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Easily Create an Internet Radio Show With MySpace Music
Current mood:
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accomplishedEver wanted to have your own radio show where you play your favourite tunes and talk a little about each track? Fancy yourself as the next Casey Kasem, John Peel or even Howard Stern? With the new playlisting functionality on MySpace you can do just that very easily. The key reason is that whilst some other music services allow you to playlist, none are so easy to add your own spoken links to as MySpace. Plus on MySpace you have access to all the major back catalogues as well as indie and unsigned music… if you’re in the US, the UK, Australia or New Zealand.Step-by-Step Instructions1. Log in to MySpace and create a new playlist in ‘My Music‘. Go to music.myspace.com and search for songs, albums or artists. You can drag tracks from search results into your playlists on the right-hand side or go to the artists’ profiles and add songs there.2. If you’re using a Mac fire up GarageBand and select the podcasting preset. If you’re on a PC go and get Audacity for free and set it up to record.3. Once you’ve recorded each link you need to add some compression to make it sounds a little more polished. You then need to seperate and export each link as an mp3 file. Call them link1.mp3, link2.mp3 etc.4. Create a new account on MySpace, taking care to select the ‘band’ type profile on the first page of the signup process. Upload up to 10 of your spoken links. If you need more you’ll have to create further accounts. I have two accounts for this and find it managable. Note: Make sure you tick ‘Allow users to add songs to their profile’ on the page where you upload and manage your songs.5. Sign back into MySpace as yourself and visit the dummy profiles you set up. Add your spoken link tracks one by one to the playlist you created by clicking the ‘+’ next to each track (if there is no ‘+’ see the previous point in red). Then go to ‘My Music‘ and re-order the tracks in your playlist so the links are in the right places in relation to the songs you added earlier.6. Once you’ve edited the order of the playlist so it hangs together as a little radio show, on that same page you can give the playlist a title and description. This helps put it in context and show up in search results.7. Last step is to share with friends. Go to the playlist page and use the ‘Share’ options or just send the link round. Anyone can receive and play the playlist in full, even if they’re not on MySpace.8. Oh, forgot, one more step. Bask in the glory of being the world’s raddest music DJ!!Have fun and share your playlists in the comments below. Mine can be heard here. -
Xbox Press Briefing – Galen Center, Los Angeles – 1st June 2008
Current mood:
We arrived at the Galen Center in Downtown L.A. having heard rumours of a big announcement from Microsoft on their beloved console. The various queues seemed to consist of media, bloggers, fans and some people who didn’t look nearly geeky enough. After joining the shortest queue we took our seats which faced an impressive stage of Xbox branding and mood lighting.
geekyClick here to read the full article at willfrancis.com -
How To Remove Unwanted Features in Safari 4
Current mood:
Apple released a new version of ‘the fastest browser on earth’ the other day. If you haven’t already, you can check out the new features and download it here for Mac and PC.
vexed
In typical Apple fashion the new features are a mixture of pointless aesthetic enhancements and genuine progress in usability. Unfortunately this update contains very few of the latter. The most tedious new feature for me is the placement of the tabs on top of the title bar, so that’s number 1 on the list. Conversely, I find their new url auto-complete really useful. Like Firefox it now searches titles of pages as well as the urls so makes visiting previously visited pages much easier.
Below are some very simple lines of code which, when pasted into Terminal in OSX, will turn off the respective features.
Click here to read the full article at willfrancis.com


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