HD Radios to Gain iTunes Tagging

September 06, 2007 | by Geoff Duncan

iBiquity Digital's new service called "iTunes tagging" will enable users of select HD radios to flag songs they hear on the radio for later purchase via iTunes.

iBiquity Digital has announced a new free service called iTunes Tagging coming to select HD radios which will enable HD radio listeners to flag songs they hear over their HD radios for later purchase via Apple's iTunes store. Developed in conjunction with Apple and major broadcasting groups, iTunes Tagging will work via a dedicated Tag button which will first appear on the new Polk I-Sonic Entertainment System 2 and the JBL iHD HD radios, due to hit the market before the end-of-year holidays.

iBiquity says several major broadcasters are already on board to support iTunes Tagging across hundreds of stations; additional stations and broadcast groups are expected to join the initiative soon, with a formal announcement of participating organizations expected in time for the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Radio convention at the end of September. "With iTunes Tagging, HD Radio technology provides a cool new way to capture the songs listeners discover, buy them on iTunes and then enjoy them," said iBiquity Digital CEO Bob Struble, in a release. "We are especially pleased that so many broadcasters came together so quickly for the initial launch."

Several additional HD radio products with the Tag button are expected in early 2008. The HD Digital Radio Alliance industry group says they're planning a multi-million dollar advertising campaign to promote iTunes Tagging.

A dedicated iTunes Tagging button on a broad range of HD radio receivers could be a significant move for Apple; although some (like noted music producer Rick Rubin) have argued radio is a moribund medium, industry analysis seems to show that a significant portion of the music-buying public discovers new music in part via radio…and there's little doubt those are exactly the sort of listeners who are likely to be adopting HD radio.

However, it might be important to note the dedicated button says "Tag," not "iTunes." If relations sour between the HD radio industry and Apple—or Apple loses is dominance of the digital music marketplace—it's not inconceivable that those "Tag" buttons could be redirected to another music download service.

Post Your Comment...Comments

PocketRadio on Sep 7th, 2007 at 3:07 AM:

Yea, it is not the big-deal it is made out to be - consumers have shunned table-top HD radio, so why should they spend $500 for a device that still requires AM-loop and externally-mounted FM-dipole antennas to even have a chance to pick up the fragile digital HD signals. This is far from having Apple actually including it as a part of the new iPod. This is all to late for HD Radio:

http://hdradiofarce.blogspot.com/

blueman on Sep 11th, 2007 at 6:46 PM:

The online music service smstunes.com already have this tagging service for most popular US based FM radio stations (no HD), you just need to send a text message with the station frequency, not as easily as pressing a button but still can be useful as you can use it anywhere in US with your mobile, more details here:

http://www.smstunes.com/radio.aspx

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