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No WMA for HP iPod

finelinebob writes "In spite of Paul Thurrott's wishful thinking, Wired is reporting that HP will not support the WMA format in its version of the iPod. From the article, according to HP spokesperson Muffi Ghadial, "'We're not going to be supporting WMA for now ... We picked the service that was the most popular (Apple's iTunes Music Store). We could have chosen another format, but that would have created more confusion for our customers.' He added, 'Most customers don't care about the format they're downloading.'" Thurrott's singing a different tune lately, anyway...."

18 of 484 comments (clear)

  1. Paul Thurrott by Triumph+The+Insult+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

    is also *ONE* very biased person

    who gives a shit what he thinks? not me, probably not you. obviously not apple and hp. big whoop

    --
    vodka, straight up, thank you!
  2. Nice for Microsoft by AkaXakA · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess that either Apple doesn't actually wants wma on iPod themselves (for business/tech reasons) or, they've been forced to by a certain company which have expressed their dislike of the plan. Either way, there isn't all that much music in wma format anyway online, except other than the iTMS rivals stores...(!)

  3. AAC vs WMA by Azadre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am not meaning to sound redundant, but isn't AAC an actual standard while WMA is propietary to XP? Why is WMA more popular by Windows users if AAC can do the same drm wise and in a majority of cases sounds better?

  4. Easily confused by JThundley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm glad they aren't including wma. The more you ignore it, the more it'll die. Ogg support would be nice, but I guess that won't happen.

    We could have chosen another format, but that would have created more confusion for our customers.
    So I guess that proves that Apple's customers are confused easily :)

    1. Re:Easily confused by viktor · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Most customer's would prefer non-DRMed MP3s

      That's cute. How many customers knows what DRM even means? Although trying our best to avoid seeing it, the world is actually made up of non-geeks. We're the exception to the norm, not them. They are "most customers", not us.

      If people actually knew exactly what DRM meant, and if they actually had a choice, then surely they'd choose files without DRM. But MP3 or WMA? They don't give a damn. They just want to listen to the music. 95% of them use Windows, 95% of them can listen to either.

      It's just like most people actually do not care exactly what kind of a motor is in the car they're driving - they just want it to look nice on the outside, accelerate fast and sound cool (and, if they're Volvo-owners, to be safe to drive in). And that's just the way it must be.

      After all, if people were informed enough, more people would use Mac (because unlike Windows, Mac OS X is actually pretty easy to use, and doesn't break down on you). People don't know. They just expect computers to require rebooting, reinstalling drivers and calling tech-support, because "that's how computers are". In the same way they just expect not to be able to do just about anything with files bought online, apart from somewhere close to the things that Apple lets them do.

  5. No Reason for WMA in iPod by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I never saw the logic in the iPod having WMA support. Maybe in the future if the market changes, but not now.

    Right now, Apple enjoys a 70% market dominance in the online music sales market - and they have significant brand name and mindshare, which isn't going anywhere soon. Walk up to a standard non-geek person:

    Question: What MP3 player works with the Apple Music store? (I know it's called the iTunes store, but who actually says that?)

    Answer: iPod.

    Question: What MP3 player works with Napster?

    Answer: Ummmm....

    A geek might know the answer, but most people do not.

    So, based on that, Apple's move to have HP license the AAC+Freeplay system is a good move - it encourages the use of the protected AAC files, and Apple gets a cut of that licensing technology, whether through direct iPod sales, or through the purchase of "iPod compatible" devices.

    Apple has a 5% market share because they didn't license their operating system - which is fine with them, they make money off of hardware. But licensing "iPod compatible" devices is a way to make money off of every MP3 player sold eventually. If you want to use the iTunes Music Store, and you sell MP3 players, you can either compete against the "de facto standard", or play with it.

    If Apple added WMA support, perhaps that would in the short term increase iPod sales since it would work with all the music stores - but in the long term, that's bad for Apple, because then anybody who wanted to switch MP3 players would just pick any WMA compatible device.

    Apple can't break into that desktop market at this time - but if they play the cards right, they could become, as Steve Jobs said, the "Microsoft of the online music world". Once that happens, maybe they'll sell more desktops, maybe not - but it would be interesting to see how much money Apple would make from "iPod compatible" devices as opposed to just computer sales alone.

    If that became the case, then other online music stores would have to support the AAC+Freeplay "de facto standard" - which means that for every song sold online, Apple would get a cut for the licensing.

    So what makes more money: WMA in iPod for short term sales, or take a gamble at getting the whole damned pie?

    Eh - just my thoughts. I could be wrong.

  6. Re:Would they consider ogg vorbis and or flac? by molafson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The answer to this question, time and time again that it is posed on Slashdot, is a resounding "No." It makes no sense economically for Apple to support those formats, despite whatever you hardcore Ogg Vorbis fans believe, despite that you've encoded your 1200 cds to Vorbis, etc. etc.

    Rio Karma plays Vorbis and FLAC, so if you want those formats, support that player (and quit whining about iPod).

  7. Formats Confusion by jetkust · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We could have chosen another format, but that would have created more confusion for our customers.' He added, 'Most customers don't care about the format they're downloading.

    What does the format people download have to do with the formats their version of ipod supports? We already know what format they will be downloading if they are using itunes music store. The question is if the ipod can support formats not downloaded from the store. I think people would care if they downloaded a wma file that wouldn't run in their ipod.

  8. Re:Less support for WMA the better by radish · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm so tired of the Linux operating system. It's like a god damned virus. Just the other day I was explaining the concept of a USB webcam to someone I know and when he showed me his PC, it was running Linux. Now of course it's easily converted, but that's one extra thing I'll have to show him how to do. Windows is the standard, nothing else should be supported, if only for clarity and simplicity reasons!

    Understand this: Monopolies suck. Monocultures suck.

    --

    ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  9. Re:Less support for WMA the better by ratamacue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Easily converted? The last thing your friend needs to do is convert from one lossy format to another. If anything, that will convince him that WMA was superior all along.

  10. Re:Disappointed by krog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I had such high hopes that Florina and the DEC research lab would be smarter than this.

    Carly Fiorina is smart in the business sense; that is, she is the kind of unbelievable bastard CEO who votes herself a $150,000,000 bonus then lays 6,000 people off to "cut costs". In technological matters she is a fool.

    The DEC research lab of old is dead. Don't expect too much.

  11. It's DejaVu all over again by rcastro0 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The problem is that Apple's iPod -- the most popular portable player on the market -- will not play music encoded in WMA.

    Likewise, none of the other portable music players from the likes of Dell, Rio or Creative Technology will play Apple's AAC files.
    This at first looks like Betamax vs. VHS, Apple being in Sony's chair. Until you realize it is Betamax vs Betamax. MP3 is VHS. To me this WMA/AAC fight is an entertaining dispute for the second division cup.

    Between all the alliances and industry player alignments/supports, MP3 has the best: the pirate industry support -- hundreds of thousands (millions?) of entrepreneurial individuals working out of basements, garages, or simply leaving their machines turned on serving files. I go to a street corner in Brazil and I can find CDs burned with hundreds of songs in MP3. Same thing in all of the "developing world" -- Malaysia, Russia, Paraguay, China. Paying a dollar a song is a luxury that *will* make WMA/AAC (and all DRM) look like Betamax, or Sony's MD.

    DRM songs will try to fit in a niche: wealthy countries or individuals which are willing to pay for songs because they "just-want-to", or because of a very slight edge of "coolness" or exclusivity. This niche, though important for the potential margin, will always be smaller than the MP3 choice (or Ogg, in an unlikely scenario). MP3s will survive like cockroaches, and is IMNSHO the only assured bet for a format that will be still be around ten years from now. Trying to "migrate up" MP3 users with cool gadgets like Ipod may be profitable, but will never close the door that MP3/Napster/Kazaa/CD burners opened.

    I think that is fine.
    --
    Quem a paca cara compra, paca cara pagará.
  12. Re:But... by David_Bloom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Beta lost because SONY refused to allow pornography to be released on Beta when they first released the format (I think they changed this later). :)

    --

    Karma: Excellent (fuck, even in the future moderation doesn't work!)
  13. some things do not change by the+arbiter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Once again, you can see Microsoft using the weight of the monopoly to insure that the consumer has a choice...as long as the choice is Microsoft. Imagine being able to play WMA, MP3, and AAC all on the same player! Imagine being able to boot into BeOS OR Windows...oh, wait. Sorry. I'm awake now.

    --
    Boycott everything - they're all trying to fuck you one way or another
  14. Re:Less support for WMA the better by Nugget · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How is the key DRM when DRM has nothing to do with the example we're discussing? There's no DRM on WMA files produced from your own CDs. Try reading the posts instead of just injecting your knee-jerk reaction based on one or two keywords.

    The guy we're disucssing, the windows user who ripped all his CDs to WMA, just has a pile of files which sound better than they would have had he chosen MP3.

  15. Re:Apple has the right to do this... by Fortunato_NC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are tons of reasons to license the iPod and iTunes:

    1. System Bundles - Buy your HP PC, HP Monitor, HP Printer, and now, your HP Portable Music Player, all at once for a discount.

    2. Even if they aren't allowed to undersell Apple, they reach different markets, so they're pushing the device at consumers Apple can't reach. Selling the iPod allows HP to get to market NOW, without R&D expense.

    3. Tons of favorable press, by aligning with one of the industry's percieved "Good Guys". Imagine what Slashdot would look like it the headlines were: "HP Announces New Music Player, and Launch Support for the Bill Gates Music Store". You think the Ogg trolls are out in full force now...

    4. Use your imagination! I don't have all day to sit here making lists.

    Anyway, I don't think we'll see HP-branded Macs anytime soon. It would be nice to see someone create a desktop Mac at a, say, $500 price point that I could bring my own 19" monitor to. I guess Apple is content to see that business go to eBay, though.

    --
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  16. For Apple, That's the Point by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I think people would care if they downloaded a wma file that wouldn't run in their ipod.


    And for Apple, that's the "bingo". The first time someone goes to buymusic.com and buys a WMA file and tries to play it on their iPod, they say "Oh - damn, this sucks!"

    Guess where they're going to go next time they buy music online?

    Either way, Apple wins. You buy the iPod, you use their file format. You use the free iTunes, you download a song - now you need an iPod or "iPod compatible" player.

    That is what Apple - and Microsoft - is shooting for: that you support their format, or you feel pain.
  17. Re:actually Apple is MAKING them by mikedaisey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I can't play iTunes files on my computer even though I have half a dozen players that will play, rip, and burn AAC files, because of Apple's DRM."

    i think you are talking about ITMS files, and not the standards-compliant AAC files one can choose to rip your files into with iTunes. You see, I think it's important in discussions like this to be specific.