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The iOS 17.3 beta that Apple released today once again includes support for collaborative Apple Music playlists, allowing Apple Music subscribers to build playlists with friends, family members, and others who share their musical tastes.

apple-music-collaborative-playlists.jpg

Apple initially announced collaborative playlist features when iOS 17 was released, but the option did not come out at launch. Apple then tested it in iOS 17.2, but ended up pulling the collaborative functionality in the fourth beta.

In Apple Music, when you create a new playlist or select an existing playlist, there's a little person-shaped icon that can be tapped to enable collaboration. Choosing this option provides a link where anyone can contribute a song.

Those who want to try it out in iOS 17.3 can click on the MacRumors playlist link to try adding a song.

The person who started the collaboration can opt to approve those who ask to add songs, but this is not enabled by default. Anyone with the link to a playlist can add music, though the owner can turn off collaboration at any time or remove people.

Apple said earlier this week that collaborative Apple Music playlists would launch in 2024, which is the right timing for when we expect iOS 17.3 to launch.

Article Link: iOS 17.3 Beta Adds Collaborative Apple Music Playlists Again
 
I'm sure I'm not the intended target audience for this feature, but anyhow, I don't see the great appeal in this feature. Maybe if you were a DJ? Music tracks don't have a unique identifier like DOIs, do they? Many journal articles have DOIs (Digital Object Identifier) which enables them to be tracked across platform, time, and space. Assuming music tracks and music albums don't have DOIs outside of the Apple Music universe, this thing seems rather limited.
 
I am looking forward to this capability arriving in Apple Music.
I constantly send friends and family new music I discover - and vice versa - via Messages. This will make that a much more collaborative experience, furthering our muscial discovery. Bring it.
 
Can Apple just make a solid software update for once instead of putting out constant fixes to fix the mistakes from the most recent release?
 
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This is the thing I want the most from IOS17, hurry up Apple.

My son and I exchange our music favs often and it would be great to build a shared playlist especially as he is off travelling round the world soon
 
My friends and I used to love this older iTunes feature where we'd have a playlist playing, and if connected to the wifi network others could see the playlist and vote up or down on songs to have them moved up or down on the playlist. It was fun in large groups. I thought it would take off and be used in bars or restaurants and stuff.

I like the idea of the collaborative playlists and tried to use the CarPlay version of this, but it was clunky and didn't work very well. It'd kick them off and disrupt the CarPlay navigation. It wasn't very intuitive like many Apple things are.
 
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I'm sure I'm not the intended target audience for this feature, but anyhow, I don't see the great appeal in this feature. Maybe if you were a DJ? Music tracks don't have a unique identifier like DOIs, do they? Many journal articles have DOIs (Digital Object Identifier) which enables them to be tracked across platform, time, and space. Assuming music tracks and music albums don't have DOIs outside of the Apple Music universe, this thing seems rather limited.
There has been a long standing Spotify feature where you can share a link to a playlist and everyone can add songs to listen in a group environment. Intended target audience are people who socialize.
 
Can Apple just make a solid software update for once instead of putting out constant fixes to fix the mistakes from the most recent release?
Wow. What you have is a very solid OS. The vast majority of expected features work flawlessly. Issues you are experiencing or read about are a very small percentage of all expected features.
 
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I wish Apple Music was updates independetly and not through iOS updates. Would make them more frequent, and probably make it possible to run new features on older iOS devices not able to run iOS 17
 
I'm sure I'm not the intended target audience for this feature, but anyhow, I don't see the great appeal in this feature. Maybe if you were a DJ? Music tracks don't have a unique identifier like DOIs, do they? Many journal articles have DOIs (Digital Object Identifier) which enables them to be tracked across platform, time, and space. Assuming music tracks and music albums don't have DOIs outside of the Apple Music universe, this thing seems rather limited.
I genuinely don't understand what tracking a song would mean here.
I want this feature so I can have contextual playlists (morning, dinner, car, etc.) that everyone in the family can edit.
 
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I genuinely don't understand what tracking a song would mean here.
I want this feature so I can have contextual playlists (morning, dinner, car, etc.) that everyone in the family can edit.
Perhaps I don’t understand the feature, but I’m thinking of people who don’t use iPhones or don’t use Apple Music.
 
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