Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Monday, January 21, 2013

More on Amazon AutoRip

I recently wrote about Amazon AutoRip, which gives you free MP3 copies of any eligible CD you purchase from Amazon -- or have purchased in the past 15 years. Well, I purchase almost all my CDs from Amazon, and today received this email from them:


Dear Michael Miller,

We thought you'd like to know that eligible songs from 647 CDs you have purchased from Amazon are being added to your Cloud Player library. This means that high-quality MP3 versions of these songs are available for you to play or download from Cloud Player for FREE. You can find your songs in the "Purchased" playlist. Please note that some songs from the above CDs are not eligible for this feature and may not be available in your Cloud Player library.
In addition, we're excited to announce AutoRip. Now when you buy any CD with the AutoRiplogo, all songs from the MP3 version of that album will instantly be delivered to your Amazon Cloud Player library for FREE.

There was also a link to view all of the 647 CDs mentioned. Pretty sweet, if you ask me.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Amazon AutoRip

Here's something cool, at least sort of. Amazon is introducing a new AutoRip service, which provides MP3 versions of selected CDs you purchase. Look for the blue/green AutoRip icon on new CD product pages; as soon as you purchase the CD, you also have access to MP3 versions of all the tracks, at no extra charge. These MP3 tracks are automatically added to your Amazon Cloud Player library, and can then be downloaded to your computer. The AutoRip tracks don't count towards your Cloud Player storage limits, either.

Even better, if you've purchased any CD from Amazno currently identified as AutoRip anytime in the past 15 years (since 1998), you get MP3 versions of those CDs for free, too. Kind of cool -- an added feature for past purchases. Good job, Amazon!

On the downside, we are are talking about MP3 files here, not lossless AAC or WMA. They're ripped at 256Kbps, which isn't horrible but could be better. And not every CD available has AutoRip capability; at present, only 50,000 CDs are available with AutoRip.

Still and all, a very nice way to build your digital library while still purchasing physical CDs. Learn more about AutoRip here.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Amazon Cloud Player Updates

If you read my book, The Ultimate Digital Music Guide, you know I'm cautiously enthusiastic about so-called cloud music services, where you upload your own music to cloud-based music servers and then have it served back to you, on any connected device. One of the first and most popular of these cloud music services is Amazon Cloud Player. As I noted in my book, the original Cloud Player service wasn't perfect (limited to just MP3 and AAC files, not WMA), but offered some pretty good features, all in all.

Well, Amazon just upgraded the Cloud Player by giving it "scan and match" functionality. What this means is that instead of having to upload all the tracks in your digital music collection, Cloud Player scans your collection and tries to match it with tracks in its official digital collection. If a match is found, Cloud Player doesn't have to upload your version of the track; instead, it serves you back the copy of the track housed in Amazon's library. If your track doesn't have a match in Amazon's library, then Cloud Player uploads your track to its servers. This is the way iTunes Match works, and it definitely saves on upload time, assuming most of your tracks are common enough to be included in Amazon's master digital library.

With this new functionality comes higher-quality playback. All scan-and-match tracks are served back to you at 256Kbps, which, while not lossless quality, isn't bad. Pricing, however, changes. The free service is now limited to a paltry 250 tracks; if you have more than this in your library (and you do), you'll have to subscribe to Cloud Player Premium for $24.99/year. This lets you store 250,000 tracks, not including any Amazon MP3 purchases, which don't contribute to the limit.

(BTW, Amazon is pushing the new 256Kbps streaming as an upgrade to its previous service, but it's not, not really. Previously, Amazon would play back your tracks at the original bitrate they were ripped at, so if you ripped at something higher than 256Kbps, this new option is actually a downgrade. Of course, if you ripped or purchased a track at a lower bitrate, then the new 256Kbps playback is an improvement. I guess it all depends, eh?)

To add scan-and-match functionality, Amazon had to work out licensing agreements with all the major record labels, as they view any serving of their content as something they get to charge for, even if it's your own purchased music played back by you, personally. (What a bunch of asses.) Hence the new subscription scheme; Amazon has to pay the labels, and this is how.

Anyway, this positions Amazon Cloud Player, even with the Premium option, quite favorably compared to Apple's iTunes Match service. iTunes Match charges the same $24.99/year but only lets you store 25,000 tracks. You also get the new ability to scan-and-match not just MP3 and AAC files, but also WMA, FLAC, and OGG format files. (You can't upload these formats to serve from the cloud, but Cloud Player will find them on your hard disk and match them to other-format versions in its library.)

If you want pure cloud service from the original tracks stored on your computer's hard drive, the Google Play Music cloud service is still the better choice. It's free (for now, anyway), and uploads all the major formats -- MP3, WMA, AAC, FLAC, and so forth. You are limited to 20,000 tracks, however, which could be an issue for those of us with larger libraries.

Then there's the serve-it-yourself option, which you have with apps such as Audiogalaxy and Subsonic. These programs turn your home PC into an always-on cloud server, and thus let you serve your own library from your own PC to any connected device, no middlemen involved. This option is a bit more technical, but worth checking out.

Still and all, Amazon's new Cloud Player developments are interesting and make sense for a lot of music lovers. That $24.99/year fee is a small price to pay to access your whole library from the cloud, and get up and running quickly.