Motorola, the No. 2 maker of mobile telephones, is set to unveil a service called iRadio that will let users download preselected audio content from a range of providers on their home computers, dump it on their cell phones and listen to it on their car stereos.
The company is banking on the popularity of portable music underscored by sales of Apple’s iPod digital music players and growing demand for high-quality, commercial-free radio.
“What we set out to solve was finding a way to get the breadth of content into the stereo where people listen,” said David Ulmer, director of marketing for Motorola’s media solutions business. “We looked around and noticed that everyone had a cell phone in their pocket. There is a very large market of potential customers to go after.”
The iRadio service, which will let customers download 10 hours of content at a time, will be available at the subscription cost of about $5 to $7 a month. When not driving, customers can listen to content on a phone with a headset.
By comparison, Sirius and XM charge about $13 a month for access to more than 100 channels; online music content provider Napster gets about $15 in the same period for unlimited downloads to a computer, or digital music player. Apple’s iTunes music library charges about 99 cents per song.
» Nokia Launches Web Music Service
» Big Profits for Apple iPhone, Slim Pickings for eBayers
» Share Your MojoBaby - Mobile Blogging Service Launched
» Best Buy and SanDisk to Launch Digital Music Store
» Commodore Gaming Announces Plans To Enter Mobile Games Market
» 3 Million Sony Walkman Phones Sold, New W950 Unveiled
» Microsoft, MCI To Add PC-To-Phone Calling To MSN Messenger
» Gamers Best at Multi-Tasking
» Universal Music Group Becomes First Music Label to Join Motorola iRadio Revolution
» Apple to Unveil Motorola ROKR iTunes Phone
» BT Livetime Mobile Service Takes on Apple iPod
» Ericsson, Napster Offer Digital Music Service for Mobile Phones
» iTunes More Popular than P2P File-Sharing
» BT & Virgin Trial Mobile TV Service
» Phantom Console Snapped At CES 2005


del.icio.us
Digg
Furl
Netscape
Yahoo! My Web
StumbleUpon
Google Bookmarks
Technorati
BlinkList
Newsvine
ma.gnolia
reddit
Windows Live
Tailrank

