Microsoft launches Xbox Music streaming service
Catalog of 30 million songs will be accessible via phone, tablet and other devices
Microsoft has launched Xbox Music, a digital music streaming service to take on Apple's iTunes and other on-demand music services such as Spotify.
Buyers of tablets that run Microsoft's newest operating system, Windows 8, will be among the first to use the service. Tablet buyers will be able to handpick from a selection of millions of songs and stream them for free - if they're willing to listen to an audio ad every 15 minutes.
Current users of the Xbox — about 66 million worldwide — will gradually be introduced to the service with a 30-day free trial starting Tuesday.
Xbox Music will be the default music player on all new Windows 8 devices, which will be available upon the launch of the new operating system on Oct. 26.
The service will allow users to access the music — a global catalog of more than 30 million songs — on their tablet, personal computer, phone and television, Microsoft said.
In a demonstration on Friday, Xbox Music General Manager Jerry Johnson showed how a user's playlists are saved online and can be accessed when switching between the service on the Xbox 360 game console, a Windows Phone and a Windows 8 tablet.
Appeal limited by cost of data streaming
Although this is seen as a step forward for the music industry, its appeal is limited by the expense of many mobile data plans. Most cost more the more data you use, which can make streaming music on cellular networks fairly expensive.
The free version of Xbox Music won't let you download songs and save them for offline playback. That will require paying $10 a month.
The paid subscription is also required if you want to use Xbox Music on the Xbox 360 game console or on smartphones that use Windows Phone. On the game console, an Xbox Live Gold membership, which costs $60 a year, is also required.
On PCs running Windows 8, Xbox Music will basically match Spotify's offer of free track selection and playback.
Sweden's Spotify, for instance, allows track selection and playback on personal computers for free — with the occasional audio ad — but doesn't allow you to pick exactly the song you want on tablets unless you pay $10 a month for its premium subscription.