Yesterday I accidentally stumbled into my Buzz on how Google was promoting interesting tapes; among these tapes was a tape of one interesting music service, which will be discussed further.

mflow is a new social service combining a social network, the ability to share music with friends, Internet radio and a music store. The service allows you to: listen, share, buy and discuss the music you like.
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The idea of service is based on the waves (flows), which are a direct analogue of tweets. Unlike tweets, the wave includes a whole music track that anyone can listen to and a small message with a comment about the song and your greetings to friends.

The main highlight of the service is the ability to listen to any music that is in its database for free. You can use the search or just turn on the wave of one of your friends with whom your musical tastes coincide.
When searching, you are given the opportunity to listen to any 30 seconds of the song that interests you, and if you create a wave with this song, you can listen to it completely.
The peculiarity of the waves is that one cannot listen to them time after time, but since the waves with the song you like most likely have already been created a lot, it becomes easy to listen to one song on replay.
A nice addition can be that if someone bought a song from your wave, 20% of the cost of the composition is credited to your account.
The music base of the service is constantly growing and, as the developers say, it now has more than 5 million songs.
As I have already noted, the music is completely free to listen to (except for songs that are not sold, except as part of an album). It is broadcast in AAC format 160kb / s.
There is a possibility to crosspost on Facebook and Twitter.
For Mac and Windows and the Google Chrome browser, there are clients.

In my opinion, mflow can be what everyone expected from Apple Ping.
References:
mflowdownload