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The Technology Strategy Board, a UK government-funded exploratory digital helper agency, is giving £1.8 million to a new consortium comprising Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), BT (NYSE: BT), the Internet Advertising Bureau and digital agency Somethin’ Else, to develop a “cloud radio” service codenamed “Apollo”.
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We 7 appears to be a lead partner and could be a gainer. The unlimited-music service repositioned in November to place more emphasis on “radio”, having concluded that consumers prefer hearing unprogrammed streams of relevant music than picking from a neverending catalogue of available tunes. Apollo would seem to be an enlargening of that idea.
We 7 was also already allied with Yahoo, which it last year tapped to handle its ad sales around its music streams.
Somethin’ Else digital director Paul Bennum: “Wouldn’t it be useful to get traffic updates on your car radio saying the roundabout up ahead is blocked? With location sensitivity, we’ll be able to editorialise audio content that would help you know that.”
While many media are now being reborn as TCP/IP carriers and although in-home radio over WiFi is emminently possible, out-of-home internet radio whilst on the move is a significant challenge.