‘When it Drops’ Gives You the Latest Movie, Music and Book Releases

when it drops

We all have our own favorite sites to consult for the latest movie, music or video game releases. With a cleanly designed site called ‘When it Drops,’ though, Web surfers can now find all this information with one click of a mouse. Each week, When it Drops gives a snapshot of the latest movies, DVDs, albums, books and video games to hit the market that week, as well as the products released the week prior and those scheduled to drop over the next two weeks. Hovering your cursor over each icon will also give you some basic information about the newly released item. If you’re interested in seeing the latest movie to hit theaters, for example, you can instantly check the film’s rating on RottenTomatoes, find links to buy tickets, or view trailers. The concept may sound simple, but that’s exactly what makes ‘When it Drops’ so useful.

‘When it Drops’ Gives You the Latest Movie, Music and Book Releases originally appeared on Switched on Thu, 07 Oct 2010 09:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Music Streaming Service: Grooveshark [Hive Five Followup]

Last week we asked you to share your favorite music streaming service, then we rounded up the top five for you to vote on. Now we’re back to share the winner and runners-up.

The race for the top slot was a tight one. Grooveshark took home the prize with 31% of the vote beating out Pandora (29%) by a little more than 200 votes. Following Pandora, Last.fm (14%) and Spotify (13%) engaged in a similar neck and neck battle for the third and fourth spots respectively. Trailing behind them was Lala with 5% of the vote, not a bad show for a new and relatively unknown service.

For more information about the Hive Five contenders, check out the full Hive Five. Have a favorite streaming service that didn’t make the top five cut? Let’s hear about it in the comments. Have a great idea for a Hive Five? Shoot us an email at tips@lifehacker.com with “Hive Five” in the subject line.






MP3Cut Easily Slices Sections of Uploaded MP3s [MP3s]

When you need to slice a piece of of an MP3 and you don’t have time to mess around with downloading a new application and learning how to use it, MP3Cut offers dead simple and web-based MP3 snipping.

Visit MP3cut, upload the MP3 you want to snip—an ideal improvement would be support for URLs that point to MP3 files, but we're not complaining!—and then use the sliders to adjust to where you want to snip the section out of the MP3. You can preview the section which makes it extra easy to get the cut mark right to the millisecond you want. When you've found the section you want to cut out, hit the download button and you're done.

If you have a handy tool to share for sampling sections of MP3s, let’s hear about it in the comments. Thanks IveAlwaysGotMail10!






YouTube Disco Brings Music Discovery to YouTube [YouTube]

YouTube has launched a music discovery service, fueled by YouTube’s inventory of music videos, called YouTube Disco.

Click on the image above for a closer look.

Presently it isn't the most advanced music discovery service around but it could be the easiest to use. You have two options when searching YouTube Disco. You can search for an artist or song and hear more songs by that artist—you might discover something new but it will be within the artist's own discography—or you can search for music related to the song or artist you initially searched for.

In the screenshot above, songs related to Queen appear in the left-hand column whereas songs directly in the Queen discography appear in the right-hand column. From the right-hand column you can browse through artist videos—the default view—or select mixes of related music or related artists.

For other ways to discover new music check out previously reviewed Radio Tuna, Project Playlist, and Source Tone.

Have a favorite music discovery tool? Let’s hear about it in the comments.






Radio Tuna Combines Music Discovery and Internet Radio [Radio]

If you’re looking for new music, you won’t find a shortage of music discovery services online. Almost all of them search their own music catalogs and not the vast assortment of online radio. RadioTuna brings music discovery to online radio.

Click on the image above for a closer look.

When you visit RadioTuna you can dive right in by searching by genre, artist, and song to begin listening. Radio stations suggested by RadioTuna are given rankings to show you how much of a certain type of music they play. You can bookmark radio stations you find and then review your listening history, see the play charts from your saved stations, and share the stations you listen to with friends through social networks like Facebook and Twitter.

RadioTuna provides a more in-depth method for discovering music online than simply searching a directory of radio stations and hoping to find one that plays songs you’d like. You can check out RadioTuna without signing up, but saving stations and your search history requires a free login. If you have a music discovery service you can’t live without, let’s hear about it in the comments.






Most Popular Hive Five Topics of 2009 [Best Of 2009]

Every week we pose a simple, focused question to the Lifehacker readership about a specific topic: Which is best? From netbooks and malware removal to home servers and wallpaper, here’s a look back at the most popular Hive Five topics of 2009.

The Hive Five asks the question "Which is best?" in a variety of topics covering hardware, software, and sometimes even a combination of the two. Although sometimes it's easy to predict the winner—Ubuntu has had its share of wins, to be sure—the real value in the Hive Five isn't actually its ability to elevate a single winner to a pedestal but to highlight all the great options that are out there.

Between the four runners up in each Hive Five and the other options highlighted in the hundreds of comments on both the Hive Five Call for Contenders and the actual Hive Five every week, it’s easy to discover new things. If ever you’re not sold on the winner of any Hive Five always make sure to read over the comments and see if any of them tip you off to a new and awesome product you’d never heard of.

Five Best Netbooks

Some months have elapsed since we asked you which netbook was best, but the newer models of the winner and runners up in that Hive Five are still the forerunners in the netbook market.

Five Best Malware Removal Tools

Nobody likes having their machine laden down with malware. Check out this Hive Five to find great applications for keeping things running smooth and malware free.

Best Home Server Software

Media files, data synchronization, and remote backups, oh my! Home computing has advanced to a point where it’s practical to run your own home server, and we’re running down the five best tools for the job.

Five Best Linux Distributions

There are many, many Linux distributions, and a lot of unique reasons to like them. Read on to see which open-source operating systems inspired our readers to provide our biggest Hive Five response to date.

Five Best Wallpaper Sites

Nobody likes staring at a boring desktop when they fire up their computer every morning. Keep your wallpaper fresh with the five most popular sites Lifehacker readers use to satisfy their wallpaper needs.

Five Best Free Data Recovery Tools

The best way to recover from unexpected data loss is to be properly prepared. With one of the following tools on hand, you’ll always be ready to save your data from the Reaper.

Six Best Video Editing Applications

You want to be the supreme ruler of your own virtual cutting room? Better break out the checkbook—your film-chopping powers aren't going to come cheaply.

Five Best Web Browsers

It’s probably the most important and debated piece of software on the modern computer. See how your fellow readers get around the net, and vote for your favorite web browser.

Six Best MP3 Tagging Tools

A well tagged MP3 collection makes everything from organization to playback easier. Keep reading for a closer look at your fellow readers’ favorite tools for cleaning up their MP3 tags in this Hive Five.

Five Best Antivirus Applications

Computer viruses are increasingly sophisticated and pervasive. If you can’t afford to run your computer without some sort of antivirus software installed, check out these five popular options to protect your PC.

Five Best Live CDs

Live CDs (and DVDs) are versatile tools, allowing you to boot into an operating system without installing anything to your hard drives. Let’s take a closer look at the five most popular live CDs.

Five Best Disk Defragmenters

Your computer is a busy beaver, rapidly accessing and utilizing files all in the name of bringing you what you want, when you want it. Sometimes it needs a little help tidying up, and that’s where these five disk defragmenters come in.

Five Best Portable Applications

Whether you got a shiny new flash drive over the holidays or your old thumb drive is looking for a new lease on life, pack it full of goodness with these five killer portable applications.

Five Best Instant Messengers

Instant messaging has become so ubiquitous, an entire generation of internet users is probably unaware there was ever life without it. Check out the following five most popular instant messengers to to help you communicate across networks and the world.

Five Best Free System Restore Tools

Backing up data is a great way to minimize losses after a computing catastrophe. But what about restoring your actual system right away? Here are the five most popular reader choices.

Five Best People-Search Engines

Need to do a little online detective work? Track down anyone from long lost schoolmates to the new friend whose number you’ve lost with this assortment of powerful people-search engines.

Five Best System Tray Applications


The Windows system tray can be so much more than a parking lot for programs you don’t want cluttering up your task bar. Read on to see the five most popular tray tools readers can’t live without.

Five Best Online Backup Tools

Local backup is a useful and necessary part of securing your data against catastrophe, but with the advent of broadband and inexpensive online storage, you’ve got little reason to not back up critical files to the cloud as well.

Five Best PDF Readers


Adobe’s free PDF reader has long been a standard for handling its extremely popular document format, but you aren’t limited to using it to view your PDF files. Let’s take a look at five of the most popular PDF readers.

Five Best Video Players


We’ve come a long way since animated GIFs and video-game-style MIDI files were considered cutting edge computer-provided A/V entertainment. Take advantage of today’s high-quality video with one of these five most popular video players.

Hive Five: Five Best Mind Mapping Applications


Mind mapping is a great way to add structure to brainstorming sessions and visualize your ideas. Check out the applications your fellow readers use to do their best brainstorming.

Five Best Windows Task Manager Alternatives


The Windows Task Manager is a functional but basic tool for keeping an eye on what your computer’s up to. If you want to go beyond the built-in tool and for more in depth information and control, check out these five alternatives.

Six Best Portable Operating Systems


Why restrict yourself to merely carrying around your data on a thumb drive? Take your entire operating system on your flash drive with the excellent portable operating systems you’ll find inside this week’s Hive Five.

Five Best Portable Apps Suites


Once upon a time, easy remote computing was a pipe dream, now people routinely carry gigs of data around on flash drives smaller than a modest pack of chewing gum. Manage your apps and data with these portable application suites.

Five Best Virtual-Desktop Managers


Long before multiple monitors were popular (or financially feasible), there were virtual desktops—applications that allow you to swap your entire workspace with another for easy compartmentalization of your work. Here's a look at five of the most popular virtual-desktop managers.

Five Best Application Docks


Remember the days of digging through folders of shortcuts and menus to launch applications? These days many users prefer customizable, attractive docks for launching and keeping track of their favorite apps. Here’s a look at five of the most popular docks.

Five Best Time-Tracking Applications


Where does the time go? Whether you need to know for billing purposes or just want a better idea of how your work day is split up, you can always answer that question with a good time-tracking application.

Five Best Software Update Tools


Rather than wait around for your software to notify you of updates (let’s face it, a lot of applications never will), these five handy tools keep an eye on your apps, alert you when an update’s available, and streamline the updating process.

Six Best Exercise Planning and Tracking Tools


Technology and exercise make an excellent pair; you can now track, plan, and graph your workouts more easily than ever. We’re here to take a look at six of the most popular tools for the job.

Five Best Alternative File Copiers


If you do any serious file copying on a Windows system, you’ll quickly discover that there are substantial limitations to the default file copier. Ease your file copying frustrations with these five alternative copiers.


Which is Your Favorite Hive Five Topic from 2009?(polls)

Have a favorite Hive Five topic from 2009 that wasn’t highlighted here? Let’s hear about it in the comments. If you have a topic you’d love us to cover in 2010, make sure to send an email with your suggestion to tips @ lifehacker.com with “Hive Five” in the subject line so we can add it to our list.






Most Popular Hive Five Topics of 2009 [Best Of 2009]

Every week we pose a simple, focused question to the Lifehacker readership about a specific topic: Which is best? From netbooks and malware removal to home servers and wallpaper, here’s a look back at the most popular Hive Five topics of 2009.

The Hive Five asks the question "Which is best?" in a variety of topics covering hardware, software, and sometimes even a combination of the two. Although sometimes it's easy to predict the winner—Ubuntu has had its share of wins, to be sure—the real value in the Hive Five isn't actually its ability to elevate a single winner to a pedestal but to highlight all the great options that are out there.

Between the four runners up in each Hive Five and the other options highlighted in the hundreds of comments on both the Hive Five Call for Contenders and the actual Hive Five every week, it’s easy to discover new things. If ever you’re not sold on the winner of any Hive Five always make sure to read over the comments and see if any of them tip you off to a new and awesome product you’d never heard of.

Five Best Netbooks

Some months have elapsed since we asked you which netbook was best, but the newer models of the winner and runners up in that Hive Five are still the forerunners in the netbook market.

Five Best Malware Removal Tools

Nobody likes having their machine laden down with malware. Check out this Hive Five to find great applications for keeping things running smooth and malware free.

Best Home Server Software

Media files, data synchronization, and remote backups, oh my! Home computing has advanced to a point where it’s practical to run your own home server, and we’re running down the five best tools for the job.

Five Best Linux Distributions

There are many, many Linux distributions, and a lot of unique reasons to like them. Read on to see which open-source operating systems inspired our readers to provide our biggest Hive Five response to date.

Five Best Wallpaper Sites

Nobody likes staring at a boring desktop when they fire up their computer every morning. Keep your wallpaper fresh with the five most popular sites Lifehacker readers use to satisfy their wallpaper needs.

Five Best Free Data Recovery Tools

The best way to recover from unexpected data loss is to be properly prepared. With one of the following tools on hand, you’ll always be ready to save your data from the Reaper.

Six Best Video Editing Applications

You want to be the supreme ruler of your own virtual cutting room? Better break out the checkbook—your film-chopping powers aren't going to come cheaply.

Five Best Web Browsers

It’s probably the most important and debated piece of software on the modern computer. See how your fellow readers get around the net, and vote for your favorite web browser.

Six Best MP3 Tagging Tools

A well tagged MP3 collection makes everything from organization to playback easier. Keep reading for a closer look at your fellow readers’ favorite tools for cleaning up their MP3 tags in this Hive Five.

Five Best Antivirus Applications

Computer viruses are increasingly sophisticated and pervasive. If you can’t afford to run your computer without some sort of antivirus software installed, check out these five popular options to protect your PC.

Five Best Live CDs

Live CDs (and DVDs) are versatile tools, allowing you to boot into an operating system without installing anything to your hard drives. Let’s take a closer look at the five most popular live CDs.

Five Best Disk Defragmenters

Your computer is a busy beaver, rapidly accessing and utilizing files all in the name of bringing you what you want, when you want it. Sometimes it needs a little help tidying up, and that’s where these five disk defragmenters come in.

Five Best Portable Applications

Whether you got a shiny new flash drive over the holidays or your old thumb drive is looking for a new lease on life, pack it full of goodness with these five killer portable applications.

Five Best Instant Messengers

Instant messaging has become so ubiquitous, an entire generation of internet users is probably unaware there was ever life without it. Check out the following five most popular instant messengers to to help you communicate across networks and the world.

Five Best Free System Restore Tools

Backing up data is a great way to minimize losses after a computing catastrophe. But what about restoring your actual system right away? Here are the five most popular reader choices.

Five Best People-Search Engines

Need to do a little online detective work? Track down anyone from long lost schoolmates to the new friend whose number you’ve lost with this assortment of powerful people-search engines.

Five Best System Tray Applications


The Windows system tray can be so much more than a parking lot for programs you don’t want cluttering up your task bar. Read on to see the five most popular tray tools readers can’t live without.

Five Best Online Backup Tools

Local backup is a useful and necessary part of securing your data against catastrophe, but with the advent of broadband and inexpensive online storage, you’ve got little reason to not back up critical files to the cloud as well.

Five Best PDF Readers


Adobe’s free PDF reader has long been a standard for handling its extremely popular document format, but you aren’t limited to using it to view your PDF files. Let’s take a look at five of the most popular PDF readers.

Five Best Video Players


We’ve come a long way since animated GIFs and video-game-style MIDI files were considered cutting edge computer-provided A/V entertainment. Take advantage of today’s high-quality video with one of these five most popular video players.

Hive Five: Five Best Mind Mapping Applications


Mind mapping is a great way to add structure to brainstorming sessions and visualize your ideas. Check out the applications your fellow readers use to do their best brainstorming.

Five Best Windows Task Manager Alternatives


The Windows Task Manager is a functional but basic tool for keeping an eye on what your computer’s up to. If you want to go beyond the built-in tool and for more in depth information and control, check out these five alternatives.

Six Best Portable Operating Systems


Why restrict yourself to merely carrying around your data on a thumb drive? Take your entire operating system on your flash drive with the excellent portable operating systems you’ll find inside this week’s Hive Five.

Five Best Portable Apps Suites


Once upon a time, easy remote computing was a pipe dream, now people routinely carry gigs of data around on flash drives smaller than a modest pack of chewing gum. Manage your apps and data with these portable application suites.

Five Best Virtual-Desktop Managers


Long before multiple monitors were popular (or financially feasible), there were virtual desktops—applications that allow you to swap your entire workspace with another for easy compartmentalization of your work. Here's a look at five of the most popular virtual-desktop managers.

Five Best Application Docks


Remember the days of digging through folders of shortcuts and menus to launch applications? These days many users prefer customizable, attractive docks for launching and keeping track of their favorite apps. Here’s a look at five of the most popular docks.

Five Best Time-Tracking Applications


Where does the time go? Whether you need to know for billing purposes or just want a better idea of how your work day is split up, you can always answer that question with a good time-tracking application.

Five Best Software Update Tools


Rather than wait around for your software to notify you of updates (let’s face it, a lot of applications never will), these five handy tools keep an eye on your apps, alert you when an update’s available, and streamline the updating process.

Six Best Exercise Planning and Tracking Tools


Technology and exercise make an excellent pair; you can now track, plan, and graph your workouts more easily than ever. We’re here to take a look at six of the most popular tools for the job.

Five Best Alternative File Copiers


If you do any serious file copying on a Windows system, you’ll quickly discover that there are substantial limitations to the default file copier. Ease your file copying frustrations with these five alternative copiers.


Which is Your Favorite Hive Five Topic from 2009?(polls)

Have a favorite Hive Five topic from 2009 that wasn’t highlighted here? Let’s hear about it in the comments. If you have a topic you’d love us to cover in 2010, make sure to send an email with your suggestion to tips @ lifehacker.com with “Hive Five” in the subject line so we can add it to our list.






TunesBag Stores Your Music in the Cloud [Music]

If you want to store your music in the cloud, access it from anywhere, and be able to share and rank tunes with your friends, tunesBag can help.

Click on the image above for a closer look.

TunesBag is a music collection service. You upload your music and can then access it from anywhere. TunesBag has multiple ways for you to upload and access your music: through your web browser, through an Adobe Air-powered desktop app, a Facebook app, and an iPhone app.

Not only can you listen to your own music but you can share music with your friends—in countries that allow limited-use sharing the music will be shared directly, in countries that don't allow sharing tunesBag will attempt to find a publicly available copy of the song to share—and have your friends rank your tunes and playlists.

You can upload up to 1GB of music with the free and ad-supported basic account. You can upgrade to 10GB of storage for $4 a month and up to 200GB of storage for $15 a month. Have your own favorite tool for sharing music without having to lug your MP3 player with you? Let’s hear about it in the comments.






Stereo8 Streams Fresh, User-Driven Music [Music]

Take user-submitted content and voting, a la Reddit and Digg, strip out the dorm room aesthetic, and apply it to music. You end up with Stereo8, a fun-to-use user-driven internet radio station.

Visit Stereo8 and select one of the three broad genres—they'll be expanding to ten shortly—and begin listening. You can simply listen without participating, but if you want to shape the way others hear music, you can login using Facebook Connect to vote music up.

If you want to participate even more than simply listening and voting, you can also upload music which will be inserted into the playlist for future play. The uploaded track will stay on the Stereo8 servers for up to 48 hours or until it is sent through the playlist once, which ever comes first—you can read over the fine print in regard to that arrangement on the Copyright page at Stereo8.

Stereo8 is a free service that requires no login to listen and a Facebook login to vote and upload.