I don't know what makes it lame in your opinion, it's just a basic web-based music player like most of the rest.
Fair enough, it is a basic UI. I set my standards low for these kinds of tools. I find that is uses the normal items to organize songs, so none of that was upsetting to me. I prefer going in by artist and then listening from that point. I also found that it randomly uploaded the music, so that certainly needs some work. I also found some odd bugs with removing a folder location and adding a new one. It continued to upload from the old location and once it started the new one, I received a negative value count (for example: 203 out of -4503). There was also some oddness after I deleted all the music I had uploaded. It still thought the music was there in some of the menu items.I don't care for the interface. It's very clunky, especially by relying on cover art or song title as principle forms of identification. I didn't like the space constraint nor the extreme randomness in what it actually uploaded. I could understand it uploading alphabetically until space filled up, but that's not what it did.
I organize my music using the filesystem rather than bothering with ID3 tags; they're not terribly useful for classical music. Google Music appears to be reliant on them, meaning that I have some albums listed by such weirdness as the soloist on one of the tracks.
I set it up as an experiment. I'm already capable of accessing my music collection remotely several other ways. But if I were planning on using a cloud service, I'd give a long, hard look at my available options because so far I haven't been impressed by anything.
It also occurs to me that I'm judging from the lens of a classical music fan. I make complaints about every new music-related service that purports to be for general audiences. Invariably, the services in question, whatever they might be, are not set up to handle the differing needs of classical music. Which just makes me question why anyone thought those services were ready for public use in the first place.
Why not try providing the feedback that you need to make the Google music service more useful for your classical needs? They make it easy to give the feedback. It's still not clear to me what would even help you as a classical music listener with any music service.
Turns out it converts FLACs to 320bps MP3s for storage. I guess vorbis was, again, just too free.
FYI, this is a known issue. Still not fixed in "not beta."Interesting because I found that I ran out of space after 2,000 FLAC uploads. Google says they allow 20,000 files but wouldn't let me upload any more FLAC music because they said I had too many files. If they were converting them to 320bps MP3s, I would have expected more than 2000 were uploadable before I ran out of space.
FYI, this is a known issue. Still not fixed in "not beta."