3:28 PM Brian is now listening to: B Today.3:28 PM Brian is now listening to: A Today.Transcript Brian is now listening to: E Today This could be an internal reference to the idea that it "notifies" (converts into musical notes) your "friends" of the notes (a play on words). Nowplaying kcsm series#The notes appear to be the beginning of I'll Be There For You by The Rembrandts, the title music of the TV series " Friends". Of course this is at least as useless as being told which note someone is listening to. Since many songs in similar keys contain at least some of the notes posted, you would be given a list of a large part of the music you can buy in any on-line music stores. The title text continues the joke of this new musical service: If you click on the post, it takes you to search results for the note on various online music store. C sharp, above Mike's comment, is the only note not given by a single letter (after the correction - see Trivia). The comic's title alludes to the fact that you can "play a song" but can also "play a note." It may also allude to the visual similarities between the hash/pound/ number sign (#) and the sharp sign (♯). Pachelbel's Rant) means that many different songs may include the same sequence of notes, though possibly in different octaves or at different speeds. Even if you could keep up with the speed of the posted notes that someone is listening to, the similarity in phrases in many songs (especially pop songs, e.g. All but the slowest songs will require reporting dozens to hundreds of notes every minute (a single glissando may cover a dozen or more notes in less than a second), meaning that anyone who can see your stream of posts will be literally inundated by posts from the service. Any song with more than a single line of music contains multiple different notes whose names according to the English convention are communicated here. There are typically many hundreds of notes in any song. Nowplaying kcsm software#In the example, the software is sharing the notes that Brian is listening to and his friends Mike and Caitlin are getting annoyed with the number of posts they are receiving. As songs play several dozen notes a minute (and some songs, many more), this would lead to the flooding of friends' notification streams. In this comic, Randall takes that notion to its extreme, envisioning a program that does this note-by-note, rather than just song-by-song. There are a variety of applications that post a user's music-listening habits on their preferred social network. Title text: If you click on the post, it takes you to search results for the note on various online music stores. It appears incorrectly here because of technical restrictions. The correct title of this page is 1482: #NowPlaying.
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