My iPhone's screen time alert is Watch Operation Condor Onlinegoing to hate this.
Last week, Spotify announced a big update that began gradually rolling out to users worldwide. Once you have the new update, your Spotify mobile app will morph into a more TikTok-esque experience, with screen-filling, creator-made videos assembled in a vertical feed.
SEE ALSO: Spotify unveils a new design that looks just like your FYPThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
If you've been paying attention to the tech ecosystem for the last few years, this isn't hugely surprising. TikTok is massive and everyone wants a piece of the action. And for Spotify, more people staring at the app for longer periods of time is almost surely a good thing in this engagement-obsessed world. But that doesn't mean I have to like it.
Spotify's big update (which, thankfully, hasn't hit my phone yet) is more than just added inconvenience. It totally misunderstands what Spotify should be for: Listening.
Whenever your phone receives the big Spotify patch, you'll be greeted with a new world of video podcasts and short snippets of things you might want to engage with later. The first and most important point of contention here is that Spotify is the lastplace I'd go if I wanted to watch videos.
I've been a steady Spotify user for more than a decade. It's one of my most-used apps because it's one of the only things that doesn'tcontribute to that dreaded screen time alert. Unlike many apps, which want you to look at them as much as possible, Spotify allowed me to enjoy it passively. I could put on a playlist or a podcast and look away from my phone for a couple of hours while still getting something out of it.
Sure, you have to open the app and feed more screen time to your eyeballs every now and then, but it's a fundamentally different experience from almost anything else you can do on a smartphone. This new version instead wants to be like every other app.
All it takes is a quick glance at social media to see that I'm not the only person who feels this way.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
I mean, I use Spotify to listen to podcasts, but this next one isn't wrong.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
And among all the complaints, you'll see plenty of people threatening to leave Spotify for another app.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The point here is that I'm not alone. Spotify, for more than a decade, has been about listening. Throw something on, sit back, and drown in your favorite jams or that true crime podcast you can't pull yourself away from. Heck, you can even use it while you sleep!
Of course, you'll still technically be able to do all of that, even with the update. It's important not to get too carried away while hating something new and weird. There's always the possibility that the new Spotify doesn'tmake me recoil in horror as much as I think it might, and I have to account for that.
That said, I don't want to spend my precious time on this planet avoiding digital landmines just to get to my songs and podcasts. This bevy of video content could theoretically interrupt something I'm listening to, or further degrade my precious phone battery. And as I've already laid out, I don't go to Spotify to watch things.
I understand the temptation to imitate TikTok. I really do, even if I'm a cranky old man who doesn't like to use that particular app. But in a time when most of us can agree that we look at our phones too much already, and that doing so probably isn't good for us, it's both bothersome and concerning that Spotify is going in this direction. After all, the hi-fi listening experience the company promised more than two years ago isn't here yet, with this pivot to video seemingly taking priority.
Where does this end? Five years from now, will Spotify even primarily be a music-listening app? I dunno, but Apple Music seems real enticing right now.
Topics Music Streaming
Previous:Bomb Envy
Next:'Thunderbolts*' mid
Recapping Dante: Canto 27 or Let’s Make a Deal with the PopeThe Great Lime Shortage of 2014From our Archive: “Three Days with Gabo”The Search for SolitudeThe Epitaphic Fictions of Primo LeviRecap of Canto 29 of Dante’s “Inferno”The Morning News Roundup for April 28, 2014Hulk, the Brazilian OutsiderJohn Jeremiah Sullivan Wins James Beard Foundation AwardThe Morning News Roundup for May 14, 2014Wildlife, or Nor Woman NeitherWhat—and Why—Is Merchant’s Gargling Oil?NASA snapped a breathtaking view of deep spaceBefore You Watch Mad Men TonightJohn Jeremiah Sullivan Wins James Beard Foundation AwardThe Illustrated Walt WhitmanThe Morning News Roundup for April 21, 2014What Makes a Literary Trend?What We’re Loving: Spiders, Spaces, Stinkin’Archibald MacLeish, Librarian of Congress Our Contributors Pick Their Favorite Books of the Year Remembering the Sag Harbor Cinema Tennis with Mr. Nice: My Week with Howard Marks Merritt Tierce on the Defunct Language of Nautical Flags I Work for a Shipping Company—I’ve Been Sick for Over a Year What Was the Princess Diana Beanie Baby? The cost of living crisis is impacting our dating habits A Quiet, Meditative Place—Joe Gibbons’s Drawings from Rikers Wordle today: The answer and hints for November 2 What do intimate washes do to our vaginas? What Ever Happened to Biosphere 2? Destruction & Sorrow: László Krasznahorkai on a Bus in China An Historic Minivan 'Colin from Accounts' review: A messy, funny as hell rom Pixel 8 reported issues are piling up: 3 common issues we’re hearing The Return of Münchausen: An Illustrated Adaptation Apple's M3 Max MacBook Pro is as fast as expensive M2 Ultra Mac desktops ‘Chasing Amy’ and the Toxic “Nerd Masculinity” of the 90s Scarlett Johansson is going after an AI app that used her likeness without permission Meet the people spending $4,000 to travel with their favorite creators
2.6998s , 10133.265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Operation Condor Online】,Openness Information Network