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  • Google Play's new 'Offers' tab features deals on apps, games, movies and more

    Google Play Store's new 'Offers' tab highlights deals on apps, movies and more

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.28.2022

    Google has launched an Offers tab for the Play Store featuring deals on apps, games, movies, books and other purchases.

  • LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 21: A selection of the UK newspaper front pages show images from the inauguration of President Biden, on January 21, 2021 in London, England. As the United Kingdom faces a future outside of the EU, the relationship with the new US administration is set to play a large part in its development over coming years. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

    Facebook's News tab arrives in the UK

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    01.25.2021

    Facebook News tab's UK rollout is the first expansion of the feature outside the US.

  • Facebook News

    Facebook is expanding its dedicated news section to more countries

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    08.25.2020

    Facebook plans to expand its News section outside the US in the next six to 12 months.

  • İstanbul, Turkey - August 28, 2017: Woman using smart phone on a wooden desk. The smart phone is an iPhone 6 plus displaying Spotify app.  iPhone is a touchscreen smartphone developed by Apple Inc.

    Spotify’s tastemakers create 17 specialized podcast playlists

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    04.21.2020

    Spotify is making it easier to find podcasts you'll like.

  • YouTube

    YouTube’s personalized music playlists are available to all users

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    12.17.2019

    YouTube Music's new personalized playlists are now available to users worldwide. Today, YouTube introduced its Discover Mix, New Release Mix and Your Mix. The playlists will curate your favorite songs, new releases and unheard tracks by your favorite artists, plus others you might like.

  • Google

    Google used photogrammetry to create a detailed VR tour of Versailles

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.30.2019

    Versailles palace is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the world, but fighting those crowds in person can be frustrating. Now, Google and the Château de Versailles have teamed up to take VR users on a private tour of Louis XIV's royal residence. It's the largest photogrammetry project ever done at the castle, with 21 rooms and 387,500 square feet of internal surfaces captured. HTC Vive and Oculus Rift users can handle and inspect over 100 sculptures, paintings and other works of art and see them with incredible close-up detail.

  • Maskot via Getty Images

    Spotify experiments with curated podcast playlists

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    06.04.2019

    Beginning today, a handful of Spotify users will see curated podcast playlists in their accounts. According to The Verge, the playlists are an experiment to help Spotify understand how it can help users discover new shows. The hand-picked lists will be broken into five categories: comedy, true crime, "geek culture," motivation and mindfulness. The Verge reports the playlists will include a mix of Spotify originals and third-party shows.

  • Pixabay

    Instagram's redesigned Explore tab sorts everything into topics

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    06.26.2018

    As if you weren't already spending hours falling down the rabbit hole that is Instagram's Explore tab, the site is making a few tweaks that'll make it even easier to spend time getting lost in other people's pics. Announced at Facebook's F8 event earlier this year, a redesigned Explore tab is now rolling out to users. It has the same tile-style interface as before, with curated posts based on the things you're already looking at, but now you can explore additional topic channels, too.

  • iHeartRadio

    iHeartRadio offers curated playlists to free users

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    04.16.2018

    iHeartRadio added on-demand music streaming powered by Napster to its broadcast radio-centric service in 2016. The company later added curated activity-, era- and genre-based playlists for paid subscribers since then, too. Now the company is bringing this Playlist Radio feature to all of its users, including free members.

  • Slacker Radio tries to break through a flooded streaming music market

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    01.17.2012

    One of our final meetings at CES last week was with Slacker Radio's VP of Marketing, Jonathan Sasse, who sat down in a Las Vegas lobby restaurant to tell us what his company has been up to lately. Slacker Radio is one of the many streaming radio offerings that have apps available on the App Store (Pandora, Rdio, and Spotify are a few other examples), and Sasse says that after a few years of building up the service with content and technology and making sure it can be accessed almost anywhere, his main goal these days is just telling people why they should choose this service over all the others. His first reason: Content. Sasse says Slacker Radio has more than ten times more music to play than Pandora does, which is a pretty impressive figure. Slacker's been working hard to make content deals with record labels for quite a while, which means there's a large library of different tunes to choose from. And in addition to all that music content, Sasse said Slacker has been making a big push for non-music to listen to as well. The service has already added in ESPN Radio and ABC News to listen to, and there's streaming comedy stations to tune in on as well. Additionally, while Pandora and other services also have their usual music selection systems for computer-generated radio stations, Slacker's genre stations are actually curated by real DJs, which is a fact that Sasse said is often hard to get across to the public. Slacker's hired former radio personalities, including Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Marco Collins, to actually choose, curate, and even narrate the music on its genre stations, which means that "he curates that station by hand," Sasse said. The company is also working on deals with partners to make sure that users can find and access it anywhere. Slacker already has a deal with Ford to show up in the company's cars, and there are also deals being worked out with phone carriers for special data access, as well as other possible partnerships. Slacker's plan, Sasse said, was to learn to monetize first and then grow, and it's time for the company to really make a marketing push and grow that audience. "We're kind of ready to step on the gas," he said. One of the biggest obstacles, so far, has been a boogeyman that we've heard a lot about during this year's CES: Apple's subscription rules. Slacker Radio also was originally bound by Apple's rule that you can't sell subscriptions on the App Store without paying a 30% cut -- Slacker at first decided to not sell subscriptions through the app at all, which led to just a login screen being shown when users opened up the app. But the call of Apple's audience was too much for the company, and Slacker is now able to sell its Radio Plus subscription (the cheaper of two offerings) via an in-app purchase. Users still can't subscribe to the Premium Radio service through just the app, however. "That margin is still too high," Sasse said. In addition to a big marketing push later this year, Sasse said Slacker is still beefing up its library and trying to figure out ways to differentiate its offerings even further. One goal is to work with users to tag and respond to content while they're listening to it, so the company can provide an even better experience. Already, users can customize ESPN Radio content with their favorite teams and shows, and Sasse wants to bring that kind of customization to other content as well, so listeners can hear exactly what they're looking for. Slacker is also working on more original content, like band-curated radio stations, and maybe even podcasts, Sasse said. Finally, Sasse said the last goal is to create a "unified, clean experience" across the entire platform, so that users see the same setup on the website as on the company's various mobile apps and platforms. Slacker Radio has already done a lot of work on its service, and while the streaming radio market is already full (and growing even more crowded almost by the day), time will tell if the company can push itself in front of the other choices out there and really find a majority audience.