Bing Audio
Developer(s) | Microsoft |
---|---|
Operating system | Windows Phone (7.5+) |
Type | Music Recognition Software |
License | Proprietary |
Bing Audio (also known as Bing Music)[1] is a music recognition application created by Microsoft which is installed on Windows Phones running version 7.5 and above, including Windows Phone 8. On Windows Phone 8.1, and in regions where the Microsoft Cortana voice assistant is available, Bing Music is integrated with Cortana[2] and the music search history is a part of Cortana's "Notebook". The service is only designed to recognize recorded songs, not live performances or humming. Xbox Music Pass subscribers can immediately add the songs to their playlists.[3] A unique feature compared to similar services is that Bing Audio continuously listens and analyzes music while most other services can only listen for a fixed amount of time[citation needed]. Bing Research developed a fingerprinting algorithm to identify songs.[4]
On March 30, 2016 Microsoft announced they will create bots based on Bing features in Skype, which Bing Music was one such feature.[5]
See also
- Gracenote's MusicID-Stream
- Play by Yahoo Music
- Shazam
- Sony TrackID
- SoundHound
- Groove Music (known as Zune in versions prior to Windows Phone 8, and as Xbox Music in Windows Phone 8.x)
References
- ^ Stroh, Michael (3 July 2013). "Bing Audio, Windows Phone's built-in music matching service, rolls out to 14 new countries". Blogging Windows.
- ^ Súrîl, Surur (7 April 2014). "Joe Belfiore confirms WP8.1 Developer Preview is coming "first part of April" and other titbits". WMPoweruser. Archived from the original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
- ^ Burgess, Brian (19 April 2014). "Use Cortana on Windows Phone 8.1 to Identify Songs". GroovyPost.
- ^ Stroh, Michael (8 June 2011). "Q&A: The story behind Music search". Blogging Windows.
- ^ Lee, Nicole (30 March 2016). "Chatting with Skype bots feels like talking to a search engine". Engadget (AOL).