bummer. I was hoping they would add a thumbs down/ban option. I really don’t 
like any of apple music’s stations. Its find for having access to such a huge 
music library and therefor one can create all kinds of playlists but I just 
don’t care for their stations. It sucks when I keep having to hear the same 
songs and artists that I don’t care for over and over. So, I just don’t use the 
apple Music stations.

Christina
> On Jul 30, 2015, at 4:03 PM, Mary Otten <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Here is an article in MacWorld that talks about the new look for Apple music 
> in iOS nine. One thing they have changed which I do not like is that now, you 
> can start a radio station without having to put the song you're station is 
> based on into my music. With iOS nine, at least in the beta being discussed 
> by MacWorld, this is not possible. You can't start a radio station from a 
> song unless that song is in "my music". If you want to keep all of your music 
> being just things that you own and don't want to mix in rented stuff, this 
> change is clearly not good.
> Mary
> 
> http://www.macworld.com/article/2953973/ios-apps/apple-music-in-ios-9-gets-a-much-needed-redesign.html#tk.nl_mwdaily
>  
> <http://www.macworld.com/article/2953973/ios-apps/apple-music-in-ios-9-gets-a-much-needed-redesign.html#tk.nl_mwdaily>
> 
> Apple Music in iOS 9 gets a much-needed redesign
> 
> Remember the good old days when the only thing you could do to a song was 
> play it? 
> 
> When Apple Music first launched in iOS 8.4 on June 30, the streaming service 
> was bombarded with hidden menus and a wild array of options. In fact, this 
> “menus on menus on menus” design was one of our biggest complaints 
> <http://www.macworld.com/article/2946190/apple-music-complaints-why-this-streaming-service-needs-some-work.html>
>  about Apple Music when it first launched. 
> 
> Well, if the iOS 9 public beta 
> <http://www.macworld.com/article/2946063/ios-9-public-beta-is-live-heres-everything-you-need-to-know.html>
>  is any indication, it looks like Cupertino’s UX design wizards have started 
> to clean up Apple Music’s messy interface. The iOS 9 update gives the Music 
> app a subtle but much-needed makeover so you can spend less time browsing 
> through options and more time actually listening to music.
> 
> The most drastic change to Apple Music in iOS 9 is the redesign of the More 
> Options menu that can be accessed by clicking on the ellipses (...) next to 
> each song. In iOS 8.4, this More Options menu was just a long list of 
> options—pretty overwhelming, especially when listening to music on the go. 
> Tapping it surfaced no fewer than 10 options for each song, and that didn’t 
> even include the hidden-but-basic functions to View in Album or View Artist. 
> 
> Everything that you can possibly do with a song on Apple Music you can do via 
> this bloated More Options menu, so it makes sense that it took a few tries 
> for Apple to get the design just right. In iOS 9, all the functions are still 
> there, but in a more elegant way that gives each option some breathing room. 
> 
> Why this matters: Early reviews of Apple Music called it 
> “uncharacteristically complicated by Apple standards 
> <http://recode.net/2015/06/30/apple-music-first-look-rich-fluid-but-somewhat-confusing/>,”
>  while others basically said it was a “hot mess 
> <http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-07-07/review-apple-music-is-a-hot-mess-with-a-few-bright-spots>.”
>  Even though streaming services like Spotify and Tidal can be equally 
> confusing, Apple prides itself on the simplicity of its products. The Apple 
> Music updates in iOS 9 prove that the company is looking to simplify its 
> streaming service, quickly getting rid of all the clutter to soften the 
> learning curve.
> 
> 
> Apple Music in iOS 8.4 (left) and in iOS 9 (right)
> 
> First off, the top section makes the album cover and song information more 
> prominent, and it adds new, nearby icons to signify different actions. Tap on 
> the heart icon if you want to see more songs like it in the For You tab, the 
> plus sign to add the song to My Music, the radio signal to launch a radio 
> station, and the share icon... well, you’ve probably seen that before.
> 
> This section also includes a very small arrow on the right to View in Album 
> and View Artist. This is a far more instinctive way to get to these options 
> than in iOS 8.4, where you simply had to guess (or read on Macworld) that you 
> could tap on the album info to get there.
> 
> Now that some of Apple Music’s most basic song functions have been designated 
> to intuitive icons at the top, the More Options menu is less cluttered and 
> easier to read. Each option button is also larger on the screen so you won’t 
> accidentally tap the wrong one. Perhaps most importantly, the More Options 
> menu no longer causes minor anxiety whenever it pops up. There is one hidden 
> option in the iOS 9 update, though. Scroll down and right below “Show in 
> iTunes Store” you’ll get the “Remove from My Music” option.
> 
> 
> Apple Music in iOS 8.4 (left) and iOS 9 (right)
> 
> The options available in the More Options menu change accordingly, depending 
> on whether you are listening to a song from the Apple Music catalog, the My 
> Music library, or a random radio station. In iOS 8.4, for example, you could 
> start a radio station from a song that was not in My Music. In iOS 9, it 
> seems that you must first add a song to My Music (the plus sign) before being 
> able to create a radio station. Once you add the track to My Music, you are 
> able to start a station (radio signal), create a Genius playlist, and “Make 
> Available Offline.”
> 
> 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
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