Songbird 0.6 Review - The Bird Got Wings

Posted by Chris7mas on Jun 17, 2008 5:44 PM EDT
Echoes; By Craciun Dan
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The best feature Songbird has is the integrated web browser from Mozilla, which allows tabs, the ability to enter any web address (for example you are not only limited to Wikipedia or Last.fm, you can search anywhere on the web for music), and it's completely configurable via the Tools -> Options menu. Songbird also benefits of an impressive number of add-ons, one of them being the Last.fm song submission.

When it first starts, Songbird prompts the user to select default language and extensions it should load by default, downloading them if necessary. Scanning a music collection of almost 4000 OGG Vorbis songs took around 3 minutes on an Core 2 Duo 1.8 GHz with 1 GB DDRAM2.

Features
The best feature Songbird has is the integrated web browser from Mozilla, which allows tabs, the ability to enter any web address (for example you are not only limited to Wikipedia or Last.fm, you can search anywhere on the web for music), and it's completely configurable via the Tools -> Options menu. The same configuration window can be obtained by going at Edit -> Preferences. There is no point to have it in two places, but maybe it's a leftover from the Mozilla browser?

The interface consists of the library, downloads, radio and bookmarks tab in the left, and the playlist or web browser occupying most of the left space. The web integration is pretty well done, and becomes useful not only for searching the web for lyrics or artist information, but to report bugs or get Songbird add-ons as well (those are two of the default bookmarks, for quick access).

Songbird benefits of an impressive number of add-ons, one of them being the Last.fm song submission. After you select it for download and install it, Songbird will prompt you to restart it. The only problem I had with the Last.fm extension was that the Configuration button is disabled, so I couldn't actually use it. Instead I installed the Audioscrobbler add-on, which worked flawlessly.

Conclusion
Songbird is practically two things, both an audio player and a web browser. As an audio player, it does what it's supposed to do: it plays music, providing a library but not much of other options.

The web browser is definitely Songbird's strong point though. It's pretty well integrated, and will offer you all the information you need, without the need to open an external web browser. Extensions are another plus. The only problem Songbird has it's that the interface is extremely slow, but it doesn't hang, which is a good thing. Overall, Songbird might fulfil someone's taste while being completely not useful for another. But it is definitely worth a try.

From http://vivapinkfloyd.blogspot.com/2008/06/songbird-06-bird-got-wings.html

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