The AOL Radio iPhone application will be available as a free download with the launch of Apple's App Store.
The AOL developed application was highlighted during the "iPhone Developer Showcase" portion of the annual awards ceremony last night at Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference in San Francisco and won the award for "Best Entertainment Application".īuilt using Apples Beta iPhone Software Development Kit (SDK), the new application gives users immediate, free access to over 350 online radio stations, including 150 local CBS RADIO stations and custom channels plus more than 200 AOL Radio channels. Getting down to one would be the ultimate!ĪOL announced that the company was recognized with an Apple Design Award for the development of AOL Radio for iPhone. By "late June" (fingers crossed) I will be down to two devices. I currently carry three devices in my car - blackberry, ipod, and Inno. Currently you can sync an Inno with Napster (Windows only) and you are given an option to buy (download) the MP3 of your recorded songs - THAT would be a great feature for itunes. Satellite's compression doesn't have the quality of MP3 or AAC, but hey, it's a free song. Recorded content can't be transfered to a computer, so you have to listen to it on the device. And of course you can organize and build playlists with your recorded songs. Thanks to it's buffer, the Inno can record entire songs to it's memory even if you press "record" after a song has started playing. That being said, combining the functionality of my XM Inno into an iphone would be an awesome feature. The main reason being that Apple doesn't need XM (or Sirius) - they are doing just fine in the music business on their own. However, the above works fine in 48kHz in my tests.I have thought this would be a great combo for years, but I just don't see it happening.
The MusicIO website says that your mac has to run at 44.1kHz. Make sure the plugin is on your master channel.ĥ - Turn down the volume of your main speakers and turn up the volume on your iPad/iPhone
Needs a USB connection, so not wirelessġ - Buy and install the Music IO app on your mobile deviceĢ - Download and install the OSX server and AU/VST plugins (I think there is a beta for windows)ģ - Set up an fx loop in Music IO (there is a video somewhere on their site on how to do this, but I can't seem to find it now).
I couldn't find any solution on the net, but then I accidentally figured it out.īy using MusicIO in a way that is not really intended I managed to play music from my mac on my iPhone and iPad. In other words: I was looking for a solution that could send audio directly from my DAW (without have to change the sound card my DAW uses) to my iPhone. To listen on my laptop I use AUNetSend and AUNetReceive and I was looking for a similar solution for my mobile devices. I've been searching for a elegant solution to send music from my computer to my phone and ipad to check mixes for quite some time now. I am writing this post because I couldn't find anything (clear) about this on the net and I am hoping that this will help other people who are searching for this.