Google Music Now Lets U.S. Users Download All Their Uploaded Songs
Google Music has allowed users to upload as many as 20,000 songs since it launched last year, but those tracks were stuck in the cloud. Only purchased songs could easily be downloaded to a local PC. Well, today that has changed, and U.S. users of Google Music are now able to pull down their entire cloud-synced music library of uploaded and purchased tracks.
An updated version of Google’s Music manager desktop application will need to be installed to allow this new functionality. This could be a boon to users, many of whom spent days uploading all their tracks to Google’s servers. The Music Manager software is an all or nothing approach that imports all the unprotected MP3s in a user’s library. This change means that Google Music has instantly become a legitimate backup solution for your music collection.
Google also added a new feature that lets you share the official YouTube video for any Google Music song on Google+. Click the drop down next to a track to share the video to your circles. This is cool, but we’re more amped about the full library downloads. What about you?
Comments
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Supall
January 27, 2012 at 6:38am
Correct me if I'm wrong, but 20,000 songs is a lot. If each song was 1 MB, that's 20,000 MB of data, or 20 GB. O_o
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Gman3968
January 27, 2012 at 4:29am
Awesome idea. I really have been looking for a way to store my music better.
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dubcek
January 26, 2012 at 5:15pm
I guess they did this to cover their butts in case the FBI shuts down Google Music.
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AntonioGarrison
January 26, 2012 at 4:48pm
Awesome. I love using Google Music, it's a great service. Now all my music is backed up, and at my finger tips at any given time and FOR FREE. It's a solid service.
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