Why Taylor Swift “Broke Up” With Spotify

Read original story on: The Guardian

Backed up by her record-breaking album sales, Taylor Swift and her label have made a bold decision to remove her back catalog from Spotify. Tension between musicians and streaming services over low royalties (reportedly around $0.007 per play) has been brewing for quite a while, but it took something as strong as Swift’s popularity and negotiating clout to break away from the increasingly influential streaming service. Unlikely to spread to other artists in the music industry, this incident may just be one of the growing pains for Spotify.

Gen Z Don’t Buy Media Anymore; They Just Rent

Read original story on: Wired

It’s been widely reported that when it comes to music, today’s teens tend to just stream it instead of buying on iTunes. The Wall Street Journal reported that digital music sales on iTunes, the world’s biggest music seller, had declined 13 percent to 14 percent since the start of the year. But what if their media consumption habit has spread to other media content as well?

During the last quarter, Amazon’s North American sales of media—books, music, movies, games—grew five percent of quarterly growth, the lowest year-over-year growth in North American media sales in over five years. If this is any indication, then it looks like younger generations are indeed choosing convenient access to media content over physical or digital ownership.

Ironically, this long-predicted shift in consumer priorities also seems to be perpetuated by the digital media sellers themselves. In the case of Amazon, textbook sales dipped sharply in part because Amazon makes textbook rentals so easy, similar to the way Amazon Prime Video discouraged DVD purchases. Similarly, Apple also has iTunes Radio for streaming music, not to mention the soon-to-integrated Beats music.

That being said, there might be a bit of over-generalization, as Gen Z evidently does still listen to MP3, paid for or not. Still, the trend towards a rental-based, on-demand economy has been a long time coming. And with the younger generations embracing such ways of media consumption, it’s time for companies built on the practice of purchasing media to reexamine basic assumptions.

Starbucks To Explore Ecommerce Next Year With Coffee Delivery

Read original story on: The Verge

Starbucks will be tipping its toes into ecommerce next year with plans for launching an on-demand delivery program in select markets. The delivery service will be available to loyalty program members through a new “Mobile Order and Pay” app, set to debut later this year. Given the success its mobile app has enjoyed, along with the rise of on-demand economy, it seems reasonable for Starbucks to double down on mobile-focused initiative.

Lowe’s Introduces Beacon-Sensing Robot For Customer Service

Read original story on: Wall Street Journal

Lowe’s department store has started testing a new connected device program called OSHbots that provides customer service with a robotic assistant. The robots use beacon technology to know what aisle the customers are in and where to go. This also allows the robots to provide inventory support to the store, as well as to display location-specific ads or promos. With more connected devices being implemented in retail, customer experience inside physical stores are about to change forever.

Brickstream Acquires Nomi For Better In-Store Analytics

Read original story on: TechCrunch

In-store analytics firm Brickstream has acquired the New York-based startup Nomi. As Brickstream has already installed more than 100,000 in-store devices for camera-based analytics, this deal helps Nomi sidestep the hurdle of actually getting its technology into stores. And with this acquisition, the hyperlocal analytics industry appears poised for its first wave of consolidation.

Quantified Self Movement Continues As Microsoft Unveils Fitness Band

Read original story on: The Verge

Microsoft has just become the latest major tech giant to enter the E-Health and fitness market, unveiling new platform called Microsoft Health as well as a fitness wearable dubbed Microsoft Band. As with Apple and Google, Microsoft’s health and fitness device will be closely tied to its OS — in this case, Windows OS with Cortana integration. But with apps available for all major mobile platforms, it appears Microsoft is serious about building a fitness device that works with almost every device out there, which would certainly help with the general adoption rate.

Apple Pay Updates: 1 Million Credit Cards Activated

Read original story on: ReadWrite

On Monday, at a technology conference organized by the Wall Street Journal, Apple CEO Tim Cook announced that Apple had activated 1 million credit cards in the first 72 hours after Apple Pay launched, calling it “already a huge hit.”

That sounds impressive—until you consider that there are more than 600 million credit and debit cards in the United States, and Apple has sold an estimated 20 million Apple Pay-compatible iPhone 6 and 6 Plus units. Also considering that many users might link multiple cards, it’s difficult to come up with a clean figure for Apple Pay’s market share among eligible iPhone 6 users.

 

Netflix Tests Contextual Outdoor Digital Campaign Made Of GIFs

Read original story on: Digiday

Netflix has started testing a new outdoor campaign in Paris that consists of responsive movie GIFs. The billboards display GIFs from movies and shows that are available on Netflix and will change depending on weather, news events, or even nearby promotions accordingly. Using this type of digitally enabled hyperlocal advertising, Netflix looks to connect its content to people’s emotions, interests and behaviors at the right moment.

Are Wearables The Next Tool For News Gathering?

Read original story on: The Drum

The Guardian is reportedly exploring ways to use wearable technology as a news-gathering tool as well as a new consumption platform. Sources claimed The Guardian was experimenting with a variety of wearable devices such as smartwatches and Google Glass, adding that it was also considering how wearables could be used to create news, such as using unobtrusive audio or video recording.

Meet CBSN, CBS’s New 24-Hour Digital News Network

Read original story on: AdWeek

After going digital with a standalone streaming service, American senior citizens’ most-watched network CBS just dove deeper into the digital swirl by launching a new 24-hour digital news network, tentatively and imaginatively named CBSN. Designed to be a more casual newsroom setting than traditional news shows, the channel, set for an official launch early next month, will stream live to TV sets, laptops and mobile devices with stories from all CBS reporters.