Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nearly Half Of Canadian Web Users Now Streaming Music, Most Using Mobile: Poll

The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 11:02 AM
    TORONTO — Almost half of all Canadian Internet users say they now stream music online, according to the results of a newly released survey.
     
    About 43 per cent of the 1,000 Canadians polled online by Google in October said they sometimes streamed music, and nearly half of them said they typically used their smartphone to do so.
     
    About four in 10 of them said they sometimes used their computer to stream music and just six per cent said they sometimes used a tablet.
     
    When asked how much time they spent streaming music, six to 10 hours a week was the most common reply, cited by 28 per cent of the users. Almost 20 per cent of them said they typically spend more than 20 hours a week listening to streaming music.
     
    In May, Google launched its streaming service Google Play Music in Canada and Spotify followed suit in September, joining a long list of services already competing for the attention of digital music fans.
     
    Some, like CBCMusic.ca and Songza, offer free ad-supported streaming of playlists and radio stations (CBC's service also allows a la carte streaming of a limited number of albums).
     
    Google and Spotify joined the likes of Deezer, Rara, Rdio and Slacker in offering Canadians access to large catalogues of music that can be accessed on an unlimited basis with a monthly subscription. Most of the services have free trials or limited plans to entice users into upgrading.
     
    According to a telephone poll conducted late last year by the Media Technology Monitor, Google's YouTube was far and away the most popular source for streaming music online.
     
    Half of the anglophone Canadians who told MTM that they listened to music online said they used YouTube for streaming, while only about 20 per cent said they used a specialized music streaming service.
     
    Google is looking to capitalize on YouTube's popularity among music fans with its new YouTube Music Key service, which launched in beta in the U.S. and some European countries last month. The subscription service removes ads while streaming music on YouTube and allows for offline listening and viewing of music videos. No Canadian launch date has been released.
     
    For their study on streaming music trends the Media Technology Monitor commissioned Forum Research Inc. to speak with 4,009 anglophones by phone between Oct. 7 and Dec. 1, 2013. The survey results are considered accurate within 1.5 percentage points 19 times out of 20.
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys such as the one conducted by Google cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Passes Bill To Cut Auto Insurance Premiums An Average Of 15 Per Cent

    Ontario Passes Bill To Cut Auto Insurance Premiums An Average Of 15 Per Cent
    TORONTO - The Ontario legislature has passed a bill aimed at reducing car insurance premiums an average of 15 per cent by next August.

    Ontario Passes Bill To Cut Auto Insurance Premiums An Average Of 15 Per Cent

    Ex-Liberals in Senate offer legal arguments for missing, murdered women inquiry

    Ex-Liberals in Senate offer legal arguments for missing, murdered women inquiry
    OTTAWA — Former Liberals in the Senate are offering up ready-made legal arguments to anyone willing to take the federal government to court in order to force a national inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women and girls.

    Ex-Liberals in Senate offer legal arguments for missing, murdered women inquiry

    Canada, U.S. And Mexico Jointly Recall Graco Baby Strollers And Travel Systems

    Canada, U.S. And Mexico Jointly Recall Graco Baby Strollers And Travel Systems
    TORONTO — Health Canada has announced the recall of a brand of baby strollers because a folding hinge on the products poses a risk to children's fingers.

    Canada, U.S. And Mexico Jointly Recall Graco Baby Strollers And Travel Systems

    Rogers Heart Research Centre Created With $239m In Funding From Family, Hospitals

    Rogers Heart Research Centre Created With $239m In Funding From Family, Hospitals
    TORONTO — The family of late media mogul Ted Rogers has donated $130 million to help fund a Toronto-based medical research centre in his name.

    Rogers Heart Research Centre Created With $239m In Funding From Family, Hospitals

    Ottawa skipped internal study on $550M job credit, relied on interest group

    Ottawa skipped internal study on $550M job credit, relied on interest group
    OTTAWA — The Harper government passed up conducting its own internal analysis on the job-creation potential of its $550-million small-business job credit, relying instead on numbers produced by an interest group, the finance minister revealed Wednesday.

    Ottawa skipped internal study on $550M job credit, relied on interest group

    Former SNC-Lavalin executive Ben Aissa gets bail in Montreal

    Former SNC-Lavalin executive Ben Aissa gets bail in Montreal
    MONTREAL — A former SNC-Lavalin senior executive was granted bail Wednesday on fraud-related charges in connection with a $1.3-billion superhospital project.

    Former SNC-Lavalin executive Ben Aissa gets bail in Montreal