Apple Music is here. ll, unless you’re on Android, where it’s coming later (how often do we have to hear that?)
Assuming that some of the wrinkles of Apple Music on iOS get flattened out before is hits the ay Store, it might be strong enough to lure you away from Spotify, ay Music, or your other prefered streaming service.
But we have a list of dems. Apple Music will have to deliver a top-notch Andriod app in if it’s going to make us give up our favorite music streaming apps.
Integrate with ’s comms
Now’s voice comms are one of Android’s best features. It works extremely well with ay Music. Much like Siri on iOS, you can direct it to play a particular artist, track, or just to “play music” it will fire up some tunes that are supposedly to your liking.
Third-party developers have the ability to integrate their apps with Now. For example, you can say, “OK, , Shazam this song” then the music-listening app will launch identify the track.
So for Apple Music, at the very least we should be able to say, “OK , play Apple Music” to jump into the application. Deeper tie-ins could be possible, if Apple is going to deliver a good app, it’ll need to go the extra mile.
Go with Material Design
I’m not holding out hope for this one, but it would be great from a usability stpoint if Apple Music would embrace Material Design.
’s design guidelines bring needed consistency uniformity to Android apps. It’s become an expectation now, as apps that aren’t with the program look dates out of sorts compared to the others.
So for Apple to get some Android fans on board, it should draw things up with a Material Design template.
Admittedly, I’m asking Apple to do something that wouldn’t. Nearly all of ’s iOS apps are Material, which does make them stick out a bit on iOS. The difference, however, is that many Android users won’t touch Apple products because of the real imagined restrictions. Apple needs to be the one to reach out the h here, so getting on board with ’s design would be a wise step to win some people over.
Besides, the interface on the iOS version is a confusing mess. It’s not as if Apple would be tossing away something great just to appease Android fans.
Add a ‘buy now’ button inside Apple Music
Streaming doesn’t have to mean the end of buying music. In ay Music, for example, you can still buy a track if you want to make sure you own it in case you decide to cancel the service. Or just to get a DRM-free copy you can download use anywhere.
Same goes for Apple Music on the desktop iOS. It’s good for artists those who like the idea of a music collection they’ll always own.
So Apple should build this in to its Apple Music app, especially since there’s no iTunes store on Android. It could connect back to your main iTunes account so that the song will appear on any of your devices.
Apple has stumbled with its cloud services before, so the company should take the time to get this right.
Cut back on the clutter
Apple Music does a lot. There are all those new tracks, playlists, recommendations, radio stations, the social connections, your saved music. It reminds me of iTunes, in that it just feels like there’s too much crammed into one application.
So even if Apple is going to eschew Material Design, at the very least the interface could st to be dialed before it comes to Android. rhaps go with fewer features to start—iTunes Radio (not Beats 1) the Connect social component aren’t all that compelling, anyway. Better to start small have a smooth, responsive, easy-to-use application instead of one that will have me running back for the relatively slick easy-to-navigate ay Music.
Make sign-in easy
Apple should build some type of unified sign-in mechanism for your Apple Music account. Many other online services do this—it eliminates the need to authenticate a device or jump through other hoops to access your stuff.
I mention this in the hopes that Apple won’t require some type of action in iTunes in order to get your phone or tablet connected to Apple Music. It should be like any other service – just sign in go. This would also enable the buy-it-now type of functionality I mentioned earlier.
Of course, we expect Apple to require an Apple ID, but why not let us tie that to our account to make signing in easier?
This desire connects to what should be the overall goal: build Apple Music into a great, stalone service that Android users would be willing to pay for. This is usually ’s turf: cross-platform services that work well on multiple devices. If Apple can pull it off, it will give us additional music choice on Android push , Spotify, others to keep innovating with their own products.