A few days Google ago announced its new beta Google Music. It’s a cloud hosting service just for music. It enables music fans to upload their music on the internet and access it from any location via computer or phone. For a limited they are letting people sign up for the free beta. I received my invite for the Google Music beta today. I’m currently uploading my 5,000-plus music library. So far I really like the service.
It’s easy to use. The download manager finds all the music on your computer and uploads them automatically. It even syncs with iTunes. The manager imported all the information (ratings, play counts, artwork) out of iTunes. That’s a huge plus considering that I’m OCD about keep my music labeled correctly.
The beta has an upload limit of 20,000 songs. That an enormous amount of space. Google hasn’t announced how much the service will cost when it comes out of beta. For me, Google Music means the end of the iPod. The only real reason I still have an iPod is a way to back-up and carry all my music. Now that everything is backed-up on the cloud and I can access my library from my phone the iPod is obsolete.
Now I can finally free my computer from the space resource hog iTunes. Hopefully, Google Music won’t be too expensive.
I haven’t been doing a good job of keeping up with the Joneses. It seems like everyone I know not named Club Soda is using a smart phone these days. iPhones are great, but I didn’t want to leave Verizon for a variety of different reasons. Mainly due to the fact most of my family uses Verizon and free calls all over the United States is a nice feature. Unfortunately Verizon hasn’t had a great smart phone until now.
I was eligible for an upgrade so I got the Motorola Droid for only $99. It costs an extra $30 a month for the data plan. I’ve only used the iPhone a little so I can’t really compare it to that device, but the Droid does pretty much everything I’d expect a smart phone to do. It syncs with my work and personal email accounts. I can tweet and follow tweets from the device (follow: DailyPlunge). It browses the web, gives turn by turn directions, and there are variety of different apps available. Basically every popular app I’ve ever heard of on the iPhone is available for the Droid.
The Droid uses Google’s Android OS which might spell doom for Microsoft’s phone OS. There are something like 50 phones coming out this year that use Android. Android is open, flexible, and easy to use. Overall I’m very happy with the phone. I can’t see a real reason for anyone to switch from the iPhone to the Droid; however, I can’t see why anyone would leave Verizon to get the iPhone when there’s now a comparable device available. The Droid is going to be a big hit for Motorola, Google, and Verizon.


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