The mSpot app edge is clear-cut, with four tabs facing the apex of the display: one all for playlist, album, artist, and songs. In accumulation to any playlists you have saved on the mSpot Web server, the first tab also includes a Quick List that you can add to on the fly. The other tabs are self-explanatory, but it's worth mentioning that there's a handy "shuffle all" task at the apex of the song catalog.
MSpot's playback display is also pretty typical and clear-cut. Album art sits dead center and can be exaggerated to fill up more than half the display with a single hit. However, this will hide further functionality, such as shuffle and repeat options and the playback timer (a quick tap will shrink the art right back down, though). The currently playing track name is in large font at the top of the display with smaller artist and album info written under it. reins for playing/pausing music and shuttling through tracks line the base of the screen and are very quick to respond on the Android.
The application got few neat updates, including voice-activated playback via song/artist/album search for Android, ability to stream songs without actually storing them locally (for conserving space on SD cards) and support for USB side loading music files directly from your computer to the phone.
The 2GB of storage remains free but there’s also a new plan, offering up to 40GB of storage for $3.99 a month.
As a final point, in accumulation to Android, mSpot facility on various other platforms, iOS-based devices included.
P.S: For use of mSpot first you have to download the Uploader for widows or Mac. Once creating an account and grabbing the mSpot uploader application, you can upload precise music folders commencing the Finder or your complete iTunes library to mSpot’s servers .