Google Music, the streaming music answer to Amazon, MOG and Rdio, is here.
You can access music in the cloud and stream to devices. But unlike MOG and Rdio, you can only play what you upload.
How do you use it? You use Google's Music Manager on your desktop to add your songs to the service. It adds play counts and ratings as well. It's a "full featured music manager", so you can search and do all the other things you could in iTunes and Windows Media Player.
Here's a look at some of its features:
• Library Upload: With the Music Manager app, you can upload your iTunes or Windows Media Player libraries with one click. You can also upload by file or folder.
• Offline Listening: It's a pretty standard feature, but Google's gives this feature a neat twist by automatically caching songs you've recently listened to. I'd also love to see them do this for most listened songs. And of course, you can also cache specific songs you select. Necessary, since you can't re-download music from the service.
• Seamlessness: Any change you make to your Google Music library on one device is automatically pushed to other devices.
• Playlists: Once you upload your tracks to the Google Music cloud, you can play around with it just like it was in a music app. That means playlists which automatically sync across all your connected devices. They also have a smart playlist feature called instant mix, which will automatically build a list for you based on one song. It's like iTunes' genius or Pandora's recommendation bot. Google says that they have servers actually listening to the songs to make their playlist selection.
The service can store up to 20,000 songs per user on up to eight authorized devices and took five minutes or so for the first 150 songs to upload.
But you don't always have an internet connection, or a good enough one to stream music. So you can either select certain music to cache on your device, and the service automatically caches your recently listened-to music as well.
You can request an invitation to Music Beta here.
37 commentaires:
Very nice info, thanks for share.
wow thats really what i've been waiting for, now I can just throw up some good music and listen to it at friends place
very cool, is it similar to pandora?
interesting, i'll ehck it out
I should try this.
I've actually wanted a service like this for a long time. I'm glad Googles picked it up because that gives it pretty much a 0% chance of being a failure.
Nice bloggy ;] Following yuo.
more awesomness
Yeah is it like Pandora? Or do you have to pay for songs?
nice! thanks for the infos..going to try this!
follow
I'm not sure I would like this. If I can only stream what I upload why wouldn't I just upload it straight to my iPhone.
I'm sure there is a decent application for it but I can't think of one right now lol
thanks for sharing with us m8
Really glad Google got into this, hope with Google and Amazon they can take some of Apple's pretentious steam.
About time! I hope it goes as everything google touches :P
That's not a bad idea. The problem I have w/ a lot of internet radio sites is they play a lot of stuff I don't like, even if it's similar to other artists I play. I'm not really a genre guy, so this would work better for me.
This service doesnt make sense, if I only can listen to what I have already I can just put that on my Mp3 player
Great, I could use an alternative to iTunes.
This should be good, I wonder if they can compete with Apple. I hope so.
google is kinda taking over the internet, isn't it...
Im gonna try this
Google seems really generous...
It's like every day I am hearing something new about the cloud.
Will it be connected with Youtube?
Interesting, not sure I would use it but good to know about.
Too bad that is for US residents only. Hopefully we don't have to wait too long to get it here.
Love the USA
google is slowly making something for everything
I'm looking foward to trying this out!
Nice info, but google music dont work in my country D;
Fine i think, no i will try to get such an key :)
Nice piece, i'll check it out asap : )
very interesting
Thanks for the info !
Damn cloud computing. These companies are always one step ahead of my development of the same programs.
Is there a limit to how many songs you can upload?
^ chloroform i think the post said 20000, so plenty.
i love the idea of this, but i think i may need to get myself an android device to use it. hmmm.....
google is evil but i lurve it =x
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