We're living in the Internet Age, so what good is a music collection that's trapped inside your home PC? Your songs should be able to go where you go, be it the office, a friend's house, an airport lounge, or even the backseat of a taxi.
There are lots of ways to get to your music via the Net, but I'm going to show you two distinct methods using fantastic freebies. MP3tunes, a Web-based service, houses your music collection online. Meanwhile, Orb streams songs straight from your PC to nearly any Internet-connected device--including some cell phones. Which one is
Store Your Music Online with MP3tunes
MP3tunes makes a mighty generous offer: The service will store up to 25 gigabytes of your music files free of charge. Once you've uploaded your collection, you can sign in to your account from any Web-connected PC and stream to your heart's content--complete with playlists and auto-generated mixes. What's more, MP3tunes effectively doubles as an online backup for your collection, a great insurance policy against hard-drive disaster.
You can let LockerSync scan your entire system for music or set it to monitor and sync specific folders. Then it's just a matter of waiting while the software copies your tunes to MP3tunes' servers. And there's the rub: Depending on the size of your collection, it can take a few days of 24/7 uploading to finish the job. That's not MP3tunes' fault: Internet service providers typically throttle upstream performance, devoting most of the available bandwidth to downloads.
Fortunately, once you've completed the initial upload, subsequent syncs should go much faster (assuming you add only a few songs or albums at a time). And you can start streaming music from your locker even while uploads are underway. The MP3tunes player runs in a browser window and offers familiar controls, including shuffle and repeat modes and a playlist builder. Mouse over any song in the track list to play, download, or trash it, or to add it to a playlist. You can even edit a song's metadata.
Its name notwithstanding, MP3tunes doesn't limit you to MP3s: It can stream most unprotected audio formats, including AAC, Ogg, and WMA. Of course, that leaves out DRM-laden songs purchased from iTunes and other stores, but that's to be expected. To avoid the hassles of DRM--on MP3tunes and throughout your digital life--I recommend either buying CDs or purchasing from DRM-free online stores such as Amazon. (For more on DRM-free music, see Dan Tynan's "Four Ways to Reclaim Your Digital Rights".)
On the plus side, MP3tunes offers a browser plug-in that lets you add songs straight to your locker from any site that hosts MP3s (or from the company's own Sideload site, which aggregates songs from around the Web).