![]() The first - “Do We Have A Problem?” - was accompanied by a video that featured Cory Hardrict and Joseph Sikora, star of “Power Book IV: Force.” The second song - “Bussin” - has since peaked at No. Within the span of a week, she released two collaborations featuring Lil Baby. Nicki Minaj has been working hard since she made her musical return last month. “I gotta shoutout Larry Jackson Apple tho, for originally putting the idea on my radar and giving me his blessing to explore new avenues for the show. Official announcement coming soon,” she hinted during an exchange with Joe Budden. The news about Queen Radio comes days after Nicki Minaj disclosed that an “official announcement” about her radio show was on the way. Aside from the “Seeing Green” femcee, artists like Pusha T, Tinashe, Lil Yachty and Outkast’s Big Boi will have shows on Amp. The app - which is currently invite-only - will reportedly allow users to speak to each other and listen to songs from Universal Music Group‘s extensive library as well as those under Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group and some independent labels. The rapper’s radio show - which originally aired on Apple Music - is slated to make its return on Amp, a new live audio app developed by Amazon. Two months after the iOS iPlayer Radio app launched, the BBC said it had passed one million downloads.Nicki Minaj is bringing Queen Radio back, but this time around, it will be on a different platform. iPlayer Radio caters to that listening preference by putting live listening front and centre, via a tap-to-listen stations dial, with catch up features tucked away in the background. In its most recent iPlayer usage stats The listing notes that the issue is “due to a problem with a specific recent firmware version” that has been fixed by Samsung but may not have yet been rolled out across all networks.Īt the iOS app launch, the BBC said the vast majority (90%) of radio listening was live, rather than on demand. The current Android app listening on Google Play warns that Samsung Galaxy S3 owners may encounter an audio playback bug - if they bought their device via a carrier. The BBC also writes that is has “followed a slightly different design pattern for the Android version of the app” than iOS, noting that on the earlier app some content is revealed by swiping upwards “to show a ‘carousel’” - but on Android swiping horizontally takes the user through all the content from the currently selected station. This means there is more space to play with in the app - “when considering additional functionality and extra content in the future” - and the BBC said it will “look at how we can reflect this model in our iOS app in the near future as well”. Using HLS has a number of benefits including the ability to efficiently access high quality live and on-demand audio whilst allowing you to continue to use other apps on your device at the same time, and allows us to develop exciting new features in the future. In the event, the BBC notes on its blog that it used the HLS (Http Live Streaming) protocol, rather than Flash - since the latter is no longer available for Android. The move extended the touch points for its digital on-demand iPlayer service by breaking out the radio content into a standalone app - with the ultimate aim of shifting all radio listening off the BBC’s main on-demand iPlayer service so that can focus on TV.Īt the time of the original iPlayer Radio app launch, the BBC said an Android version would be coming soon but said it needed to iron out Adobe Flash issues for the app to work across the various flavours of Android device. The BBC launched its original iPlayer Radio apps last year, in October, releasing a native iOS app plus mobile web and desktop apps. ![]() Confirming that the app is now available for download on Google’s Play Store in a tweet this morning, the corporation added that it would also be available on Amazon’s app store for its Kindle Fire tablets “very soon”. users listen to BBC radio stations live or catch up on scheduled programmes they missed. ![]() ![]() ![]() The U.K.’s BBC has launched an Android version of its iPlayer Radio app which lets U.K. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |