Internet music startup Spotify on Tuesday added a free radio service for iPhone or iPad users in the United States in a direct assault on locally loved Pandora.
The option to create free music channels
based on artists or genres will be added in coming days as an update to
the Spotify program in Apple's online App Store.
"Our focus has always been on creating an
amazing user experience," Spotify vice president of product Charlie
Hellman said in a release.
"The radio feature we've added to our iPhone
and iPad apps gives users the ability to discover, listen and save what
they like on the go -- all within one app -- for free."
Internet music darling Spotify has been
trying to win fans away from Pandora, a popular service based in the
California city of Oakland across the bay from San Francisco.
Pandora reports having about 150 million
users compared to the 10 million or so people who have signed up at
Spotify. Both companies offer ad-free subscription services but
approximately two-thirds of listeners opt not to pay.
Spotify's list of advertisers included Chevrolet, Heineken, Warner Brothers, McDonalds, Macy's, and Jim Beam.
Spotify, a pirvately held firm which was launched in Sweden in 2008, boasts a library of more than 16 million songs.
The music streaming service is available in a dozen countries in Europe and launched in the United States in July of last year.
Spotify offers a $9.99 a month plan allowing subscribers to download as many songs as they want to a mobile phone.
Pandora in May reported that its loss widened in the past quarter but investors welcomed news of a jump in revenue.
Total revenues rose 58 percent year-over-year
to $80.8 million, and the number of active users increased 53 percent
to 51.9 million in the quarter ended April 30.
Chief executive Joe Kennedy said in an
earnings call that consumers "continue to embrace Pandora's unparalleled
personalized radio experience at an extraordinary rate, propelling
Pandora's market leadership to an all-time record share of 5.95 percent
of total US radio listening."
Pandora gets revenues from advertisers and from users who pay for premium services.
Pandora went public last year. The company's stock dropped 2.5 percent to $11.19 after the Spotify announcement.
© 2012 AFP
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© 2012 AFP
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