Amazon Launches New 'Music Unlimited' Service, Starts At $4/Month For Use On Just One Echo (geekwire.com) 25
Speaking of giant ecommerce companies, Amazon has launched a streaming music service dubbed, Amazon Music Unlimited, that starts at $3.99 (cheaper than Spotify or Apple Music) and has tens of millions of songs. There's a catch, however. The service has three payment tiers, but the lowest one -- which again, costs $3.99 -- only works with company's Amazon Echo, or Echo Dot, or Amazon Tap speakers. GeekWire adds: To use Amazon Music Unlimited on multiple devices, including smartphones, you'll need to pay $7.99 if you're an Amazon Prime member, or $9.99 if you're not. In a world where people increasingly expect everything to work everywhere, the Echo-only tier might seem out of place, even at less than $4 a month. But Amazon is pitching the option as an add-on experience for Echo owners, going beyond the 2 million tracks available in the existing Amazon Prime Music service that comes with the $99/year Amazon Prime subscription. The company is also using some smart computing behind the scenes to differentiate the experience. For example, Echo users will be able to ask Alexa to "play the new song by Adele."
I miss Live365 (Score:3)
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Awesome story grandpa!
Pay for eavesdropping! (Score:5, Insightful)
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"Doesn't have to be on all the time." Also, it provides an operational capability to whoever controls the device. Do you know all the ways it can be controlled? Nobody does, not even the guys who designed it.
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I already pay my cellphone provider for Eavesdropping-as-a-Service. Plus my cellphone features location tracking and camera surveillance features that Echo hardware lacks.
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Except that your smartphone has a dedicated piece of hardware listening for the activation phrase. Your battery would drop faster than a Samsung battery explodes if it was surveilling you like an Echo.
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Funny, that's how the Echo works as well. [washingtonpost.com]
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Or, I could just listen to the radio... (Score:2)
God I miss MP3.com (Score:2)
For a while E-Music worked great, but they got big in Europe and jacked up their prices to silly levels. Now if I want to listen to a band I've gotta buy the CD. That's fine for something I already know I like, but it took a long time for In Flames to grow
Music Unlimited (Score:2)