iTunes 3G Music Store - not yet...
Despite being 3G, Apple's new iPhone won't allow users to download music from iTunes using 3G networks - at least, not yet.
According to Apple's product page, the mobile version of the iTunes Music Store will remain solely accessible using WiFi. Is this a missed opportunity? We think it might be - but, equally, Apple has a practise of dribbling new features out during the life of a product, in order to stimulate and to maintain sales.
Look to Napster Mobile, Rhapsody and the numerous (but not particularly widely-used) mobile music services. These already allow users to purchase and download tracks using 3G connections. With the movement to mobile music and music anywhere continuing (as noted in this Guardian report yesterday), the only reason Apple may not yet have introduced a 3G music store has to be the reluctance of the carriers to allow the company to undercut their own music services, simply by offering a better service.
We think that reluctance will fade as iPhone market share improves, we also think we may see more movement to support mobile music within the next major version of ITunes, which we'd anticipate for September/October this year, around the traditional iPod refresh season.
We're very surprised at the lack of A2DP support in the Bluetooth stack used in the iPhone - that's an incredible shame, we'd like to be able to use the device to stream music to speakers and our choice of Bluetooth headphones (though, let's face it, those Bluetooth headphones with their little flashing lights are always a fashion crime).
Latest Stories on 9 to 5 Mac
- Apple patents the 3D Apple Store - Alice in Avatar-land
- Surprise: Warner admits iTunes sales slow on price hikes
- Apple ships Aperture 3: 64-bit, Snow Leopard/Intel only, 200 features, $199/£169 (demo available)
- What's coming to the Apple Store this morning?
- Apple Store Down. Can we has Core i7 MacBook Pros?
- Apple podcasts Mac advice video clips
- iPhone gains, BlackBerry loses US smartphone marketshare


Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Reddit
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Comments (2)
There was an article somewhere describing how the music industry is really the problem. They want a to declare it part of a "mobile sales" pricing tier so they can get more money out of Apple on each sale. They would want any song sold over a cell network to be more expensive, not for data reasons but just because.
I don't see how they can use this as an excuse. On Sprint, as long as you have a data plan, you can get tracks for $.99 each.
So they have no excuse.