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Spotify Expands Free Streaming to All Devices

Spotify Expands Free Streaming to All Devices | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it
Spotify announced on Wednesday that it is expanding its free streaming option to all devices.

 

Spotify Free for tablets will also work in conjunction with Spotify Connect, the company's Chromecast-like integration for home stereo systems. Previously, non-paying Spotify users could only listen to Spotify Radio selections on mobile. Like Pandora, iTunes Radio andiHeartRadio, Spotify Radio allows users to listen to "stations" comprised of artists and genres, but not specific music tracks.

 

The new option will allow users to listen to tracks they select, just as they can on the desktop.

 

 

In addition to Spotify Free for tablets, the company is also rolling out a free streaming option for all devices, including mobile phones. This option, dubbed "Spotify Shuffle," the option will allow users to "shuffle play" all playlists in their libraries and shuffle listen to any artist they choose.

 


Via Gust MEES
Gust MEES's curator insight, December 11, 2013 11:08 AM

 

Listen also to my MIX Playlist:

 

https://play.spotify.com/user/webizard/playlist/67gBvDrCayFU4QRcKKOcEP

 

Lori Wilk's curator insight, December 11, 2013 11:14 AM

News from Spotify

Mateo Barragán's curator insight, February 16, 2014 10:17 PM

Spotify is quickly growing in the market share. By expanding it's services into new devices  for free, will definitely increase its popularity. 

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A Brief History of Computer Programming Languages [#Infographic]

A Brief History of Computer Programming Languages [#Infographic] | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it

Code is the foundation of computing. Whether you are using a social media app on your smartphone or working with a cloud server’s API, the task relies heavily on a programming language.

 

What you may not know about computer programming is that most historians recognize Ada Lovelace as the world’s first programmer. She wrote an algorithm for Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine. Although this computer was never completed,Lovelace noted that “Mr. Babbage believes he can, by his engine, form the product of two numbers, each containing twenty figures, in three minutes.” While that is relatively slow even by punch-card standards, Babbage and Lovelace were about 60 years ahead of their time. Digital, programmable computers didn’t emerge again until the 1940s.

 

The Guardian provided this brief overview of Lovelace’s work in December 2012, the 197th anniversary of her birth:

 

Often described as the world's first computer programmer, Lovelace showed a keen interest in mathematical studies from an early age and was taught by her mother, Annabella, who was also a gifted mathematician.

Her notes include what is recognised as the first algorithm intended to be processed by a machine, while she also speculated on its future ability to create graphics and complex music.

 

Lovelace’s contributions to computing marked the beginning of a rich history in programming. In 1970, Niklaus Wirth created the language known as Pascal, which is still used to make Skype desktop applications; in 1983, Bjarne Stroustrup created the object-oriented language C++, which today powers Google’s Chrome web browser, among others; and in 1991, Guido Van Rossum contributed the incredibly useful and powerful Python language, named for the British comedy group Monty Python. As a result, Google, Yahoo and Spotify are reaping the benefits.

The infographic below outlines the history of programming languages in greater detail.

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