AoL Radio app delivers radio streams in CD quality
AoL just announced that the AoL Radio App on www.aolradio.com is now able to deliver radio streams in CD quality, with free access to over 400 online radio stations. Stations include 250+ AoL stations and 150 local CBS Radio stations. The app detects a user’s location, automatically displaying the nearest CBS Radio station. So far, six million IPhone or IPod users have downloaded the app.
“In developing the Radio App, we listened to our consumer’s feedback and created an application that would engage them in a way they couldn’t find anywhere else,” said Lisa Namerow, GM, AOL Radio, SHOUTcast and Winamp, in the announcement. “Our partnership with CBS Radio has allowed AOL Radio to continue to grow, and having more than 6 million downloads and counting is further proof that AOL Radio continues to innovate in the Internet radio space. We are thrilled it’s being so well received by consumers and is a testament that the hard work of the AOL Radio and Mobile teams is really paying off.”
AoL Radio was awarded with a 2008 Apple Design Award for the Best Entertainment Application, being named one of the iTunes Best of 2008 Top Free Music Apps, and being listed as one of Gizmodo’s 50 Essential iPhone Apps.
The AoL Radio App is available for free from the App Store on iPhone and iPod touch or at www.itunes.com/appstore/.
AoL Radio is part of the AOL Radio Network, which also includes SHOUTcast and their product extensions within Winamp. Globally, the AoL Radio Network is No. 1 in the Entertainment/Radio category according to comScore Media Metrix Worldwide October 2009 data.
Here’s more on what the new AoL is up to, as recently reported bYAIM Group.
Rumor: newspaper-sized Kindle to launch this week?
Is this the week that Amazon will launch its much anticipated newspaper and magazine sized Kindle? The New York Times is speculating yes. That would push up the date two quarters (from the Q4 09 announcement Amazon itself made). The question, though, is will it be enough to save newspapers hit by the double whammy of the recession and the migration to free content via the Web.
Amazon, News Corp, Hearst, and Plastic Logic, are all working on tabloid-sized e-reading devices with anticipation being high that Amazon’s current Kindle model of charging readers for newspaper subscriptions could be applied to the other devices to help beef up sagging bottom lines. Newspapers selling on the current Kindle, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and USA Today, would be the first to benefit from larger format devices.
The Times charges $13.00 a month for access; The Journal is $9.99. Updates are daily via the Kindle’s cellular connection.
We’ve written about the Kindle several already. In one piece, we suggested that even if The New York Times bought every one of its subscribers a Kindle, by killing its print run, it would come out ahead by some $346 million. We also reported that the Times could be earning as much as $1.6 million from Kindle sales.
There are shortcomings in the current display technology – as good as e-Ink is for reading books, it may prove to be unsuccessful for newspapers. E-Ink currently is black and white only and can’t display videos, one of the mainstays of the online press.
That gives Apple, which is also rumored to be launching a large-screen iPod as early as this summer, a serious leg up with its full color touch screen display. That also could be the dedicated e-reading device’s downfall: the iPod Touch has a full-fledged browser which would continue newspapers’ current conundrum of not being able to charge for content via a proprietary delivery system.
Yes, an LCD screen is harder on the eyes than an e-Ink one, but an all-in-one device that plays iTunes and surfs the Web may be too much to resist.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos remained upbeat about Amazon’s ability to compete with Apple. When asked in February whether he thought the Kindle could help print media, he replied that he thought there were “genuine opportunities.”
CraigSearch makes searching Craigslist from the iPhone easy
Want to search Craigslist from your iPhone or iPod Touch? Now you can. PheedYou, Inc. has launched an iPhone app called CraigSearch. The interface is as straightforward as Craigslist as shown in the picture above. New features to come include the ability to save a search and receive alert notifications.
The program has been popular with 20,000 downloads from the Apple App Store in its first 12 days. The program is free.
Craigslist has in the past been wary of unauthorized services that grab listings from the site. It remains to be seen if CraigSearch will run into trouble.
If you’re looking for the new mobile tool, don’t go to CraigSearch.com – that belongs to an executive search firm specializing in the grocery industry. Instead, visit PheedYou.com.
