| 1st November - Finnish handset
manufacturer Nokia will continue its push into the services space with the launch
of its UK-based Nokia Music Store on Thursday. The company will make millions
of tracks from major artists and independent labels available alongside interactive
features such as personal track recommendations and a favourite artists search
and discovery function. Users will be able to access the Nokia Music Store
via their desktop computer or directly from Nokia devices beginning with the Nokia
N81 and Nokia N95 8GB, both of which launch alongside the music shop. Individual
tracks will cost 80p per track and albums start at £8.00. The store will
also offer a monthly subscription for PC streaming for £8.00. The
move is in direct competition with Apple's iTunes store and precedes the launch
of the European iPhone by days. But music software firm Omnifone is keen
to crash Nokia's party and is also having a launch bash in London on Thursday
for its MusicStation platform. MusicStation has already been picked by Vodafone
to offer unlimited track downloads, straight to the mobile, for £1.99 per
week. But we're also promised that there will be more: "It will also have
a very aggressive pricing model, which has yet to be announced and will be very
threatening to O2 and iPhone," the company said. Back
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