Monthly Archive for July, 2009

Pandora Alternatives

When Pandora announced a 40 hour cap on free listening, I decided to investigate some alternatives to Pandora. (I probably had been listening to 40 hours of music on Pandora in a week!) I quickly found Slacker. Slacker provides web-based music streaming in a similar manner to Pandora. I have found that they provide a tighter selection of music and that their music discovery has not been quite as good. This is probably because it is not based on the Music Genome Project. However, much like Pandora, after listening for a while, the selection has improved. Slacker’s commercials are a bit more radio-like and therefore more intrusive; however, they don’t have a cap so it’s hard to complain. Since I don’t always have my music on the machine I am on, I have also been taking advantage of my installation of Subsonic to listen to music.

Both Pandora and Slacker have mobile clients available for the BlackBerry. I have both installed, and both work well on 3G and WiFi. I don’t use the mobile clients very often, but when I want some music, and I am not at my computer, it’s convenient to have the option to play music right from my BlackBerry. Subsonic is supposed to stream to mobile devices, but I have yet to get that working.

Another benefit is that the LastFM Firefox Extension supports both Pandora and Slacker so I can continue “scrobbling” my tracks to Last.fm. Subsonic has built in support for Last.fm “scrobbling.”

Edit: Recently, I have started listening to my “library” on Last.fm. This feature plays songs that I have already listened to. I am not sure how Last.fm select songs, but I would assume it is based on what I have listened to most often. Since I have “scrobbled” a large number of songs, Last.fm does a decent job of playing songs for me. It’s still not as good as Pandora, and I imagine it would do much worse on smaller sets of “scrobbled” songs.

BlackBerry Bold Tethering on Windows XP

I adapted and simplified the directions for tethering available throughout this forum thread at CrackBerry.com. My directions are specific to AT&T in the United States.

Configuration:

Install the latest version of Blackberry Desktop.
Open the “Phone and Modem Options” control panel.
Click the “Modems” tab.
Select “Standard Modem” and click on “Properties”.
Click the “Advanced” tab.
In the “Extra initialization commands:” field, enter the following:

AT+cgdcont=1,"IP","wap.cingular"

Click “OK” twice.

Open “Network Connections”.
Open the “New Connection Wizard”.
Click “Next”.
Select the “Connect to the Internet” option, and click “Next”.
Select “Connect using a dial-up modem” and click “Next”.
In the “ISP Name” field, type “BlackBerry”, and click “Next”.
In the “Phone number field:”, type “*99#”, and click “Next”.
Select “Anyone’s use”, and click “Next”.
Leave the user name and password fields blank; uncheck “Make this the default Internet connection”, and click “Next”
Click “Finish”.
Click “Cancel”.

To connect:

Connect the BlackBerry Bold to the computer using a USB cable.
Open the BlackBerry Desktop Manager.
Open “Network Connections”.
Open the “BlackBerry” network connection.
Click “Dial”.

You should now be connected. When you are done, go ahead and disconnect.

BlackBerry Bold Tethering on Mac OS X

This forum post at BlackBerryForums.com has all of the details necessary to set up tethering for a BlackBerry Bold on Mac OS X.

I set up tethering quite a while ago. I then updated my Bold firmware not realizing that it would break tethering. After some digging, I found that the solution is to install the BlackBerry Bold PPPD Replacement. This solution is mentioned on the last page of the same BlackBerryForums.com post and also on this CrackBerry.com forum post.

Now tethering works correctly again, and I still have the benefits of the upgraded firmware on my Bold.

Update: BlackBerryForums.com has removed the old post for tethering on Mac OS X. This post appears to be a suitable replacement, but I have not tried these exact instructions.