Does anybody know of a way to automatically listen to all the linked mp3s on a web page
January 10, 2005 8:45 AM Subscribe
Does anybody know of a way to automatically listen to all the linked mp3s on a web page? [MI]
I frequent a couple of great mp3 blogs (3hive, for instance) and have been searching for a way to automatically listen to all the tracks without having to click each link in turn. I'm not looking to download the tracks (I can do that with wget), just listen to them one at a time. A Firefox plugin? OS X App? I could write a shell script, but I'm at work and lazy.
I frequent a couple of great mp3 blogs (3hive, for instance) and have been searching for a way to automatically listen to all the tracks without having to click each link in turn. I'm not looking to download the tracks (I can do that with wget), just listen to them one at a time. A Firefox plugin? OS X App? I could write a shell script, but I'm at work and lazy.
Response by poster: Ok, while not immediately apparent, webjay does do what I was looking for:
http://webjay.org/playthispage?url=(url here)
Thanks.
posted by maniactown at 9:39 AM on January 10, 2005
http://webjay.org/playthispage?url=(url here)
Thanks.
posted by maniactown at 9:39 AM on January 10, 2005
There's a Firefox plugin that I find useful for pages with a lot of media content. It's called Download Them All. It rawks.
posted by Civil_Disobedient at 11:31 AM on January 10, 2005
posted by Civil_Disobedient at 11:31 AM on January 10, 2005
Webjay good. Download Them All bad.
at 5:30 AM this is the entirety of my commentary as an interested party on something like this.
posted by TTIKTDA at 2:35 AM on January 11, 2005
at 5:30 AM this is the entirety of my commentary as an interested party on something like this.
posted by TTIKTDA at 2:35 AM on January 11, 2005
You could also use one of the bookmarklets on Playr's front page to do this easily.
posted by alf at 1:54 AM on January 19, 2005
posted by alf at 1:54 AM on January 19, 2005
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by maniactown at 8:56 AM on January 10, 2005