Vodafone offers unlimited music downloads

But can it silence the iPhone?

By Gemma Simpson, 10 September 2007 15:55

NEWS

Vodafone UK will launch an unlimited mobile music download service by Christmas of this year.

Through an agreement with UK-based mobile music company Omnifone, users will be able to share playlists and tracks with other people at a fixed rate of £1.99 per week.

Using Omnifone's MusicStation platform, users can choose from a catalogue of more than one million songs from major music labels – such as EMI, Sony BMG, Universal Music Group and the Warner Music Group – and independent labels.

Cheat Sheets

♦ Mobile location-based services
♦ FMC
♦ 3G

The service will be accessible on a new range of Vodafone handsets – to launch in the run-up to Christmas – as well as existing 2.5G and 3G mobiles.

Omnifone CEO Rob Lewis told silicon.com the service gives users flexibility to find music on the move and "not just when they're tied to the PC".

Lewis - founder and CEO of silicon.com until its sale to CNET Networks in 2002 - added each track can usually be downloaded within five to 10 seconds – giving users the ability to download around eight albums in 10 minutes while they're waiting for the bus.

Downloaded tracks and playlists are stored centrally so if a customer's mobile is stolen, lost or upgraded, the replacement handset will automatically have the user's MusicStation tracks and preferences the first time it is switched on.

The Omnifone platform also stores a user's favourite tracks on the phone's internal or removable memory – which can be accessed when the phone is in flight mode or not connected to the internet.

The user can then have unlimited access to their full catalogue when connected to a 2.5G or 3G network.

Omnifone's platform went live in June 2007 with 30 mobile operators confirmed as MusicStation partners at that time.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Graham Coles

    Interesting wording, 'to find music on the move and "not just when they're tied to the PC"'

    I suppose he is aware of the wireless iPod touch?

    I also wonder if the inverse applies--can you actually get to your Vodafone music from a PC without your phone?

    Any why on earth would you want to pay 1.99 a month, or more to the point, what happens when you stop paying. I assume you just lose all your music.

    Steve Jobs seems to get things right; like he said, people want to own the music they've bought.

    Great scheme, count me out.

  2. 2. Simon Cox

    Why is this news? Oh look some bloke called Rob Lewis... Did he bother to read Peter Chocrans Blog this week. Being able to download 1 million tunes (that's a lot but I bet they don't have exaclty that song that's going through your head) for 2 quid a week is not going to save Vodaphones business model.

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