
Spotify Makes Downloading Music To Wear OS Smartwatches Easier
Spotify premium users sporting a Pixel Watch, Samsung Galaxy Watch or one of a host of other Wear OS smartwatches just got a handy update that'll allow them to download songs to their wearables with greater ease, the company said in an Instagram post June 13.
The update allows customers to use the Spotify app on their phones to send song downloads to their smartwatches, tablets and desktops. Previously, song downloads had to be done on the wearable itself, a clunky process. For runners, having songs saved locally on a smartwatch means they can still listen to music via Bluetooth headphones without needing to carry a large smartphone on runs. Users can also use the Spotify app on their phones to manage their song library on various devices. This feature is limited to five devices.
New update to the Spotify Android app for easier song downloads with Wear OS smartwatches.
Spotify
A representative for Spotify directed CNET to the press release on the change.
Spotify is the world's most popular music streaming service with over 30% market share, according to Statista. It dwarfs competing streaming platforms such as Tencent Music, Apple Music, Amazon and YouTube Music.
Despite Spotify's global popularity and Android being the most popular mobile operating system in the world, this update comes years after that of the competing Apple Watch, which received offline downloads back in 2021. This is likely because Wear OS, Google's wearable operating system, was languishing for years without proper support, with Samsung opting to develop its own wearable operating system during Google's hiatus.
Google eventually got back into the game with the launch of the Pixel Watch in 2022. As a result, Samsung, OnePlus, Mobvoi and TAG Heuer and others have all released Wear OS smartwatches.
While the Apple Watch remains the most popular smartwatch in the world, it's been losing market share. Currently, Apple only has 20% global market share, according to Counterpoint Research. That's largely due to the dominance of HarmonyOS in China, an Android fork which powers smartwatches from Huawei.
The market outside of China paints a different picture. Apple's watchOS had a projected 49% market share, with Wear OS gaining ground with 27% in 2024, according to Counterpoint Research. The increasing popularity of Wear OS smartwatches is potentially why Spotify decided to roll out more improvements for greater feature parity.
How to download songs to Pixel Watch or Galaxy Watch devices with Spotify

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
20 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Google plans major AI shift after Meta's surprising $14 billion move
After all the talk about AI's godlike powers, it turns out that they still run on people, and now that critical human feedback has become Big Tech's newest battleground, Ironically, since ChatGPT took off in late 2022, artificial intelligence has consistently needed humans to improve. It's essentially the layers of human feedback that help train AI to evolve and make smarter, safer, more useful choices. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter In true tech fashion, though, AI's human-in-the-loop (HITL) pipelines are turning into a slugfest. At the heart of this showdown is Scale AI, perhaps one of the leading names in the niche. However, that premium position is now under duress with two of the biggest tech giants, Google and Meta Platforms (META) , at the center of it all. In the latest twist, Google is stepping back while Meta ramps up its role with Scale AI, with the broader narrative of Big Tech guarding its training data like gold. Bloomberg/Getty Images Since its founding in 2016, Scale AI has become one of the key players in fine-tuning the most advanced AI models. Specifically, it delivers the high-fidelity labels needed for reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF). Related: Meta commits absurd money to top Google, Microsoft in critical race Simply put, it's how humans guide AI by giving feedback so it learns to make better choices. AI bellwethers like OpenAI and Google (GOOGL) have leaned on these human-verified datasets, a role OpenAI's CFO Sarah Friar recently deemed "critical" in maintaining a healthy AI ecosystem. Naturally, investors took notice. A $100 million boost from Founders Fund in 2019 helped Scale jump past billion-dollar unicorn status. From there, it was off to the races as by 2021, a $325 million Series E had the company valued at a whopping $7.3 billion. Things kicked up a gear in May last year when Accel led a $1 billion round, pushing Scale's valuation to an eye-watering $13.8 billion with Tiger Global, Index Ventures, and Nvidia all back for more. Now, Meta Platforms, one of the largest spenders on AI, has acquired a 49% stake in Scale AI for $14.3 billion, valuing the company at nearly $30 billion. The decision risks Scale's once-enviable positioning by questioning its neutrality, though, with Google, Microsoft, and others retooling their contracts to avoid giving a rival a peek at their playbooks. More Google News: Google delivers a harsh message to loyal employeesMeta commits absurd money to top Google, Microsoft in critical raceHow to track stock price changes from 52-week lows with Google Finance Meanwhile, fresh contenders are muscling in. Labelbox and Appen have supercharged their platforms, and leaner outfits like Hive, Alegion, and CloudFactory pitch specialized, sector-focused labeling services with tighter security and more agility. In a major development, Google, one of Scale AI's biggest backers, is looking to offload its $200 million-plus data annotation agreement with Scale AI. The search giant fears that handing proprietary training datasets to a part-owned rival could leak sensitive insights into its AI offerings, including autonomous-vehicle roadmaps. Related: Analysts unveil bold forecast for Alphabet stock despite ChatGPT threat Sources say Alphabet has already opened back-channel talks with Labelbox, Appen, and other annotation outfits to backfill its HITL needs. Those discussions, spanning tens of millions in annual spend, signal a shift toward diversification and tighter controls. The fallout isn't limited to Google, though. Microsoft, Elon Musk's xAI, and other marquee Scale clients are reportedly reevaluating contracts worth hundreds of millions, worried that Meta's inside view could tilt the competitive landscape. OpenAI pulled back from Scale months ago, and it spends far less than Google. It spreads its bets across multiple providers to avoid risking its intellectual property. Turns out, the deal has everything to do with fueling Meta's "superintelligence" push. Scale CEO Alexandr Wang will lead the charge toward Meta's elusive goal of AGI. He's taking a small crew with him. Scale will continue to run independently with Jason Droege stepping in as interim CEO.. It's important to note that Google-parent Alphabet's stock price is up 10% over the past month, yet remains down 7% year-to-date. In contrast, Meta Platform's stock price has climbed 7.5% in the last month and is up 20.4% YTD. Related: Google resolves major privacy issue The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Wall Street Journal
32 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Hybrid-Electric Plane Maker That Wants to Change the Way We Fly
Investors are betting billions on air travel's next big things, from all-electric air taxis to supersonic jetliners. The chief executive of aerospace startup Electra says he's looking to deliver a practical option: a hybrid-electric plane that can take off and land—quickly and quietly—on a surface no bigger than a soccer field. 'It's just an airplane,' says Marc Allen, who was a Boeing executive before becoming Electra's CEO last year. But he believes this hybrid, also known as an 'ultra short,' will answer travelers' desire to fly without traffic-clogged trips to the airport, long security lines or inconvenient connections. Helicopters are too loud and expensive, and small jets still must use traditional airports, while air taxis have limited range, he says. 'We're consolidating these existing technologies in a totally unique and novel way to finally deliver direct aviation, to make it real.'


Digital Trends
35 minutes ago
- Digital Trends
Amazon's Kuiper satellite launch called off 30 minutes before liftoff
Amazon is keen to get its second batch of internet satellites into orbit, but it won't be happening just yet. The launch of 27 Project Kuiper satellites was set to take place early Monday afternoon ET at Cape Canaveral in Florida, but just 30 minutes from liftoff, rocket operator United Launch Alliance (ULA) said it was standing down for the day 'due to an engineering observation of an elevated purge temperature within the booster engine' on its Atlas V vehicle. In simple terms, this means part of the booster became too hot and needs to be investigated. Recommended Videos ULA said it will release a new launch date just as soon as one is decided. The rocket had been due to launch last Friday, but poor weather conditions prompted mission planners to shift the date to Monday. Similar to SpaceX's established Starlink service, Amazon's Project Kuiper aims to provide fast, affordable broadband internet to customers globally. It's particularly keen to serve locations where fiber, cable, or cellular infrastructure is unavailable or unreliable, such as rural and mountainous areas, while the service could also play an important role in disaster zones — something that Starlink has done a number of times in recent years to support emergency and relief efforts. The company plans to deploy a constellation of 3,236 satellites in low Earth orbit, which will be completed by 2029 at the latest. Before then, Amazon is aiming to launch a high-speed broadband service by the end of this year with around 1,000 satellites, though building the constellation over time will improve network performance and reliability for what the company expects to be a growing customer base. To deploy its internet satellites, Amazon has secured more than 90 rocket launches with a slew of spaceflight firms that include not only ULA but also ArianeGroup, Blue Origin, and even SpaceX, spending more than $10 billion in launch contracts. Customers signing up to the Project Kuiper service will be able to choose from three types of user terminals: a compact 7-inch square model for portability (up to 100 Mbps), a standard 11-inch model for households (up to 400 Mbps), and a larger model for enterprises (up to 1 Gbps). Amazon expects to sell its standard customer terminal for around $400 per unit, which would make it about $50 more expensive than Starlink's terminal for residential customers. Interested in watching the launch? Digital Trends has everything you need to know.