't looking for certain tracks or artists, there are plenty of playlists on the homepage to listen to. And playlists are what this site does perfectly. Easy to create, easy to populate, easy to manage, and easy to share. Drag-and-drop is all that is needed for most playlist actions. Each playlist gets its own URL, so your friends can listen to it without even having to create an account. And each one comes with an embed link as well, so you can show off all your hard work on your own web page. Also, each playlist shows who created it; you can use that link to follow that user to see new playlists they might generate in the future.

When you finally start to settle down after running around like a kid in a candy store, you will find each track has a purchase link that takes you to an Amazon music search page. And that link? You got it - it has an Amazon affiliate ID on it. As far as we can tell, that's the only method MixTape.me is using to generate a little scratch.

But you know what? We don't mind that so much, because we have found some really great music that we haven't found any other way.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/mixtapeme_is_a_brilliant_musical_mashup.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/mixtapeme_is_a_brilliant_musical_mashup.php Product Reviews Mon, 23 Mar 2009 22:49:29 -0800 Phil Glockner