News
Open-source MP3 software threatens iTunes
Start-up company Pioneers of the Inevitable released an early test version of their open-source Songbird music software on Wednesday, with which they ultimately hope to undermine the dominance of Apple's iTunes.
The small company is hoping to create "the Firefox of MP3", a reference to the open-source Web browser that has eaten into Microsoft's Internet Explorer market share.
Songbird is indeed built on some of the same open-source technologies as the Firefox Web browser, and hopes to tap into the community of independent developers that has helped add features to Firefox.
The company, which is led by digital music veteran Rob Lord, has been cautioning the open-source community not to expect a full-featured music player from this first release, which they are calling only a "proof of concept" for now.
The developers wanted to prove they could build a functioning music player on the Mozilla Foundation's open-source technology platform, and wanted to have something that other programmers could look at and build on, they said.
Indeed, the first version has a tendency to crash occasionally, and lacks some of the more advanced features of an iTunes or Windows Media player. But it does show off the company's vision of a music player that is focused on the Internet, rather than on a computer's hard drive.
Lord has said that his vision for Songbird is software that makes little distinction between songs that happen to be located on a local drive, and music that is online. As an early example, the software contains a Web browser that lets listeners browse sites such as Pitchfork Media, and which automatically creates a playlist out of the MP3 songs that are stored on that Web site.
The player could also be used to tap into online music services such as RealNetworks Rhapsody or Yahoo's music subscription service, Lord has said. Before starting the Pioneers of the Inevitable, Lord was one of the product managers for the launch of Yahoo's service.
More about Software
- Obama in sex video shocker? Oh wait, it's just spam September 11, 2008
- No black holes from Large Hadron Collider, say scientists September 10, 2008
- Michael Moore to premiere film online September 05, 2008
- Images: Touring Google's Chrome browser September 05, 2008
- Extensions promised for Chrome September 04, 2008

- Canon EOS 550D: Increment schmincrement
- LG Mini GD880: Miniature by name, minuscule by nature
- BenQ W600: Low-cost gaming and entertainment projector
- Canon PowerShot SX210 IS, Digital IXUS 210, 130, 105: Make life worth living again
- Toyota Prius recalled: Brake issue hits UK
- Google to add status updates to Gmail, scare bejeezus out of Facebook

- Google to add status updates to Gmail, scare bejeezus out of Facebook
- Facebook plans Gmail killer, revamps useless photo uploader
- Google Ocean Showcase: Dive the deep at your desk
- Vodafone UK's Twitter account hijacked by foul-mouthed employee
- Editors' Choice 2010
- Twitter may be in decline: Study suggests just a fad after all
- Google Chrome 4 adds add-ons, HTML5
- Jobs: Google's 'Don't be evil' is a 'load of crap', Adobe is 'lazy'
- Google withdrawing support for IE6
- Google Social Search: Web search that asks your mates
- 'Exceptional' demand for Windows 7 pumps Microsoft profits
- Trends in trends: Twitter trending topics go local, Google Trends gets Hot Topics
- MusicDNA puts the Web in your music
- Palm Pre homebrew app store: WebOS beta apps are pre-Pre
- Google founders to sell $5.5bn worth of shares



