Instinctiv

We improve the way you discover, manage and listen to music by making the process easy, fun and more personalized. Our products are designed to understand what you like by observing what you naturally do. No star ratings, no thumbs up/thumbs down, no other confusing questions, settings or preferences. Just play the songs you feel like listening to and skip the ones you don’t. We’ll do the rest. And we promise, we’ll get to know your tastes and play you songs you are actually in the mood for
You want a music player that knows you. You want a music player that notices when you skip a song. You want a music player that keeps up with you as your moods and tastes evolve over the course of the day, month and year. Â instinctiv Player is here. For more information visit:Â http://www.instinctiv.com/index.html
Comments
“Press has been great. Our PR firm has attributed over 22 million impressions online at various tech sites since the CEA Line Shows..”
— Jono Pinksy, Viologht
” Our client ThinkEco did 82 press interviews and demos in two days! We can’t complain. The CEA Line Show in NYC is an excellent venue for start-ups like ThinkEco because it attracts top shelf press and business prospects who have more time to spend at the booth. People didn’t pass by, they all came over to talk. From start to finish, a professional, yet intimate, conference that netted big results –P.S. The food was excellent too!”
— Anne Steinbergm, Managing Director, Kitchen Public Relations for ThinkEco
“CEA Line Shows is a critical event for my teams at Engadget, Switched, TUAW, and Download Squad. In a tech editorial environment that is increasingly (and understandably) remote and mobile, in-person shows like these are a welcome rarity. Not only do they get my guys and girls out of their home offices, but they have also created innumerable hands-on and breaking stories chock-full of the video and images our readers have come to love and expect. The smaller size of CEA Line Shows means that my journalists can get their job done in a consumable environment as compared to the multi-day, exhausting conferences. Both have their place, but I am for one forever a fan of the smaller CEA Line Shows.”
— Joshua Fruhlinger, Editorial Director, AOL Tech.
“All in all, the CEA Line Shows was a big success, especially for an initial effort. I urge other manufacturers of home-theater products to sign up for next year — you’ll save loads of money compared to putting on an individual line show, and you’ll save journalists loads of time, a commodity in very short supply these days. It’s a win-win in an otherwise lose-lose economy.”
— UltimateAVmag.com Editor, Scott Wilkinson.
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