MusicGremlin (MP3 player/digital music service) Preview
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MusicGremlin (MP3 player/digital music service) Preview
Recently CNET has published a preview for MusicGremlin (MP3 player/digital music service) on their site. They write
Upside: The MusicGremlin will let you purchase music à la carte from its MusicGremlin Direct online store for 99 cents per track or buy a $15-per-month all-you-can-download subscription. The store should have more than 2 million tracks at launch, so it’ll be competitive with the iTunes Music Store and Virgin Digital. Subscribers can grab new songs anytime they like (as long as they have a wireless connection) or subscribe to Gremlist, which are hand-programmed playlists that are updated weekly and automatically download new music to the player.
Downside: The MusicGremlin will debut in an 8GB model (and possibly a 4GB), which isn’t much storage, although the player itself is still as large as the first-generation iPod. This is no diminutive flash player. It needs a larger battery for Wi-Fi, which is why the unit ends up on the bigger side. Getting the most out of it requires not only the initial purchase but also a monthly subscription, since you can’t subscribe to Gremlist without one. The player works with Windows PCs but not Macs, and we’re a bit disappointed that it doesn’t display pictures or videos, since it’s so cutting edge in other ways.
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A news article from TheRegister writes ‘MusicGremlin’s upcoming digital music player will support direct-to-device song downloads, the company said today as it begins to pitch technology licences to device manufacturers. The company will next month launch a Wi-Fi enabled player that has enough web access smarts on board to tune into MusicGremlin’s own online store and let the user purchase and download tracks. The unit scans for available networks, and connects when it can. When it can’t do so, purchase requests are cached until there’s suitable bandwidth available for the download. Either way, users won’t need a PC to act as a download intermediary’. Continue reading here.
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