美联社布鲁斯-梅尔苏
2006年1月3日
NEW YORK — Motorola, after nearly a year of vague
pronouncements, unveiled Tuesday an ambitious music radio
service for cellphones that also plays over car and home
stereos.
Motorola iRadio, featuring 435 channels, would be sold by
wireless service providers to their subscribers for between $7
and $10 per month — a few dollars cheaper than the satellite
radio networks that would be among the phone-based service's
immediate rivals.
No wireless carriers have signed on yet to carry iRadio, which
may also be adapted for non-Motorola phones if carriers request
it, company officials said.
In some ways, iRadio more closely resembles a vast "podcast"
network rather than a traditional radio broadcast.
Motorola expects about 90% of its content to be loaded on phones
from the Internet over a personal computer, rather than
broadcast over the air, in this case a cellular network. That
would mean less of a strain on the limited capacity wireless
operators have for mobile calls, e-mail and Internet services.
iRadio marks a rare foray into consumer services for Motorola,
one of the world's top producers of mobile devices and network
equipment.
While the service may help sell Motorola phones, headsets and
other wireless gear, the company also views the system as a new
business model for radio, much as Apple Computer broke the mold
for selling music with its iTunes online store.
Not surprisingly, Motorola sees the phone as the focal point of
this new model, not only serving as a portable music player but
emerging as a roving conduit and repository for music that can
feed a home or car stereo.
To enable this vision, Motorola has developed a Bluetooth
wireless adapter for car radios so that a cellphone can
broadcast its content over a car's speakers. Motorola said the
device and installation is expected to cost $200 or less.
Motorola is also selling a Bluetooth adapter to connect phones
with home stereos.
The commercial-free network will feature channels created by
Motorola through its partnerships with music labels, as well as
stations from other broadcasters.
In October, Motorola signed a licensing deal with the Universal
Music unit of General Electric, and an agreement with Warner
Music Group is slated to be announced this week. Some of the
iRadio stations will be devoted to a single artist from those
labels.
For now, about a half dozen Motorola handsets due on the market
this year through undisclosed carriers are compatible with
iRadio. One is the next edition of the ROKR, a phone that's
generated only tepid sales through Cingular Wireless despite its
status as the first handset to play iTunes.
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