Wednesday, November 16, 2011

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe [Explainer]

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeApple's much-delayed iTunes Match service launched today, bringing their vision of music in the cloud to iTunes and iOS users alike. But what is it, exactly, and is it worth your money? Here's a look at how iTunes Match works and if it's right for you.

What Is iTunes Match?

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeiTunes Match is a service from Apple that allows you to keep a cloud-based music collection for $25 per year. Unlike Google Music and Amazon Cloud Player, however, this doesn't necessarily involve uploading your music and using a web-based player to stream your collection. Instead, iTunes scans the music you already have in your library and tells Apple you've got a copy. Apply then allows you access to any music in their collection, all encoded as 256kbps AAC files with absolutely no copy protection. What's especially great is that you get these high-quality files even if your files aren't as good. The iTunes catalog is huge, so chances are most of the songs you own are already in it. If they're not, however, iTunes will upload a copy of your music to store and sync as well. All your music will be transferred to other machines running iTunes (both Mac and Windows PCs) as well as any iOS devices. This way you'll automatically have all your music synchronized and backed up in the cloud. If you lose all your music in a hard drive crash, you'll be able to get it all back without issue so long as you're an iTunes Match subscriber.

Should I Buy iTunes Match?

Whether or not you should bother purchasing an iTunes Match subscription is going to depend on your needs. To get a better idea of what's best for you, here's a look at the upsides and downsides to help you make the right choice.

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe

The Upsides

The obvious benefits of iTunes Match are easy synchronization, a backup of your music collection, and access to music files encoded at a high bit rate?a bit rate likely higher than most of your existing collection. The service is pretty cheap, as $25 isn't much money at all on a yearly basis. If you like and use iTunes, plus have an iDevice or two, it's one of your best options for cloud-based music services.

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe

The Downsides

While it's great that iTunes Match can keep your music in sync across devices, that same feature is also one of its limitations. Because you're not able to stream your music in the same way you can with Google Music and Amazon Cloud Player (or a streaming music service like Spotify), you only retrieve as much of your matched collection as your computer or mobile device can accommodate. This does not mean iTunes Match is incapable of streaming, but while doing so it downloads the file to your device. You don't have the option of streaming only. (One exception appears to be that can stream unsync'd music if your device is too full to accommodate any additional downloads.) This can get a little frustrating if you don't want to download a song to your device simply because you've chosen to listen to it. Additionally, there is no option to stream via a web browser so your listening options are limited to your computers (of which you can have a maximum of five) and iDevices.

The Bottom Line

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeIf you're into all things Apple, iTunes Match is likely the best service for you. It's cheap, it keeps your music backed up and synced without the need to upload your entire collection (or possibly any of it), and it'll work with all of your devices.

If you're not fully entrenched in the Apple ecosystem, iTunes Match might not be your ideal service. If you need your music on an Android device, for example, you're out of luck. If you're simply dealing with a mix of Mac and Windows PCs, plus an iPhone or iPad here and there, it should work just fine. Plus, if you do have an Android device you will have physical copies of the music files you can transfer over and play without issue. You could even subscribe to an additional service like Google Music or Amazon Cloud Player and use both in conjunction. Because iTunes Match match provides cloud music storage rather than streaming, these services can work well together. But if you find yourself wanting to use both you might be better off with Spotify, which offers a hybrid of the two via its premium service.

If you loathe iTunes, then iTunes Match is clearly not for you. Even if you really like the service, it requires the use of the iTunes software to manage your collection. If you can't buy into that you should definitely look for something else.


Have you already subscribed to the iTunes Match service and have some initial thoughts? Let us know how you're liking it (or not) in the comments.

You can follow Adam Dachis, the author of this post, on Twitter, Google+, and Facebook. ?Twitter's the best way to contact him, too.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/C3hQ7tSWcwY/what-is-itunes-match-and-should-i-subscribe

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