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if google's solution is only in the cloud, as opposed to Amazon which allows local storage, I don't think anyone would use google. Most people would kill their bandwidth caps if they had to stream all the time.
if google's solution is only in the cloud, as opposed to Amazon which allows local storage, I don't think anyone would use google. Most people would kill their bandwidth caps if they had to stream all the time.
If goggle's solution is pure cloud and the eliminate any option of local storage they might as well not release it. I don't even think they could prevent local storage even if they wanted
I too hope that whatever Google releases will have a local storage option. I really like that about Amazon's player.
Why do you say "I don't even think they could prevent local storage even if they wanted"? For example, if I upload a mp3 to Google's yet to be released music player, then I go to my phone and start listening, the file doesn't have to exist locally on my phone. It can be streamed just like Slacker or Pandora...
I would prefer to have it locally on my phone in case I have no data connection and want to enjoy my music. Data quality is poor near my home and Pandora doesn't run as smoothly as I would like. Also, I fly a lot which requires having the phone in airplane mode. If the music is stored on my SD card, I still have it.
I think Google could easily say that any music you buy from them you have to keep in the cloud. They could also easily allow you to upload your own music, but not download it again. It would be simple enough for them to do. Now, it would be really, really bad IMO and would lead to the service being a complete flop, but they could do it.
I haven't decided yet. The cloud would be too expensive to hold all my music. I have over 320gb of music stored on a hard drive, but mainly because I kept fully uncompressed files stored.
Went with the 50GB plan with Amazon Cloud - for my 35GB music library.
I like it, because now I can have access to ALL of my music on my phone, while I still have my most-played (or the music I am currently "liking"), on my SD Card.
I use it and it works great for me. I used to have to pick and choose what I put on my phone. Now I've got all of it on tap. The price of storage is on the expensive side in my opinion, but other than that - no complaints.
Question:
In the settings of the Amazon MP3 app, you can determine your "delivery preferences" (for when buying\downloading music onto your phone). If you select "Save purchases to your Cloud Drive", it will automatically just save your newly purchased music to the cloud. Right?
When this option is chosen, the ability to "auto-download all purchases when saved to your Cloud Drive" is opened up, and ready to be checked\toggled. With this checked, does that mean that once the music goes up to the cloud, it will ALSO download the music to my phone?
I guess I could just test this and see... Hmmm...
Yep, that's exactly what it means.Question:
In the settings of the Amazon MP3 app, you can determine your "delivery preferences" (for when buying\downloading music onto your phone). If you select "Save purchases to your Cloud Drive", it will automatically just save your newly purchased music to the cloud. Right?
When this option is chosen, the ability to "auto-download all purchases when saved to your Cloud Drive" is opened up, and ready to be checked\toggled. With this checked, does that mean that once the music goes up to the cloud, it will ALSO download the music to my phone?