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May 14, 2009 1:22 PM PDT

Hands-on with Imeem Mobile for iPhone

by Donald Bell

Imeem logo

The music discovery Web site imeem.com officially launched its very own iPhone app on Thursday, May 14. Imeem's app is free and bears a resemblance to similar offerings from Pandora, Last.fm, and Slacker, offering the ability to stream, search, and purchase music over Wi-Fi or cellular connections.

But before you write off the Imeem app (download) as some late-arriving Last.fm wannabe, there's one killer feature to be aware of: cloud storage. Apps like Last.fm will go so far as to create personalized radio stations based on a random selection of songs from your collection, but the Imeem app allows you to call up any song or album in your collection and play it without the restrictions associated with most services (i.e. limited skips, and the inability to play songs from the same artist back-to-back).


In order to stream music from your personal collection, you first need to upload your music to imeem.com from your desktop using its free Mac/PC-compatible client. Now before you go thinking that you can upload that 300GB iTunes library to Imeem and stream it anywhere in the world, there's a catch. Imeem won't charge you for the first 100 songs you upload to the site, but anything more than that will require a VIP service ($29.99 per year for up to 1,000 songs, or $99.99 per year for up to 20,000).

Beyond the appeal of streaming your music collection form the cloud, the rest of the Imeem application falls somewhere between the simplicity of the Pandora app, and the more personalized, social approach of Last.fm. The main menu screen offers a selection of top-ranked songs from Imeem.com, personalized listening recommendations, and a rotating selection of curated content (URB magazine's "Next 100," for example).

The playback screen is very similar to Slacker, with like/dislike, play, and skip controls. Option buttons pull up artist bio information and quick links to "Favorite" the artist or song, e-mail it to a friend, or purchase the song from iTunes.

You won't find detailed information on artist tour dates or listening data from your social network, unlike the Last.fm app, nor is there an adjustable audio quality setting like the one found on Pandora. Still, for a free music App, Imeem strikes good balance of features and audio quality, and certainly please existing fans of Imeem.

To take a closer look at the Imeem App for iPhone, click through our slideshow. For another opinion, read Matt Rosof's take on CNET's Digital Noise blog.

(Disclaimer: Last.fm is owned by CNET's parent company, CBS.)

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Donald Bell is CNET Reviews' senior editor for MP3 players and portable audio, and one half of the MP3 Insider blog and weekly podcast. He also likes getting his hands dirty with digital audio tools for musicians and DJs.
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by shetaan819 May 14, 2009 1:48 PM PDT
You neglected to mention whether it streams any better than the SimplifyMedia app which also lets you stream your local collection.....I usually am not able to get quality audio while driving in my car with the SimplifyMedia app....if this is able to stream my personal collection @128K while driving this might be worth paying for.....
Reply to this comment
by audiodonald May 14, 2009 4:54 PM PDT
I'm not sure of the bit rate comparisons, but the major advantage here is that you're streaming your content from Imeem's servers and not from some home computer that you have to keep up and running. Also, it's free.
by B-McGee May 15, 2009 11:24 AM PDT
@ shetaan819: I understand what Imeem does, but why don't you just sync your music to your iPhone? Granted, if you have a ton of songs they won't all fit, but I have about 500 on my 1st gen iPhone for listening in the car. I've tried Pandora while driving and it's ok, but drops out rather frequently. They need to add the functionality to these apps that locks into your iPhone's gps signal and tracks that signal so your have a good continuous connection.

How long will it be before someone hacks into the Imeem music database and steals all those songs and the RIAA starts screaming bloody murder and sues Imeem? I give it a couple months, tops.
by May 16, 2009 7:16 AM PDT
We are planning something like this at www.jamWee.com <-- beta registrations being accepted right now
by Rhunter420 May 14, 2009 2:23 PM PDT
I hate (love) to be a G1 Google phone fanboy, but we have had this application for months. It is absolutely amazing on the G1. I love making my custom radio stations and have actually discovered more than one cool artist that ive never heard of. God bless android OS and imeem.
Reply to this comment
by seven7dust May 16, 2009 2:03 AM PDT
yes I was jealous for awhile ! and still like AnDoid nonetheless
But unfortunately For you the G1 doesn't come with a 3.5 mm headphone jack
which is ridiculous IMO ! thank the MS fanboys at HTC for that !
by Constable Odo May 14, 2009 9:29 PM PDT
Do they have a limit on the size of the song. If they don't, you could just turn ten songs into one long one as an extended mix and get more music up there for free.
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MP3 Insider is a blog and weekly podcast created by CNET's MP3 technology experts, Donald Bell and Jasmine France. Each week, Jasmine and Donald discuss the latest digital music (and video) news, hardware, software, and media services, and address reader calls and e-mail. Send us e-mail at mp3insider@cnet.com or call us at 1-800-720-CNET (2638) and be a part of the show.

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Donald Bell Donald Bell is an electronic musician, a veteran record store employee, and a fearless hardware hacker. He's also CNET's Senior Editor for MP3 and digital audio.
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