Apple looks set to launch cloud-based music service

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 15 June 2012 14:29 IST
Highlights
  • Just weeks after Amazon and Google unveiled their music offerings, Apple appears set to raise the bar
Just weeks after Amazon and Google unveiled their music offerings, Apple appears set to raise the bar.

The Cupertino, California-based gadget-maker is expected to launch a new Web-hosted music service next month, according to multiple reports, after negotiating deals with at least three of the four major record labels.

The service is likely to be presented at Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference, which opens in San Francisco on June 6 and which has been the venue for past launches of high-profile Apple products.

According to The New York Times, Apple's service will allow music stored in the Internet "cloud" to be listened to on multiple devices -- from computers to smartphones to touchscreen tablets.

A cloud-based service would allow streaming of digital music from an online collection and free up a user from having to connect their various devices to transfer songs housed on a computer hard drive.

Online retail powerhouse Amazon launched a Cloud Drive and Cloud Player music service in late March that allows subscribers to upload digital music to Amazon servers and play it on a computer or an Android device.

Internet search giant Google jumped into the music market in early May with a Google Music service that lets people store their music collections in online libraries for streaming to computers, smartphones and tablets.

Google Music, which is in beta, or test phase, and is invitation-only for the moment, does not sell songs, however, and only allows users to upload the music they already own to Google servers, a time-consuming process.

While Amazon and Google may have gotten the jump on Apple in taking music to the cloud, the maker of the Macintosh computer, iPod, iPhone and iPad appears poised to launch a more comprehensive service.

Apple's ace in the hole is likely to be iTunes, the online music store it launched in 2003 which boasts more than 200 million customers and which has sold more than 10 billion songs.

In addition, Amazon and Google launched their music services without agreements with the four major record labels: EMI Music, Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group and the Warner Music Group.

According to the Times, Apple has already hammered out agreements with EMI, Sony and Warner and talks are ongoing with Universal.

Discussions are also continuing between Apple and the music publishers who control copyrights and represent songwriters, the newspaper said.

Besides allowing for music purchases through iTunes, Apple's agreements with the record labels and the publishers should give users instant online access to their existing iTunes music libraries.

"With these licenses, Apple will have secured the cloud music high ground despite being the last to launch," MG Siegler of technology blog TechCrunch said.

"Apple is likely going to be able to do the one thing that is absolutely crucial for cloud music to take off: offer library syncing without uploading," Siegler said in a blog post.

The New York Times said Apple's cloud music offering may be integrated with its MobileMe subscription service which allows Macintosh owners to access files stored on Apple servers.

Apple is also likely to include features from Lala, a Palo Alto, California, company it bought in December 2009 that hosted digital music collections on the Web. Apple shut down Lala just a few months after the purchase.

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Amazon, Apple, Google, cloud, music service
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. WhatsApp's Might Soon Flag Fraudulent Chats Before You Reply to Scammers
  2. Realme P4R 5G India Launch Date, Design and Key Specifications Revealed
  3. God of War Laufey Revealed at State of Play: Everything You Need to Know
  4. Lava Bold N2 5G Launched in India With 6,000mAh Battery, 6.75-Inch Display
  5. Honor X7e With a 7,500mAh Battery Debuts Globally at This Price
  6. Motorola Edge 2026 With 6.3-Inch Display Goes Official
  7. Nothing Ear 3a, CMF Buds Neo Visit Regulatory Databases, Might Launch Soon
  8. Sony Bravia 7II 4K TVs With Cognitive Processor XR Debut in India
  9. Marvel's Wolverine Gets Gameplay Trailer at State of Play, Pre-Orders Go Live
  1. Realme P4R 5G India Launch Date Revealed Along With Design and Key Specifications
  2. Marvel's Wolverine Gets Visceral Gameplay Trailer at State of Play, Pre-Orders Now Live
  3. RTX Spark Laptops Said to Cost More Than Traditional AI PCs; Base Models Could Start at $1,799
  4. Lumio Introduces 55-Inch Variants of Vision 9 (2026) and Vision 7 (2026) Smart TVs in India: Price, Features
  5. Bitcoin Drops Below $67,000 as ETF Outflows, Institutional Selling Intensify
  6. Lava Bold N2 5G Launched in India With 6,000mAh Battery, 6.75-Inch Display: Price, Specifications
  7. WhatsApp Said to Be Developing On-Device Scam Detection Feature for Android
  8. Motorola Edge 2026 Launched With 6.3-Inch Display, MediaTek Dimensity 7450 SoC: Price, Specifications
  9. Honor X7e Launched With 7,500mAh Battery, 50-Megapixel Rear Camera: Price, Specifications
  10. God of War Laufey Revealed With Extended Gameplay Trailer Showcasing New Protagonist, Setting and Combat System
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.