Best Online Cloud Music Service - Online Mass Music Storage

Written By Lingkar Dunia on Saturday, November 19, 2011 | 12:50 AM

Do you love to hear Music every day? But suffering from little mass storage for your media? Than you won't have to worry about your storage media. Now you can choose between many of Online Music Service providers providing Cloud Mass Storage Media for users worldwide. Google has also recently launched its Google Music Service in United States so do you upload all your music to Google Music? Did you checked other Online Music Service providers like Spotify? Rdio? Mog? Rhapsody? iTunes? Amazon Cloud Music? Google Music? Which ones are free, and which ones cost money? Or do you just forget about online music storage and just go back to listening music on CD' and DVD's.
We have summerize some of Best Cloud Music Service Providers who are offering various Music Albums, Artist Albums, Popular Music Albums etc through online storage. Following are some of Best Cloud Music Service providers you should check out.

Comparison between several Online Cloud Music Service Providers:

Rdio is a new social music service, founded by Janus and Niklas. Rdio making a music service that takes the work out of deciding what to play next follow friends and people with great taste in music, get inspired by what they're playing, and listen to their playlists. With Rdio's mobile apps, music on your computer and mobile phone is finally connected without needing a cable. Collections and playlists are instantly updated and you can sync music and listen, even when you're offline.


Spotify broke onto the scene in a big way in July 2011, when it was finally released in the U.S. Spotify offers tight integration with Facebook; songs I listen to in Spotify show up in real time on my Facebook Timeline (which can be a good or bad thing, depending on what embarrassing thing I happen to be listening to). In fact, when I open my Spotify desktop app, more than 50 of my Facebook friends are actively using it. By comparison, only seven of my Facebook friends are using Rdio, (which I'll get to later), with only a couple actively using it.


Rhapsody is, quite simply, the ultimate digital jukebox: For $10 a month you can listen to whatever you want, whenever you want, on whatever gadget you choose, from the hottest new releases to our decades-spanning catalog of 13 million - yes, 13 million - songs. And if you're not sure exactly what you feel like listening to, allow our crack team of musical experts to ply you with personally tailored recommendations, playlists, cheat sheets, essays, arguments and delightfully random tangents, holding forth on everything from the highlights of Hank Williams' massive oeuvre to the albums that directly influenced Nirvana's Nevermind to a detailed beginner's guide to the music of Colombia to the biggest hip-hop releases in the last month or so - and that's just one day's work.


MOG Inc. is a next-generation music media company founded in June 2005 by David Hyman, former CEO for Gracenote. MOG has one simple goal: to perfect your music-listening experience. MOG�s all-you-can-eat, on-demand listening service provides access to a deep library of over 13 million songs and a million albums through its mobile apps on iPhone and Android, as well as on the Web and streaming entertainment devices for TV. It surpasses all other music subscription services in its ease-of-use, discovery features and audio quality.


Amazon beat both Apple and Google to the punch when it released Amazon Cloud Player hand in hand with Amazon Cloud Drive. Amazon Cloud Drive allows you to upload 5GB of any type of file, including music files (MP3, AAC), to Amazon's servers for free. After that, there's a tiered-pricing plan, and music you purchase from Amazon doesn't count against your storage limits and is automatically added to your Cloud Drive. At the time of this writing, Amazon is offering unlimited space for music, which doesn't count against your total storage space. So for only $20 a year, you get 20GB of storage space, and unlimited music storage space.


With iCloud, all the music you purchase through iTunes and your Apple ID will be available on all your iOS devices. So if you buy a song on your iPhone, it'll be available on your iPad and on your computer. For $25 a year, iTunes Match allows you to store music (MP3, AIFF, WAV, MPEG-4, AAC) that you didn't necessarily purchase from iTunes. Any music that's matched is automatically stored in iCloud; whatever music isn't available through Match, is uploaded. Since most of your music can probably found among iTunes 20 million songs, you won't have to upload from scratch, thus saving you tons of time.


Google Music came out of beta recently with a splash. The Android Market offers hundreds of free songs and millions you can buy. You can also upload up to 20,000 of your own songs (MP3, AAC, WMA, FLAC) to Google's servers, and play them on any device with a standard Web browser. That's right: Google's offering its music services outside the Google ecosystem. Imagine that?

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