balloonoboy
Banned
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- Nov 13, 2009
At the WWDC in June, Apple unvelied iTunes Match. A subscription-based service that would upload and match your own music to the same music on the iTunes server (all files would be converted to 256kbps) and wirelessly deliver it to you whenever the need arose. The service is to cost $25/year.
Arguably, music files take up the most space on our iPhones, iPods, and iPads. And for years iOS device afficionados have been begging for even more memory. And they got it in subsequent iterations of said devices.
But would we really need more than the bare-minimum of storage - 16GB - if we are able to store our music in the cloud?
Would you subscribe to a service like this knowing your library isn't completely legit? Would you actually pay to listen to your own music? How much would your data plan take a hit?
Would you even need a service like this with Wireless Sync?
Are you ready to dispose of that iPod Classic and embrace the cloud?
Arguably, music files take up the most space on our iPhones, iPods, and iPads. And for years iOS device afficionados have been begging for even more memory. And they got it in subsequent iterations of said devices.
But would we really need more than the bare-minimum of storage - 16GB - if we are able to store our music in the cloud?
Would you subscribe to a service like this knowing your library isn't completely legit? Would you actually pay to listen to your own music? How much would your data plan take a hit?
Would you even need a service like this with Wireless Sync?
Are you ready to dispose of that iPod Classic and embrace the cloud?