Rdio announces expansion to seven new countries, reaches Asia for the first time

Rdio announces expansion to seven new countries, reaches Asia for the first time

Rdio may not be available in as many places as, say, Spotify, but the relatively popular music service is certainly doing all it can to get there. As such, Rdio today announced that it has now arrived in seven additional markets, bringing its total presence to 31 countries and making this the first time it’s being offered in Asian territory. Hoping to lure folks in, Rdio’s quick to point out its promise to deliver up to six months of free internet-based tunes, after which streamers can easily upgrade to one of its various plans (assuming they want to, of course). Fret not if Rdio isn’t live in your hood; the company says it’s constantly working on expanding its reach, so hopefully we’ll see it pop up in more areas pretty soon.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Rdio

Remember Paul Vo?

Remember Paul Vo? He’s the genius who invented a little black box that makes acoustic guitars sound otherworldly by changing the physics of how strings vibrate? Well his Kickstarter succeeded, and 100 units of the Vo-96 Acoustic Synthesizer are on sale now.

Read more…

    

Google Play Music for Android updated to address data usage complaints

Google Play Music for Android updated to address data usage complaints

Mobile data caps have been the enemy of Google Play Music for quite some time, but a new update, available in the Play Store today, might provide a quick fix. By default, the service streams music at the highest quality possible on a given connection, so it wasn’t always friendly to users dealing with data limits. With this update, Google is aiming to decrease the amount of overall data the app uses while providing more bandwidth usage settings. Additionally, the update boasts improved search quality and faster music downloads. Hopefully, Google will continue to work out the kinks before its forthcoming iOS All Access rollout. In the meantime, Google Play Music users can mosey on over to the source link below to download the latest version.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: The Next Web

Source: Google Play Store

MTV iOS app relaunched with full-episode streaming, more video content

MTV iOS apps relaunched with fullepisode streaming, more video content

While MTV has had a presence on Apple’s mobile platform to some extent, its parent company, Viacom, is now approaching things differently by increasing and improving the video content found in its iOS apps. MTV is renaming its WatchWith app as, well, MTV, and it’s adding on some new functionality to go with the popular second-screen features. The most notable trait of the newfangled iOS app is the ability to stream episodes from select MTV shows in full, though, in order to do so, users will need to be subscribed to one of the participating cable providers — AT&T U-verse, DirecTV, Time Warner Cable and Verizon FiOS being among them. The Reality Television Music Television network says it’s also boosting the app’s on-demand repertoire, giving viewers access to a slew of sneak peaks, bonus clips and other original content. And, hey, we’ll take as much Awkward as we can get.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: App Store

Pure Jongo multi-room speaker system blasts its way into North America

We all love our speaker docks and such, but sometimes we wish we could have our music blast throughout our entire home without having to move the speaker from room to room. Pure looks to solve that first-world issue by introducing the Jongo series of multi-room speaker systems, which are available in North America right

Read The Full Story

Left of the dial: Independent radio in the digital age

“This room is, to a certain extent, a trophy room,” Jason Bentley admits, his morning DJ voice rendered even smoother than usual following an in-studio set by local downtempo electro-soul group Rhye. The host of Morning Becomes Eclectic is seated slightly uncomfortably on a stepladder in KCRW’s cramped music library, as staff members clear out electric candles from the performance space (the band and station arrived at the alternative lighting in order to maintain Rhye’s relative anonymity, while still giving viewers of the video stream something to look at). The space is exactly what you’d want in a radio station library: high, cramped shelving units that are somehow impossibly messy and immaculately organized all at once. Between the CDs and vinyl stacked on shelves and tucked into hidden drawers, there’s a vast catalog of music in this room, but it’s clear in the five seconds it takes to walk from door to door that this space couldn’t possibly house all the songs required to maintain a 24-hour schedule as diverse as KCRW’s.

“We have moved to digital, mostly,” the DJ / music director continues. “But this is really the spiritual center and the heart of the radio station.” The setting is in stark contrast to Jersey City’s WFMU, where the concept of a music library is still very much a living, breathing thing. In spite of the station’s ties to the claustrophobia of the greater New York City metropolitan area, WFMU’s set is far more spacious, housing more music than could ever be enjoyed in a single lifetime. At the beloved freeform station, physical media is still a primary tool of the DJ’s arsenal, albeit one augmented by a 250,000-song digital music library. But for all the care devoted to its library, WFMU’s charm lies within a structure seemingly held together by duct tape and love — and walls decorated with glittered LP covers created by listeners at its annual record fair.

Filed under:

Comments

Rhapsody Concerts lets iOS users keep track of music tours, find shows nearby

Rhapsody Concerts lets iOS users keep track of music tours, find shows nearby

Back when SongMatch for Android was introduced to the public, Rhapsody said that its Shazam-esque offering was only the first of many “companion” apps to come. Today, as part of its plans to expand the suite of Rhapsody applications, the streaming service is introducing Concerts. The moniker says it all, really: the new application is designed to be a hub where you can easily keep up with — you guessed it — concerts from music artists you’re into or even ones you’ve never heard of. Using a device’s location services, Concerts can quickly find gigs around your area and display useful info related to them, including things like an entire show lineup and the ability to buy tickets.

While Concerts isn’t limited to Rhapsody subscribers, those who pay the monthly fee do get a couple extra tidbits, such as music playback and track downloads from within the app. Currently, it’s only available for iOS, but Rhapsody did tell us that Android and Windows Phone versions are “coming in the next few weeks.” For folks who can download right now, however, we have the App Store link below.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: App Store

Apple’s iTunes Radio “playing catch up with Nokia Music” suggests Nokia VP

It’s not often that Nokia gets to take a moment to snark on Apple, so it’s certainly not surprising that immediately after Apple releases information on their iTunes Radio service, the VP of Nokia Entertainment has responded with a reminder about Nokia Music. As iTunes Radio was made official, this streaming music service with iAd

Read The Full Story

iTunes Radio official: streaming music inside Apple’s built-in app

As rumors have suggested, Apple is outing their own music discovery platform, and they’re calling it iTunes Radio. The new feature will be built right into the company’s existing Music app on iOS, so users who take advantage of the app won’t have to switch to another app to use the new iTunes Radio. iTunes

Read The Full Story

Apple debuts music streaming service, iTunes Radio

Apple debuts music streaming service, iTunes Radio

Granted, this one felt like a bit of a wild card in the lead up to WWDC, but ultimately the rumors have proven true: Apple’s just taken the wraps off of a brand new music offering, iTunes Radio. The service is built directly into iOS 7’s music app, featuring easy access to radio based on your music collection. The company’s also got hundreds of its own stations, grouped by artists and genre — artists like, get this, Led Zeppelin. You can modify stations by telling the app which songs you love and hate, and you can access old stations by clicking your history button. The app is free with ads for regular users, or ad-free if you happen to be an iTunes Match subscriber. It’s starting in the US and coming to other countries in the unspecified future. You can use it on your iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, as well as on your desktop.

Follow all of our WWDC 2013 coverage at our event hub.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Apple