io-connected service whereby you can get a private URL that includes your best-loved music tracks and play them wherever a web-enabled computer is available. All you have to do is furnish a drop name and add as many files as you want, as long as you don’t exceed the provided limit.
Of course, the drop itself can be shared via Twitter, so that you can keep your friends and peers fully posted on your current aural experience. What’s more, if you have a band of your own this service makes for putting your work across effortlessly, and it turns hunting for that elusive record deal a less-stressing task indeed.
Other than that, drop features such as password protection can be set down when you create it. You can also establish a date of expiry for the drop, but (as always) you can renew it later on should you change your mind. In addition to that, you can enable guests to add files and comments, and guests can also delete files if you empower them to do so.
Playlist.io In Their Own Words
“Add audio, listen from ‘the cloud’.”
Why Playlist.io It Might Be A Killer
It makes sharing music as easy as any other sharing process carried through Drop.io.
Some Questions About Playlist.io
What is the maximum size of a Drop itself? Can that be extended somehow? 






