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New Online Music Service For Australia

arb writes "Destra Music is the first online music retailer to open its doors in Australia. Currently their catalogue offers over 100,000 tracks priced from 99c (Australian) and they hope to have half a million tracks available by mid next year. Purchasers will be able to burn the songs to CD and copy them to portable devices. The tracks are available for purchase through online partners, such as JB Hi-Fi and Sanity Online. In what is believed to be a first for online music retailers, vouchers will be available in stores so you will not need a credit card to purchase online." Sounds like competition for Bigpond Music's download service, and also dealing with DRM'd .wma files.

4 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. Don't believe the advertising by femto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just visited the site and every track I saw cost $1.99. Presumably there is at least one song on the site that costs 99c, so they can say 'from 99c'.

  2. The fundamental flaw... by doublebackslash · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is a chink in their armor, the forced windows useage and new generations of file shargin under development.
    Newer file sharing protocols will be fully encrypted (making traffic mnitoring illegal at best),
    Be de-centralized to the point of being pure p2(No big intorduction server to take out, or central company to go after),
    Use dynamic ports and protocols that disguise their packets,
    Use spoofing, so that noone knows who is getting what file exept the sender and the reciver, and the reciever dosn't know where its coming from, and vice versa,
    Spoofing is in a round fassion, with multiple hops, and multiple agents seting up different hops, so the packet round trip is HARD to follow (I know, bandwith is precious, but if you distribute the send across multiple agent chains, this ain't so bad),
    And Searching won't reveal who has the file (more spoofing) keeping share-ers annonymous.

    This is the basis for something that I'm planing right now, long way off, but these are the keys to the next gen P2P network. Once in the wild, there is no way to take it down. =)

    I hope such a system sees the light of day.

    --
    md5sum /boot/vmlinuz
    d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e /boot/vmlinuz
  3. Will these services be the end of lossless music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Am I the only one who has issues with paying for approximations? If I'm going to burn it to a cd, there's no reason it should be lossily compressed just so I can decompress it and have a lower quality recording than if I had bought the cd. If all of these services offering lossy music catch on, the uncompressed cd you can buy in the store now may become a distant memory. You would think that the RIAA would love this just as the MPAA liked MPEG2 for dvd.

    Folks, the whole point of digitizing music is to prevent errors from creeping in!

  4. I'll wait for iTMS.au by rogerbo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    lemme see,

    * butt ugly interface
    * three pages of dance/electronic music with a grand total of 27 albums to choose from!
    * WMA only
    * no support for MacOS or Linux
    * no indie music

    And why would I be interested again?

    Rather than just stocking the stuff you can buy in any mall why don't online music retailers specialise in stuff that is hard to find? Eg set up international music store per genre eg a psytrance store that sells globally. I can't walk into a record store and buy this stuff cause no one in Sydney stocks it so I either have to steal it off soulseek or order physical CD's from overseas retailers and wait. I would think it would be much easier to obtain international distribution rights from more obscure independant labels as well.