
Courtesy of Pandora
I recently “sat down” with Tom Conrad, chief technical officer at Pandora Internet Radio, to ask him what the Pandora team is working on.
Probably one of the most exciting things for Pandora users is ability to listen to their stations anywhere they can acess the Internet. That is why users will be happy to know Pandora is working hard to expand.
“Our overall strategy –with respect to mobile — is to be everywhere our listeners want us to be. There’s no iPhone religion, or Palm religion, or anything-religion at Pandora,” explained Conrad who oversees Pandora’s mobile strategy and development. “If our listeners want us, for example, on the Blackberry or on Google’s Android then it’s only a matter of time until we deliver that solution.”
Currently, Pandora is available through Sprint, AT&T and some Verizon phones.
While working hard to expand, the Pandora team needs to take a lot into consideration when introducing a Pandora application to a new phone.
“We look first and foremost for phones that we think will provide a great Pandora listening experience,” said Conrad. “Pandora works best on a phone with a great user experience, a great audio subsystem, a beautiful screen, a standard headphones jack, and operating systems that are well suited for streaming.”
”In the case of AT&T and Sprint, we have close partnerships that have brought Pandora to 30 so-called “feature phones,” he added. “In the case of smartphones like Windows Mobile, iPhone, and Palm our relationships with smartphone OS vendors are paramount.”
The main concern for the folks over at Pandora is making sure the customer is happy.
“We’re hard at work on three main things: improving the quality of Pandora playlists (this is a never ending task for us; there is always room to improve on how Pandora responds when you tell us the name of your favorite artist or song), delivering Pandora to an ever-widening group of mobile listeners, and finally setting Pandora free from the PC in your home so that you can listen from your stereo, TV, or tabletop radio,” explained Conrad.
Curious to know what else the Pandora team was working on I tried to pry out some top secret information form Conrand, however, he was reluctant to give out any information to new and upcoming Pandora phone applications but did note that they are working on applications for more Windows Mobile phones and the Palm Pre.
Things look promising over at Pandora and I may have that Pandora application for my BlackBerry soon.