h a l f b a k e r ySuperficial Intelligence
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
You know the cliched event: "I love this song! Turn it up!"?
This device, built into the system, can be programmed to detect your favorite songs off the radio, or on CD, cassette, etc. and automatically turn up the volume.
It can also be used to lower volume, skip tracks or change stations
when a song you don't like starts playing.
XMLTV
http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/XMLTV Sounds like it's time for XMLRadio... [egnor, Jul 08 2000, last modified Oct 04 2004]
[link]
|
|
Many CD players can be programmed to
skip songs, although I've never grown familiar
enough with this feature to actually use it.
(A single button with a little skull-and-crossbones
symbol would work for me.) |
|
|
I'd like a radio that monitors all stations and
switches (or suggests switching) to one that
plays a song I long to hear. |
|
|
Does anyone remember eachmovie.com (now dead). You rated about 20 films to start and all films you saw after that. Based on your ratings and the ratings of others, it would give you its best guess of what you would think of a film. |
|
|
This could work with a radio where, when a song is playing, you push a rating button, the rating is stored against your profile and used as part of the algorithm of who to pay the song to (if at all). |
|
|
st3f,
uncle nutsy turned me on to www.moviecritic.com which appears to do what eachmovie.com sounds like it did. |
|
|
A good idea. Though you could
extend it to an algorithm which
detects entire genres, styles or
producers' sounds. You could then
have something which automatically
blocks out anything that's, say,
Country and Western, or boy-band
R&B. |
|
|
If one put that into a set of
noise-cancelling headphones, it
would make a much-needed
neutraliser for piped music, such
as the sort heard in supermarkets
and railway stations. |
|
|
glad i found this, i was about to post essentially the same idea (due to Don Henley on the radio). my suggestion was going to be that the radio store the introductions of crappy songs in mp3 format for comparison to the radio songs. this could also be used to turn up good songs (i didn't think of that bit). i would love this as my local radio station plays too much Peter Gabriel as well as the nasty mr Henley. + |
|
|
www.pandora.com does that for music. |
|
| |