![]()
- June Could Be Turning Point for Markets, Economy
- Spain to Go to Market to Fund Banks, Regions
- JPMorgan Sells Good Assets to Offset 'London Whale'
- Euro Zone Bank Safety Net Leaves Holes Unplugged
- Why a Strong Dollar Doesn't Mean a Cheap Europe Trip
- State Fund Rejects ‘Unaccountable’ Chesapeake Board
- Madoff Case Is Paying Off for Trustee ($850 an Hour)
- Cool Jobs: From Gold Stacker to Bed Tester
- Roubini’s Das: Spain Needs a Bailout ‘Sooner or Later’
MOST SHARED
- Homes Prices Drop 2% to Post-Crisis Lows: Case-Shiller
- State Fund Rejects ‘Unaccountable’ Chesapeake Board
- Greece to Leave Euro Zone on June 18: Wealth Manager
- Spain to Go to Market to Fund Banks, Regions
- Buffett-Backed BYD Defends Electric Car After Accident
- Stocks Jump 1%, Led by Materials; FB Slides 5%
- Spreading Around Your Retirement Wealth Tax Free
- Stocks to Watch: JCP, VRTX, CHK, FB & More
- How Nasdaq Lost Control of Facebook IPO, by the Minute
- Euro Sinks, China Talks Tough, Dollar Gets a Lift
MOST POPULAR
HOT ON FACEBOOK
Amazon Launches Online Media Storage Service
Amazon.com wants to be more than a destination for shopping online — it also dreams of being a place where you can store your music, photos and videos and access them any time, from any computer.
![]() |
Amazon's move is beating Google [GOOG
Loading...
()
] and Apple [AAPL
Loading...
()
]which are believed to be working on similar services that would allow consumers to access their content when away from their home computer.
While Amazon will charge for the Cloud Drive service, it's offering anyone with an Amazon account 5 gigabytes of free storage. That's less space than you'd get on the smallest iPod Touch, but it's a move that's likely to woo plenty of users who might later decide to pay for more storage space.
The Seattle-based company, which already runs an online storage service for companies called Amazon S3, decided to roll out a consumer cloud service to make it easier for customers to access digital content no matter where they are, Amazon music director Craig Pape said.
The offerings could also benefit Amazon's bottom line: The company realized customers were hesitant to purchase MP3s at work because they didn't want them tied to their office computer, Pape said, so Cloud Drive and Cloud Player may drive more impulse music shopping.
"At the end of the day we're trying to delight customers, but we're trying to sell more music, too," he said.
The company also wants to sell cloud storage. If your tunes and videos take up more space than the 5 GB Amazon is giving out, you can pay an annual storage fee to use Cloud Drive: The use of 20 GB of storage, for example, will cost $20 (and this includes the 5 free GB). For an undisclosed period of time, however, Amazon [AMZN
Loading...
()
] is offering 20 GB of free storage to those who buy a digital album from its Amazon MP3 store.
Documents or videos you've uploaded to Cloud Drive will open with programs on the computer you're using, Pape said, while songs in MP3 or AAC files will be playable through the Web-based Cloud Player.
The player offers simple controls -- you can play, pause or skip tracks, or build your own playlists. For users who want to listen while on the go, an updated version of the Amazon MP3 digital music-buying app will include Cloud Player, letting users play music they've stored with Amazon's service on their cell phone as well as tunes that are already on their handsets.







