The Power Boost
Tune.FM helps you discover a world of new independent music. Support and listen to new music independent artists for free online.

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The Power Boost
Tune.FM helps you discover a world of new independent music. Support and listen to new music independent artists for free online.
Stream Your Favorite Music with Tune. FM
Tune.Fm, a free music streaming service, is rapidly growing, and it appears on its way to become something big.
The iTunes Store and the Spotify Store are the dominant online stores for music. But they are also facing a threat from Tune.Fm. All of these stores sell a song for $0.99, and all of them let you download songs for $0.99. But Tune.Fm lets you download songs for $0.77. That's it. The advantage of Tune.Fm is that it lets you listen to a song for free, before you decide whether you actually like the song enough to buy it. The disadvantage is that they don't have a catalog of music as extensive as iTunes or Spotify, so you end up not having a lot of choices. But the advantages of Tune.Fm are that their catalog is rapidly growing and their prices are going down. iTunes and Spotify, on the other hand, have already accumulated a huge catalog of music, and their prices aren't going down. iTunes and Spotify are clearly in Tune.Fm's sights. They have already invested tens of millions of dollars in buying music distribution companies, and millions more in buying exclusive deals with record labels. But Tune.Fm's investors are not taking this lying down. They have launched a lawsuit challenging the exclusivity deals. And Tune.Fm has another advantage. iTunes and Spotify have to keep charging $0.99, because that is what their customers expect. But Tune.Fm can charge less, because their customers don't expect anything. So Tune.Fm may turn out to be a bigger winner than iTunes or Spotify. But it has a lot of work to do.
Tune.Fm is a human-powered music recommendation engine. It uses the aggregate activity of its listeners to continuously learn their tastes and their musical personas. We measure musical persona by tracking the ratio of plays to listeners of a given song or album. A music recommendation engine is interesting because it represents a new kind of social technology, a new kind of entertainment, and a new kind of business.
Tune.Fm is an online music system. You tell Tune.Fm what songs you like, and it tells you what other people with similar interests are listening to. Recently, Tune.Fm has been getting a lot of publicity. (The New York Times called Tune.Fm "the Napster of radio.") This is good publicity, but it needs a little explanation. A lot of people who talk about Tune.Fm seem to take it for granted that Tune.Fm is more social than radio. For one thing, it has "channels," which are supposed to be radio stations, but are actually just collections of songs. The person who runs the channel can edit what songs go into it, and is presumably supposed to listen to those songs. (Tune.Fm says nothing about this.) But having channels doesn't make it a social system. For one thing, you have nothing in common with the person who runs the channel. You can't imagine them. And you can't talk to them. What really distinguishes Tune.Fm from radio is that Tune.Fm can tell you what your friends and other people are listening to. But you can't see what your friends or other people are listening to. To see why, imagine you have two friends who are both listening to the same song. Tune.Fm could tell you, but you wouldn't see the information. The reason Tune.Fm can't show you what your friends and other people are listening to is simple. Tune.Fm is a paid service. It charges you a monthly fee. It wants to make as much money as it can, and it wants to make you as happy as it can. So it can't show you anything that will upset you. On the other hand, it can't show you anything that will make you happy either. That's because Tune.Fm won't
Tune.Fm is a music streaming service without ads, where you can listen to any song ever written, any time you want, for free. Tune.Fm is a music streaming service that, unlike most music streaming services, is ad-free. This means two things for you. First, there are no annoying ads interrupting your listening. You can just listen to whatever song you want, whenever you want.
Tune.Fm is a music sharing website. You sign up for a user id and a password. Then you can enter an artist name and a song title, and Tune.Fm will try to find a song by that artist. It searches databases of songs, and it downloads them for you. The databases are open-access, which means that musicians can upload their own music. The sites which most resemble Tune.Fm are Pandora and Last.FM. But their databases are less open. Pandora and Last.FM use their own databases and exploit copyright rules to limit what people can do with what they download. Tune.Fm tries to respect copyrights, and yet it allows users to do pretty much whatever they want with the songs they download. When they first joined, all the users were mostly interested in music which they could listen to and share with their friends. But now, when there are more sources of music, the users are more interested in music they can listen to without the help of their friends. So, the sites change their algorithms to give people what they like. The algorithm used by Tune.Fm is complex, and it gets more complicated every day. And Tune.Fm's success has led people to make predictions for what the algorithm will do next. These predictions are controversial, and they don't agree on much. Part of the reason Tune.Fm is controversial is that its algorithm is based on complex math, and people don't like math. Still, it's worth considering, because the success of Tune.Fm has helped to create a category: sharing music with strangers on the internet. And sharing is the future of music. Now, of all music, classical music has most benefited from sharing. Classical
For more information Website: https://tune.fm/ Whitepaper: https://tune.fm/public/landing/images/Tune.FM(JAM)WhitepaperV3.pdf Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunefmofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tunefmofficial Telegram: https://t.me/tunefm
Author Bitcointalk username: ParkYeJaeHwa Bitcointalk Url: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=3402249 Hedera Account ID: 0.0.576683
Are you an Independent Musician? Discover how Tune.fm can help
Few of us have the money, connections, or time to see every band we want. But technology makes it possible for us to listen to almost everything. Music discovery is broken. Everyone wants to discover new music, but music discovery companies make their money by matching fans to artists with narrow tastes. Tune.Fm fixes this model. We connect fans with artists based on what they like. Fans tell us the music they want to hear, and we pair them with artists from around the world who offer that music. We're not the only music discovery company. But we're different. We're fans too. We get paid in JAM tokens for discovering new music and playing the songs we love. And artists get paid directly when their fans stream their music. Tune.Fm is a music economy built on fan and artist collaboration rather than on matching fans to artists. For fans, Tune.Fm is a totally new way to find music that they love. For artists, Tune.Fm is a new way to connect with their fans and to make their music financially sustainable. We're launching soon. But the first step is to prove that there is a music economy to be built. In June, we'll be running a crowdfunding campaign on IndieGoGo. The Kickstarter-like campaign will test the business model. If it works, businesses will join us. If it doesn't work, we'll adjust the business model and try again. Tune.Fm is an experiment in capitalism that's built from the ground up to be sustainable and egalitarian. We believe in capitalism as a redistribution of wealth, not as a mechanism for concentrating wealth in a few hands. We believe that artists and fans can become partners in building and sustaining a new music economy. And we believe that building this new music
The music economy is broken. Musicians are underpaid for their work and fans are being overcharged. Tune.Fm is building a new paradigm: The Music Economy. Artists will be paid for their work and fans will access music at a much lower cost. Tune.Fm will grow the community around music and music fans. Tune.Fm is a new way for fans and artists to interact and collaborate.
The internet has changed the music industry profoundly. Price discovery happens now by streaming, not sales, and artists make more money from streaming than they do from album sales. But the distribution of streaming revenue is uneven. Artists with smaller fan bases get a smaller piece of the pie. Artists who are famous but unknown get a smaller piece. And, artists working together on an album get a smaller piece than if they were all solo artists. The artists do not get the streaming revenue, though. Streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music have to pay the record companies, who, in turn, pay them to the artists. The middlemen take a huge cut, and the middle man's cut is getting bigger. So what do you do? We thought, why don't we create a new kind of middleman? Instead of paying the record companies, let's pay them directly. And instead of splitting the revenue with the artists, let's pay them directly. That way, the artists get all the money, and instead of splitting it, we split the payments. That's what Tune.FM does. We pay the record companies directly. We pay them a fixed rate per play. And, we pay the artists directly. If fans listen to a song we're streaming, we give them tokens of the show, and the artist gets that token. If the token gets played, the artist gets money. And, if fans listen to a song we stream from a show we don't stream, we give them tokens of the show, and the record company gets that token. If the token gets played, the record company gets money. That way, fans get to discover new music. Tune.Fm is the world's first global music economy. Music has always been global, but access to it is limited. Music fans in one country can't discover new music made by artists in other countries. This is a problem, because many new and interesting artists come from other countries. Tune.Fm solves this problem by giving fans the means to support their favorite artists directly, and earning JAM tokens by discovering new music. The Tune.Fm music economy is based on the Ethereum blockchain. The blockchain empowers us to create a music network that is decentralized, fair, open, and transparent. In 2016, we launched a music discovery platform called Tune.Fm, where artists could upload their music and fans could discover it. Since then, we've become one of the largest independent music streaming services with more than 20 million monthly listeners in 200 countries. We also connect artists to fans through strategic partnerships with Shazam, Spotify, SoundCloud, Beats, and more. Today, we're excited to announce that we're launching the Tune.Fm Token Sale, which will enable fans to earn JAM tokens and help artists get paid for their work. Token Sale Details The Tune.Fm Token Sale will run from October 19 through November 20, 2017. The Token Sale will open for registration at 12:00 AM UTC on October 19, 2017. Token Sale pricing The Token Sale will have a maximum of 1.1 billion JAM tokens available at a price of $0.02 per token. Token Sale cap The Token Sale cap is 500,000 ETH, which is equivalent to $80 million USD at the time of the Token Sale. Token Sale funding allocation The Tune.Fm Token Sale funds will be divided as follows: 60%: Increase revenue through advertising and partnerships 20%: Development, marketing, and operations 10%: Community growth Token Sale bonuses The Token Sale will have a special bonus of 50% for the first 500,000 ETH raised, Tune.Fm is a music discovery platform. It connects artists with fans, and provides a new way for fans to support their favorite artists. Through Tune.Fm's tokenized revenue sharing model, artists earn tokens every time they stream their music. Fans discover and share the new music, and artists earn revenue when the songs get streamed. Tune.Fm is a music economy. A music economy is a system in which money circulates around music and musicians, and in which musicians can earn new value from their music. Artists can already earn value from music. When a record label or music company buys a song from an artist, the label or company gets a share of the artist's revenue. But that's only a portion of the artist's value. A music economy expands this value. A music economy is based on a tokenized revenue sharing model. This model has three key properties: 1. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song. 2. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song. 3. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song.
For more information Website: https://tune.fm/ Whitepaper: https://tune.fm/public/landing/images/Tune.FM(JAM)WhitepaperV3.pdf Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunefmofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tunefmofficial Telegram: https://t.me/tunefm
Author Bitcointalk username: Andersson Reykjavik Bitcointalk Url: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=3397514 Hedera Account ID: 0.0.576598
Play a Song and Listen to the Entire Album on Tune.Fm!
Few of us have the money, connections, or time to see every band we want. But technology makes it possible for us to listen to almost everything. Music discovery is broken. Everyone wants to discover new music, but music discovery companies make their money by matching fans to artists with narrow tastes. Tune.Fm fixes this model. We connect fans with artists based on what they like. Fans tell us the music they want to hear, and we pair them with artists from around the world who offer that music. We're not the only music discovery company. But we're different. We're fans too. We get paid in JAM tokens for discovering new music and playing the songs we love. And artists get paid directly when their fans stream their music. Tune.Fm is a music economy built on fan and artist collaboration rather than on matching fans to artists. For fans, Tune.Fm is a totally new way to find music that they love. For artists, Tune.Fm is a new way to connect with their fans and to make their music financially sustainable. We're launching soon. But the first step is to prove that there is a music economy to be built. In June, we'll be running a crowdfunding campaign on IndieGoGo. The Kickstarter-like campaign will test the business model. If it works, businesses will join us. If it doesn't work, we'll adjust the business model and try again. Tune.Fm is an experiment in capitalism that's built from the ground up to be sustainable and egalitarian. We believe in capitalism as a redistribution of wealth, not as a mechanism for concentrating wealth in a few hands. We believe that artists and fans can become partners in building and sustaining a new music economy. And we believe that building this new music
The music economy is broken. Musicians are underpaid for their work and fans are being overcharged. Tune.Fm is building a new paradigm: The Music Economy. Artists will be paid for their work and fans will access music at a much lower cost. Tune.Fm will grow the community around music and music fans. Tune.Fm is a new way for fans and artists to interact and collaborate.
The internet has changed the music industry profoundly. Price discovery happens now by streaming, not sales, and artists make more money from streaming than they do from album sales. But the distribution of streaming revenue is uneven. Artists with smaller fan bases get a smaller piece of the pie. Artists who are famous but unknown get a smaller piece. And, artists working together on an album get a smaller piece than if they were all solo artists. The artists do not get the streaming revenue, though. Streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music have to pay the record companies, who, in turn, pay them to the artists. The middlemen take a huge cut, and the middle man's cut is getting bigger. So what do you do? We thought, why don't we create a new kind of middleman? Instead of paying the record companies, let's pay them directly. And instead of splitting the revenue with the artists, let's pay them directly. That way, the artists get all the money, and instead of splitting it, we split the payments. That's what Tune.FM does. We pay the record companies directly. We pay them a fixed rate per play. And, we pay the artists directly. If fans listen to a song we're streaming, we give them tokens of the show, and the artist gets that token. If the token gets played, the artist gets money. And, if fans listen to a song we stream from a show we don't stream, we give them tokens of the show, and the record company gets that token. If the token gets played, the record company gets money. That way, fans get to discover new music. Tune.Fm is the world's first global music economy. Music has always been global, but access to it is limited. Music fans in one country can't discover new music made by artists in other countries. This is a problem, because many new and interesting artists come from other countries. Tune.Fm solves this problem by giving fans the means to support their favorite artists directly, and earning JAM tokens by discovering new music. The Tune.Fm music economy is based on the Ethereum blockchain. The blockchain empowers us to create a music network that is decentralized, fair, open, and transparent. In 2016, we launched a music discovery platform called Tune.Fm, where artists could upload their music and fans could discover it. Since then, we've become one of the largest independent music streaming services with more than 20 million monthly listeners in 200 countries. We also connect artists to fans through strategic partnerships with Shazam, Spotify, SoundCloud, Beats, and more. Today, we're excited to announce that we're launching the Tune.Fm Token Sale, which will enable fans to earn JAM tokens and help artists get paid for their work. Token Sale Details The Tune.Fm Token Sale will run from October 19 through November 20, 2017. The Token Sale will open for registration at 12:00 AM UTC on October 19, 2017. Token Sale pricing The Token Sale will have a maximum of 1.1 billion JAM tokens available at a price of $0.02 per token. Token Sale cap The Token Sale cap is 500,000 ETH, which is equivalent to $80 million USD at the time of the Token Sale. Token Sale funding allocation The Tune.Fm Token Sale funds will be divided as follows: 60%: Increase revenue through advertising and partnerships 20%: Development, marketing, and operations 10%: Community growth Token Sale bonuses The Token Sale will have a special bonus of 50% for the first 500,000 ETH raised, Tune.Fm is a music discovery platform. It connects artists with fans, and provides a new way for fans to support their favorite artists. Through Tune.Fm's tokenized revenue sharing model, artists earn tokens every time they stream their music. Fans discover and share the new music, and artists earn revenue when the songs get streamed. Tune.Fm is a music economy. A music economy is a system in which money circulates around music and musicians, and in which musicians can earn new value from their music. Artists can already earn value from music. When a record label or music company buys a song from an artist, the label or company gets a share of the artist's revenue. But that's only a portion of the artist's value. A music economy expands this value. A music economy is based on a tokenized revenue sharing model. This model has three key properties: 1. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song. 2. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song. 3. The tokenized revenue sharing model is based on tokens, not cash. Tokens are an asset, like shares or bonds. It's more like buying an ownership stake in an artist than buying a song.
For more information Website: https://tune.fm/ Whitepaper: https://tune.fm/public/landing/images/Tune.FM(JAM)WhitepaperV3.pdf Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunefmofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tunefmofficial Telegram: https://t.me/tunefm
Author Bitcointalk username: Andersson Reykjavik Bitcointalk Url: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=3397514 Hedera Account ID: 0.0.576598
Why the New Tune.FM User Experience Rocks
Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and online community that enables bands, labels, and publishers to sell their music directly to fans. We let fans discover and stream music for free from anywhere in the world, collect what they like in their library, and buy their favorite music to show support for the artists they love all in one place. Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and online community that enables artists to sell their music directly to fans on their Facebook page. We let fans discover and stream music for free from anywhere in the world, collect what they like in their library, and buy their favorite music to show support for the artists they love all in one place. Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and online community that enables artists to sell their music directly to fans on their Myspace page. We let fans discover and stream music for free from anywhere in the world, collect what they like in their library, and buy their favorite music to show support for the artists they love all in one place. Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and online community that enables artists to sell their music directly to fans on their YouTube channel. We let fans discover and stream music for free from anywhere in the world, collect what they like in their library, and buy their favorite music to show support for the artists they love all in one place. Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and online community that enables artists to sell their music directly to fans on their own website. We let fans discover and stream music for free from anywhere in the world, collect what they like in their library, and buy their favorite music to show support for the artists they love all in one place. Tune.Fm is an alternative to iTunes. It is a global music marketplace and Tune.fm is a social music network that allows fans to discover, collect, and share music.
Tune.Fm is a community of music fans just like you. We are 100% free for fans, and 100% independent. We believe in artists, we believe in music, and we believe in you.
Tune.Fm is a music file hosting service that launched in June 2011 and is based out of San Francisco, California.
We all like music. Most of us have created it. Most of us have played it. Most of us like to share it with people we enjoy. Many of us have made some money out of it. Some of us are musicians, but most of us are not. Most of us live in places where we can't get the kinds of jobs where we get to make music. And most of us are discouraged by the high prices and poor quality of music. Music is a big part of our lives. We use it for fun. We listen to it at work (many of us, in fact). We listen to it in restaurants, in the car, and at the gym. We listen to streaming music services like Spotify or Pandora, or we download music from the iTunes Store. We listen to free music on sites like YouTube and SoundCloud. We listen to songs from our Facebook friends. We listen to music on YouTube, or concerts at Carnegie Hall, or TED talks, or anime, or movies. Music is everywhere. But it's also hard to make money in music. Most musicians don't make a living at it. Most musicians make less than $20,000 a year. Even on a good day, most musicians make less than $20,000 a year. We musicians are weird people. We spend a lot of time playing music. We play instruments, or sing, or make up songs, or teach people to play instruments, or design instruments, or write software to make instruments, or improvise. We play shows. We promote our shows. We write articles for magazines and newspapers. We go on tour. We teach music. We spend hours every day reading articles and blogs and books about music. So why do we do it? What makes us musicians
The vast majority of the musicians on Tune.Fm are amateurs, not professionals. Many of them are just getting started, and for many of them their goal is to be able to play music with others. Most music apps require that you play an instrument. Even the ones that don't require instruments usually require you to use a MIDI keyboard or guitar tuner. Tune.Fm does neither of these things. That might seem strange, but it is not. Most of us learned how to play an instrument by copying someone else's music. We play by ear, not by reading music. We play by feel, not by the rules. Why do musicians think this way? Because the original technologies weren't designed for playing by ear. MIDI is designed so you can read music. But most of us don't read music. We play by ear. The piano keyboard is designed so you can play by touch, not by reading. But most of us don't read music. We play by ear. Why do guitar tuners require you to play a guitar? Because most musicians don't play by touch. Most of us play by ear.
For more information Website: https://tune.fm/ Whitepaper: https://tune.fm/public/landing/images/Tune.FM(JAM)WhitepaperV3.pdf Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunefmofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tunefmofficial Telegram: https://t.me/tunefm
Author Bitcointalk username: Ryoko Kenshin Bitcointalk Url: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=3398199 Hedera Account ID: 0.0.575823