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ExtensionFM - Turn the web into your music library
Dan Kantor, the brains behind Streampad, has quietly launched a new web music player called ExtensionFM. Implemented as a Chrome extension, ExtensionFM automatically captures tunes from websites you visit and allows you to browse, queue and play them in a few simple ways.  After playing with it for a couple weeks, ExtFM has become a complement to sites with similar discovery features (HypeM, We Are Hunted) and has filled some of my least favorite gaps in others (play-all from the Tumblr dashboard).
Here’s how it works.  When you land on a site with mp3s, ExtensionFM captures them and shows you that new tunes are available. In the screenshot below, the ExtFM button shows that it’s grabbed 75 new tunes from Stereogum.

Click the button to see and play the tunes on the current page. Playing is continuous, so when the first tune completes, it automatically begins playing the next.

ExtensionFM captures tracks as you browse.  To view all your discovered tracks, pop open the All Songs player, displayed in the top image. The familiar panel view — a la iTunes — displays sites, artists and albums with links to the original posts and more info.  The single column view below is a simple player.

The tracks in your player are persistent across sessions, so as I browse my favorite music sites day after day, I’m curating a library of music I can browse and play on demand.
There’s a nice intro screencast of ExtensionFM on the landing page: http://www.extension.fm/ Check it out for more detail and to request a pre-release access code.

ExtensionFM - Turn the web into your music library

Dan Kantor, the brains behind Streampad, has quietly launched a new web music player called ExtensionFM. Implemented as a Chrome extension, ExtensionFM automatically captures tunes from websites you visit and allows you to browse, queue and play them in a few simple ways.  After playing with it for a couple weeks, ExtFM has become a complement to sites with similar discovery features (HypeM, We Are Hunted) and has filled some of my least favorite gaps in others (play-all from the Tumblr dashboard).

Here’s how it works.  When you land on a site with mp3s, ExtensionFM captures them and shows you that new tunes are available. In the screenshot below, the ExtFM button shows that it’s grabbed 75 new tunes from Stereogum.

Click the button to see and play the tunes on the current page. Playing is continuous, so when the first tune completes, it automatically begins playing the next.

ExtensionFM captures tracks as you browse.  To view all your discovered tracks, pop open the All Songs player, displayed in the top image. The familiar panel view — a la iTunes — displays sites, artists and albums with links to the original posts and more info.  The single column view below is a simple player.

The tracks in your player are persistent across sessions, so as I browse my favorite music sites day after day, I’m curating a library of music I can browse and play on demand.

There’s a nice intro screencast of ExtensionFM on the landing page: http://www.extension.fm/ Check it out for more detail and to request a pre-release access code.

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  1. micahtcollins reblogged this from whitneymcn
  2. theloveyoumake reblogged this from ninbrin and added:
    oh my, how interesting.
  3. ninbrin reblogged this from matthewknell
  4. lacapsula reblogged this from dankantor
  5. earsofthebeholder said: so many sleepless nights dreaming of this capability… now all i need is for it to pull tracks from my chaotic inbox!
  6. neatso reblogged this from matthewknell and added:
    Looks / sounds pretty great.
  7. dankantor reblogged this from chewablevitamins and added:
    much easier :) Thanks Jen! jenrobinson:
  8. classicmcconnell reblogged this from whitneymcn and added:
    Trying this when I get home
  9. matthewknell reblogged this from chewablevitamins and added:
    File under awesome
  10. whitneymcn reblogged this from chewablevitamins and added:
    Jen’s overview is that you need to try it.
  11. chewablevitamins posted this