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Facebook music ilike
Facebook music ilike









facebook music ilike
  1. FACEBOOK MUSIC ILIKE FREE
  2. FACEBOOK MUSIC ILIKE WINDOWS

If it's available on the video site, you'll be able to view the music video and sing along.

FACEBOOK MUSIC ILIKE FREE

Some of those apps do it quite well.įree Music Player When you search for a song in Free Music Player, it tries to find the track on YouTube. Quite the contrary, there are a variety of apps that provide the same basic service as Music. It practically owns the space on the popular social network.īut it's not the only music app on Facebook. Here is what her page, built from the same widgets, looks like on (formerly known as iLike) is a music listening service that allows you to add tracks to your Facebook profile, share playlists with friends, and play games. Her record label could create a Facebook page for her at, which it hasn’t. That is why YouTube is so successful, because it is pasted all over the Internet.” Rather than try to bottle up everything in one place, push it out to where people are. Explains Partovi: “A syndicated effort is always stronger. That is the power of being a widget company-you can insert yourself anywhere. They will be able to manage all the messages coming from those artist pages from the dashboard as well. Instead of having to manage their profiles in all of these places, artists will be able to upload all of their songs, concert dates, and blog posts once to the Universal Artist Dashboard and then spread it all over the Web. And since iLike has also joined Google’s OpenSocial effort, these artist pages will soon be exportable to other social networks as well, such as MySpace, Bebo, Ning, Hi5, Orkut, and in iGoogle Web widgets.

FACEBOOK MUSIC ILIKE WINDOWS

From one place, a music artist or record label can set up an artist page on Facebook and, as well as information that pops up in iLike plug-ins for iTunes and and Windows Media Player. To make it easy for them to do that, iLike is also introducing today the Universal Artist Dashboard. Partovi wants iLike to become a one-stop-shop for artists to manage their own profiles and communicate with their fans, whether on Facebook or elsewhere.

facebook music ilike

And, of course, who did we run into in the lobby downstairs, but Ron Conway. (Partovi went to high school with Herb Allen III, who lets him use the office for meetings when he is in New York. On Monday, I met with iLike CEO Ali Partovi at the swank Fifth Avenue offices of the investment bank Allen & Co. But it doesn’t end within the confines of Facebook. But where does that leave Facebook in the fight for the hearts and marketing dollars of the struggling music industry? Already, I like iLike’s chances in this battle. He responded, “What is the effect on app developers if we are making it possible for bands to have music pages? It increases distribution because your app can be on that page.”įair enough. I asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg yesterday about the potential here for Facebook to be competing with its own app developers.

facebook music ilike

And every link in each of those widgets takes you back to the Facebook application pages that iLike controls. Any widget on the iLike artist page-popular songs, upcoming concerts, the iCast blog, even the iLike button-can be plopped into a Facebook artist page (also known as a canvas page). Well, it turns out that iLike does not care which page artists choose to call their home. So if you are a music artist, you now have to make a decision: Do you go with the iLike page as your main Facebook page (and take advantage of the nearly 10 million members who use the iLike app), or do you go with your own advertiser page on Facebook? Case in point: the new Facebook page for 50 Cent (shown left) had only three fans when it first went up just after midnight, compared to 1.2 million fans on his iLike page on Facebook. Right out of the gate, iLike will generate 160,000 pre-populated artists pages that the musicians or the labels themselves can modify, or leave as is. And starting today, iLike will create duplicate versions of these marketing pages for them that work with Facebook’s new brand destination pages. Already, any band or musician can create an iLike artist page on Facebook that includes their most popular songs (filtered by what your friends like), upcoming concert dates (click on a date and see if any of your friends are going), an artist blog called iCast, related artists, and a Fan Wall where Facebook members can leave notes. Yet, when it comes to music artists, one of Facebook’s most popular application developers, iLike, is doing the exact same thing. Instead, Facebook is treating music artists just like any other brands, which can also set up their own Facebook pages, collect fans, and market to them directly. Alas, there will be no standalone Facebook Music service. With the launch of Facebook Ads, it is welcoming bands and musicians to set up their own public Facebook pages where members can sign up as fans. Facebook just got a whole lot friendlier for music artists.











Facebook music ilike