Tag Archives: Google Music

1 Acquisition Apple Doesn't Want to See: Samsung Buying Pandora

By Eric Bleeker, CFA, The Motley Fool

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When Apple first conceived the iPhone, one concept was to use the cumbersome iPod click wheel as the central control of the phone. After using the touchscreen interface that Apple finally decided upon, that idea seems ludicrous. However, it does show how intertwined the iPod and the iPhone have long been. 

When the iPhone was first launched, Steve Jobs stood in front of a sign that had three soon-to-be iconic buttons behind him: “iPod, Phone, Internet.” The inclusion of the iPod was just as important as an access point to holding a full-featured and easy-to-use Internet in your hand. 

Yet the nature of how music is consumed is changing. Streaming services such as Pandora  and Spotify might struggle to become profitable, but they’re more and more popular with users. Apple has taken note of the trend and is reportedly working on a Spotify competitor. Yet while Apple works on its homegrown competitor in the space, the cagiest move of all could be Samsung making a move for Pandora. Let’s take a look at the digital music space and see why a Samsung and Pandora tie-up could make sense. 

Digital music: Apple’s domain
Apple rode booming iPhone sales to more success in the digital-music world. While gaudy numbers about the billions of apps downloaded began to steal the show at Apple’s presentations, its dominance of music continued expanding. Competition over digital-music sales has increased markedly in recent years, with Amazon.com aggressively pricing digital music and building out its cloud player. Likewise, after relying on third-party music services such as Amazon when Android first launched, Google  unveiled Google Music in 2011 to better compete with iTunes as a central music hub.

Yet this increased investment in the digital-music space from competitors hasn’t done much to dent Apple’s dominance. Asymco’s Horace Dediu recently pegged Apple’s iTunes as paying out $3.4 billion in digital payments to publishers in 2012 — 60% of industry totals. That’s consistent with past research from NPD, which has shown iTunes maintaing roughly 66% of U.S. digital sales. 

With Android now controlling roughly 70% of worldwide smartphone sales, it’d be easy to conclude it’ll begin chipping away at Apple’s music dominance. Yet market-share figures don’t always tell the full tale. Apple’s iOS has higher market share in countries like the United States, where legal digital-music sales are much higher. Not only that, but getting the right licensing to sell music globally is a time-consuming affair. Google Music launched as U.S.-only, finally moving to Europe just last November. Apple has a large head-start in setting up global music sales. 

Not only that, but Apple has a dominant grasp on peripherals such as sound bars and alarm clocks to turn smartphones into music systems. Walk into a Bose store, and you’ll find nearly every piece of audio equipment working in conjunction with an iPod or iPhone. 

Music matters beyond music sales
While Apple probably collected roughly a billion in sales for its cut of iTunes music sales last year, that’s …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Amazon AutoRip service bundles digital copies, CD purchases

Amazon wants to breathe life back into CD sales by offering free MP3 versions of your Amazon CD purchases including any discs you’ve bought since 1998 with a new program called AutoRip. Your free MP3s are automatically stored in Amazon Cloud Player after you purchase a new CD and are available for playback or immediate download. Past purchases that are eligible should automatically show up in Cloud Player. The free digital tracks do not count against your Cloud Player storage limits as with purchases from Amazon’s MP3 store.

More than 50,000 CDs are AutoRip eligible including albums from every major label with titles such as “Babel” by Mumford & Sons, “Red” by Taylor Swift, “21” by Adele, “Some Nights” by Fun, and “Girl On Fire” by Alicia Keys. You can browse a list of AutoRip albums on Amazon .

All AutoRip MP3s have a bit rate of 256 Kbps, making them equivalent to the high-quality tracks Apple offers with iTunes Match and that Google offers with the new scan-and-match feature on Google Music. Amazon also offers a scan and match service for Cloud Player that puts 256 kbps versions of your personal library in the cloud.

“I’m excited to see Amazon…embrace models that acknowledge the importance of both [physical CD and music downloads] to music fans,” said Preston Austin, cofounder of Murfie, an online marketplace that lets you buy, sell, and trade physical CDs online. “Liberating the music fan to get the most out of online and offline technology is where Murfie competes and where we want the industry to be.” Amazon’s new service puts the online retailer in competition with Murfie’s service that also includes ripping physical CDs and creating digital copies of your CD collection.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Google Music adds scan and match feature

Up to now, Google has been the poor boy of online music, but that’s about to change. It rolled out a scan and match feature on Wednesday for Google Music users that gives the search giant a leg up on Amazon’s Cloud Player service and Apple’s iTunes Match. Here are some things you should know about Google’s matching service.

What is it?

Google’s service scans a user’s computer, giving them online access to the songs it finds, provided Google can match those songs on its servers. If the songs cannot be found, they will be uploaded to a user’s online locker.

The service saves you the time of manually uploading your music to Google Music by scanning the files in your library and comparing them to songs in the Google Music library.

If your song is in the Google Music library, Google will copy it to your cloud account. If it isn’t in Google’s library of approximately 13 million songs, Google will upload to your cloud account. (In comparison, Amazon and Apple claim to have about 20 million songs in their respective libraries.)

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Source: PCWorld