Spotify inched a little closer to owning the whole music streaming market today. Microsoft announced that its own subscription streaming service, Groove, will be mothballed and that it’s arranged a partnership to move you Groove-lovers into a safe zone with all your tunes.
Because it’s built-in with Windows, there are probably plenty of people out there who are using Groove to manage their local music. There’s no shame in that, once you get into a system, it can be hard to move out. For now, Microsoft says it’s still going to support the Groove music player for use with music on your hard drive, it’s only dropping the streaming subscription. Still, for the sake of convenience, you’ll probably just want to move your local files into Spotify as well.
It’s a humble end for Groove, which originally started as Xbox music before getting a hip rebranding. It was a fine app, just fine. But it wasn’t strong enough to compete with Spotify. According to a recent survey from Edison Research, Pandora is still leading the streaming pack. In the fourth quarter of 2016, Pandora reported its user base had reached 81 million people. But it’s still considered a dark horse in this race because it hasn’t managed to convert its free users into paying customers. Spotify is number two in the market and isn’t making money either, but it does have 60 million paying subscribers and is generally considered the cooler service. Of course, Apple is coming up from behind with 27 million paying users, and impressive year-over-year growth on its Apple Music service.
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