![]() ![]() The big, big thing is that it puts all of your music “in the cloud”, without you having to actually upload the vast majority of it – iCloud just looks at what you’ve got in your iTunes on your local machine or machines, and it magically appears in your new iCloud service immediately – as long as it’s already in iTunes’s store, that is.Īll music appears in AAC 256kbps format, and in effect Apple is standardising and cleaning up all your music – it will all be in a uniform format, all metadata present and correct, and so on. ICloud has a couple of aces up its sleeve which differentiate it from similar services offered by Amazon and Google. ICloud: what does this mean for the way we’ll DJ in the future?Īpple’s new iCloud service, which as part of its offering provides music storage in the cloud and auto-sync across all iTunes-enabled devices, looks set to revolutionise the way consumers access their music – while of course tying them in ever more to Apple. But what will this mean for DJs? Is it likely to change the way we access, store and play our music?Does it mean that the days of having a huge hard drive, backing it up religiously, and collecting vast gigabytes of music on our home PCs and laptops will be a thing of the past? We take a look into what could be a very different future for DJs… What’s different about iCloud? ![]()
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