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Turntable.fm: The Fastest-Growing Music Service You're Not Using

 & William Fenton Contributor

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Turntable.fm is climbing the charts. According to a story from Betabeat, the Facebook phenom has hit 140,000 active users after just one month. Not a bad showing for a semi-closed beta with a spotty security record.

The popular service effectively combines (free) music-streaming, chat rooms, and voting, all through a Facebook portal. It's similar to Web apps such as Pandora. Turntable.fm allows you to discover new music and create your own custom playlists, only that playlist isn't just for you—you'll share it with other Facebook users in real time.

Add to the exchange a note of gameplay. After you create your DJ avatar, you can create your own room or enter someone else's (if you get overwhelmed there's a randomizer) and interact with other avatars through a chat feature. Each room supports up to five DJs. Take a seat on the stage to share your playlist, created from your own uploads or from the Turntable.fm library.

Turntable.fm

Finally, voting plays a huge part in the experience. Everyone in a given room listens to the same track simultaneously, with the option to chat in real-time or simply vote it up (via an "Awesome" button) or down (via a "Lame" button). For every vote the DJ racks up points to be spent on new, snazzier avatars. The more favorable the response, the more avatars pack the room; the less favorable, the more apt your track will get skipped.

If this sounds like your kind of scene, the service is still (as of today) accepting new members through turntable.fm , which will prompt you to login through Facebook.

Earlier this week Betabeat also covered how, alongside Turntable.fm's growing popularity, users had begun to write scripts that let them make unauthorized downloads of tracks from the library and auto-vote for particular DJs. This exploit has since been addressed, the report said.

About Our Expert

William Fenton

William Fenton

Contributor

As a contributing editor, William Fenton specializes in research and education software. In addition to his role at PCMag.com, William is also a Teaching Fellow and Director of the Writing Center at Fordham University Lincoln Center. To learn more about his research interests, visit his homepage or follow him on Academia.edu, LinkedIn, and Twitter.

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