A Audio, hi-fi and car audio  forum. Audio Banter

Go Back   Home » Audio Banter forum » UK Audio Newsgroups » uk.rec.audio (General Audio and Hi-Fi)
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

uk.rec.audio (General Audio and Hi-Fi) (uk.rec.audio) Discussion and exchange of hi-fi audio equipment.

Discovering new music? We7 & Spotify streaming



 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd 09, 05:49 PM posted to alt.consumers.uk-discounts.and.bargains,uk.rec.audio
Don Pearce[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,358
Default Discovering new music? We7 & Spotify streaming

On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 18:22:48 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote:

Don Pearce wrote:

Yep, Spotify is impresive IMHO. Just how did you check the bitrate?



Just had a network monitoring tool hanging on the computer - it was
flatlining at about 384 (394 was a typo) all the way through a song.
Spotify is a no-buffering service so you don't get bursts of full
speed.

d


Ahh, ok, I wondered if that was what you had done. Spotify is a p2p app,
so you will be having data going out as well as going in, the traffic is
not just for your use.


That would only make sense if somebody was listening absolutely
synchronously with me (to some early John Mayall, I think). I doubt
very much if that was happening.

d
  #2 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd 09, 07:28 PM posted to alt.consumers.uk-discounts.and.bargains,uk.rec.audio
Nick Gorham
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 851
Default Discovering new music? We7 & Spotify streaming

Don Pearce wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 18:22:48 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote:

Don Pearce wrote:

Yep, Spotify is impresive IMHO. Just how did you check the bitrate?

Just had a network monitoring tool hanging on the computer - it was
flatlining at about 384 (394 was a typo) all the way through a song.
Spotify is a no-buffering service so you don't get bursts of full
speed.

d

Ahh, ok, I wondered if that was what you had done. Spotify is a p2p app,
so you will be having data going out as well as going in, the traffic is
not just for your use.


That would only make sense if somebody was listening absolutely
synchronously with me (to some early John Mayall, I think). I doubt
very much if that was happening.

d


Or, if the app cached a number of songs or parts of songs on your disk
and them made them available from that cache. Doesn't have to just be
what you are listening to.

Give that Spotify describe there service as p2p I suspect you are
incorrect in your doubts.

From their web site:

"Why does Spotify use so many internet connections?
Spotify uses a peer-to-peer network along with streaming servers to
stream music. This is why you see multiple connections to other Spotify
users.

What quality does Spotify stream in?
We use the Ogg Vorbis q5 codec which streams at approximately 160kb/s. "

--
Nick


  #3 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd 09, 07:57 PM posted to alt.consumers.uk-discounts.and.bargains,uk.rec.audio
Don Pearce[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,358
Default Discovering new music? We7 & Spotify streaming

On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 20:28:34 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote:

Don Pearce wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 18:22:48 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote:

Don Pearce wrote:

Yep, Spotify is impresive IMHO. Just how did you check the bitrate?

Just had a network monitoring tool hanging on the computer - it was
flatlining at about 384 (394 was a typo) all the way through a song.
Spotify is a no-buffering service so you don't get bursts of full
speed.

d
Ahh, ok, I wondered if that was what you had done. Spotify is a p2p app,
so you will be having data going out as well as going in, the traffic is
not just for your use.


That would only make sense if somebody was listening absolutely
synchronously with me (to some early John Mayall, I think). I doubt
very much if that was happening.

d


Or, if the app cached a number of songs or parts of songs on your disk
and them made them available from that cache. Doesn't have to just be
what you are listening to.

Give that Spotify describe there service as p2p I suspect you are
incorrect in your doubts.

From their web site:

"Why does Spotify use so many internet connections?
Spotify uses a peer-to-peer network along with streaming servers to
stream music. This is why you see multiple connections to other Spotify
users.


You are right, but I just fired it up for ten minutes without
listening to any songs, and there was no network traffic at all.
Perhaps it doesn't find you until you are active.

What quality does Spotify stream in?
We use the Ogg Vorbis q5 codec which streams at approximately 160kb/s. "


Ah well, I was wrong. They do seem to get a reasonably full 20kHz of
bandwidth though, albeit with a strange tip-up of level at the extreme
top end. Well beyond my hearing range these days, I'm afraid.

d
  #4 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd 09, 08:39 PM posted to alt.consumers.uk-discounts.and.bargains,uk.rec.audio
Anton G˙sen[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 59
Default Discovering new music? We7 & Spotify streaming

Don Pearce wrote:

That would only make sense if somebody was listening absolutely
synchronously with me (to some early John Mayall, I think). I doubt
very much if that was happening.


My guess is that someone had the music you were listening to in their
queue. It does use buffering (start playing a track, wait a few moments,
and then skip forward a minute or two and you'll see what I mean).
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT. The time now is 01:07 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2025 Audio Banter.
The comments are property of their posters.