155 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
155 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1391
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Title: HPR1391: Google Play Music All Access
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1391/hpr1391.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:42:59
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---
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Hello, this is Ahuka. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio, another exciting episode. This is
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going to be a little bit different because it's not part of any series that I've done,
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but I want to talk about something that I'm a fan of. And so, to start with, I'm going
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to say, I like music. I'm guessing I'm not the only one, and I don't tend to put a lot of
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music into my podcasts because that can cause problems. But I certainly enjoy listening to music,
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and I love having it with me. I have a large music collection to draw on, and you know, having it
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with me at all times can be a bit of a problem considering how much music I have. Right now, I have
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a couple of portable players, two of which are full of music that I carry with me. My pockets can
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get kind of full that way. And while I like listening to the tracks I own, what about finding new
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stuff? My players have never suggested anything. And that's where the cloud services come in.
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My first cloud service was Pandora. I could listen to it on a computer using Pithos, I think,
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is the name of the app that I use on my Kabuntu machine, or on my phone with the Android app for
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Pandora. Pandora is like a radio station that plays the kind of music you'd like. You give the
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service the name of an artist, and it builds a channel for you based on that style of music.
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It finds other artists to consider similar to the one you named, and builds a playlist around that.
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I find that roughly every five to eight tracks it plays something from the artist you named
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with the rest being the similar artists, what it considers similar. It's not bad.
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You can use it for free if you don't mind ads and only use it 40 hours a month.
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I like to go ad-free and unlimited and pay $36 for a year. I believe it's also available for
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$3.99 per month. That's US dollars. I'm not sure what the euro price would be, but it's
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probably in the same ballpark. Now I have probably mentioned this before. I tend to pay for apps when
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I can to support the services I rely on. I think it's a problem actually that there are a lot of
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people that are constantly looking for what they can get for free. You're not going to get quality
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services or software for free. Just one of those things you have to take a look at. It may not be
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money that has to be paid. Maybe it's other things, but support the people that are supporting you.
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Pandora was good in its way. You can't really control it precisely though.
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Sometimes I know exactly what I want to listen to or I want to check out an artist I just heard
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about. So I got an account with Spotify. Spotify is a service that has most of the recorded music
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available for you to stream and let you create playlists. A paid account is $10 a month.
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It is fantastic for things like putting together a playlist of every song a particular artist
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has recorded or making playlists to suit a particular need or mood. It has a very large library,
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but not everything is there. A number of very high profile artists have refused to license their
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music among them the Beatles. I happen to be a big Beatles fan and I have their albums on CD and
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have ripped them to Aug or MP3 is needed, but that doesn't help on Spotify. Then two years ago Google
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got into the competition. Their initial offering was based around a music store, much like the iTunes
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store or Ubuntu One, but had an interesting feature that let you upload your own tracks to their
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servers, from which you could stream those tracks to your devices. So I could upload all my Beatles
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CDs to their servers and listen to them all I want. That was great. And I could also upload those
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rarities that would otherwise be unavailable. Bootleg tracks, for instance, or direct sales tracks
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from bands like Fish that sell concert recordings direct to the fans. This is a great feature,
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and I signed up for my Google Music account. In addition, I could buy tracks from Google Music,
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which would automatically be added to my account, and I could easily upload tracks I purchased from
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places like Amazon or E-Music, both of which I patronized. So now I had three different cloud
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services each doing different things. I liked them all well enough, and between them they pretty
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much covered everything I wanted, but then Google raised the bar. It created a new service called
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Google Play Music All Access, which combined all of the services into a single service for $10 a
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month. The new Google Play Music All Access was somewhat recently released, and for your monthly
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fee you get access to a large library of music you can stream in addition to all of your own tracks.
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You can do this by creating playlists in which the tracks can come from Google's library or from
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your own, and you can create radio stations similar to Pandora. I tried it, and after a week I
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canceled my Pandora and Spotify accounts because now I get it all for less money. And for whatever
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reason I find I'm listening to music even more often now with Google Play Music All Access. So how does
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it work? Well, Google Play is the name for Google's all-in-one online store. It offers music,
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movies, and TV, books, magazines, apps for Android, and even Google branded hardware like Nexus
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and Chrome. So it combines in one place everything you might ever want to buy from Google.
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For this review we'll focus just on the music section, but chances are that if you have an Android
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phone you have visited the Google Play apps either on your phone or in your browser.
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The Play Music app you will see has an icon like a pair of headphones.
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All Access is what you get when you sign up for the $10 a month plan and gives you all of the
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above services. And if you open the app on your phone you will see the following sections.
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First one is Listen Now. This is where you can search for tracks in Google's library
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plus all the tracks you have uploaded, plus suggestions based on your tracks, and even
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suggestions based on playlists you have created. Then My Library. You can start with the tracks
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you have uploaded, but you can also add any tracks you find in Google's library to your own My Library.
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Now this doesn't mean that you're downloading them. It just means that they've been added to this
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section of the app where they will be easily found. Remember this is really essentially a streaming
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application. Next section is Playlists. So you can create playlists. I'm sure everyone is very
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familiar with this. This is very similar to Spotify for instance. Then there is a section called
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Radio. And you can create stations here by giving an artist or a track, something like that,
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and telling Google to build a dynamic playlist of what it considers to be similar tracks.
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So this is basically the Pandora equivalent. Then the last section is Explore. And you can
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browse by new releases, particular genres, or check out curated playlists offered by Google.
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This last section, I don't tend to go too very much because my taste does not match up with the
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majority of the people using this app. So you can be pretty sure I really don't give a damn if
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Lady Gaga has a new app or new track released. Now because we're talking about streaming, you should
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definitely be thinking about whether this is using your mobile data. If you're worried about
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data caps or you're worried about poor coverage in an area, what I always do is I load a couple
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of gigabytes of tracks onto my phone from the music that I own. It could be their electronic tracks
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that I've purchased from Google or Amazon or E-Music or something I've ripped from my CDs.
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So I've always got a few gigs of those things on my phone. A good thing to do is go to your settings
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menu and you can set that to stream over Wi-Fi only if you're considered getting hit with a big
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data bill. You can also pin certain tracks to your device for offline listening. Open the track
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you'd like to pin and look for an icon that looks like a push pin. If it's at an angle, that means
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it can be downloaded to your device. If it is vertical, it means it has already been downloaded.
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But note, you can only download a track twice. This really is meant to be a streaming service.
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Note, again, you can in the settings specify that you will only download tracks via Wi-Fi.
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Again, that'll help protect you against hitting a data cap.
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Now, one of the things about this is that you can have all of these features on your
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computer as well as on your phone. And actually, I do that even more. I use it mostly on my computer.
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I've got, you know, decent speakers connected to my media computer and I use Google Chrome
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and have that open to the Play Music app. And there I have all of the same access.
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Now, maybe it's just because I'm a bit older than a lot of folks, I don't find managing everything
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on my cell phone to be a lot of fun. It's a small screen. My fingers are big.
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So, to me, having a full-size keyboard and a full-size monitor just makes my life easier.
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So, I create my playlist and my browser on my computer. Now, of course, you have to be logged
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into Google to do this, but if you're logged into Google, everything you do is synced through
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your Google account and will show up on your phone. So, any playlist you create will be available
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on your phone, any radio stations will be on your phone, etc. So, if you're logged into any
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Google application, whether it's Gmail, Google Plus, or what have you, there's a little icon in
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the upper right that looks like nine dots in a square. And if you click that, you can select
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the play store. And from there, you can select music. Now, when you're in the play store,
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if you go to my music, you get basically the same options you would've gotten on the Android app.
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Listen now, which combines tracks you've uploaded, tracks you've put in playlists, etc. My library,
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the radio for the stations you've created, explore if you want to see what's hot these days,
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or playlists that other people have submitted to Google. There's auto playlists, which is playlists
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that are generated by algorithms. And of course, the playlist you have created.
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Now, one neat feature is that you can drag and drop any track into a playlist. A good example
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is using the radio feature to find tracks you might not have known of previously.
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And if you hear when you like, just drag it on a playlist, and it is added.
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I generally listen to play music on my kabuntu desktop computer using Google Chrome,
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but I have used it with Firefox, and at work, I've used Internet Explorer.
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So, you know, I think with any reasonably modern browser, you shouldn't have any trouble.
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Sharing. Google is all about social these days, so sharing music is built into the Google Play.
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You can share playlists with your friends or with the general public. Now, what this means is
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sharing through Google Plus. Google Plus is the center of everything with Google these days,
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so you shouldn't be surprised. So, just open a playlist you want to share, and you will see a button
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that says share playlist. If you click on that, you will get your options. The default for every
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playlist is that it's private. But if you like, you can change that to public. When you do this,
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a Google Plus button appears, and if you've been on Google Plus, you know what I'm talking about.
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It's your standard, you know, post something on Google Plus kind of thing. And this lets you
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select who you would like to share your playlist with. You can share it with the public,
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which in practice means anyone who follows you on Google Plus, or you can select specific people.
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They also need to be on Google Plus, though, for you to share with them.
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And if anyone shares a playlist with you, you can subscribe to the playlist. And if they add tracks later,
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those tracks will be added to your subscribed copy.
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So, not a bad feature, really. Now, Google Play Music All Access depends on making license
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deals with the record labels. So, it may not be everywhere in the world just yet.
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But it has been rolled out initially in the United States. It was then rolled out in Australia,
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New Zealand. Then in August, it was rolled out in nine European countries. Austria, Belgium,
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France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Spain, and the UK. It may have rolled out in
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other UK countries since then, depending on what kind of deals Google was able to make and what
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the licensing authorities are like. So, I'd expect that it'll start appearing most places as
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they're able to make those deals. So, you might guess I'm a big fan. I really like this.
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So, I'm sharing this with everyone in the hacker public radio audience.
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Check it out. See if you like it. And, you know, I hope this has given you some interest in this.
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So, as always, I'm going to sign off by reminding everyone to support free software. And this is
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a hooker signing off. Bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day through Friday.
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