By now, most people are accustomed to Google Music , but as Mountain View just outed its new tunes purchasing platform , we needed to test it out for ourselves. It is a painless process, particularly when you have used the Android Market and have already got a mastercard in Google’s system. To snatch songs or albums in the course of the new service, you just visit the Google Music page and click the “Shop” link inside the upper right hand corner. That’ll bring you to the music component to the Android Market, where you’re then ready to purchase individual songs or entire albums to locate your individual sonic bliss. Pricing’s well-nigh a twin of what you’ve seen elsewhere: songs are either 99 cents or $1.29, and albums are around ten bucks. Once you’ve made a variety, you are going to be prompted to log into the Market in the event you haven’t already to finish your purchase. After doing so, it also asks if you would like to share your new tunes on Google+, and allows you to choose who gets to work out (and hear) the musical post to your profile. Easy peasy.
Shortly after buying the album, it showed up within the Google Music app on our Android device and we were being attentive to Jay-Z’s lyrical stylings very quickly. While doing so, we poked across the updated app and located just a few new features inside the update. The UI have been tweaked slightly, as now you can scroll horizontally during the categories up top, which makes sifting through your library by title, artist or genre easier than ever. Users could also create instant mixes from playing songs and the player itself has gotten some sprucing within the looks department. Unfortunately, the Market app doesn’t enable music purchases on phones just yet, but Google said it’s within the pipeline, and we’ll be letting you understand all about it when it arrives. Until then, tell us how Big G’s new music store is treating you within the comments below.
Robot navigates, reassembles truss structures
Apple patent application points to DJ-like beat matching, pairs iTunes with fist pumps



