Windows/Mac, iPhone/iOS: Wish to stream music from your main stash to an iPhone, Android phone, or any browser? Audiogalaxy, once a Napster-like peer-to-peer service, seems reborn as a straight-up service for streaming your individual music, and it’s brazenly easy to installed.
Head to Audiogalaxy.com, register with a username and password (or, even easier, through Facebook), then download software on your PC or Mac. Your complete software really does is use your music files, but you are able to click on the Audiogalaxy agent to your system try and point out exactly which tunes you’d wish to stream. If you would like iPhone or Android access, download those free apps through your Store/Market, or click definitely the right icon on the Audiogalaxy page.
With the software installed, you’re instantly able to stream tracks throughout the Audiogalaxy player online, or through your phone. Create playlists, shuffle all the collection, choose particular albums or artists, and, in case you’d like, have those playlists sync back through your iTunes library. It took me literally five minutes to get Audiogalaxy up and running from my main PC laptop to an Android phone, a MacBook, and even a Chrome Incognito browser, just for the heck of it.
Audiogalaxy is free to exploit, and there are not any apparent limits on collection size, though the service only supports DRM-free MP3s and AAC files. There’s an Audiogalaxy Gold that gives a vague ” unlimited access in your music on your entire devices.” Thanks for the top hengehog!
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