Various Positions

Monday, 3 September 2007
by hannahdonovan
filed under Announcements and About Us
Comments: 20

Yup, we’re hiring, and we pretty much need to fill all 17 positions. The following ones are the most critical, so consider these a jump to the top of the pile:

Why come to Last.fm? Well, first of all because we think it’s the place to be if you’re passionate about changing the world of music.

We’re not your regular web two-point-whatever company, and we never will be. We’re a passionate bunch of kids in East London that move and adapt quickly; what most people consider innovative is a standard day around here. We also have a singing microwave.

So what’s the catch? We get a lot of applications and reject most of them. (Also, most positions are only open to EU or work permit holders.) But the good news is: if you make it, you’ll be working alongside some pretty great people.

A look inside:

See all open positions


* Matt made me name this post after an old Leonard Cohen album. Dork.

Squid Optimization Guide

Thursday, 30 August 2007
by tony
filed under Tips and Tricks
Comments: 25

Speed is the name of the game these days, and if you’re running Squid, it needs to serve its cache fast, every time. This guide shows you how to get from slow Squid to Optimized Squid in 30 minutes.

Read the whole entry

Audio Fingerprinting for Clean Metadata

Wednesday, 29 August 2007
by rj
filed under Announcements
Comments: 275

[UPDATE]
Phew, so we’ve received >1 million fingerprints so far.. not bad for the first 24hrs. The most fingerprints submitted by a single user is 12,203. I’m sure that record won’t stand for long tho :)
The ‘server overloaded’ message should be silenced now. We are currently receiving ~42 fingerprints per second.
More news to follow tomorrow.
[/UPDATE]

The veteran Scrobblers amongst you will probably remember our “moderation system” – this was a user-voting system that let you propose and merge artists, ultimately fixing misspelled artists by creating aliases to the correct version.

We are planning to bring this back in a big way, addressing not only artists, but albums and tracks too.

We don’t want to have to vote on the really obvious stuff (“01 – Radiohead”), so we are going to do as much as possible automatically, with various algorithms and data mining tricks. The entries we can’t be 100% sure about, and the remaining stuff, will again be thrown open to a public vote.

Phase 1 is now underway with the first public “beta” release of our new fingerprinting technology. This will mature into a nice sexy (free) API that lets you grab clean metadata based on an audio fingerprint. For now, all that it does is send the fingerprint data to bootstrap the moderation system. This doesn’t change any MP3 files on your computer. It does send useful fingerprint data to our moderation system so we can get the ball rolling. If you have a big MP3 collection, it will take a while… Thankfully it remembers where it got to, so you don’t have to do it all in one session.

Grab the fingerprinting app and let it scan your MP3 collection:

Download for:
Windows
Mac OS X
Linux .deb
Source code

What we’ll do next is figure out all the popular (mis)spellings for tracks with the same fingerprints. We will publish lots of stats, example data and graphs showing our progress as the fingerprint database grows in the coming weeks. We need people with MP3 collections (of any size/quality) to download and run the fingerprinter to make this work, so spread the word.

Remember, you don’t need to clean up your ID3 tags before running the fingerprint app: This time round, people with imperfect tags are actually going to be of some use to us, and don’t deserve all the terrible things we normally wish on them ;)

Download the app, and watch this space for lots of stats and graphs detailing our findings in the coming days and weeks!

RJ

Thank You Taggers!

Friday, 24 August 2007
by elias
filed under Lunch Table
Comments: 36


I love exploring tag radios. For example, this morning I woke up listening to wake up radio. Then I listened to breakfast radio. Now I’m listening to coffee break. I like how those tags aren’t limited to genres, and I enjoy wondering why something got tagged the way it did.

Our most popular tag radios include chillout and alternative rock but we got a lot more to offer. For example, have you ever tried fado tag radio? It’s improved a lot recently thanks to a new algorithm Norman developed.

However, all our algorithms wouldn’t work without your help. Everyday we receive lots of tags for lots of music. Thank you!! And special thanks to drsaunde, spacefish, and JessiCoplin who are our all time top taggers. Our top three staff taggers (Erik, Felix, and Mischa) are light years away from their contributions. But every tag counts!

Btw, do you tag music? What are your favourite tag radio stations?

Quick and to the Pointless

Thursday, 16 August 2007
by fiona
filed under About Us and Found On Last.fm
Comments: 15

So far, it seems, our blog has been dominated by announcements, technical tidbits and various other odds and ends. Seeing as Last.fm is actually meant to be about music we thought it was about time that we, your friendly neighbourhood Music Team, introduced ourselves. The rest of Last HQ may lead you to believe that we are somewhat of a side show to everything else that goes on here; but let’s face it, what would we be without the music?

An Introduction

Last.fm is and always has been dedicated to working closely with artists and labels, whether they are making music after school in a bedroom, releasing their first indie album, or are part of a major and selling millions of records a year. If you’re in a band, or run a label, you can join the Last.fm family by registering for a music account.

Our mission then is to make sure you can hear anything and everything you could ever want to on Last.fm. If you consider how many labels, how many artists, how many albums and how many songs have ever been created you may be close to achieving some idea of the mammoth size of this task.

This is us. On the roof.

Matt H, Jonas, Stefan B, Fiona, Helen

A day in any one of our lives might include keeping artists and labels happy (as well as meeting new ones), getting CDs encoded and online, managing promotional campaigns and making sure everything is running smoothly. There’s also research to be done, contacts to be made, phones to be answered, the Music Manager to babysit, a forum to tend, blog posts and newsletters to construct, developers to bribe and perhaps most vitally, tea to be drunk and biscuits to be eaten.

Bands in Bath Tubs

We also like to think that due to the time we spend browsing various artists pages that we spot some of the best oddities on Last.fm. For instance, the vast quantity of photos of bands-in-baths that we spotted earlier today; Liars, Menomena, CocoRosie, The Unicorns, Xiu Xiu and our very own Matt H’s Everyone to the Anderson. He can’t explain it, anyone else have any ideas?

Other recurring themes we’ve spotted include swimming pools (Reuben, Blink 182, Nirvana), the four-way split (Interpol, Fugazi, Grizzly Bear) and the ubiquitous ‘standing in front of a graffitied brick wall’ shot (Pretty much every band, ever). This does beg the question is there such a thing as an original band photo?

My winners are probably Animal Collective, whose highlights include a theme park log flume photo. The Shins as sleeping super heroes and Modest Mouse just seem to take it to the next level by turning themselves into trees, or giants, or a museum exhibition… in the desert.

Scrobblevision

Wednesday, 1 August 2007
by anil
filed under Announcements
Comments: 34

We don’t believe in making a fuss here at Last.fm, so without further ado, here’s some new video features for all of you: You can now embed Last.fm video wherever you want on the web, watch the video fullscreen and scrobble it to your Last.fm profile. And all this with great quality sound. Here’s South London’s finest, Good Shoes, with a little number about where they live.

Scrobble on Facebook

Wednesday, 25 July 2007
by james
filed under Announcements
Comments: 49

Today we’re launching a new Facebook application: What I’m Listening To. By far the most requested improvement to our first app was having your recently played music on your profile without having to click or interact with the app in any way.

To address the challenge of updating a profile box on Facebook in real time, we developed an extension to our submission system that refreshes your Facebook profile whenever you scrobble a track.

Rather than just release a rehash of some other fine apps already out there, we tried to come up with something extra that would thrive in the scope of Facebook’s social graph.

So as well as being able to love tracks straight from your profile, you can now also add a pithy note or limerick to accompany each track you play. This is exclusive to Facebook for now, but we’ll be watching this one closely to see how we can appropriately integrate it on Last.fm.


It’s taken us a few weeks, but we tried to keep it simple and useful, and sometimes the simplest things require the most thought.

Hope you like it!


Saturday Web Roundup, Vol. I

Saturday, 21 July 2007
by flaneur
filed under Stuff Other People Made
Comments: 10

Emails have been flying around Last.HQ lately about nifty things people are building with Last.fm music profile data and the Audioscrobbler platform.

We’re working (tirelessly!) on a better directory of all the places on the web you can take your Last.fm profile, but until then we’ll try to do these regular recaps of cool projects and other web oddities. Here’s what caught our eye this week.

IBM Rocks

This mashup tracks what music people are listening to at various IBM offices around the world. Everyone loves rotating world globes.

http://eightbar.co.uk/2007/07/19/lastfm-ibm-ibm-rocks/

Scrobblepod

While the latest version of the official Last.fm client includes experimental iPod support, it’s great seeing well-executed third-party apps like this. Not sure why there isn’t a Zune scrobbler yet, but it must be coming…

http://scrobblepod.sourceforge.net/

MetalAd

“Your Last.fm metal extension.” If your music tastes are of a certain persuasion (think Muz), this app will take the logos of your top artists and format them for your ‘About Me’ sidebar. Nice.

http://www.denzer.ch/heavyraptor/last.fm/

And while I’m slinging links around: congrats to Jonathan Schaeffer and co. at my alma mater for solving checkers! (It’s unfortunately going to be another 90 years before there’s a computer that can help me beat Steve at Go.)

Vote For Last.fm

Tuesday, 10 July 2007
by christian
filed under Announcements and About Us
Comments: 23

Last.fm has been picked as one of Time magazine’s 50 Best Websites of the year! You can vote for us here – we’re currently top of our category (Audio & Visual), but face some hefty competition from the likes of LaLa, Veoh and, er, YouTube’s You Choose ’08 (not exactly a new website, Time, but hey…), so get voting!

And then afterwards you can watch a Time journalist getting destroyed by Bob Dylan back in 1965. Genius.

"Do Not Disturb Me, I Am Thinking"

Wednesday, 4 July 2007
by
filed under About Us
Comments: 19

A few months back, a renegade filmmaker invaded Last.fm World Domination Headquarters. Armed with only a camera and a knack for bad timing (of course, we had to have some site downtime during his visit) he did a pretty good job at capturing a day in the life of Last.HQ.

The resulting video was posted online today, so meet the team:

Update: The embed above doesn’t seem to work reliably, but you can watch the full version here.

(Apparently the filmmaker isn’t responsible for the oh-so-inspirational music that got placed over the entire clip. Anil quickly dubbed it “The Winds of Change.” Ahhh, cheese. Not that we notice…um…music….argh.)

Speaking of video, music videos on Last.fm can now play full-screen.