Spotify [1] âs âDiscoverâ feature, a news feed offering recommendations, songs and playlists based on your current listening habits, has today made its way to the iPhone through an update to the Spotify iOS app, which also includes a number of other bug fixes and improvements, including a new âNow Playingâ view and updated app icon.
The company had first announced the Discover feature back in December 2012 , but didnât begin the rollout until April. Initially, the option was made available only to a limited number of beta testers in the U.K. and Nordic countries, before its public debut in May . But even then, Discover was only a publicly available option in Spotifyâs web application, not its mobile clients.
However, we learned that some users were able to beta test the Discover on iPhone feature before todayâs broader debut. One TechCrunch writer with a French IP address says heâs had access to Discover in the App Store version 0.6.4.2 of Spotifyâs app. (Todayâs update is version 0.7.1). This user is also missing the new âNow Playingâ view which arrived in the update, indicating that he may be in some smaller beta test group. (Screenshot at right).
For most of Spotifyâs user base, though, today will be the first time theyâll have access to this new type of music discovery experience on mobile â" and only on iPhone, as the feature is not yet available in the iPad version or on other mobile platforms.
The feature is powered by algorithms similar to Spotifyâs radio for music discovery purposes, but itâs not limited to recommendations made solely based on your plays. Discover will also alert users to New Releases on Spotify, music thatâs popular in their area or popular on Spotify more generally, music shared by artists and others you follow, and more.
The addition of Discover for iPhone is timely, given that Apple recently announced its own Spotify competitor with the debut of iTunes Radio , a streaming music service that also takes into account usersâ music listening behavior in order to make recommendations and build genre-based playlists. That service, which will arrive in the iOS 7 update later this year for U.S. users, includes access to the entire iTunes catalog of over 26 million tracks. Spotify, meanwhile, claims a catalog of over 20 million tracks â" a database whose actual size may vary by country.
Before the introduction of Discover and other social feature like Spotifyâs âFollowâ option, which allows users to find and follow music influencers like artists and journalists, Spotifyâs music discovery options were more limited. Users had to rely on Spotifyâs radio, or find and follow their Facebook friends to be introduced to new music. That latter option, of course, is not always ideal. Although some of your Facebook friends will share some of your musical tastes and interests, many will not.
Spotifyâs attempt at building unique âmusic graphsâ for individual users then may become its key selling point and competitive stance versus what Apple is now introducing with iTunes Radio. These music graphs are different from Facebookâs âfriend graph,â as theyâre more tailored to each userâs preferences. They also offer more diverse recommendations than Appleâs Genius, because it looks beyond your own play history and music collection to find new music. In addition, Discover will help to increase usersâ time in app, which is good for Spotifyâs ad-supported business, too.
When the feature was first announced , Spotify founder Daniel Ek explained that the answer to the challenge of sifting through the worldâs music was to make discovery more personal, the way it used to be when friends lent records to each other or told each other about new songs in person. But that model needed to move beyond just âsocialâ friends to really work.
Spotify today says that the âDiscoverâ feature is now âcoming soon to everyone,â but did not also announce a timeframe for its arrival to other mobile platforms or the iPad, which was not included in the new iOS update.
Spotify has created a lightweight software application that allows instant listening to specific tracks or albums with virtually no buffering delay. It was launched in the fall of 2008 and had approximately 10 million users by September 2010. Spotify offers streaming music from major and independent record labels including Sony, EMI, Warner Music Group, and Universal. Users download Spotify and then log onto their service enabling the on-demand streaming of music. Music can be browsed by artist, album, record...
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