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Mobile - Web - Media
Tuesday, Sep 18, 2007 1:38:07 PM
AritstServer and ToneThis Serve Up Indie Ringtones
ToneThis is a desktop application for delivering personalized and third-party content to your phone. Unlike traditional content stores (ringtones, wallpapers, videos, games), ToneThis sits on your desktop enabling you the freedom to select and personalize your own content for delivery to your cellphone.
ToneThis desktop software allows you to create MP3 ringtones, truetones, realtones, cellphone wallpaper and mobile video ringtones using your CD, MP3, WAV, iTunes, image (JPEG, GIF, BMP), and video (AVI, MPEG) collection. Create an unlimited number of cellphone ringtones, wallpapers, and videos. Access to mobile music, image, and video content. Access to mobile games. Almost all US/Canada/EU/AU carriers supported.
For an overview of ToneThis, watch this interview and demo with Raj Singh, founder of ToneThis:
http://www.podtech.net/home/3993/lunchmeet-tonethis-gets-your-media-on-your-cell-phone
When you first see the demo of the software, take note of the right side panel. ArtistServer has partnered with ToneThis to provide music with Creative Commons licensing and currently loads as the default content provider when you launch ToneThis. The mp3 used in the demo is by an artist on ArtistServer - very cool! Check out the screenshot below:
This is a great opportunity for artists to gain more exposure and take advantage of a great marketing tool - ringtones. We are serving over 110,000 page views to more than 60,000 unique visitors per month within the ToneThis application alone!
Not all songs are available through ToneThis, only those with one of the following Creative Commons licenses:
- Attribution
- Attribution Share Alike
- Attribution Non-Commercial
- Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike
- Public Domain
If you are an artist on ArtistServer, and want your music available on ToneThis, make sure you have selected one of the previous licenses, and make your song available for download. http://www.artistserver.com
The ToneThis panel also provides an 'artist' view, which lists artists who have music with the proper Creative Commons license. Only artists with upgraded accounts are listed.
ArtistServer also supports ToneThis as a ringtone transfer method for the ringtones artists upload with their songs. When using the ToneThis transfer method, the mp3 will first be downloaded to your local copy of ToneThis, then you send it to your phone. While the final download step is similar to what ArtistServer already offers, ToneThis has gone several steps further by providing detailed support for mobile networks around the world, and for 100's of phones.
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Thursday, Apr 13, 2006 9:24:57 AM
MySpace and Cingular Trying to Catch Up to ArtistServer
Last month, I announced the launching of http://www.IndieMobile.com on my blog, which is the ringtone section and mobile transfer tools from ArtistServer rebranded as it's own site. The site is now complete with ringtone previews in Flash - which allow you to listen to each ringtone right on the page before downloading or sending to your mobile phone - for free. Roll back to last year, and you'll find that in May of 2005, I announced that http://www.ArtistServer.com was providing a complete ringtone service for indie/unsigned artists - and quite possibly the first to do so. Now, just a few weeks ago, MySpace and Cingular Wireless with all their millions and all their people, announced that they will have a ringtone service/program for artsits.
Cingular's Mobile Music Studio on MySpace is a free, truly original platform that lets emerging artists create and market their personalized wireless content. Australian Indie Garage Rock Darlings, Shifter, to be First Band to Benefit from Partnership
If music truly is the universal language, then millions of music hopefuls are sure to be talking about the new Cingular Mobile Music Studio available exclusively on MySpace. Announced today at CTIA Wireless IT & Entertainment 2006, Cingular's Mobile Music Studio is a first-of-its-kind platform that offers hundreds of thousands of unsigned artists and bands on MySpace the tools needed to turn their self-produced music into ringtones. forbes.com
More from MoCoNews.net:
Cingular hopes the service will boost revenue, customer loyalty and help its image among young people. Customers will be able to preview ringtones and buy them on the MySpace Web site, which will then send them to their cellphone. Cingular plans to charge about $2.50 for each 30 second ringtone and will give the bands 25 percent of the proceeds. But hey, life is a bitch..if you are locked into a contract with some operator, you will not switch just to get ringtones from MySpace bands.
Meanwhile... ArtistServer, with no budget and a staff of one... has been enabling artists to provide uncensored ringtones to their fans for free for nearly a year now.
Cingular/MySpace plan on censoring content:
Once all licensing has been completed, the artists will then be able to upload a short track of their original song, via an audio file, at which time the music content is screened to ensure content is indeed original and appropriate.
And more on censoring from TelephonyOnline.com: Cingular was hazy about what other criteria that panel might be using
to decide whether a song makes the grade and implied there would be
other subjective factors informing the decisions. "We don’t have a
specific criteria yet," Garver said. "We'll take each song on a
case-by-case basis and use our judgment on what’s appropriate content."
What does 'appropriate' mean?
As they pros play catch up, I'll soon be launching our next tool for promoting artists... and that will deal with Website 'widgets' - which are objects of some type that you would include on your blog or site. A demo of one is running on my blog right now - on the left site. It's a fully customizable widget that offers ringtones and is 100% controlled by the URL itself. This makes the widgets not only easy to customize, but it allows people to dynamically create them to fit their own sites. So, as Cingular/MySpace make it difficult for people to obtain ringtones by indie/unsigned artists, I'm taking a different path, I'm making it easy for artists to take advantage of ringtones, mobile phones and connecting to more fans. Yes, our ringtones are free, and the artsits do not ear their $0.50 or less per ringtone, but really, how many artists are going to sell enough to even cash out? I haven't seen the details of the agreement with the artists, but usually with a payout system, there needs to be a minimum of $20 before they'll send you a check. That's 40 ringtones each artist would have to sell for $2.50 each - and that's to Cingular customers only if I understand their arrangement correctly. From out in the crowd someone yells, "But Gideon, if Cingular gets behind this and promotes it, that will be HUGE!" Yeah... well, let's look at how they plan to promote it: Cingular executive director of high-growth segments Dave Garver said
that the program could have enormous potential for Cingular even though
the MySpace music site would not occupy a slot in the Cingular content
deck or the ringtones promoted in its MEdia Mall download center. The
power of self-promotion and viral marketing would do all of the work,
he said.
“Shifter is way too small for Cingular to
bring on as a partner -- it’s even way too small for a record label,”
Garver said. “But when you aggregate all of those bands, each with
their own ringtones, you get a significant number of downloads.”
Looks to me like they are expecting all the artists to have their "friends" buy the ringtones. If that is the case... ARTISTS... don't waste your friends time or money - join ArtistServer for FREE and set your friends up with up to 3 ringtones for FREE. If they want to hand you $0.50 in exchange, tell them to bring someone to your next show instead - or ask them to pass on your band's URL, etc.
If I worked for MySpace, I'd be ranting down the halls saying, "This has NOTHING to do with artisits or bands! Forget the deal! Let's do it ourselves! Connect with the community! Empower the people!" I may not have any budget, nor any staff, and I certainly can't afford to be at all any of the conferences, nor can I even afford to pay myself for this work I do... but you know what? I'm still a year ahead of the largest social music site on the planet when it comes to providing mobile solutions to artsits. While that doesn't help me pay the bills, it is a good sign for things to come. Plus, when you work for free, your salary is joy you harvest from your work, and I've been very fortunate over the years, as my work with ElectronicScene and ArtistServer has always paid me well. :)
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Wednesday, Jul 27, 2005 11:13:45 AM
20 Ways to Maximize Your Exposure on ArtistServer - Pt. 4 of 4 18)Offer Ringtones with each of your songs – As of the date that this is being written, there are approximately 160 different mobile phones which support the use of mp3 files as ringtones. This number will double over the next year as nearly all mobile phones take on mp3s as a ringtone format. You might be seeing some dollar signs right now as you realize that the ringtone market is fairly healthy, but I'm going to suggest that you not sell your ringtones, and that you give them away for free as a marketing tool.
An mp3 ringtone is usually very short and hopefully optimized for the tiny speaker on mobile phones. You can pick the intro of your song, the chorus, or even go back to the masters and mix down something new just for the ringtone. The following are some specific tips on creating your own mp3 ringtones:
- 100KB - make sure your ringtones are near or below 100KB in size
- mono - phones do not need stereo ringers, make your ringtone MONO
- less than 25sec - try to make your ringtones 15sec. in length or less, and no more than 25sec
- 64kbps - some phones support lower bit rates only - 128 should work for most, but 64kbps might be the better bit rate to use
- select clear sections - ringtones are most effective if they are clear and do not have a lot of sounds in the background
- selecting the loop - try selecting the chorus section or the intro of your song if you are not sure of what to use - don't expect the ringtone to 'loop' perfectly, most phones will have a pause at the end before they repeat the mp3 ringtone
- cut the low end - phones do not reproduce bass well, a good ringtone has more treble/hight end
- normalized - if you normalize your ringtone, you'll ensure that it will be loud enough, just don't fry the signal
- loud - again, make sure your ringtone is LOUD - not distorting, but very loud and clear
- fades - consider doing a fade at the end of your ringtone - phones may not 'loop' the ringtone, but have a pause at the end
- ringtone mix - you may find you'll get best results if you mix down a ringtone than extract one out of your finished song
- test it - test your ringtone on a mobile phone if you can
Once you've created your ringtone, ArtistServer provides you the option of uploading it to our site and associating it to the song you created it from. Once you do this, your song will now show up in more locations on the site, and you'll see a small phone icon displayed along with your song. With this in place, our site visitors can use our Ringtone Transfer Tool to send it to their phone – for free! I suggest spending an afternoon creating ringers for all of your songs and uploading them to ArtistServer. After uploading them to the site, make some announcements in your blog, on your site, on discussion boards – anywhere, and let people know that they can now get your free ringtones. Just be sure to use the words “Free mp3 ringtones” and link directly to your music/ringtone page – this way search engines will index your link and help send users to your site when they search on those keywords.
19)Publishing your RSS feeds and 'Ping blog service sites' – Each artist is provided with three RSS feeds to their content. One to their Blog, one to cover their songs, and the third to reviews about their songs. In each case, the 15 most recent items are always displayed – this way your feed is always up to date. (If you are wondering what RSS is, just do a Google search on “What is RSS.”) With the urls from your feeds, you could spend a good few hours submitting your feeds to various RSS and blog search engines. Here is a listing of places for you to submit to: http://www.masternewmedia.org/rss/top55/ The reason you want to do this, is the same reason why you'd want to submit your Website to a search engine – you want them to index it so people can find your content. There's a concept called “pinging” where you are informing a site that your content has been updated so they will index it. Fortunately, someone launched a site that 'pings' many of these sites for you in one swoop – visit: http://www.PingOMatic.com – submit your RSS link – then bookmark the results. The bookmark allows you to trigger that same ping request again, so each time your post new content, you click on that bookmark – watch the ping results – the carry on with your day.
20)Support other artists – It might sound strange, but yes, you can promote yourself by promoting others. A simple example would be a “song of the week” selection that you pick and promote on your site. People will come back to see what is picked next – artists will email you asking them to check out their songs – and music fans will start using you as a filter to finding great music. And... while they stop by to see your 'song of the week' selection... they'll also see links to your music! Some of these people will definitely want to hear what your music sounds like – and there is your opportunity. The only issue with this, is that you can't fake it – your efforts to promote others must be true and not stuffed with fluff.
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Monday, Jul 18, 2005 10:35:08 AM
The Status of this Web Apparatus If you've stopped by ArtistServer lately, you probably noticed a few things are different as I've recently launched several new site features/tools. In order to help you get up to speed on these new additions, I'll introduce you to each one below:
Ringtones:
For Artists, this means each song you upload on the site can also have a 'related' mp3 ringtone. We now have a ringtone transfer tool which helps site visitors get the ringtone on their phone.
For those looking for mp3 ringtones, you'll find we currently do not have very many to offer you, but this will change by the end of the year. If you find a song you like on the site - email the artist and ask them to make a ringtone from the song and that ArtistServer.com has info on how to do it.
Tags and Tag Clouds:
Tags, as I mentioned in an earlier blog post, are basically keywords. This in iteself isn't very cool. What is cool, is how we can use tags to find new content - think of it as a 'discovery system' and you'll start seeing how tags and 'tag clouds' can serve your needs.
Tags and tag clouds provide an organic method of finding new and related content. As we progress with the tag concept, we will eventually evolve to offer the ability to subscribe to tags or tag clusters.
Stations, Playlists and Podcasting:
This set of tools isn't currently available, but it's basically done. I can't open the site up for playlists and podcasts right now due to server load. There's just no way our single server could handle the increase in traffic. So expect these tools to become available in the next two months. For now, you can check the stations area out on the site, just visit http://www.artistserver.com/stations to take a look.
Why don't I go over each of these three items so you understand how this all fits together.
Stations are at the top level, they retain a name, a location on the site, a feed URL for all your playlists and bascially, they serve as a point of presence if you want one - otherwise, you'll mainly be interacting with playlists.
Below stations are playlists - where each station can have multiple playlists. You could consider each of your playlists a show if you wanted, as we do tag each playlist with a date. Or, you could treat your playlists as nothing more than collections of your favorite songs on the site - whatever - it's up to you.
Playlists also offer you the option of adding comments below each song and adding your own content to the side of the site - where you could add your own graphics, links, etc.
Now for the podcasts! You won't have to do anything to create a podcast - as soon as you finish creating your playlist - it's also available as a podcast. Bam! The only thing to consider, is that not all the songs on the site are 'podcast compatible.' What this means, is that music by Freeware members is not available for podcasts - on music by artists who support the site by upgrading their account.
In order to get this all started, there will most likely be a trial period where all music will be available for podcasting. I hope to open the stations/playlist/podcasting tools and area by the end of September 2005.
Mobile Website:
I won't say much about the mobile version of the site just yet, as it's still very much in beta and I haven't been able to work on it for a few weeks. You can check it out if your mobile phone supports WAP 2 - which is basically xHTML. Just pop open your phone's browser and go to artistserver.com and you'll get routed to mobile.artistserver.com.
If you have any feedback about the mobile site, please let me know.
Copyright and Creative Commons Licensing:
Every song on the site now carries either a copyright graphic or a Creative Commons graphic with a link to the license. This is the first step in our integration of licensing, the next step will be adding this information to our RSS feeds, then eventually, we will embed the license in your content for you (if the format supports it).
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How does ArtistServer Compare to the Competition?
If you click around and check out my competition, you'll find that they: - don't support Tags - don't have a mobile site - don't provide RSS feeds of their content - don't prodive music fans with their own site and blog for free - and don't offer or support ringtones
You would also find that only 2-3 have license integration and maybe 4-5 have stations support, while only 1 has Podcasting support and maybe 2-3 provide blogs.
What this says to me, is that the competition isn't evolving, that they aren't embracing new technology and distribution methods - and that ArtistServer will leapfrog it's competitors in 2006.
For more information on what has been developed here and what is coming up, please view the "Release Log" at this address: http://www.artistserver.com/releaselog.cfm
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