Shazam hits 300M users, shows off redesigned app for Apple's iPad
Popular music identification app Shazam announced on Monday that it had surpassed the 300 million user mark and will in the coming months roll out a new, redesigned version of its app for both Apple's iPad and Android tablets.
According to Shazam, the past several months have seen triple-digit growth in the number of downloads of its iPad app, which has become a popular second-screen tool for television watching. The company will, in the coming weeks, redesign that app across both Android and iOS platforms to take better advantage of the tablet form factor.
The redesigned app will include a new feature showing what TV shows and music people are currently tagging, as well as what is most popular in the Shazam Tag Charts.
Users will also have access to an interactive mapping feature, allowing users to zoom in to any city in the world to see what's popular there. It will also bring an improved Shazam Friends feature, quick-tagging that identifies a song or show in as little as one second, improved sharing, and automatic resubmission when a user enters a better network reception area.
According to Shazam, the past several months have seen triple-digit growth in the number of downloads of its iPad app, which has become a popular second-screen tool for television watching. The company will, in the coming weeks, redesign that app across both Android and iOS platforms to take better advantage of the tablet form factor.
The redesigned app will include a new feature showing what TV shows and music people are currently tagging, as well as what is most popular in the Shazam Tag Charts.
Users will also have access to an interactive mapping feature, allowing users to zoom in to any city in the world to see what's popular there. It will also bring an improved Shazam Friends feature, quick-tagging that identifies a song or show in as little as one second, improved sharing, and automatic resubmission when a user enters a better network reception area.
Comments
I'm genuinely sad to see them succeed.
I would love to see some other company with actual integrity that cares about their users do a similar service however. I wonder if Apple would buy them out or start a service like this on their own?
It has obvious value in that it sells tracks. Most of the time if you go to the trouble of identifying a track, you're going to buy it if the button is right there.
Shazam is always inaccurate for me. It's a feature, not a product, and it works not all that well.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gazoobee
Shazam is such a scum-ball, money-grubbing, anti-customer company.
I'm genuinely sad to see them succeed.
I would love to see some other company with actual integrity that cares about their users do a similar service however. I wonder if Apple would buy them out or start a service like this on their own?
It has obvious value in that it sells tracks. Most of the time if you go to the trouble of identifying a track, you're going to buy it if the button is right there.
What's the gripe with Shazam? I genuinely do not know and haven't had a problem with the service.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Oflife
A great British invention!
Absolutely! My friends Uncle helped start the company up. I've used it on many occasions and it has always been reliable for me...
I've never had a problem. Even a loud place I've been surprised that it could pick up songs over the other noises.
It wouldn't be hard for Apple to make something like this, licence it or buy the company.
When SIRI came out I emailed Apple saying it'd be a perfect add on.
"what band is this"
"what track is this"
"what album is this from"
etc.
Siri could find it and ask if you want to download the track or album and take you to the iTunes store ready to buy.
You are joking, right?
Either that, or you're totally insane.
I could use a good laugh though, so feel free to cite some examples of how exactly Shazam is such scum.
Originally Posted by Evilution
"what band is this"
"what track is this"
"what album is this from"
It can do that already, can't it? The third-gen iPod shuffle could do that.
Only songs in your library. I think he was referring to a song you hear in the car - ask Siri to identify it.