
Xperia arc Home, "Music Unlimited" cloud-based digital music service
Following recent announcements this spring from Apple, Amazon and Google about cloud-based, digital music services, Sony has now made available on Android its version, Music Unlimited, which boasts access to about seven million songs.
The licensed songs are available from Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group and EMI Music as well as leading independent labels and major publishers worldwide.
Unlike Amazon, Google or Apple, you'll have to pay for this cloud, no matter if you go for the basic monthly subscription plan or the premium. For $4 there's a music matching service, similar to Apple's for $25 a year; for $10 there's an unlimited catalog on-demand access to music, like Rhapsody or Rdio, and access to hundreds of music channels. The premium level also allows for synced playlists, consolidation of old and new in one library and a free 30-day trial.
Music Unlimited has been in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand since February (debuting it in December in the U.K. and Ireland), but the company has, after all, been mired in the PlayStation Network security breach this spring in which hackers took private information from some 102 million personal accounts.
The digital music service (powered by the Qriocity App on Android Market) will be available to users in the U.S., France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Spain, the U.K., Australia and New Zealand.
Users can access the service on Sony Ericsson’s Android-based mobile devices, including: Xperia arc, Xperia Play, Xperia X10, Xperia X8 and Xperia neo as well as other Android-based devices. The vast array of Sony Internet-connected devices can also be used, including 2010 and 2011 models of Bravia HDTVs, blu-ray disc players and home theater systems, as well as the PlayStation devices, which were the primary ways to access Music Unlimited before the expansion of service to Android.
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