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Portable MP3 Hardware Sales Up

prostoalex writes "In December of 2002 only 12% of US music downloaders owned a digital music player, while for this year the number has increased to 17%. Jupiter Research expects the sales of the digital music players to double this year, while another research agency notes a remarkable shift towards paying for music. Even the music industry tends to agree that online music stores are a boon and expects the Web sales to really take off in 2004." (And the sales of Ogg-capable hardware are up, too, since there finally is some.)

12 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. Re:perhaps more surprising by GizmoToy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't think its all that surprising, really. I'd have to believe the biggest reason most only listen to their music on their computer is because the entire library is available at any given time. You don't need to swap CDs. To most, that's a very attractive option.

  2. But of course by cspenn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Funny how the music industry changes its tune as soon as the money starts rolling in.

    "Oh yeah, the Internet, it's the latest thing!" ...while the RIAA locks and loads the lawsuit cannon for yet another salvo.

    I wonder if customers will be as easily confused?

  3. Statistics by trystanu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So let me get this straight:

    In 2002 only 12% of people downloading music owned MP3 players

    In 2003 17% of people downloading music owned MP3 players.

    So we're talking percents of percents here. 12% of however many people were downloading music (on that'd be less if we're talking people who've paid for their downloaded music). Has this number increased, decreased?

    Thankfully in the new 2003 Jupiter Research consumer survey, 6 percent of online adults said they would be buying a portable music device in the next 12 months. What's an online adult, am I an online adult?

    Uhuh? Anyone else confused? They seem like numbers just for the sake of numbers to me...

  4. The Fight over Format by mr_lithic · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Is this the Music Industry finally admitting that they no longer can inhibit digital music distribution and that need to grab their share of the pie?

    The music industry corporations made a bundle by changing the format of the media that they supply. There were millions made when the CD replaced the LP and millions of older releases were sold to people who already had the album.

    The shift to a portable digital format has been made outside of their control and now they are struggling to catch up.

    The lack of willingness by the younger population (12-17) in this study to purchase music points to the fact that they may have already missed the boat.

  5. Need Search Without DL by Flamesplash · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What the music services need to do now is provide a web based interface to their music library. I really hate it that itunes and napster require you to instll their software before seeing if a particular song/artist/album is avail. If I'm only looking for a particular song/artist/album then I don't want to install some random piece of software first. Granted most people are going to pick and use one service as their primary, ie iTunes for me, but I'm not adverse to using others if they carry music I can't get through my primary.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
  6. No connection between online sales and players by MrDingDong · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Most, if not all, of the online music stores sell music in some sort of proprietary, DRM-able format. MP3 is neither. So people who are buying MP3 players are probably not buying them to play music they've bought off an online music store. The major players - including Microsoft, Apple and RIAA - would like nothing better than to see MP3 disappear.

    It is great that MP3 player sales are up, but I don't think that there is necessarily any sort of relationship to online music sales.

    Now maybe there *is* a relationship to increased use of P2P services by the public...

    Correct me if I'm wrong....

  7. Re:My vote for the best of them... iRiver iHP-120 by jandrese · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What about the interface? Does it have an elegant easy to use interface like the iPod, or is it more like most MP3 players with some horrible hack job of an interface?

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  8. Re:iPods.... by Animaether · · Score: 4, Insightful
    my best hope is that some marketer at Apple will see the original post and the responses and perhaps have a change of heart in what seems to be their "no discounting" policy

    Hop into business mode for a second and read what you wrote there.

    I see...
    - a person who really, really wants an iPod
    - a person who would want that iPod at a discount
    - a person who sees cheaper offerings from competitors
    - a person who does not intend to buy said other offerings because he is
    - a person who really, really wants an iPod

    Why lower the price ? Seems like in the end, if you can't find a cheaper deal, you'll cut your (monetary) losses and get an iPod anyway.

    And even if you do go and get a competitor's product- don't worry, there's plenty others who will still get an Ipod.
  9. Re:perhaps more surprising - Ach, get a neuros! by Psychopundit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmmm... Well, to each his own. I hadn't noticed this to be a problem. In my car I want good sound of course, but I think the bigger problems are attributed to the poor listening environment (engine noise, wind noise, driving distractions, etc...). Any limitations in FM transmission just has not been an issue for me in my car. But, I can see how that might be an annoyance for vehicle audiophiles. Good luck!

  10. Sound quality a factor? by base_chakra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wonder how many people are turned off of personal digital audio players by the compromised sound quality of lossy codecs? The price per megabyte isn't nearly so attractive for those that prefer lossless quality.

    When MiniDisc was new (and expensive), manufacturers targeted audiophiles while the advertising emphasized custom mixes and sound quality (even though ATRAC is also lossy). With "MP3 players," the emphasis is usually on quantity, not quality. Being able to accomodate realtime filters like DFX might be a way to find some middle ground.

    I realize that most consumers either tolerate or are unaware of the fidelity loss, hence the continued dominance of the now inferior MP3 format. Still, I think that in order for this market to grow more quickly, it should educate consumers about the options available to them with these devices: CD quality if you want it, or OGG (etc.) if you want more tracks per MB.

  11. Redundant technology by WarriorX99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm surprised that with car stereos, we're still just seeing a lot of CD players that read MP3 CDs. I'd quite prefer to keep all my music in one place like an iPod (oh, how I wish I had one). I would actually like to see more car stereos with the audio-in so that I could use an MP3 player in my car too. I wonder why that hasn't caught on. It would sure double my incentive to buy an iPod (as if there weren't incentive enough).

    --
    Life today. Uncertainty tomorrow.
  12. The wrong reason for the increase by tif · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The referenced articles says "...the number of paying music downloaders doubled in the first half of 2003 -- coinciding with the [RIAA] announcement that they intended to begin prosecuting file-sharers ..." How ignorant. The RIAAs litigious behavior has nothing to do with it. Paying downloaders increased because sites offering to sell music increased.
    --tif