Last.fmVersion: 2.1.0 (iPhone OS 3.0 Tested)
Developer: Last.fm
Age rating: 12+
Rating Description
4+ Applications in this category contain no objectionable material.
9+ Applications in this category may contain mild or infrequent occurrences of cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and infrequent or mild mature, suggestive, or horror-themed content which may not be suitable for children under the age of 9.
12+ Applications in this category may also contain infrequent mild language, frequent or intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and mild or infrequent mature or suggestive themes, and simulated gambling which may not be suitable for children under the age of 12.
17+ Applications in this category may also contain frequent and intense offensive language; frequent and intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence; and frequent and intense mature, horror, and suggestive themes; plus sexual content, nudity, alcohol, tobacco, and drugs which may not be suitable for children under the age of 17.
why?
Infrequent/Mild Alcohol, Tobacco, or Drug Use or References
Infrequent/Mild Mature/Suggestive Themes
Infrequent/Mild Profanity or Crude Humor
Infrequent/Mild Sexual Content or Nudity
Compatibility: Compatible with iPhone and iPod touch
Requires iPhone OS 2.0 or later
Filed Under: Music
Listen to more than 5 million tracks for free with Last.fm on your iPhone.
Create personal radio stations based on any artist or genres, and listen to commercial free music for hours. With Last.fm on the iPhone you can also check out artist bios and concert information and share your favourite tracks with your friends using the iPhone contact list.
The more you listen, the more Last.fm learns what you like and recommends new music based on your taste. Go to the Last.fm website, and you can see your iPhone and iTunes listening history, stored by Last.fm no matter where you’re listening.
App Store options offer vast selection of content
by Ben Boychuk, Macworld.com
A million formats lived and died on AM and FM radio. But news of the niche format’s death was slightly exaggerated. Album-oriented rock, classical, bluegrass, free-form progressive, surf rock and punk didn’t really die at all. Some interesting music migrated to satellite. The rest moved to the Internet. To music lovers for whom a 160GB iPod classic is still disappointingly small, Internet radio gives the iPhone and iPod touch an unlimited capacity for music.
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