NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
TrumpTariffTradeAnnounceLaunchNewsPricesStrikesMajorFebruaryPhotosYourCarLotSayCourtDigestSundayTimelineSafetyGlobalMarketTechChina
TrumpTariffTradeAnnounceLaunchNewsPricesStrikesMajorFebruaryPhotosYourCarLotSayCourtDigestSundayTimelineSafetyGlobalMarketTechChina
All Articles
The next iTunes may be vibe-coded
The Verge
Published 3 days ago

The next iTunes may be vibe-coded

The Verge · Feb 19, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers, a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week. Wouldn't it be great if you could exchange music recommendations with your friends, no matter whether they use Spotify, Apple Music, or Bandcamp? What if you could follow DJs and other tastemakers online and automatically turn their social media feeds into playlists? Or what if you could fine-tune your music recommendations with AI to only get recommendations for songs you've never played before? Those are a few of the tasks the new music app Parachord is trying to take on by f … Read the full story at The Verge.

Full Article

This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers, a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week.Wouldn’t it be great if you could exchange music recommendations with your friends, no matter whether they use Spotify, Apple Music, or Bandcamp? What if you could follow DJs and other tastemakers online and automatically turn their social media feeds into playlists? Or what if you could fine-tune your music recommendations with AI to only get recommendations for songs you’ve never played before?Those are a few of the tasks the new music app Parachord is trying to take on by freeing music metadata from individual subscription service silos. In essence, Parachord wants to one day make songs universally playable and shareable, no matter what services you subscribe to. For now, Parachord is still very much in its infancy, with a series of unstable, experimental builds slowly laying the path to a beta release.Parachord is still very much in its infancy, with a series of unstable, experimental builds slowly laying the path to a beta release.But the idea behind it is something Parachord mastermind J Herskowitz has been noodling over for a long time. Not only is Herskowitz a music tech veteran who’s worked at Spotify, LimeWire, and AOL Music, he also built this very app before.Back in 2011, Herskowitz banded together with a small group of likeminded misfits to build a music app called Tomahawk that used a plug-in architecture to tap into the music libraries of services like Rdio, Grooveshark, and Beats Music. The app also offered access to a social layer for music fans and allowed bands to share their latest tracks with universal links.It was a fascinating idea, but without a clear business model, it was ultimately not sustainable. Tomahawk development effectively ended in 2015. “We all needed to get jobs,” Herskowitz remembers. “I was very sad when Tomahawk went away.”Except, it never fully went away. As an open-source project, Tomahawk’s code continues to be available on GitHub. Around a month ago, Herskowitz decided to take another look at it, with some help from AI. “I fired up Claude Code, pointed it at the Tomahawk repo on GitHub, and said: Look at this, understand what it does, and let’s see if we can rebuild it.”Herskowitz freely admits he’s not a developer in the traditional sense. “My whole career was in product management,” he says. “I never [wrote] real code.” But with Claude Code, he managed to rewrite Tomahawk and turn it into a working version of the new Parachord app within a couple of weeks, without hiring a developer.The music industry has changed quite a bit over the past 15 years, as has the way many people listen to music. A bunch of once-promising streaming services have since disappeared. Consumers have largely flocked to three or four major services, with Spotify leading the pack. “When it comes to subscriptions, Spotify won,” Herskowitz says, acknowledging that people who only care about listening to their Discover Weekly likely won’t get a whole lot out of his app.Parachord is built with a different audience in mind. People who buy songs on Bandcamp, track their listening history with Last.fm, and religiously follow bands on Bluesky. Back in his Tomahawk days, Herskowitz used to think there was a huge audience like this out there. Now, he realizes that it’s much more niche and at times even wonders if anyone other than himself really cares about the ideas behind Parachord. Not that that has stopped him. “That’s the beauty of where we are today,” he says. “Technologically speaking, I can build an app for [just] me.”“I fired up Claude Code, pointed it at the Tomahawk repo on GitHub, and said: Look at this, understand what it does, and let’s see if we can rebuild it.”Vibe-coding is often being talked about in the context of productivity apps, but there are some fascinating implications for the media space as well. Fifteen to 20 years ago, a bunch of developers tried to figure out new ways to consume music and video online, often with surprising results: Songbird turned MP3 blogs into playlists. Boxee pioneered universal movie and TV show libraries across streaming services. Miro experimented with alternative, P2P-powered distribution models for video podcasts. The list goes on.In the end, many of these efforts were more passion projects than businesses. Back then, that was often a death sentence for niche apps. These days, vibe coding can give these niche projects a new lease on life.Of course, other things have changed, too: Most major media services are a lot more restrictive when it comes to data sharing and API access, forcing Herskowitz to rely on complicated work-arounds. Users who want Parachord to play nice with Spotify have to register it as a personal app in their Spotify developer profile, and then generate an individual API key. That personal key model also extends to the integration of AI services like Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT.The flip side: By relying on personal keys, Parachord requires far fewer resources. “I don’t need to limit features to paid tiers to cover third-party API or hosting bills - because there aren’t any,” Herskowitz wrote on LinkedIn last week, adding: “I’m building Parachord as a personal app because music listening is personal. Your taste, your library, your preferred sources, your friends, your desired social experiences around listening to music, your history—these aren’t things that should live inside someone else’s walled garden.”And while Herskowitz is building Parachord as a personal passion project, he also hasn’t given up on the idea that there are business models waiting to be unlocked if you can break free of the silos of the big music streaming services.“Nobody’s going to start a streaming business from the ground up to compete with Spotify,” he says. “[But there is] an opportunity for a little cottage industry to build experiences on top of the content that people are already paying for.”Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.Janko Roettgers


Share this story

Read Original at The Verge

Related Articles

The Vergeabout 2 hours ago
Vibe camera shootout: Camp Snap Pro vs. Flashback One35 V2

Fun vibes. Okay-ish photos. | Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge There's been a surge of interest over the last few years in inexpensive digital cameras. Younger folks are snapping up old point-and-shoots because they view the aesthetic as more authentic and more appealing than smartphone images. Companies are even rereleasing old tech at new prices. And there are cameras like the original Camp Snap: a $70 single-button point-and-shoot with no screen, designed as a modern take on a disposable film camera. It's cheap enough to send off with a kid to summer camp and accessible enough for just about anyone to enjoy its lo-fi aesthetic. I've been testing two charming examples of this formula: the $99 Camp S … Read the full story at The Verge.

The Vergeabout 2 hours ago
America desperately needs new privacy laws

This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech world. For more on the dire state of tech regulation, follow Adi Robertson. The Stepback arrives in our subscribers' inboxes at 8AM ET. Opt in for The Stepback here. How it started In 1973, long before the modern digital era, the US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) published a report called "Records, Computers, and the Rights of Citizens." Networked computers seemed "destined to become the principal medium for making, storing, and using records about people," the report's foreword began. These systems could be a "powerful management … Read the full story at The Verge.

The Vergeabout 18 hours ago
Arturia’s FX Collection 6 adds two new effects and a $99 intro version

Arturia launched a new version of its flagship effects suite, FX Collection, which includes two new plugins, EFX Ambient and Pitch Shifter-910. FX Collection 6 also marks the introduction of an Intro version with a selection of six effects covering the basics for $99. That pales in comparison to the 39 effects in the full FX Collection Pro, but that also costs $499. Pitch Shifter-910 is based on the iconic Eventide H910 Harmonizer from 1974, an early digital pitchshifter and delay with a very unique character. Arturia does an admirable job preserving its glitchy quirks. Pitch Shifter-910 is not a transparent effect that lets you create natu … Read the full story at The Verge.

The Vergeabout 22 hours ago
Georgia says Elon Musk’s America PAC violated election law

Of course, it’s the guy who constantly complains about voter fraud who may have committed voter fraud. | Image: The Verge For all his bluster about voter fraud, Elon Musk has been one of the most flagrant flaunters of US election law. Now his America PAC has been slapped with a reprimand by the Georgia State Election Board for sending out pre-filled absentee ballot applications. State law prohibits anyone, other than an authorized relative, from sending an absentee ballot application prefilled with the elector's information. Residents of Chattooga, Cherokee, Coweta, Floyd, and Whitfield counties reported receiving absentee ballot applications from America PAC, partially pre-filled. According to the State Election Board, the applications also failed to note tha … Read the full story at The Verge.

The Verge1 day ago
Suspect in Tumbler Ridge school shooting described violent scenarios to ChatGPT

The suspect in the mass shooting at Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, Jesse Van Rootselaar, was raising alarms among employees at OpenAI months before the shooting took place. This past June, Jesse had conversations with ChatGPT involving descriptions of gun violence that triggered the chatbot's automated review system. Several employees raised concerns that her posts could be a precursor to real-world violence and encouraged company leaders to contact the authorities, but they ultimately declined. According to the Wall Street Journal, leaders at the company decided that Rootselaar's posts did not constitute a "credible and imminent risk of … Read the full story at The Verge.

The Verge1 day ago
The Pixel 10A and Soundcore Space One are just two of the best deals this week

Welcome to the weekend, folks! The Reviews and Guides team here at The Verge is gearing up for all things Unpacked, but Samsung isn’t the only one readying new phones. Google just announced the Pixel 10A, which, for you early adopters, is already up for preorder with a $100 gift card. Elsewhere in deal land, you’ll find steep discounts on mopping vacuums, slight discounts on Soundcore’s cheap ANC headphones, and a rare discount on a new PC controller with swiveling sticks. So, let’s get to it, shall we? We finally have a release date for the Pixel 10A: March 5th. What’s more, if you’re thinking about picking up Google’s latest phone, you can already preorder the base-model configuration at Amazon and Best Buy with 128GB of storage and a $100 gift card for $499. Alternatively, Amazon is offering it with a free pair of the Pixel Buds 2A, a fantastic set of recently released earbuds that typically retail for $130. Despite being a pretty minimal update, Google’s forthcoming Android handset is a pretty solid deal. It doesn’t adopt a lot of features from the flagship Pixel 10 series; however, last year’s Tensor G4 chip is still speedy enough for most tasks, satellite SOS is handy, and you get slightly faster wired and wireless charging. More importantly, it still comes with seven years of OS and security updates, which, personally, I’d take over Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots, and other AI-based tools any day of the week. Read our hands-on impressions. Google Pixel 10A Where to Buy: $599 $499 at Amazon (free $100 gift card) $629 $499 at Amazon (free Pixel Buds 2A) $599 $499 at Best Buy (free $100 gift card) Twelve. That’s how many AC outlets Anker’s 351 Power Strip — which is now available in black or white from Amazon and Anker for $23.99 ($6 off) — packs into its 9.65-inch, surge-protected build. The beefy power strip also features a 20W USB-C port and two USB-A ports, both of which can deliver up to 15W of juice. Just keep in mind that, like with most power strips