Skip to main content

This Is My Jam shutting down, but its owners want to be as nice about it as possible

This Is My Jam
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Since 2011, This Is My Jam has allowed users to easily share their favorite songs and find new music by checking out other users’ favorites. Sadly, many of the service’s features will be going away as its creators have decided to step away, but users’ jams will live on.

“After nearly a year assessing many options, we’ve decided to stop operating This Is My Jam in its current form,” creators Matthew Ogle and Hannah Donovan wrote in a Tumblr post on Sunday. While most other Web services would simply set a deadline after which users’ data would be unavailable, This Is My Jam is taking a much friendlier approach.

The first thing that the service’s creators want users to know is that their jams aren’t going anywhere. Instead the site will, in the creators’ words, “become a read-only time capsule.” Users will no longer be able to post to the site, but everything posted to the site during its four-year lifespan will be there to explore.

As for why the service is shutting down, the creators have this to say: “First and foremost, it feels like we’ve explored This Is My Jam’s original mission best we could. We’re ready to free up our evenings and weekends for new ideas and projects, while hopefully doing good by the thing that made Jam great: the 200,000 of you who shared more than 2 million hand-picked songs over the last four years, week after week.”

Of course, there is more to it than that. This Is My Jam relies on a bevy of other websites and services like YouTube, SoundCloud, and Twitter. These services often make changes to their APIs, which means that instead of working on new features, the team behind This Is My Jam is busy making sure that current features still work.

This Is My Jam will go into time capsule mode starting in September. For now the website is still allowing new users to sign up, though it isn’t clear if this will be disabled before September.

In the meantime, if you’re looking for a replacement service, last month we reported on Cymbal, which seems intent on taking up the social music sharing mantle.

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
What is hi-res audio, and how can you experience it right now?
Dlyan Wireless Headphones

High-resolution audio, hi-res audio, or even HD audio -- whatever you decide to call it (for the record, the industry prefers "hi-res audio"), it's a catch-all term that describes digital audio that goes above and beyond the level of sound quality you can expect from a garden-variety MP3 file and even CDs. It was once strictly the domain of audiophiles, but now that major streaming music services like Apple Music, Amazon Music, Tidal, Deezer, and Qobuz have embraced it, almost everyone can take advantage of what hi-res has to offer.

But what exactly is hi-res audio? What equipment do you need to listen to it? Where can you download or stream it? And does it actually sound better? We've got the answers.
What does the term 'hi-res audio' mean?

Read more
How to download music from Spotify for offline listening
How to download music and podcasts from Spotify: The downloads folder.

If you're a Spotify Premium user paying that premium Spotify fee, chances are you've taken at least some time curating playlists, liking songs, and using the platform's easy-to-use (and recently revamped) user interface to discover new and old music.

But sometimes all that music or your favorite podcasts aren't available if you find yourself without an internet connection to stream them from — like on a long plane ride or weekend camping trip in the sticks. That's where Spotify's offline listening feature comes in handy, allowing you to download playlists, albums, and podcasts through its desktop and mobile apps so you can still rock out while you're off the grid.

Read more
How to switch from Spotify to Apple Music
Spotify and Apple Music transfer on a smartphone.

Spotify is the world's most popular music streaming service for a reason. It has a massive catalog of music and podcasts, is full of cool music discovery and sharing features, and is really easy to use.
However, with its recent price increase and the fact that it still hasn't joined most of its peers in offering a hi-res audio quality option, you may be considering jumping ship for its closest competitor, Apple Music, which counts lossless hi-res tracks, mind-bending spatial audio, Dolby Atmos Music tracks, and a catalog that rivals Spotify's among the many attractive reasons to switch.

But there's one problem: you’ve spent a lot of time creating playlists and marking songs and albums as your favorites in Spotify. Is it worth the switch? Will all that hard work be lost in translation?

Read more