Sprint Purchases 33 Percent Stake in Tidal For $200 Million (billboard.com) 63
Sprint has acquired a 33 percent stake in Jay Z's music streaming service Tidal, the two companies announced today. From a report: A source familiar with the matter tells Billboard that the purchase was for $200 million and that Jay and each of the company's two dozen artist-owners will remain part owners. As part of the deal, Tidal will become available to Sprint's 45 million retail customers, while the companies will partner for exclusives from its artists, according to a press release.
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YouTube won. Every song is available on YouTube, and can easily be downloaded off YouTube for personal use. Why would anyone bother with Spotify?
Better sound quality? Spotify Premium offers 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis. Youtube streams at 126 kbps AAC to 165 kbps Ogg Vorbis, depending on the AV container.
Re:It's not gonna happen (Score:4, Insightful)
I used to listen to cassette tapes on a Walkman, so I'll take "free, way better quality than tape" over "expensive, and maybe you can hear the difference in a quiet room with expensive headphones".
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I completely disagree. 126kbps AAC would be pretty much transparent even in good listening conditions. 126kbps MP3 would probably be pretty bad. Depending on the source and encoder, it could be as annoying to listen to as tape (but with different flaws). Tape mostly had hiss, wow/flutter, and poor dynamic range. The hiss was not usually a big deal except in fancy-pants music with quiet components... this was not a problem for my rock/pop listening. The poor dynamic range was something that my brain seemed t
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It's music recommendations on YouTube are terrible too.
It's not much of a substitute for a streaming service.
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I'm pretty happy with Google Play music, except for the fact that tidal (I assume) is taking artists away (my selection of Jay-Z has significantly reduced).
I'd like to see competition, but not in the form of exclusivity.
I left spotify because it sucked (no streaming to chromecast, no side loading, worse recommendations, no personal "library"), I suspect they fixed many of the issues, but that's why competition is good.
Net Neutrailty (Score:1)
Conveniently, Net Neutrality is going to die since il Cheeto appointed the man from Verizon to regulate it. SO Sprint can make their service the priory one and not use any data charges.
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Only 'cause "Annoying Orange" is already an established character.
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So... (Score:3)
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Sprint is going to by TMO first, then once it fails, there will be essentially no cellphone competition.
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Depends where you live and travel I suppose
I have tmobile for $75/month
It is unlimited enough for me locally (they say they'll throttle me during peak hours if I break 23 GB, but I only use 10-15) with good coverage (about 2/3 the time I am faster than 15/5mbps, and rarely under 5/1). They give me the basics I need in Toronto (slow slow slow, too slow for interactive, but I can pull a map in desperation for free).
For Verizon last I checked I'd be paying $75/month more (glancing at their page, things may hav
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Yeah, I actually think AT&T has responded to pressure from T-mobile and is pretty competitive (especially now that T-Mobile is unlimited only).
That's why I'm concerned about the proposed Sprint buyout of T-Mobile (and the AT&T one when that was on the table).
Sprint was always garbage in my area (bad coverage, high prices), but T-Mobile has been really upping their game over the last decade, and it's starting to exert downward pressure on AT&T, which is in turn starting to affect Verizon.
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What competition? AT&T and Verizon raise prices in lockstep and T-Mobile is too insignificant and impotent to stop it. Sprint is simply just a joke of a company.
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Another bad investment (Score:3)
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If they're trusting Tidal's subscriber numbers without even looking at their own traffic patterns to get a picture how much Tidal data (and that other streaming services) is moving across their networks, then I wouldn't put any amount of stupidity beyond them.
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Well, once the deal goes through, that analysis will show that 100% of Sprint users are subscribers. So their analysis is gonna look pretty good....
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True. But I suspect the data volumes will remain close to zero...
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Amazon will destroy Tidal and Spotify (Score:1)
Here is the simple math:
For Amazon Prime members you can now pickup a subscription to Amazon Music Unlimited for $79 per year or $6.58 per month. They have over 20 million songs and the catalog is growing by the day and will catch up to Tidal's 30 million in about a year. Tidal basic is $9.99 per month and is not lossless. Amazon has them beat by $3.41. Since the major cohort of people paying for these services is middle class males over the age of 30 employed in jobs paying over $50k per year basically the
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Every other streaming service, except for Amazon Prime + FireStuff, lets anyone in your HOUSEHOLD have their own viewing profile.
Who Cares... (Score:1)