The music industry magazine Billboard reveals details about future music service from Google: download songs music cabinet on cloud computing
American entertainment industry magazine Billboard reveals details about the music service that Google is planning. According to Billboard advertising, Google Director of contacts with record companies for the establishment of a digital store and service subscriptions, as well as music files storage cloud computing (called by Billboard "Locker" - cabinet). Google offered to charge customers $ 25 a year to store songs in the cloud and access them - for the hearing or downloading - from any device to connect to the Internet.Google Music Store will act like Apple's Layettions, allowing purchase of albums or individual songs (with the difference that while Sayettions works through software, Google Music will work through the browser). When customers buy a song in the store, he can not only download to your computer, but also a copy of his account and cloud computing. According to Billboard, the music locker will be features of social, such as construction of playlist and send it to friends. Google also aims to allow customers to listen to songs in full before they decide whether to purchase them or not (contrary to practice to play just 30 seconds of the song). Google supports the service with an online music player mobile application that will allow connection to the music locker. The company aims agreements are valid for three years with record companies.According to Billboard's sources, is not known when and where service will be launched first. Google did not respond to appeals from the charts on the subject, and therefore did not answer questions such as what would be the music-stand size, does indeed confirm the record companies a full melody of the songs, what songs and what price will be the division of profits. Industry estimate that the record companies collected from Google Standard pricing: $ 7 a full album, 70 cents for most songs, 91 cents for hits and 49 cents for the old songs. In this situation, the consumer pays 10 dollars for an album and 99 cents for a song."Google Music can be a serious threat Layettions," wrote a mother. G Sigalar leading technology blog Tech Crunch. "Everybody writes for years Sayettions should take the experience of its use of cloud computing. It seems that Google, with all the online experience, more close to it. If the service described by Billboard to exist - there is no doubt I'd use it." However correspondent adds that he believes Google will be hard to get the record companies consent forms that it plans to use the service.
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