Why it’s always worth re-evaluating your online streaming music service

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Why it's always worth re-evaluating your online streaming music service

Just like short-term insurance you do not have any long-term investment value to lose from a music streaming service. You pay per month for the service and lose nothing when switching services, apart from setting up your playlists again.

So it is worth taking stock once in a while of what you are getting versus other services, and compare it to your own unique requirements.

I have some older non-mainstream music, and this is something I check for on a streaming service to see whether they have it. Sometimes they have it, but it gets pulled off as usage rights change. So a possible solution is uploading it myself and knowing it is always there and integrated with my streaming music. That changes slightly what I'm looking for then on the streaming services catalogue of music.

Whilst I love Spotify it is not available yet in South Africa, so I have to use a VPN to listen and that makes moving between devices a bit of a challenge. So Google Play Music is available in South Africa and this makes it more practical for me. But if you live in a country where Spotify (and other services) are available, your options are different. We have another quite cheap streaming music service within South Africa but I can't upload my music to it, so I'm at the mercy of usage rights changes which happen fairly often.

And of course apart from size and extent of the catalogue, whether you can upload or not, whether the service will sync across devices and play offline, there are various other considerations around the player features as well as what devices of yours are supported. I always prefer a service that works across different platforms and is not locked into their own devices or OS, and thankfully even iTunes now mostly works across the different platforms.

Services also change so it is worth not getting stuck in a rut and having a relook at the options you have. Of course, one way to get locked into a specific service is if you buy albums or tracks within that service instead of subscribing monthly….

Read the main article at https://lifehacker.com/getting-a-new-google-home-here-s-why-you-should-ditch-1819153231 where some differences are highlighted specifically between Google Play Music and Spotify

D6WCicr9CWcewWghjEVWxs4zfWuiQvVNRoo8nTH9my5r sAvwS8NQBVy8ZxkqfAY2u4a3e5KsA2OH2ew ZCT01Dbq 6Q4nYDioPrDF7txRuB5KJwcCuYPiugeP6aqZ tzmbn59hIT W6eLoLXHUNifez ydZG1CNAZPWy2mhfpUlJvLvAQS34vg1G30Yipp8Dr8b5J4DcWXh=w506 h910 Getting a New Google Home? Here’s Why You Should Ditch Spotify for Google Play Music
Yesterday, Google announced a slew of new products, from a pair of Google Home voice assistant variants to the new Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL smartphones. Those new voice assistants, like the $49 Google Home Mini and the $399 Google Home Max, make music playback throughout the home simple—so you’re going to want to hook up to a music streaming service. Google Play wants to be the streaming service of choice for all Google devices. With added features…

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