When Apple announced its new iTunes Match service, I was skeptical. I had just been released from my annual $99 payment to Apple for MobileMe, thanks to iCloud. I wasn’t excited about a new annual subscription taking its place.
I figured I’d pay $25 for iTunes Match just for the first year. I’d use the service once: to upgrade all my older music tracks to high-quality versions provided from Apple’s iTunes Plus library. (You can get details about how to do this—and a lot more about iTunes Match—in “iTunes Match: What You Need to Know,”Playlist, page 68.) I expected that once the upgrade was complete, I’d stop using iTunes Match and then never pay again.
Perhaps Apple hadn’t made the details of iTunes Match clear enough. Perhaps I was too…
