OAKLAND, Calif. — Pandora is one of the nation’s most popular Web radio services, with about 1 million listeners daily. Its Music Genome Project allows customers to create stations tailored to their ...
They’re the most terrifying words in tech, as AllThingsD‘s John Paczkowski observed on Friday: “Apple is entering your market.” One can only imagine what went through the minds of Pandora founder Tim ...
Chumby has been around for some time now, and the team behind it are keeping their promise to release updated features for the squidgy touchscreen companion. The latest is support for Pandora radio, ...
Everyone’s favorite music-genome-powered web radio service Pandora is now officially available on everyone’s favorite ambiguous-use plush-paneled Linux appliance, the Chumby. Fitting of their strategy ...
Internet radio companies and the major record labels have reached a revised royalty agreement that will make it possible for beleaguered services like Pandora to survive, the New York Times reports.
With concerns about profitability and iTunes Radio about to launch, there's a lot of uncertainty around Pandora's future. But one recent report from IBISWorld claims that Pandora will continue to ...
Four-year-old Internet radio station and “music genome project” Pandora will start to add commercials to their free service (the $36 per year premium membership will remain ad-free). With 21 million ...
It looks like Apple has plans to expand its music ambitions beyond iTunes. According to a recent report by the NYT, Apple is working on their own web radio service to take on the likes of Pandora.
When Tim Westergren says something about music, it’s easy to believe him. He not only possesses rock-star good looks and a background as a pianist, but he also co-founded Pandora, the web’s most ...
Pandora, the popular Web radio service, reported impressive earnings after the close Thursday, recording second quarter EPS of $0.04 vs. consensus forecast for $0.02. Revenues of $157.4 million topped ...
Pandora founder Tim Westergren is staunchly defending his Internet radio service, blaming disputes over artist royalties on a "deliberate and orchestrated campaign" by the Recording Industry ...
The founder of MP3.com and MP3tunes.com says the next step for Web radio is freeing fans to make their own programming decisions and give them more full-featured offerings. Greg Sandoval covers media ...
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