For instance, here's Rolling Stone on one of the first exclusive deals, The Eagles 2007 double CD "Long Road To Eden": Worst, the "exclusive" music found on iTunes or in WalMart or Target usually leaked to other stores with embarrassing results. And, eventually, most everyone came to iTunes. To use a term appropriate for March Madness, this announcement is the result of a triple press: Urban and tech-savvy listeners flocked to iTunes, suburban listeners went to Target and rural listeners shopped at Wal-Mart. What I find humorous is that music analysts have known for years about the appeal, but the four major labels still continued to try to charge consumers up to $18.99 for CDs. Second place has toggled between Target and WalMart.Īll three also have something in common: The "magic" $9.99 price point. As many know, Apple has officially been the number one music retailer for going on two years. Will the move push noticeable units? I severely doubt it. UMG is also banking that the lower price points will at the least be offset by increasing CD sales volume. Want to know more about us? Head here.To accommodate the lower pricing, UMG labels also plan to step up deluxe versions of albums that can sell at higher prices for the more devout music fans and collectors. In no time, our stories got picked up by the likes of Forbes, Foxnews, Gizmodo, TechCrunch, Engadget, The Verge, Macrumors, and many others. PiunikaWeb started as purely an investigative tech journalism website with main focus on ‘breaking’ or ‘exclusive’ news. IST 11:21 am: In an email response to one of these affected persons, Spotify notes that they still have their best techs working on it. Being a regular user, if this same Spotify wrong metadata bug is also annoying you on your car radio or the watch, then let us know in the comments below. But these are also not something to worry about. These kinds of problems aren’t supposed to happen often. Furthermore, it has also promised to sort out the problem very soon. Meanwhile, the wrong metadata bug has been brought into the consideration of the concerned team and they’re investigating.
Affected by this bug, several users have reported on the community section of Spotify and asked for a fix as soon as possible. This Spotify wrong metadata on car radio doesn’t seem to be a big issue though, it might be misleading sometimes and confuse users. It could be that other watch users are also facing the issue, but we haven’t come across more reports yet. Or specifically, a Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 user has also reported that the current track is not updated when skipping forward. This same issue also seems to bother watch users. This feature works well with other player programs, e.g. (The display will always show the title, artist and album of the current track, and this display will not change.) My current client version is 8., but when I upgraded to the previous version the display went bad, before that it worked fine.
(Next track for example) While I don’t change the track, the update is fine, but after that it stops working.
When I use the spotify client in the car with bluetooth connection to the car radio, the track info update on the car display stops when I press the track change buttons. While the next audio is being played perfectly. In contrast, while changing the track of the music, the application is stuck on showing previous track info, rather than changing it. And the issue is related to that metadata which isn’t changing when users change the track. The metadata is basically the description of the audio you are listening to, it includes info such as song name, artist, genre, and more. Recently, some of the users have reported that, while playing songs or using Spotify client on their car radio using Bluetooth they have encountered a bug in the metadata. Well, being software, the bugs may appear often and Spotify is no exception. However, some users have been facing issues while using the service in their car or watch via Bluetooth.
Spotify supports different devices that run Android, iOS, or Windows, hence, it’s a dynamic music player. You can listen to any song or podcast you want, anywhere at the ease of network, create your own playlist, or choose from top genres, and much more. Gradually, it gained popularity, the reason being its quality services, a wide range of songs, and podcasts. Spotify is one of the world’s most popular audio streaming and media service used by millions of users. Original story (published on September 22, 2021) follows: New updates are being added at the bottom of this story…