Advertising

The Seattle Times Company

NWjobs | NWautos | NWhomes | NWsource | Free Classifieds | seattletimes.com

Business / Technology


Our network sites seattletimes.com | Advanced

Brier Dudley's Blog

Brier Dudley offers a critical look at technology and business issues affecting the Northwest.

October 21, 2009 at 10:31 AM

Comments (0)     E-mail E-mail article      Print Print      Share Share

Google taps iLike for new Web music service

Posted by Brier Dudley

Google's going to raise the profile of digital music in its search results, offering people ways to discover and buy music through a partnership with Seattle-based iLike and Lala, according to reports out of the Bay Area today.

But Google's "One Box" initiative doesn't sound like a full-blown music destination/distribution service like Microsoft has tried various ways, Amazon's doing with its MP3 store and MySpace is building.

Techcrunch's initial OMG story said Google's building a music service with major record labels on board. Then it added news that iLike and Lala will stream music from the search results and it will all be announced Oct. 28.

Cnet's report suggests its going to be enhanced search results that present not just links but music information and buying opportunities via iLike and Lala, a Palo Alto-based Web music service.

Why hasn't Bing done this sort of thing already? You'd think it could pretty easily tap the Zune service, if Zune's licensing deals would allow it, or surface MSN's rich music features.

Google's service sounds cool but nowhere near a YouTube for music (gTunes?). If it was going there, perhaps it would have bought iLike or some other startup that indexes and infers people's taste in music.

This also sounds like a middle finger extended toward Apple during its messy divorce from Google.

E-mail E-mail article      Print Print      Share Share

Comments
No comments have been posted to this article.

Recent entries

Advertising

Advertising

 
Most read
Most commented
Most e-mailed
 
 

Most viewed imagesMore

Advertising

Browse the archives

October 2009

September 2009

August 2009

July 2009

June 2009

May 2009

Extras