It's clear that anybody who owns both an iPhone and an iPad is having a really frustrating experience using Spotify at the moment.
On the one hand, the new sleek iPhone interface is an incredibly intuitive and useful way to listen to and manage your music (with the introduction of saving music etc) and on the other, the iPad is rendered useless as a music-playing device if all your music library is on Spotify, now Saved and not manually inserted into playlists.
I also think the points raised here about commercial conflict of interest are quite interesting. Spotify are a growing company, who had the resources to create (in my view) the best music-browsing mobile app on the market (in its current form). So how can we logically account for this delay between iPhone and iPad launch?
Maybe it simply wasn't a priority for Spotify, maybe it's a resource issue or a planning balls-up, but the negative response from existing users shown here and the general subscriber growth over the last couple of years make this highly unlikely.
I think the staggering, or possible indefinite delay of an iPad app could be a tactical move. I suppose you could argue that maybe Spotify are just keeping new developments for iPad under wraps as new features game-changing features could be released in the next iPad update?
However, this doesn't make a lot of sense, as that would result in further disparity in UX across devices as well and serving to annoy loyal long-term subscribers over a period of months, (even years?!) in the lengthy interim.
It seems a really silly state of affairs, and I'm not going to get annoyed with Spotify as they provide a service which I pay for, they don't owe me an iPad update and I am free to cancel my subscription, which I may do if I find a better alternative.
But what I will say is that providing a more detailed response to subscribers on the current progress of the iPad update would go along way in Spotify regaining favour with customers who are slowly becoming dissatisfied, dispite the innovations that Spotify are introcuding.
Vague promises just erk people further, and if there is some tactical business logic behind the delay, then that is a real shame.
Detailed, reassuring correspondence from Spotify on this issue is the only way to stop loyal users turning into mutineers.
If I don't hear anything soon, I and many others I suspect, may just jump ship.