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March 24, 2008 9:00 PM PDT

With Winamp in mind, Imeem announces developer strategy

by Caroline McCarthy
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This post was updated at 9:00 AM on Tuesday to make it clear that Imeem's platform is technically "live."

Social media service Imeem has announced the Imeem Media Platform, a set of APIs (application programming interfaces) and tools so that outside developers and partners can contribute to the site. The APIs will give developers access to media on the site (music, video, and photos), the media player interface, the music recommendation engine, and playlist-creation tools, among other things.

While the platform itself is technically "live," it's in a very preliminary phase, Imeem founder Dalton Caldwell told CNET News.com. Right now, all that's out is the documentation and tools for developers to start experimenting. "This is like step one," Caldwell said. An application directory, as well as OpenSocial compatibility, will come later.

The Imeem Media Platform, Caldwell said, was inspired in part by Winamp, the media player software that gained popularity in the Web's early days in part because it was "hackable" and welcomed developer plug-ins and extensions. (Winamp parent company Nullsoft was acquired by AOL way back in 1999.)

"The reason I was a fan (of Winamp) was because it was extensible," Caldwell said. With Imeem's new developer tools, he hopes that Imeem enthusiasts with some tech expertise will be able to make the service better, and perhaps combat complaints that Imeem's interface isn't user-friendly. "We think it'd be really great if someone built, like, a smart playlist creator so you could type in your favorite artists...and (Imeem would) create an automatic playlist for you."

Caldwell also named a few other examples: a "name that tune" or music trivia game, for example, or a way for music blogs to customize the Imeem players embedded on their sites.

While it still pales in comparison to the MySpaces and Facebooks of the world, Imeem has come a long way since the identity crisis that re-branded it from an oddball instant-messaging client to a social network in 2006. The site now claims 24 million unique visitors per month, and has streaming music deals in place with all four major record labels.

Originally posted at The Social
Caroline McCarthy, a CNET News staff writer, is a downtown Manhattanite happily addicted to social-media tools and restaurant blogs. Her pre-CNET resume includes interning at an IT security firm and brewing cappuccinos. E-mail Caroline.
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