
The strange thing is that after I had disabled ABP both sites could only "see" the first 700 tracks from large lists.Ī better solution for long lists is to not export the list in Last.fm as a xspf-file but to choose for TSV as the format in the drop-down menu (it's right underneath where it says XSPF). It turned out that because I had enabled AdBlockPlus both sites somehow couldn't trigger the export from Last.fm. So far anything under a thousand tracks on Last.fm gives good results, but when I tried a user with 5064 tracks loved and another with 7455 both came back as either not a valid username or zero results.

There is an option to turn this off.īoth services have a problem with searching for tracks if the number of loved-tracks is fairly large.

The downside of using Playlistify however is that they have sound effects while searching that are really annoying if you're listening to music. Playlistify also has an option for adding the url of an xspf-file but no option to upload one, not that handy since you can only download the file from Last.fm but not link to it. I've tested both sites to see what results they give and it turned out that Playlistify gave more results back than Spotibot (20 tracks more of my Loved-list). Playlistify has had some outages but normally they're really stable. These two sites offer an easy way of finding loved tracks based on giving them a username. Standard tools for exporting Loved Tracks 5 iTunes (Mac) - import a XSPF playlist.1 Standard tools for exporting Loved Tracks.
