In this article we’re going to take a look at the latest version of the Zune software, which has become a full fledged media management application, with some innovative features.

Familiar?
Apple’s recipe for success was simple, a top down approach: the device, the software, the place to get music, and the (demonic?) scheme to tie all these together- FairPlay DRM. Microsoft, rather unsuccessfully copied that recipe a little later, and called it Zune. Even if more than 85% of PCs use Windows, Zune’s music player market share is only 4% compared to iPod’s crushing 70%.
As expected, there are three components in the Zune’s platform: the Zune player, the Zune Windows-only software and the Zune online services: Zune Marketplace and Zune Social. Oh, and let’s not forget the the Zune DRM. In this article I will take a look at Zune Software and Zune Marketplace. We’ll review the Zune hardware in a separate article later on, if possible.
Quick overview
Zune Software runs on XP and Vista and it is build on a variation of the Media Center UI Framework, and not WPF, as Microsoft probably wanted to eliminate the burden of installing the .NET 3.0 framework. A good choice.
The Zune software is a media player application that can be used to manage a Zune and stream content to a nearby XBOX 360. It supports MP3, AAC(.aac, .mp4, .m4a, .m4b, .mov), WMA for audio and MPEG4 ( .mp4, .m4v, .mov), H.264, WMV and ASF for video. It can also manage JPG pictures, but this feature is implemented just for syncing with the Zune player, so it is very limited in functionality. Like iTunes, it can rip and burn audio CDs.

Zune devices can only be managed using the Zune Software and no other media players are compatible with Zune software. As Zune Marketplace is tightly integrated with the Zune Software, it has also gone largely unnoticed.
Library management
Zune Software allows folder monitoring so whenever you drop files in the monitored folders they are automatically added to your collection. You can define folders for music, videos, pictures and podcasts from local or external drives. Sweet! iTunes can replicate the same behavior only on the Mac using Folder Actions. The default location of the Zune library (songs downloaded from the Marketplace, podcasts and ripped CDs) can easily be changed, even from the first start-up screen.
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Smart playlists are known in Zune as Autoplaylists. Unlike iTunes, where you can burn any playlist as an audio CD or MP3 Data CD, Zune Software has a dedicated burn playlists and you can burn it only as an audio CD.
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At the bottom you can select the default playlist and any tracks dragged onto the playlist icon are added to that playlist. Another nice feature that iTunes did not implement properly is the Now Playing playlist.
It can automatically download album cover art and metadata for the content in the library or you can do it manually. It does a good job at finding cover art, significantly better than iTunes.
Other than marking a song as favorite (the only functionality I see in this is for the social extension since there is no favorites autoplaylist) or editing the metadata, there’s not much you can do. In iTunes you had some more sophisticated options like specifying whether a song should be skipped when shuffling or the start and end time if there’s just a part that you like.
You can rate songs but it doesn’t have a five star rating systems like iTunes, just a love/ don’t love heart symbol.
Searching brings results both from your collection and also from the Zune Marketplace, nicely divided in to two panes. This would be a view that I’d like to see in iTunes.
Look and feel
The look and feel of a software used for managing, discovering and listening to music is very important for the user experience and could be considered a deciding factor in buying a music player. In my opinion, the Zune Software is a worthy contender for the “Best Jukebox experience” title.
Interface
Zune has a unique, beautiful, clean(!), user-friendly and intuitive interface, which makes it far more attractive than any other media player I’ve used before. Even with the Cover Flow and the new Grid View, when compared to Zune, iTunes still looks too much like a spreadsheet.
The nested-tab navigation is remarkably easy to use and seems so natural you wonder how you managed to live with out it. In the upper left corner you will find the main tabs: Collection, Marketplace and Social as well as a tab for Zune devices when connected or CD when inserted. Each main tab contains nested-tabs to display different content. For instance, under the Collection tabs there are tabs for media stored on your computer: Music, Videos , Pictures, Podcasts and Channels.
The third level of nested-tabs allows you to choose the type of view you prefer. For Music you get Artists, Genres, Albums, Songs and Playlists. Each of this view has an uncluttered layout and they all look attractive, but I find the Artists view the most useful.
Themes
Zune Software does not support themes but you can change the background. You get seven different backgrounds, the first being completely white, and the rest having some washed up colors on the same white background, but interesting non the less.
Now Playing
Zune doesn’t come with a true full-screen view or a mini-player but it has a fabulous Now Playing screen, that tiles album art across the application window.
If your graphic card supports it and if you enabled the Premium graphics rendering with animation option, the Now Playing screen fills up with high quality photos of the current artist and animated bio info. I prefer this to any iTunes Visualizer.
Podcasts
Podcast support in Zune is decent. No complains or new features here.
Music discovery features
Zune comes with three interesting music discovery services: Mixview, Channels and Picks.
Mixview
Mixview puts at the center the current artist (selected or playing), and flowing around it, squares representing works of the same artist, related artists, artists who have either influenced or been influenced by the respective artist and top listeners. When you click a square, the item moves in the center and new related items are displayed. When you mouse over the center you can get more info, play or buy the item. Very cool!
Channels
If you are busy and don’t have time to track all the music you like, you can subscribe to channels, that are basically regularly-updated playlists that Zune Pass members can subscribe to. These are updated by partners–industry heavyweights and Zune employees. I’m going to talk about the Zune Pass a little later.
Picks
Like iTunes Genius, Picks makes music recommendations tailored to your taste, based on your listening habits. your friends and those listeners who prefer the same artists as you. After 116 plays I still didn’t get any recommendations. It is supposed to get better the more music you listen to.
Zune Marketplace and Zune Social
There are some differences between the Zune Marketplace and the iTunes store. The Zune Marketplace offers a lot less music (4 million songs) and no feature length movies or audio books. On the other hand, you have a simple interface and a subscription-based service called Zune Pass, which didn’t turn into a big hit.
For purchasing songs, Microsoft uses a system called Microsoft Points.These are available in denominations of $5 for 400 points. A song is 79 points, which equals to $0.9875, similar to the price on iTunes, but from a psychological point of view 79 is less than 99. To me, the only logical explanation for this confusing system is Microsoft’s greed. Just think at the fact that if you buy 400 points with 5$ you can buy only 5 songs with 395 points, so the remaining 5 points which equals to 0.0625$ remain to Microsoft.
Music content is offered in DRM-restricted WMA format @ 192kbit/s or non-DRM MP3 format (256kbit/s) for a per-song or per-album fee, or via a $14.99 Zune Pass monthly subscription. The non-DRM offering is larger than Apple’s, but these MP3s are hard to find.

The Zune Pass allows you to download an unlimited number of tracks, you can play on up to three computers and three Zunes. You are actually renting the music, since Zune Pass downloads cannot be burned to audio CDs and become unplayable when the subscription ends, unless purchased. Luckily you get to keep 10 DRM songs per month and all the MP3s. Also, with the Zune pass you can preview the whole song, not just 30 seconds. Still, 14.99$ seems a little expensive.
When you create a Zune account you get a 14-day free Zune Pass. The Zune pass isn’t a bad deal if you take into consideration that you can strip the DRM relatively easy(FairUse4WM).
Even if you don’t subscribe to the Zune pass you still have access to the music discovery services that will be applied on you existing collection and any music you rip of CDs.
Zune Social is the free online component that displays your most-played artists, recently played and favorite songs, and a list of your friends. You can also earn badges, if you listen to an album or artist a certain number of times. This info can be showcased on a user’s Zune card, which is a flash widget that can be embedded on other social sites like MySpace or Facebook.
Conclusion
Zune is a viable alternative to iTunes on the PC side, and you should really give it a try. For me, the Zune Software offered the best music experience on the Windows platform so far. Too bad it doesn’t support other audio players. If you want to buy an iPod and use it with a Windows PC, I suggest you also try a Zune player first. I know I would, after seeing how elegant the Zune’s interface is.
Tags: apple, Closed Source, ipod, itunes, mp3, music, player, playlist, social, zune








Any Zune users to share their impression?
i love my zune, i don't like the software at all. itunes and wmp11 are a good choice for alternatives.
I currently own a zune and an ipod and I prefer the zune over the ipod. To tell the truth their is a sad layer of dust forming on my ipod. This review sums up most of the software so I give it a thumbs up. To bad it dosent work for mac though.
Really, an iPod gathering dust. I really find that hard to believe. The zune software is okay.
The zune device is okay. I don't know about this version of the zune software; but unless it is drastically different than the one I was using a while ago (maybe 2.5) then I wouldn't recommend it to anyone…… under any circumstances…….at all……. ever. I could post a point by point analysis of why the zune software is inferior to even itunes but it would bring up suppressed memories of zune software which would result in said analysis ending in nothing but curse words. I had nothing against microsoft before this, but the zune software makes me feel as if the zune device was rushed to the market just so bill gates could rake in some ipod cash, and the software to go with it was just an afterthought.
Please donate your old boxes to a church-group or some needy student in these hard times! To comply with the law, and with Microsoft's leasing policy, you can now replace Microsoft OS with the free (download from the net) Ubuntu OS, which can be set to erase the hard drive of all traces of the illegal to give away Microsoft system, before donation! Now, explain to your lucky recipient that all the manuals they will ever need are available for free on the internet! Just ask for them in Google! OpenOffice, which is installed already is plenty adequate for homework assignments and with a little exploring, everything else can work well too! Happy commuting!
I've had a Zune for a while now, and I love the software. It's clean, extremely easy to use, and always runs smoothly, without hogging resources. Note to the reviewer – It is possible to make a favourites autoplaylist by selecting anything with a heart, I've used this to great effect. I recommend a Zune to anyone.
3.1 stinks, I want MAD GRAPHICS not friggin album art that looks like a mad dash of postage stamps! I have a 1 gig vid card and the "premium graphics" are as lame as 8 bit computing!
I love my Zune 120 and the Zune software. I hate visualizers because they always look so dated (iTunes, WMP11, Winamp…) so the mixview-like album art nowplaying screen is nice. I love the look, feel, usability and feature list in Zune. iTunes is SO SLOW in windows so i'm loving this transition from WMP11 (yea, it was painful…). And for the post above me, no visualizer i've ever seen is any more than 8-bit looking
I have had 2nd, 3rd and 4th gen iPods before moving to Zune and the experience so far has been fabulous. Music Management in iTunes is terrible. You really have to hunt for music in your hard disk to figure out where the hell iTunes hides it. And there are lot of MP3s from different sources which iTunes refuses to upload to my iPOD. Seriously I had it enough. Then my friend risked it and bought a Zune. Saw how it worked with it quirks and waited until Zune 2.5 then jumped shipped and happy eversince. I subscribe to Zune Pass and get 10 free tracks of my choosing to keep plus any music I buy from Amazon, Zune ecosystem handles it without a frown.
Seriously, Apple was really good for a long time, but now Zune kicks ass….
zune software sucks. its garbage i hate the interface it wont even read the hardware as a disk… now i know even ipods have the capabilities to go to disk mode why not zune? the only thing good about a zune is the screen size. zune i do not recommend.
actually… stand corrected on last comment.. it isnt that bad but i dont like how u cant see album artwork and pictures, i would probably choose ipod over a zune anyday. i perfer something among the lines where you have full access through windows explorer or finder for mac to browse your files manually so u dont have to deal with all that marketing garbage that itunes has and this zune software have with the marketplace.