Skip Links

Microsoft Zune 3.0 media player software

By Ginny Mies, PC World
September 19, 2008 08:20 PM ET
  • Print

Like Apple's iTunes 8, Microsoft's Zune software (now in version 3.0) offers new ways for listeners to discover new music via their software. Unfortunately, to get the full experience of its coolest new feature, MixView, you must spring for a US$15 per month Zune Pass subscription.

Zune 3.0 is available for download from Zune.net; if you own one of Microsoft's Zune players, you can use the software for managing files and transferring them to your player. If you don't own a Zune, you can still use the free software to manage your PC's library of audio and video files.

Zune's MixView is Microsoft's answer to Apple iTunes' new Genius feature, which allows you to automatically generate playlists. Like Genius, MixView makes additional music recommendations based on songs within your library and based on the software's associated online music and video store, the Zune Marketplace. But Zune's algorithm engine includes an element that Genius lacks: It also draws from a social community. When you download Zune 3.0, you can create an individual username that identifies you in the Social community of Zune. Whether to participate actively in the community is up to you.

Pick an album or an artist in MixView, and images of related content--such as albums, individual tracks, and artists--blossom around it. Click on one of the surrounding images, and a new display appears. Double-clicking on the image lets you hear a 30-second clip of the associated song and gives you the option to purchase it. To hear the full version of the song, you must be a Zune Pass subscriber. (With a Zune Pass you can download and stream an unlimited number songs from the Zune Marketplace, the online music and video store, at a flat rate of $15 per month. You retain access to the songs as long as your Zune Pass is current.)

MixView is a lot of fun if you like to geek out on music history and learn about who influenced who. I could spend hours clicking through the MixView, and I found its recommendations right on target with my tastes. Aesthetically, it does a spectacular job of mapping out song, artist, and album relations graphically. And its multidirectional recommendations expand your universe of possibilities far more quickly than Pandora's linear suggestions do. For example, if you pick Willie Nelson in MixView, you immediately have the option of playing Waylon Jennings, the Smoking Popes, or Hank Williams. If you pick Willie Nelson in Pandora, the only suggestion you get is Waylon Jennings; and if you don't want to listen to Waylon Jennings, you have to skip to the next song.

Images of listeners from the Zune Social community will also automatically pop up along with the recommended music. You can view recent plays from their collection as well as favorites and top artists. Connecting music fans to one another is a nice touch, the feature wasn't especially useful in my case, as many supposedly "like-minded" listeners actually had very different music preferences from mine. As a result, I didn't spend much time looking at their music libraries.

  • Print
What is Tech Briefcase?
TechBriefcase is a new, free service where IT Professionals can Search, Store and Share IT white papers and content like this. Learn more
Bookmark content
Speed up your research efforts with content across the web.
Search and Store
Find the white papers you need. Create folders for any topic.
View Anywhere
Open your briefcase on your iPhone, tablet or desktop. Share with colleagues.
Don't have an account yet?

Videos

rssRss Feed