TVHarmony.com

February 1, 2008

Listen to your music library anywhere with Jukefly.com

Filed under: Connected Media Player, Radio, Reviews — tvharmony @ 1:56 pm

If you have a large music collection like me, you suddenly realize what a pain it isto cart your library around so you can listen to your tunes at work or on the go.  I have an 60gb iPod full of stuff, but that’s only about 1/6 of my music. Not only does it take me forever to move that many songs on to an iPod, it even takes longer for me to whittle down the songlist to make sure the essential stuff gets on there.  The end result is that my iPod song list never gets changed and it is hopelessly out of date.  It’s also a pretty big pain to find the music I’m looking for using the iPod’s user interface.

A couple of my old work colleagues started their own company several months back and now they are finally coming out of stealth mode with their new free web service, Jukefly.com, which lets you listen to your music from anywhere that you have an internet connection.  At this point, I basically have an iTunes style user interface built into my web browser, and I can play any of my songs at work as if I were on my computer at home.  

 

What’s cool about Jukefly is that instead of uploading your music to a server, you simply download a small app that sits on your home computer and communicates with their service. There is no uploading of music or messy configuration and with your music just stored in single location, all you music and playlists are always in sync with the service. Within minutes of signing up, I had access to all my songs and could play them on any computer that has an internet connection.    It’s really handy, and even at this early stage of development, it seems to work seamlessly.

It also has some cool social features that I think will be cool as the site grows.  While you are playing any tune on your computer, you can comment on the song or artist, or see what others have said about it.  It also lets you see other users who have that song and browse their collections to see what other music they have that may be interesting. You can also make other people your “friends” similiar to other social websites, and by doing so, you can play their “shared” playlists.

I think Jukefly has a lot of potential over other music sites I’ve encountered.  I like the idea of having one repository for all my music, playlists, etc. so things are always in sync, and from what they’ve said, they’ll have an open api available in the near future which I think will potentially make it something like the flickr equivalent for music when it comes to widgets.  Potentially, developers could create widgets for facebook and the like that compare and contrast music libraries, playing patterns, etc.

You can check it out here

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