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HP Dumped Napster for Apple

Pieter Townshend writes "Found on GMSV: 'In the days leading up to Napster's re-launch last October, a deal that would have put Napster links on millions of Hewlett-Packard computers went bad. HP withdrew from the agreement at the last minute, its reasons for doing so becoming clear three months later when it announced a surprise partnership with Apple to feature the iTunes Music store on HP computers and sell Hewlett-Packard branded iPod music players.'"

236 comments

  1. One reason why I think by mpost4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Based on the last line of the article "But he expects the business will mature as users realize it's cheaper to pay a flat fee for access to 500,000 tracks than to pay $1 a song."

    The problem with the $15 a month is, I don't want to have to pay if I don't use it for a month. As it is I have spent less then $10 a month on iTunes store (and this month I might not spend anything), for me it has been cheaper. So if I look at it I have saved about $25 by not going with Napster. And since I am the only one in my circle at work that uses it, but every one here drinks Pepsi, I am getting free songs from my co-works (that or they would just trash the winning caps), but that is just a non-issue in the long run. With the iTunes store there is great integration into OS X and my iPod.

    Also it does cost $.99 do download the song form Napster, so you have to pay for access then to download. From Napsters (www.napster.com) front page "Choose your own tracks for $0.99 each, or get the whole enchilada for just $9.95 per album."

    1. Re:One reason why I think by bsharitt · · Score: 1

      Another could possibly be the iPod

    2. Re:One reason why I think by vonPoonBurGer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think the major reason HP jumped from Napster to iTMS is the iPod itself. Comparing the two music distro partnerships, I doubt HP saw much difference in terms of the profit potential. But selling rebranded iPods?? The margins on those things are huge! And they have serious cool factor going for them right now. It's no wonder HP would switch to iTMS, given the chance to tap the kind of hardware profit margins Apple is currently enjoying.

    3. Re:One reason why I think by wo1verin3 · · Score: 5, Informative

      >>Also it does cost $.99 do download the song
      >>form Napster, so you have to pay for access
      >>then to download. From Napsters
      >>(www.napster.com) front page "Choose your own
      >>tracks for $0.99 each, or get the whole
      >>enchilada for just $9.95 per album."

      You're confusing two different things.

      Napster allows the following:

      1) Subscribe for $10 a month and have unlimited download access to songs, you can not burn these but can download so as long as you are a subscriber. The vast majority of the library can be accessed by download but there are a select songs that are 'buy only'
      2) Purchase a single track for $0.99. No subscription required.
      3) Purchase a single album for $9.99. No subscription required. It's a one time purchase and not tied to anything else.

    4. Re:One reason why I think by Patik · · Score: 5, Interesting
      The problem with the $15 a month is, I don't want to have to pay if I don't use it for a month. As it is I have spent less then $10 a month on iTunes store (and this month I might not spend anything), for me it has been cheaper.
      That's the same rationale I use for choosing my cell phone provider. My friends laugh when I tell them it's 25 cents/min, but since I only use maybe 30 min/month I'd just be wasting 470 minutes with a "normal" $30/month plan. And if I don't use it one month, my balance waits until I need it.
    5. Re:One reason why I think by Xaymot · · Score: 5, Funny

      See what the man did to you? Now your chasing down other peoples' trash to snag some free songs. Its like when a GHB addict goes to Home Depot to sniff some thinner.

      RC cola is better anyway.

    6. Re:One reason why I think by mpost4 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Well I am not chasing them down, my coworkers offer them to me, with out me asking. One day one of my coworks saw my iPod on my desk and asked if it was an iPod, when I ansered yes, he said "I have a bunch of Pepsi winning caps you want them." Also I am not drinking soda. I am drinking water. Which is better for you then any soda.

    7. Re:One reason why I think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know... all this makes me continue to be happy to be with Emusic. $20 for 90 songs/mo, MP3 VBR, no DRM. The catalog's a bit weighted toward the obscure, but it works for me.

    8. Re:One reason why I think by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 3, Insightful

      rent for 15 bucks a month or own for a buck per song...hmmmmm

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    9. Re:One reason why I think by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Napster partnered with Samsung to make a portable music player that works with their files. It sells for $100 less than the 20GB Ipod but doesn't have nearly the cool factor or popularity.

    10. Re:One reason why I think by RegalBegal · · Score: 1

      I hate paint thinner..

      --
      "It'll destroy you if you try to make it mean anything to anyone but yourself." - Henry Rollins
    11. Re:One reason why I think by lamz · · Score: 2, Funny

      Also I am not drinking soda. I am drinking water.

      Pepsi is 99% water, so I figure that's close enough.

      --

      Mike van Lammeren
      It will challenge your head, your brain, and your mind.

    12. Re:One reason why I think by Xaymot · · Score: 1

      I saw a guy on 20/20 that was a GHB addict. HILLARIOUS! His kid had this little T-Rex arm birth defect from his drug use and when the T-Rex arm kid was old enough he made a "documentary" about his dad's GHB addiction. And when I say documentary what I really mean is footage of a teenage kid with a dinosaur arm yelling names at his dad calling him an idiot as the guy is tweaking and having spasms from GHB. Awesome. The dad blew his probation when he was caught passed out in a Home Depot soaking in a puddle of opened paint thinner cans that he was huffing.

    13. Re:One reason why I think by nat5an · · Score: 1

      Yeah. That sure is hilarious.

      --
      Head down, go to sleep to the rhythm of the war drums...
    14. Re:One reason why I think by Hagakure · · Score: 1

      WHAT is the name of this documentary and where can I find it?!? Sounds intense!!

      --


      If this is Heaven I'm bailin out! I cant tolerate this ol tin-tub, so fulla trash and rats...
    15. Re:One reason why I think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My long distance is the same way. I use a pre-paid phone card. It's about 500 minutes (anytime minutes) for $20. It's good for 24 months. Mine expires in 3 months and still has over 200 minutes on it. I think wasting 200+ minutes at $20/24 months is much cheaper than having a plan that costs more than $5 per month (all of them I have seen). My unlimited plan (to me anyway) is $10 per year.

    16. Re:One reason why I think by indianajones428 · · Score: 1

      RC cola is better anyway.

      Better than the Pepsi or the thinner?


      Wait, nevermind, they both taste better than Pepsi....

      --
      When a thing has been said, and said well, have no scruple. Take it and copy it. --Anatole France
  2. Napster Sigma? by Pirogoeth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Even though they're under new management, I wonder if Napster still has a bit of a stigma to them that gave HP cold feet?

    --
    Happiness is like peeing yourself. Everybody can see it but only you can feel its warmth.
    1. Re:Napster Sigma? by oscast · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think it has less to do with stigma and more to do with which of the two companies provided a better solution.

    2. Re:Napster Sigma? by Deathlizard · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Doubtful.

      The most likely reason is that Itunes store is the only store going right now that it showing success.

      Napster is a great name. When people Hear the word "Napster" they think "Download Music". The problem is that their software isn't as great as it used to be and people are starting to realize it.

    3. Re:Napster Sigma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really.

      The service just sucks.

      Or so I've heard; I've never actually used it.

    4. Re:Napster Sigma? by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Napster is a great name. When people Hear the word "Napster" they think "Download Music".

      Don't most people think "Download Stolen Music"? RIAA made sure that Napster's name was mud to the general public, which made Roxio's purchase of the trademark all the more surprising.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    5. Re:Napster Sigma? by iotaborg · · Score: 1

      You also have to realize that Napster only existed for a few years particular to a certain generation of people. All of the people who grew can see through the "Napster" facade (ie it's not free music anymore) and meanwhile, the current kiddies never even heard of Napster; not good future planning to base your business on a name.

    6. Re:Napster Sigma? by jayhawk88 · · Score: 1

      Stigma with whom, the RIAA? James and Lars? The rest of us were quite fond of Napster.

  3. AAC versus WMA by King+Elessar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    AAC versus secured WMA, no big surprise here that HP decides to go with the non-MS solution.

    1. Re:AAC versus WMA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the poster failed to include any sort of argument, where's the "insight"?

      Slashdot needs a "+1 MACS R00lzz" option.

    2. Re:AAC versus WMA by sharlskdy · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's nice to see an alternative to WMA catching on, and this deal with HP gives AAC a huge boost, breaking away from the perception that it is confined to the Mac world.

      I've been looking at the choices in media media formats and I have not been very happy with the fact that WMA (WMA7 from what I have learned) has been showing up everywhere. I don't want to have a MS-proprietary format running everywhere. I know it's supposed to make my life easier (and make it easier for MS to extract more money from me later, and don't tell me they aren't trying to think of some way to do this).

      With iPod Mini and iPod-HP, iTunes pre-installed on HP computers, with a very significant market share being carved out, and with AAC as the contendor to WMA it seems as though Apple has done the right thing at the right time. Once AAC is established as the popular everyman's format, then consumers will be locked into Apple's system.

      This isn't something someone can just Netscape. Once someone is locked into a format, then any purchased music is stuck in that format. Unless the record store allows you to go back and download the media in an alternative format, you are stuck on that format (apart from burning / ripping yourself, but then you'll have aliasing issues to deal with).

    3. Re:AAC versus WMA by Mr.+No+Skills · · Score: 1
      no big surprise here that HP decides to go with the non-MS solution.

      I'm not quite sure what this means. HP has got to be one of the top 5 companies in bed with Microsoft. While they have their non-MS operating systems, all their effort seems to be getting things migrated to Windows.

      DEC set its own fate when it thought Windows NT would be a better choice for Alpha chips than VMS.

      Compaq bought all this, and let it wither and watched all its big iron services people go away.

      Now HP has MPE, HP-UX, OpenVMS, etc. etc. etc., and seems to think the future is Windows on Itanium chips.

      I remember HP when it made incredible meters and unique computers. Now they make consumer desktops, and from where I sit (hardly the top of the world, but I'm in and out of a few large computer rooms in my life) I see former Compaq/Alpha/HP-UX shops moving toward IBM/AIX when they have money, and Dell/Linux or Solaris when they don't. And I miss how well I slept at night when I ran a VMScluster, busting on the other admins when their SH SYS uptime was less than a year.

      --
      Sleep is for the Weak
    4. Re:AAC versus WMA by King+Elessar · · Score: 1

      Take a look at http://opensource.hp.com/ or just do a search for linux from their main page. Any hardware company with half a brain (IBM, HP, Intel, etc...) is moving away from being under the iron fist of MS. Notice how they also tend to be dropping their proprietary Unices also, in favor of Linux.

      Of course a huge portion of their business is desktops, and obviously they are still mostly being sold to Win users. But why would they want to lock themselves down to a Windows Media solution if they could avoid it.

      Heck I'm happy enough that they're finally supporting my printers with free/open source drivers. :D

  4. Fly on the wall, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny


    Steve Jobs : We'd like you to use our music service, we'll even let you HP-brand the iPod.
    Carla Fiorina : Nice idea but we've got a handshake deal with Napster and a cheque for $250K to make the deal concrete.
    Steve Jobs : Here's a suitcase full of money, an iPod and a contract to let you do voice-acting in the next Pixar flick. Return the $250K and consider my proposal.
    Carla Fiorina : Napster who?

    1. Re:Fly on the wall, eh? by captaincucumber · · Score: 1
      Carly: Steve! Is that an iPod in your pocket?!
      Steve: I've always loved you Carly. Let's make sweet love.

      Sorry. That's the best I could come up with.

  5. I'm glad by andyring · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I am happy to see that HP has some sense in this. Instead of picking Napster, which is doomed to failure, they instead went with a company who has a solid, proven track record of being THE industry leader in online music distribution and top-of-the-line MP3/AAC players.

    Smart move, HP! Good on their part, good for Apple, and most importantly, good for the customer.

    1. Re:I'm glad by paranode · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...they instead went with a company who has a solid, proven track record of being THE industry leader in online music distribution...

      Wow, I didn't know it only took a few months to become THE industry leader with a solid and proven track record. That is an accomplishment.

    2. Re:I'm glad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is DRMed music good for the customer?

    3. Re:I'm glad by FLEB · · Score: 1

      See: Running an entire business as a loss-leader.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    4. Re:I'm glad by plj · · Score: 2, Funny

      Instead of picking Napster, which is doomed to failure, they instead went with a company who has a solid, proven track record of being THE industry leader in online music distribution and top-of-the-line MP3/AAC players.

      But hey. We all know Apple is dying too, don't we?

      --
      “Wait for Hurd if you want something real” –Linus
    5. Re:I'm glad by plj · · Score: 1

      Who the hell there modded me flamebait?!! Isn't it a generally know joke that "Apple is dying", what?

      Hell, I'm writing this on my own 12" Powerbook. And you can be damn sure I would not have purchased that if I'd really believe that Apple would die anytime soon.

      If I truly deserved downmodding, then I think I was redundant but definitely not flaming. But actually, I think you should go and read those moderator guidelines, and then concentrate using your points in promoting instead of demoting, as I'm currently doing with mine.

      --
      “Wait for Hurd if you want something real” –Linus
  6. It was probably the hardware... by AzrealAO · · Score: 4, Informative

    HP decided they wanted to sell rebranded iPod's, so they went with iTunes.

  7. HP don't play that way, Microsoft. by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ]Hewlett-Packard] withdrew from the agreement at the last minute, its reasons for doing so becoming clear three months later when it announced a surprise partnership with Apple to feature the iTunes Music store on HP computers and sell Hewlett-Packard branded iPod music players.'

    Which would make Microsoft unhappy and it did and for other reasons as well. That Microsoft took iTunes so lightly is a mystery.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. by Darth+RadaR · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That Microsoft took iTunes so lightly is a mystery.

      In the same way that Microsoft took the internet lightly. Coming to a Theatre near you: Microsoft inbeds its music service in Windows $version.

      --
      /*drunk.. fix later*/
    2. Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Interesting
      In the same way that Microsoft took the internet lightly. Coming to a Theatre near you: Microsoft inbeds its music service in Windows $version.

      That Microsoft has to grow is a fact, that they keep missing the ball is evidence they were lucky with the OS and not terribly good business people besides that. Of course, they'll integrate a search engine with music service and eveything else into Windows is a given. That HP is playing maverick to Microsoft and Intel is fascinating.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. by darkjedi521 · · Score: 1

      They do in theory own two alternate CPU architectures and two Unices that they could in theory turn into consumer systems ala OS X/Next. Plus at one point, Windows ran on the Alpha. Doesn' t explain why they would go against Microsoft though.

    4. Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. by sharlskdy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As others have posted (and I didn't know) that AAC is an industry-developed codec, which makes it well accepted by the Industry. That MS has missed the boat on this one is significant, because they can't just "Netscape" the iPod.

      MS is going to have to actually compete in this arena - something they are notoriously poor at.

  8. M$ arm twisting by millahtime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wouldn't suprise me if they went with apple just to get away from M$ dominance. M$ has twisted so many arms at HP, Dell and the likes over the years I can understand why they would stay away from M$ if they have the chance. What company wants their arm constantly twisted?

    1. Re:M$ arm twisting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I wouldn't suprise me if they went with apple just to get away from M$ dominance.

      You wouldn't? Do you mind if I do then?

    2. Re:M$ arm twisting by calambrac · · Score: 2, Funny
      The same company that likes being tied up and handcuffed to the bed, while Billy Boy whispers "you've been a bad company" in its ears...

      Seriously, though, how does eschewing Napster for iTunes benefit HP from the point-of-view of independent operation? Instead of being dependent on Napster and MS, and having to develop or purchase and promote an unknown player, they're dependent on Apple, and get a really popular, already developed, and expertly promoted player to go with.

      It has nothing to do with gaining indepedence from MS, which pretty well missed the music downloading boat anyways, and everything to do with riding the iPod's wave. Meanwhile, there's still Trusted Computing chugging away and all their computers still ship with Windows...

      So don't worry. HP still likes it rough.

    3. Re:M$ arm twisting by RockClimbingFool · · Score: 1

      Why yes, and we all know how much that has hurt thier bottom lines. I think Dell is declaring bancruptcy next week, right?

      I think Microsoft has some evil tactics, but large companies don't care if they get in on the profits.

    4. Re:M$ arm twisting by Vhalkyrie · · Score: 1

      Not likely. The marriage between MS and HP is for money, not love. They aren't going anywhere. Napster isn't owned by MS either, so it's a stretch to say this is a MS snub.

      HP picking up iTunes is about money, not ideology. iTunes is a better service, but they clearly got sold on the HP branded iPods. Napster isn't making any money right now, and Apple is making money selling iPods. The deal was greatly weighted in favor of Napster - they were probably banking on the new revenue. HP simply got a better offer from Apple.

    5. Re:M$ arm twisting by p4ul13 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I disagree. By passing up Napster (and its WMA licensed music) for iTunes; HP is accomplishing a couple good moves.

      1-They are differentiating themselves from other computer makers.
      2-HP is reducing their lock-in with MS (indirectly but it's still one less tie)
      3-The iTunes / iPod combination is highly successful and therefore very visible, so this lands them a lot of brand recognition to ride on.

      --
      Paul Lenhart writes words!
    6. Re:M$ arm twisting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you didn't just disagree... you just agreed with what the poster said

    7. Re:M$ arm twisting by calambrac · · Score: 1
      The parent said, "what company likes getting their arm twisted?". I pointed out that the answer is HP, all the way to the bank, any way they can get it, be it with MS (who they are still very closely tied to) or with Apple.

      So, yeah, your enumerated points 1 and 3 are right, but they don't mean you disagree.

      As for point 2, yeah, MS is a Napster partner but they weren't betting the farm on music downloads. If anything, MS benefits regardless of what service people use on a PC, because all the people who were thinking about buying a Mac to get the integrated package of computer, song manager, and player, now get all that on a Windows platform.

      In the end, HP sells more computers, MS sells more Windows licenses, and Apple sells more iPods with some under a different brand name. Everybody gets off except Napster.

    8. Re:M$ arm twisting by perlchild · · Score: 1

      of course, the fact that Napster was pushing a format which Microsoft owns, and quite
      possibly patented(I didn't check) means that HP would have been independant from microsoft, right?</sarcasm>

      IMHO Microsoft didn't miss the music download biz, they're just betting the boat on how they can hobble everyone's offerings down the line and profit from other people's work. Something to keep in mind, should TCPA ever come to life:
      how many slashdotters are taking bets that iTunes's "fair-use-friendly" drm gets either neutered, or prevents apple from offering it at all?

    9. Re:M$ arm twisting by p4ul13 · · Score: 1
      because all the people who were thinking about buying a Mac to get the integrated package of computer, song manager, and player, now get all that on a Windows platform.

      That's a good point. Apple still does get business in the form of computer buyers who wanted the integrated package, but were hesitant about making the platform switch or didn't want to spend the premium bucks for the full Apple setup.

      --
      Paul Lenhart writes words!
  9. i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by JWG · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... during the HP meetings. I can think of so many reasons to dump Napster in favour of Apple, such as: DRM, WMA, and cross-platform compatibility issues. All of these are, of course, aside from the fiscal reasons to favour Apple. From my /. perspective, I wonder which technical reasons, if any, came into play.

    1. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by dildatron · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Apple doesn't have DRM? uhhh... ok... Then why can't I download iTunes music from any OS, burn it with any software, and play it with any player?

      --


      If you had nuts on your chin, would they be chin nuts?
    2. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody go ahead and post a "Napster is Dying!" troll, since I'm too lazy to do it myself.

    3. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno about you, but if I was a "fly on the wall" at HP, I'd be hanging out in the meetings about Itanium, Opteron, and Xeon-64. That's where the interesting technical/political shit is happening at HP -- not in the Presario bundleware group.

      I doubt the discussion went any deeper than "iPods are sexy!". They don't care about the tecnical pros-n-cons of Apple vs MS DRM or cross-platformness.

    4. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by dasmegabyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since HP sells exclusively Windows products, I doubt DRM, WMA or cross-platform compatibility mattered a pair of fettered dingo's kidneys to the board room. I guarantee having an offer from Time Magazine's Inventor of the Year or whatever, the high profile company with the coolest product, the ones who did it FIRST and MOST VISIBLY, meant a lot more.

      It was a matter of "what the consumers seem to think is best" vs "a high risk untested service from a start up whose only merit is name recognition." They went with the company that has the better chance of being there next year...and the one with $5bil to work with.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    5. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by ncc74656 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Apple doesn't have DRM? uhhh... ok... Then why can't I download iTunes music from any OS, burn it with any software, and play it with any player?

      I guess I must've been imagining things when I was playing iTunes downloads on my Palm with AeroPlayer (after having converted them from AAC to Ogg Vorbis). Stop spreading FUD.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    6. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by pyros · · Score: 1
      Apple doesn't have DRM?

      The post didn't say that, only that DRM was a reason to pick iTunes over Napster. The usages restrictions are different with each service, and iTunes comes from the company spurned for their "Rip. Mix. Burn." commercials which said "it's your music."

    7. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact that you can defeat the DRM doesn't mean it doesn't have DRM. I'm sure you can get WMA files into any other format (with about the same loss in quality as converting from AAC) with a little effort, too.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    8. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by pyros · · Score: 3, Informative
      Since HP sells exclusively Windows products

      They sell a desktop, the d220, with Mandrake, no MS license bundled into that price. They also sell quite a few servers with Linux on them. In fact, they support Linux quite a bit.

    9. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though you actually exerted more effort to suggest the troll than you would have in doing it yourself..

    10. Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since HP sells exclusively Windows products
      You are joking, right?
      Ever heard of Tandems? Ever heard of HPUX? There's more than silly little desktops out there, dude....

  10. Huh!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    AAC has DRM too

    1. Re:Huh!? by Kenja · · Score: 5, Funny
      "AAC has DRM too",

      But its Apple DRM. Which is good for some reason. Unlike Microsoft DRM, which makes baby Jesus cry.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    2. Re:Huh!? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, yes and no. Tracks you download from iTunes have DRM, but AAC in and of itself is an industry support subset of the MPEG-4 standard. Think .MP4...which is what some people have been calling it (in fact that was the default extension from my non-Apple AAC transcoder until iTunes came out, now it's .m4a).

      WMV, on the other hand, is exclusively owned by Microsoft. It's also available in non-DRM flavors, but is only licensed for use on platforms that have been granted MS' okay. Which are few, basically just Windows and OSX, maybe X-box.

      You need licenses for either format, but AAC licenses are available to anybody with available reference implementations. And I think -- think, mind you -- that AAC doesn't require a license for free-as-in-price encoders/decoders written by hobbiests. At the very least, you can get free decoders at www.audiocoding.com, open source of course.

      So yeah, AAC's not open like Vorbis. But unlike Vorbis, the industry invested a lot of research into it and actually wants to use it. As such, AAC is heading for the same popularity as MP3, whereas WMV is looking more like, well, ASX. Vorbis will eternally be a hacker's tool because it doesn't have the visibility nor the clout of AAC in the industry...but as it's going to be eternally tweaked, it will no doubt continue to sound better at comparative bitrates.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    3. Re:Huh!? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      AAC has DRM too

      It's easily stripped off with QTFairUse (you'll need to stick with iTunes 4.1 to use it, though). All of my iTMS downloads have been "fixed" with it.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    4. Re:Huh!? by pyros · · Score: 5, Informative

      I know it was half-joke, but it's not that Apple DRM is good, it's that Apple's DRM policies are recognize fair use rights. The only serious complaint I have heard about the format you get from iTunes is that you have to burn to CD and then rip that to get MP3, which results in potential loss of quality. But the ausio CD you burn from the protected AAC file is a redbook compliant audio CD with no restrictions on it.

    5. Re:Huh!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DRM Apple uses wasn't made by Apple. It's made by somebody else, and anybody that wants to can license it.

    6. Re:Huh!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The only serious complaint I have heard about the format you get from iTunes is that you have to burn to CD and then rip that to get MP3, which results in potential loss of quality. "

      You don't need to do this. Grab Audio Hijack from http://www.rogueamoeba.com/audiohijack/ and rip your iTunes music as it plays in the digital realm with no loss in sound quality.

    7. Re:Huh!? by discstickers · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or you could re rip to unprotected AAC and not lose any quality.

      --
      I have a shitty sig!
    8. Re:Huh!? by TALlama · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, the newest versions of WMA DRM don't work on OSX.

      --

      - The Amazina Llama

    9. Re:Huh!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would you do that?

    10. Re:Huh!? by shotfeel · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, its not Apple's DRM either. They license it from a 3rd party (Freeplay), who AFAIK is free to license it to companies other than Apple.

    11. Re:Huh!? by discstickers · · Score: 1

      ITunes -> Preferences -> Importing -> Import Using...

      --
      I have a shitty sig!
    12. Re:Huh!? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In theory, if you convert AAC to uncompressed audio and then re-compress at the same bit rate it will only try to throw away information that is already missing from the first encoding, and so there will be no loss in quality. In practice, this only works if both encoders use exactly the same psycho-acoustic model, which they probably won't (I believe the AAC encoder in QT is based on the Dolby Consumer CODEC, while Apple probably use the professional CODEC for iTMS music).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:Huh!? by rabbit994 · · Score: 1

      You can also use Ambrosia's Wiretap available at Ambrosia Software which is how I get around their DRM. Also useful if you just have to record something.

    14. Re:Huh!? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      You can also use Ambrosia's Wiretap

      That only sounds like the Mac OS X equivalent of TotalRecorder. You could compress what it captures with FLAC, but that'll be much larger than the source file. Getting it back into AAC will entail some generational loss. QTFairUse lets you extract the original AAC data; with some additional tools (faad and mp4creator), you can recreate an .m4a file that plays in iTunes the same way as the original .m4p--no data loss, no increase in size.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  11. $15 a month by bad+enema · · Score: 5, Funny

    Equivalent to going out and buying a CD every month. With the rate of quality music being released these day, buying once a month is way too frequent for my taste.

    Personally I have gotten most of the pre-Internet era music from Kazaa Lite, so paying $1 a song would suit my needs much better. Or I could just stick with Kazaa Lite some mroe.

    1. Re:$15 a month by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I bought 2 cds this month. Both were originally released in the early-mid 1990s.


      You don't need to buy a CD the day it comes out, you don't need to listen to only top 40.

    2. Re:$15 a month by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

      Funny, I've bought quite a few excellent CD's released this year. Maybe you're not looking in the right places.

    3. Re:$15 a month by bad+enema · · Score: 2, Funny

      I can think of Blink 182's CD as a good one released this year. What did you buy, and from where?

    4. Re:$15 a month by wankledot · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If you can't find quality music to buy, you aren't looking hard enough, or the genres you like suck to begin with.

      Seriously, I'm tired of seeing "there is no good music" comments, there is a TON of music in any genre being released all the time, and even when there isn't, there's usually a massive back catalog of things that most people don't own, and could look at.

      --
      My sig is blank, I typed this by hand.
    5. Re:$15 a month by bad+enema · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sorry, I always thought preference in music was a subjective matter. That's why I don't think the genres I like (which happen to be a lot of genres) "suck".

      As for not looking hard enough, perhaps you're right. I was a lot more into music a few years ago in my teens, and I've found out that the farther away from mainstream, the more appealing the music out there is.

    6. Re:$15 a month by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So go there and look instead of complaining, ass.

    7. Re:$15 a month by letdownjournals · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I used to think, "Man, what happened to music? There used to be so many great bands, and now they all suck."

      Then I found my old collection of cassette tapes in my parents basement, all the 80's indie/alternapunk bands that I remember so fondly... Most of that stuff isn't so good either. But life was a lot more fun then, so the music seems a lot better.

      Maybe I just hate modern bands because they're all younger, richer and having a lot more fun than me.

    8. Re:$15 a month by gareth6889 · · Score: 1

      BUT WHAT ABOUT BRITNEY? damn! shes so fine and that latest song really hits the spot!

      quality of music? bah. brit's multitalented! didnt you see her in crossroads?

      Gaz

      (please note sarcasm :D i'd rather spew in my shoes than listen to her)

    9. Re:$15 a month by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

      buddy, if you like blink 182 you're not going to like anything i recommend.

      try matthew dear's new album for starters, i guess.

    10. Re:$15 a month by pod · · Score: 1

      So then maybe it is time to look into some other genres. There is more to music than rock, country and pop, if you're not liking any of the new music from genres you normally do like, hint hint, widen your experience. All the genres are always progressing and changing and mingling, so rock now and rock 5 years ago isn't the same, for example. Even bands change.

      So your options would be to try new music, or look into the backcatalogues.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  12. They almost have it by jchawk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They have almost got it right. I will shell out up to $49.95 a month when I can have access to just about every song ever released by a major record label and some of the independants.

    Here's what I want.

    1. On Demand Access - meaning I can login from anywhere and stream the music to my PC or internet connected device.

    2. Download / Burning Rights - I want to be able to create cds that I can take with me and play in the car.

    It's that simple, hell work a deal out with ISP's and let them offer it as a value added service that I can tac on to my account.

    1. Re:They almost have it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful


      I will shell out up to $49.95 a month when I can have access to just about every song ever released by a major record label and some of the independants.

      Cable and DSL cost less than that. You can test-drive music, games and applications then decide what products you will support.

    2. Re:They almost have it by mydigitalself · · Score: 1

      The problem "they" will cite..

      2. What's to prevent you from burning LOTS of these CDs and giving them to friends?

      You may say "well I can do that today", but you can't as you don't have an original CD of "just about every song ever released". What you are proposing would give pirates very easy access to illegaly copy just about every song...

      This is why "they" are all pushing DRM :S

    3. Re:They almost have it by jchawk · · Score: 1

      If they make it cheap enough, say $19.95 or whatever... People won't steal it because it is just easy to pay and use the service.

      Look at cable television, still very easy to steal but it's easier for most just to pay for it.

    4. Re:They almost have it by Golias · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Of course this means that you (and anybody else who is thinking) will join for 1 month, download the whole damned store, and then quit, having "purchased" a library of the entire history of pop music for $50. Sounds like a real winner of a business plan!

      Subscription models only work if you are not allowed to own a copy. =

      Of course, no model that prohibits you from owning a copy will work either, because most of us don't want to "rent" our music. This is the real reason why subscription-based services are doomed.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  13. Pay by month or each time? by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When the iTunes store came out, I went a little nuts, and probably spent more on music in 2 weeks than I had in 2 years.

    Why? I could finally get that "one song I wanted" issue out of my system. Why by the entire "Queen: Greatest Hits" when I can't stand "Another one bites the dust", and just want "Bohemian Rhapsody"?

    Once that was done, I slowed down. I'll still buy an album once every 2-3 months when the fancy strikes me for something new or when another band joins (I'm still holding my breath for the Beatles to get into the music stores, even though I'm starting to see black spots).

    So why use a subscription service? Maybe if I could copy those tracks to my iPod (or some other MP3/portable music device) I could almost see the worth of it, but for $15 a month compared to $10 every 2-3 months, I don't see the worth of it.

    Otherwise, I think that Napster, and other online stores like unto it, are pretty much in trouble. As the article states, they really don't have a revenue model. The songs probably barely make enough money for the bandwidth/server costs/customer support (meager though the latter should be), and Apple has made no secret that iPods are driving its profits. Sony has come out with their service with probaby superior encoded tracks, but selling them at $1.99 a song is a death kneal for all but the dedicated fans. At that price, I might as well just buy the CD and rip the songs into FLAC or something instead of wasting time downloading them from Sony.

    In the end, I see Apple surviving, then as time goes on perhaps making a bigger chunk from the $0.99 per song track once they become the de facto standard (Apple? A dominate player in something? Shock!) and not having to rely so much on iPod sales. I see advertising based music sales doing pretty well - Coke and so on, but my money's on 12 months from now a lot of those services offering iPod compatible tracks through a licensing deal with Apple.

    Of course, I could be wrong, but the trends so far seem to support it.

    1. Re:Pay by month or each time? by ThaenRT · · Score: 1

      Why by the entire "Queen: Greatest Hits" when I can't stand "Another one bites the dust", and just want "Bohemian Rhapsody"?

      Maybe because "Bohemian Rhadsody" isn't on Queen: Greatest Hits?

      thaen

    2. Re:Pay by month or each time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CD 1 , Track 1 - Bohemian Rhapsody

    3. Re:Pay by month or each time? by metalhed77 · · Score: 1


      When the iTunes store came out, I went a little nuts, and probably spent more on music in 2 weeks than I had in 2 years.


      Same here. Anyone wanna join a support group? I blew waaaaayyyy too much money on itms.

      --
      Photos.
    4. Re:Pay by month or each time? by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      It is, but it depends on which version you buy. If you buy the CDs individualy, it's on CD 2, but if you buy the box set, it's on CD 1

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    5. Re:Pay by month or each time? by shotfeel · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Once that was done, I slowed down.

      Reminds me of one of the other factors the RIAA seems to ignore when looking at sales trends. Many of us older folks have spent a lot of money not only on new music, but to replace all the vinyl we still wanted to listen to. I don't remember where I read it about a year ago, but it seems most of us have replaced everything we think worth replacing and have slowed our purchases to new stuff only.

      IOW the upgrade gravy-train in over for the RIAA and they still haven't figured out how to maintain sales with only new stuff.

    6. Re:Pay by month or each time? by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      So, were you the $29,500 man?

    7. Re:Pay by month or each time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What gets me every time is the impulse buy -- I hear a song on the radio, and I listen to the clip on the iTunes Music Store, and check out a couple more clips from the same artist - and then iTunes shows me a couple "people who bought what you have in your cart liked these songs too" links, and I listen to the clips, and whaddaya know, some of them are pretty good, and into the cart they go.

      There's something about the 99 cents - the "I'm already spending $20, so what's $1 more? I'm already spending $25, so what's $1 more?" phenomenon. Add to that the 30-second preview and the fact that you don't need to buy an entire CD if there's only one song I like. And I can do it at 3am if there's a song I've got stuck in my head that I want to hear all of, or if there's an old song that one of my frat brothers reminded me of in an IM....

      And why the iTMS instead of Napster? Because it integrates so smoothly with my iPod, and the DRM is sensible and reasonable by comparison to Windows Media.

  14. Napster's Public Image by PurdueGraphicsMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One obvious consideration is the fact that Napster's name isn't exactly crystal clear in the public's eye. With all of the lawsuit stuff they went through back in the day, the name Napster has a lot of negative baggage with it. That alone would be enough to keep me from dealing with them.

    --


    The guitars sound good, now give me about 10db more on the cow bell.
    1. Re:Napster's Public Image by shish · · Score: 1

      Upstanding law-abiding people don't like napster, but all the kids nowadays *love* napster, because it got them free stuff. Even though it's not the piracy ship that it used to be, it's image amongst youth is still one of being A Good (albeit illegal) Thing.

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    2. Re:Napster's Public Image by vingt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >> all the kids nowadays *love* napster

      Nah, the "kids" have a short attention span. Napster is soooo yesterday's news.

      >> Even though it's not the piracy ship that it used to be

      IOW, it sold out (circumstances irrelevant)

      >> image amongst youth is still one of being
      >> A Good (albeit illegal) Thing.

      No. Napster 2 isn't associated with the original Napster phenomenon by ANY of the generation or mindset to which you allude. They've moved on...

      And they're well aware of the attempts by marketing droids to broker the rebel Napster image into commercial viability via Napster 2. But unfortunately for the marketing geniuses, it's not in the name but the game.

  15. iTunes vs. Napster by malchus842 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I were in HP's position, I'd certainly be disposed to selecting Apple as my partner over Napster. iPods are wildly popular, and iTunes is a going concern run by a company that is a profitable going concern. If I'm HP looking for business partners, I am certainly going to select the one who looks like the way of the future.

    Say what you want about Apple, but they keep coming up with great innovations and products that are slick, well designed and quite useful. HP made a very wise choice here and I think they will make a handsome profit from it. Not to mention Apple being "validated" by someone in the WinTel clique, and having a WinTel producer OEM their gear and install their software by default. This is win-win for Apple and HP, and not bad for consumers.

    Yes, there is the DRM issue, but is it realistic to think that there will ever be a time when there is no DRM on material like songs? While I wish DRM wasn't necessary, Apple's license is pretty good - use on multiple machines, use on multiple iPods and burn them onto MP3 disks. Perfect? No. Good enough for the vast majority? I'd say so.

    1. Re:iTunes vs. Napster by eclectic4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just an FYI, you can burn as many audio CD's of them also to play in any CD player. While the quality will obviously not be of the usual CD variety (as you are creating the AudioCD from rather good AACs, but still compressed nonetheless), you still do not have to burn them onto MP3 disks to listen to them sans iPod or computer.

      It's the best DRM/Purchasing out there, which is why iTunes MS has risen to the top.

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    2. Re:iTunes vs. Napster by shawnce · · Score: 4, Informative

      burn them onto MP3 disks

      Just a small correction: You can burn them to audio disks, you cannot transcode them to MP3 but have to encode from an audio disk to MP3.

      (of course solutions exist to get around this but their use is not allowed for by the iTMS usage terms).

  16. breakups... by Enze6997 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Maybe HP and Napster will run into each other at some bar after one to many rum and cokes and for some reason Apple will be out of town on business or something... sparks will fly and BAM... 10 years later herpes!

    1. Re:breakups... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, I think we've all been there.


      For me, I was an intern at Andover.net (now part of VA Systems) during the summer of 98. They flew me out to Michigan to live at the geek compound and write perl scripts to bitchslap users.


      Anyhow, Bob Balda (not his real name) originally did most of the perl coding, and took me under his wing. Every friday afternoon, they had an open bar, so we'd get shitfaced drunk.


      The weird thing is, I don't remember ever drinking more than one beer, but I'd wake up sometime the next day not remembering what happened. Bob was nice enough to let me stay crash in his bed, though. My ass would really hurt like hell. I guess I liked to eat spicy hot tacos when I'm drunk.


      Anyhow, my ass started itching like hell a few months later. I went to a proctologist who told me I had anal herpes, but couldn't explain how I got them.

  17. Dog eat.. by devphaeton · · Score: 0, Redundant

    napster loses again!

    This makes what, the 3rd time that he's/they're getting jacked by the industry they put into motion?

    for shame.

    --


    do() || do_not(); // try();
    1. Re:Dog eat.. by zpok · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'm going to start a web-site and P2P initiative that allows you to copy and download every conceivable closed source program and game.

      Then I'm going to sell out, go broke or to jail, not sure yet.

      Then someone else is going to open a store with my "brand" name.

      Then others can claim it was I who started this "revolutionary" business and talk woozy about it.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    2. Re:Dog eat.. by R.Caley · · Score: 2, Interesting
      napster loses again!

      Their first business model was to encourage a generation to steal and leech money from the them as they stole.

      Their new one is to get those same people to pay for what they have previously been encouraged to steal.

      Born To Lose.

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
  18. H-Pod? by Johnny+Fusion · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, what will HP call thier branded I-Pod? I supposed they could go with H-POD, but then people might get confused. "H? But H comes before I, is it the older model?" Then I guess there is HP-POD, which could be pronounced "Hip-Pod", but then Steve Jobs would be all, "Waitaminute, Apple is WAY MORE Hip, than HP! OK so we both started in Garages, but I sold my my VAN, to start the company, a VAN, man. And Woz had to sell his Calculator! His Calculator, man, one of those nice Programable HP ones... oh, wait. OK"

    --- Ready to be modded down this time...

    --
    There are two kinds of fool. One says, This is old, and therefore good. And one says, This is new, and therefore better.
    1. Re:H-Pod? by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


      HiPod?

      Just a thought. (if any HPers read this and use it I want one for the idea)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:H-Pod? by Octagon+Most · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Then I guess there is HP-POD, which could be pronounced "Hip-Pod"..."

      Or perhaps they will use the "hip" naming conventions they use for other products and call it something like the h3845a Digital Audio Player.

    3. Re:H-Pod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HP ODD?

    4. Re:H-Pod? by R.Caley · · Score: 1
      So, what will HP call thier branded I-Pod?

      The ``doPi'' of course.

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    5. Re:H-Pod? by 11223 · · Score: 1

      Except LEM has already suggested it.

    6. Re:H-Pod? by geoffspear · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm betting on "MusicJet 6000".

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    7. Re:H-Pod? by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      Instead of H-Pod, simply HPod.

      I was thining HP-od, but that could be misread.

    8. Re:H-Pod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could call it iPAQ.

      uh, wait a minute...

  19. Napster's Client by bob670 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    interface sucks, and their plug in for MediaPlayer 9 barely works, and fails completely with large fonts enabled. On the other hand, iTunes works perfectly, delivers on every aspect of the experience, from simple purchasing, sleek library management, fast searching and easy burning and sharing with authroized PCs and devices. Apple, as usual, delivers on user experience while solutions based on WMA deliver on inconvenience. I was a long time Wintel/Musicmatch user, but iTunes wins hands down. Buh-bye napster 2, buymusic.com, MusicMatch and whateve half-cooked dish MS will serve.

  20. HP isn't dumb by scifience · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I think that the reason HP didn't go through with the deal with Napster is that they aren't dumb. Anybody with half a brain can see that Napster is doomed to failure.

    No company that has no source of generating any profit is going to exist. The only reason Apple can afford to do iTunes is because they are using it to sell iPods, which do make them money. Napster has no such device, and as such have no hope of staying in business for long. Roxio may have thought that they would sell CD burning software as a reuslt of Napster, but I imagine most people already have burning software that they are happy with.

    I give Napster another 6 to 12 months, at best.

    1. Re:HP isn't dumb by joebeastie · · Score: 1

      actually i believe napster does has a device. i do not know if they make it themeselves but it does have their logo on it.

    2. Re:HP isn't dumb by mcwop · · Score: 1

      Additionally, Apple has a whole lot more marketing muscle than Napster does.

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

  21. Re:I am sad by yintercept · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personal, I am sad about the whole state of affairs in this industry. Basically, the computer manufacturers are choosing which programs the end user will use for listening to music, which antivirus software they will use. Each new computer that comes off the shelf is bundled with more and more ads and programs that monitor behavior.

    The boxes coming out of the shop should stop being called "computers" and should be correctly identified as "ad delivery units."

  22. Think about it... by ScottGant · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dumped Napster

    Dumped-Napster

    DumpedNapster

    Dumpster

    It all becomes clear.

    --

    "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
  23. Napster's a baggage by superpulpsicle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the legal troubles with Napster that's forever ongoing would scare anyone away.

    They say this and that case is settled, but it's BS. You know those damn lawyers keep spawning like bacteria.

    1. Re:Napster's a baggage by dasmegabyte · · Score: 2, Informative

      Uh, Napster, LLC, is gone. Roxio just bought their assets, including the name. They combined that with PressPlay, a stupid music service that had at least 2 shitty incarnations before coming out as the new Napster 2.0.

      IANAL, but if a company breaks the law and then goes chapter 11, you can't be held accountable for their actions if you buy their liquidated assets. I mean, if I buy one of those fancy, meshy office chairs from the Enron yard sale, you couldn't sue me for sitting in it. Roxio is sitting on the Napster name.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
  24. The other problem. by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But he expects the business will mature as users realize it's cheaper to pay a flat fee for access to 500,000 tracks than to pay $1 a song

    But then the question is, what happens as the users realize it's even cheaper to listen to the internet radio built into iTunes for $0 a month.

    Okay, yeah, you can't choose exactly what song you hear next on internet radio. But generally, if I go "hey, I want to listen to X specific song", this indicates I'm going to want to listen to it again someday in the future. Unless I keep paying for Napster's streaming service for the rest of my natural life, I can't get that. Perhaps worst of all, last I heard not *all* of the songs Napster has up for sale are free to stream when you have the $15/mo service, and there's no way to tell which songs can and can't be streamed unless you've already paid for the service. ...well that's encouraging.

    The $15-to-stream-from-our-library thing is a really neat business proposition, and I'd call it real innovation, but I just can't see buying it. I'd rather just stick with actually buying in some form the tracks/albums. And if you're only looking at buying tracks/albums, Apple's software works both on my macs and my PCs, and they seem to have a bigger and more indie-friendly library. I think I'll stick with them.

    1. Re:The other problem. by Octagon+Most · · Score: 1

      "The $15-to-stream-from-our-library thing is a really neat business proposition..."

      I am torn on the idea myself. I do know that once I started buying songs from iTMS, after several months of thinking about it, I had to push myself away from the keyboard after 50 songs. It's downright addicting. The interface design is fantastic and really encourages jumping around through recommendation links. This leads to many, "Oh man, I love _____ (fill in song/album/artist)" moments. A quick click-charge-download later and it's yours.

      On the other hand, while 30 second previews are nice, the unlimited streaming would offer more sampling which could lead to some nice discovery of music you never thought to listen to before. For now the album reviews on iTMS and the celebrity playlists are leading me to new stuff. I imagine that it will evolve like Amazon to keep doing more to point the customer toward his/her interests and lead to more purchases.

    2. Re:The other problem. by Smack · · Score: 3, Informative

      Personally, what I dislike about the iTunes radio is a different problem: that I can't say "hey, I don't want to listen to X specific song". With Napster, even in the "radio" mode you can delete future songs from the playlist or skip ahead any time.

    3. Re:The other problem. by Maserati · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, I'm warning people at the office when they get set up with iTunes for the first time. One guy had the CD player in his laptop break and blew $150 before it got fixed (not from my office, not mine to fix).

      The worst part is, now there's a $0.99 tax on getting a song stuck in your head.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    4. Re:The other problem. by pastafazou · · Score: 1

      besides, you can stream 30 seconds for free from iTMS, which is about long enough to decide whether you want to download it from Kazaa or not for free.

  25. The headline should be more like by savagedome · · Score: 0

    HP Humped Napster for Apple

    1. Re:The headline should be more like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, that's how I read it at first. I'm getting some coffee.

  26. So...let me get this straight... by HedonismBot · · Score: 1

    It is official.

    Slashdot confirms: Napster is dying

    --
    Sailors. Oh man!
  27. Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tunes by plopez · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/34980 .html

    This is an interesting article. It appears that Compaq had a good device for tunes before being purchased by HP. THe question is why did HP go and outsourced tunes appliance when it already had one it purchased from Compaq? Lack of faith in Compaq? Then why did they they buy Compaq? Did they even know it existed? Then the question becomes did they even know what they bought?

    Interesting...

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  28. The problem with "legal" music services... by djeaux · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...is that you can't download surreptitiously-recorded concerts, studio outtakes, or other "bootleg" materials.

    I already own all the legit releases by the artists that interest me, but last time I checked I still need about 1,000 Bob Dylan shows just to get that part of my collection up-to-date. God help me when I start on the Grateful Dead or Phish!

    Thank goodness for broadband & good ole FTP server software!

    --
    "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
    1. Re:The problem with "legal" music services... by shawnce · · Score: 1

      Nothing prevents an artists or record company from distributing such items on a music service such as iTunes other then any legal restrictions or lack of desire on the part of the artist or record company.

      I bet this is a temporary problem. I have heard talk about some artists making such items available on iTunes. Currently you can get "exclusive" tracks from many artists on iTunes and those are often special cuts, remixes and/or live performance versions.

    2. Re:The problem with "legal" music services... by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      Check out Pearl Jam's 70 or so Live recorded albums on iTunes... only problem is I won't touch them since none of them are complete albums... besides the fact that I don't listen to Pearl Jam. :)

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    3. Re:The problem with "legal" music services... by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      You don't HAVE to have every Dylan show, you know. A lot of them have crummy sound, a tired band, or a boring setlist. Many of the best ones are already available in remastered versions...and some of these are on itunes. There are also a handful of tracks from his set at Carnegie Hall in 1964 that claim to be exclusive to iTunes. They're certainly better than my nth generation tapes, though sadly none of his duets with Joan Baez are on the service.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    4. Re:The problem with "legal" music services... by djeaux · · Score: 2, Informative
      There are also a handful of tracks from his set at Carnegie Hall in 1964 that claim to be exclusive to iTunes.

      Actually, this is soon to be a "legit." Titled Bootleg Series 6, it now has a release date of 23 Mar 2004. The iTunes "exclusive" is a pre-release promo.

      Remember, if it's on iTunes, it is approved by the artist's record company. Last time I checked, Dylan was not contracted to Doberman, Wanted Man, Yellow Dog, Sick Cat, Crystal Cat, or Trademark of Quality, although those labels have definitely released more of his stuff than Sony/Columbia...

      --
      "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
  29. Hip-pod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then I guess there is HP-POD, which could be pronounced "Hip-Pod"

    which can be further modified into "Hippo-D", featuring DJ Hippo as a mascot.

  30. it's a business decision by mm0mm · · Score: 4, Informative

    Napster is compatible only with Win---s XP and 2K. Not even with 98 or NT will you have access to it. Meanwhile HP -- iPod by HP; Linux by HP? Maybe HP wants to diversify their products and is aware that relying too much on one technology will limit their business. IMHO HP has better business sense than Roxio, who targeted Napster only to part of 94% desktop users.

    1. Re:it's a business decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
      iTunes also requires windows 2k/xp.


      Maybe you can tell me where I can buy a NEW HP consuer PC that doesn't come with Windows XP?


      Maybe then you can tell me what your point was?

    2. Re:it's a business decision by way2trivial · · Score: 1

      http://h10018.www1.hp.com/wwsolutions/linux/produc ts/clients/clientscert.html#compaqdesktops
      yeah, there will be a space or two there to take out somewhere

      --
      every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    3. Re:it's a business decision by Yakko · · Score: 1

      But you're forgetting that iTunes also runs on MacOS X. Could be a problem if you use only Linux or Solaris, though...

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
  31. Margins? by Gorimek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've heard from several places that the iPods cost very little more than the plain hard drives that are in them, and thus have very low margins.

    If so the business plan would be to run the music store without a profit, in order to sell iPods without a profit, in order to sell macintoshes. But that doesn't sound too smart, so I'd be willing to believe they do make money on iPods, and maybe what I heard only applies to the first models.

    If anyone knows any more or less real numbers on Apples iPod margins, I'd be very interested to hear them.

    1. Re:Margins? by EvanTaylor · · Score: 5, Informative

      apple makes about 27% profit margin on all hardware, ipods included. Their PR for investors explains this.

      --
      Sleep is for the weak.
    2. Re:Margins? by radish · · Score: 1

      Well that's obviously not true, given the number of players based on the same kind of drives which cost a lot less (e.g. Rio Karma, iRiver etc). You can get a 20gb Rio for under $300, which I guess means Apple's margin is _at_least_ [20gb iPod price] - $300, and likely much more since I doubt Rio are selling at a loss.

      --

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

    3. Re:Margins? by GizmoToy · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is just not true. I forget when, but Apple publicly released information to investors showing that they made between $50 and $150 per iPod, depending on the model. This is due to the extensive discounts they receive by buying the components in huge quantities. You might remember that the original iPod debuted at the exact same price as the hard drive it contained ($399, if I'm not mistaken).

    4. Re:Margins? by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      The early iPods only worked on macs, But I assume they started making good profit from them because the current versions work on PCs too.

  32. 5 reason of why Napstare will fail by brainnolo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As many pointed out, the first is certainly - They dont sell a player like iPod other's are: - User experience isn't at iTunes level - Napster history doesnt make it sound "clean" - They are not coming out with Pepsi caps :P - Doesnt work on Mac, that is the platform of artists since its creation. In my opinion HP doesnt want to break good relelations with Apple especially when they can enter in profitable business through Apple itself (last is the ITMS, but what about pro-printers?)

  33. Interesting marketing by blackmonday · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You'll probably mod me off-topic, but I walked into Target a few days ago, and I was walking by their electronics section and noticed that they are selling *Napster-branded* CD-Rs, CD boxes, media cases and such. The little cat logo and everything. I couldn't believe the irony.

  34. Dude, use furthernet.com by mveloso · · Score: 1

    yeah the client sucks, but there's boatloads of free concerts out there for the downloading...legally. And they sure do suck up disk space.

    1. Re:Dude, use furthernet.com by Buran · · Score: 1

      Looks like yet another crappy search engine for me. I think the URL is wrong...?

      Anyone know where I can get Elton John concerts? I've been looking without any luck. MP3, ogg, whatever-that-lossless-format-is-called, etc., I don't mind what format they are in as long as it's not WMA or RealAudio.

  35. You have no clue. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 3, Informative
    Basically, the computer manufacturers are choosing which programs the end user will use for listening to music, which antivirus software they will use.

    No, computer manufacturers are choosing which programs they, as manufacturers, want to pre-load on a machine. It may or may not have to do with contracts or what the sales guys want, or even what the hardware developers want, or download what you want. The point is, it you don't like what's loaded on your machine when you buy it, go to any decent hardware retailer and build your own parts, it's all plug and play, no tech experience required. It's an afternoon project. Then load what you want. But a manufacturer can load whatever fit's their fancy.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  36. Apple Domination... by oneiros27 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, Apple has lead markets before. Anyone remember when the IIgs was the premier graphics and sound platform?

    You still see a lot of Apples in graphics and sound industries, but Apple's not been so great about maintaining their niche. [I mean, hell, Photoshop, one of the reasons for having a Mac in the 90s was one of the reasons people didn't want to switch to OS X, as Adobe wasn't going to make the jump right away].

    When I worked in we development, I saw us go from 6:2 mac:pc user preference, to their current 1:12. [As most of us mac users left... and the manager [one of the two pc users] kept hiring non-mac people] . Okay, that might be a bad for empirical evidence.

    The real question is going to be if Apple can keep the lead, or become complacent, and have someone else take the market from them.

    --
    Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
  37. Question: by HoldmyCauls · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How long before iTunes is running under GNUstep? That way we can have it under Linux, too!

    --
    Emacs: for people who just never know when to :q!
    1. Re:Question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Yeah, but we don't *want* you to have it. If Linux gets any of our apps, that's less reason for Linux users to switch to OSX. It's a one-way street. Your software will be ported to the Mac, but you'll end up with nothing from us, if we can help it.

    2. Re:Question: by Arkham · · Score: 3, Informative

      iTunes is a Carbon app, not Cocoa. So, never, unless Apple rewrites it.

      --
      - Vincit qui patitur.
    3. Re:Question: by unother · · Score: 1

      Fat chance. iTunes is a Carbon application.

    4. Re:Question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably forever, since iTunes isn't a Cocoa app..

    5. Re:Question: by CottonEyedJoe · · Score: 4, Informative

      As others have mentioned iTunes relys on an API that is not available under GNUStep. Additionally, even if iTunes was Cocoa, and could thus be compiled using GNUStep, it would have to be recompiled to do so, AND for each architecture it ran on. iTunes is NOT open source, only Apple could recompile it. Many people misunderstand GNUStep, believing it is some form of Cocoa emulator and can run binaries built on a mac with cocoa, it cant. GNUStep is a reimplimentation (and an imcomplete one) of Cocoa and apps have to be built with GNUStep in mind.

  38. Re:I am sad by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 3, Interesting

    only the big PC companies...

    Alienware and Apple do not do such things.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  39. Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by Black+Jack+Hyde · · Score: 1
    1) Subscribe for $10 a month and have unlimited download access to songs, you can not burn these but can download so as long as you are a subscriber.

    You can burn songs you download. You're not a Napster user, are you?

    1. Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You can burn the songs you buy for $.99 cents each, not the entire library of song you're renting access to with the monthly fee.

      You don't read at above a 3rd grade level, do you?

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    2. Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by pyros · · Score: 4, Informative

      It was advertised that music obtained through the unlimited subscription model was only playable (without cracking the protection, violating the DMCA) while you were still a paid subscriber. This would have to imply you can't legally burn it to redbook audio CD.

    3. Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by Black+Jack+Hyde · · Score: 2, Informative
      I do use the service. And as a subscriber you can download songs and burn those songs to CD. The exceptions are songs marked with the red Buy Only tag.

      You don't think at above a 3rd grade level, do you?

    4. Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by Drakonian · · Score: 1

      You don't have any concept of basic civil human communication, do you?

      --
      Random is the New Order.
    5. Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

      >>I do use the service. And as a subscriber you
      >>can download songs and burn those songs to CD.
      >>The exceptions are songs marked with the red
      >>Buy Only tag.

      No, you can not burn 'downloaded' tracks. Only tracks you have bought. And yes I am a Napster user, before that a Pressplay user.

      Here is what Napster says you can do with a download:

      A "Download" is a Track that you may save to the hard drive of your personal computer and play back as many times as you want for so long as your subscription is current. You may make an unlimited number of Downloads while your subscription is current. You may copy each Download to up to two additional personal computers that you own (i.e. a total of 3 copies). You may not share Downloads with anyone else. Napster automatically renews your rights to all of your Downloads at the beginning of each Subscription Month (as defined below) so long as your subscription remains current. This means that in order to play any Download after the end of a Subscription Month, you must log on to the Service so that Napster can renew your rights for those Tracks. The Client will count the number of times that you play a Download, including while you are offline, for royalty accounting and analysis purposes.

  40. subscription is silly by zpok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nobody play the radio anymore?
    And plenty of internet radio's offering great music for free anyway.

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  41. WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who modded this fat tard up? Look chubby, just because the morons here mod your lying crap up does not make it true. Now go back to masterbating to your Britney Spears picture.

  42. best comment today by proj_2501 · · Score: 1

    you get a prize!

  43. Naming by H8X55 · · Score: 1

    Name the player HiPod. Better than iPew.

  44. Re:I am sad by ack154 · · Score: 1

    HP is actually one of the worst offenders of this behavior. If you ever do a restore from an HP recovery partition or see one new, they put an incredible number of crappy little things on it (and last I checked, even weatherbug). You can run Spybot on it and find like 25 or 30 items. That shouldn't happen out of the box.

    But, as someone else mentioned, it's really the manufacturers choice to put whatever they want on it. Although if it gets too bad, I'm sure someone will step in and say something.

    It should be noted I think that, for Antivirus, some companies (Dell in particular) give you a choice of which AV program you want installed, you can even tell it to give a trial or pay full price for the real version. That's not a bad start at choices.

    Now if they'd just let you NOT put crap like realplayer and musicmatch on there (aside from the XPS systems, which you can say no to most of the software).

  45. Re:I am sad by fdobbie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh yes, because iTunes comes with lots of spyware and adware.

  46. Re:I am sad by NaugaHunter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Um, how is this different from other large-ticket items, like your car? They decide what brand of radio, what type of transmission, what kind of tires are sold with each model. You're free to replace any of them you want when you've bought the car.

    I think you're overgeneralizing from Microsoft and their vendors. With a Mac, yeah it comes w/ iTunes and Sherlock and whatnot. But you can use other programs without any negative consequences. Many people use other programs for a lot of things. Heck, you could set up to log directly into XWindows if you want and use no Apple software (other than their changes to work on the hardware, natch).

    Now, Apple computers may not be easily configurable at purchase time as far as hardware goes, but they use industry standards and most pieces you'd want to replace you can. But all of their software packages are just that - software packages.

    I have no idea what you mean by 'ad delivery units'. My computer is a tool that actually lets me get things done.

    --
    R: That voice. Where have I heard that voice before? B: In about 365 other episodes. But I don't know who it is either.
  47. Do the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    1 Million iPods at $300 each and 27% profit is $81 Million dollars of raw profit... and Apple has sold more than a million... and many of them were for $400 or $500.

    I'm sure Dell wishes they made that kind of money off their laptop division.

    1. Re:Do the math by klubar · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you look at the bottom-line numbers Dell is much more profitable. Although their gross (above the line) margin is much less, their SG&A costs per unit (or per revenue dollar) are much, much less than Apple's. The gross margin costs do not include development, sales or marketing (and administration). The marketing cost per unit for Apple's iPod is huge ... it's a fact of life of being a smaller vendor with much higher development costs. Dell's profit as a percent of sales is more than twice as high as Apple's. If you look at the stock prices over any period, it pretty much tell's the story.

  48. The Real Reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Come on, kids, this is a no-brainer.
    As Steve and Phil told us at the very beginning, and as reality has proven - THERE IS NO MONEY IN SELLING DOWNLOADABLE TRACKS. At least, not for the reseller/portal provider. Apple knew that from the start, and told us as much. They would make their money from sales of the iPod, which would in turn drive more music sales, expand the library, and in turn create more iPod sales.
    But the rest of the gang thought they could change reality and make some easy money where it did not exist to be made. Sure, if BuyMusic's million-songs-per-day fantasy had come true, they might have made a few bucks on that volume, but it didn't.
    Carly is a smart woman, she figured this out before Napster did, and she made an educated guess that Napster would last about as long as Right Said Fred. (bet you don't remember them!)

    1. Re:The Real Reason by Etcetera · · Score: 4, Funny


      and she made an educated guess that Napster would last about as long as Right Said Fred.

      I'm too sexy for my iPod.

    2. Re:The Real Reason by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      You mean them? They are (again) quite successful in Europe.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    3. Re:The Real Reason by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "Come on, kids, this is a no-brainer. As Steve and Phil told us at the very beginning, and as reality has proven - THERE IS NO MONEY IN SELLING DOWNLOADABLE TRACKS."

      Steve Jobs said that Apple is not making money on iTunes. This is a very long stretch to "there is no money in selling downloadable tracks." There are tons of variables:

      • iTunes is still in startup mode. Lots of startups don't turn a profit for months or years. There are development costs and launch plans which are one-time spends. Frankly, if Steve Jobs had said that the iTMS was profitable in its first year of launch, after seeing their ad spend, I would have been quite shocked.
      • We don't know what Apple's ad budget is compared to other online services. Perhaps they are erring on the side of over-spending because they are not they are not relying on iTunes to be a profit center. Few people outside of Apple know this.
      • We can't assume that the current cost per sale is a constant.

      And a bunch of other stuff we can't know, and assumptions we can't make.

      "Startup with massive launch budget declared to be not profitable" is hardly news. Stretching this to declare that the business has no hope is relying on too many unknowns.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  49. HP Ipods by Enfurno · · Score: 5, Funny

    So now im guessing any ipod I buy will be bloated with extra software to check the integrity of my mp3's, give me weather updates, and provide easy online customer support... just what I was looking for.

    --
    Need cheap, customized, and quality bandwidth or hosting on any business scale? Visit www.ENetpresence.com
  50. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by Luscious868 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is an interesting article. It appears that Compaq had a good device for tunes before being purchased by HP. THe question is why did HP go and outsourced tunes appliance when it already had one it purchased from Compaq? Lack of faith in Compaq? Then why did they they buy Compaq? Did they even know it existed? Then the question becomes did they even know what they bought?


    My guess would be that they took a look at their own device and they took a look at what was already out there and then made a decision. Perhaps the device by Compaq was a total POS. iPods are the in thing right now. It's a great device. I shelled out over $600 for a new 40 GB iPod, a battery pack, the iTrip to broadcast music over an FM signal and a car charger and I couldn't be happier with my purchases. To be able to take your entire music library with you is a great thing and the iPod makes navigating a huge library of music an easy thing to do (deciding what you want to listen to, on the other hand, can be pretty daunting when you can choose from any CD or song in your library).



    I think HP took a look at their device, took a look at the iPod and the integration of the iPod, iTunes and the iTunes Music Store and saw a superior integrated solution and decided to go with that. It was a good business move on their part. They'll sell more devices and they know that they are delivering a quality solution to their customers.



    Apple is a solid company that has proven that they can deliver. Napster hasn't proven that it's going to make enough money selling music and subscriptions to stay in business. Apple can fund iTunes through sales of iPods. How can Roxio ever hope to fund Napster if the recording industry should decide to continue charging what it is presently charging for the foreseeable future? The short answer is that it probably can't unless it can sell enough monthly subscriptions. It's not clear at this time what is going to happen to Napster. HP could have some ticked off customers if they bundled Napster and then the company went out of business.



  51. Can't be by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Apple has to make money on them, or why sell them? Apple has to make money on something, either iPods or iTunes or Macs, and it can't be for the Macs, since iTunes runs under Windows too. I can't see how it does Apple any good to lose money so HP can make money. They can't have that huge a margin.

    1. Re:Can't be by vonPoonBurGer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Obviously Apple's not giving away to iPod design without getting something in return. For every iPod HP sells, they're going to have to give Apple a cut. So, HP won't be able to make as much profit per iPod as Apple does, but HP has much larger distribution channels than Apple, especially outside North America. There's a lot of interest in tapping emerging markets in eastern Europe and parts of Asia (especially China). By partnering with HP, Apple can get in on that action without having to spend money up front to increase production capacity and develop distro channels overseas, where it currently has little of either.

      Apple could likely make more money in the long run by building overseas production and distribution capabilities, but it would require a huge investment up front. Apple does have lots of cash on hand (close to $5 billion!), but right now time is far more of a concern for them. They want to establish themselves in as many marketplaces as possible, as fast as possible, before competing MP3 products get there. It would be no use for them to spend all kinds of money breaking into new markets, only to find that some other vendor has been saturating that same market for six months already with cheaper (albeit less cool) competing product.

  52. In defense of Napster by rbeattie · · Score: 1, Informative


    I pay the $9.99 a month for the online service and it's great. Ten bucks gets me 10 songs on iTunes, but gets me streaming access to just about every son in Napster's catalog. It's so great when someone says something about a song and you can click-click and start playing it immediately, or someone talks about a new album and you can start listening to it right away as well.

    I know I can't take it with me and the songs aren't mine, but you know what? I'm a geek. I'm online 15 hours a day. Excercise? Life outside? Are you kidding me? WTF do I need a portable music player for? My fat ass is tied to my Aeron or my fold-out IKEA chair for 98% of my waking hours. Napster to me is perfect.

    -Russ

    --
    Me
  53. After Market Expenses by yintercept · · Score: 1
    Um, how is this different from other large-ticket items, like your car?

    It is not unlike other industries, and if you look at other industries you will find a long history of companies trying to find ways to sneak in after market expenses. I think you will find that there is a great deal of law trying to control such activities.

    Computers are a little bit unique in that it is extremely easy to include sales related logic into programs. Since people are using their computers to make purchases, I suspect it will be an area that needs to be watched carefully for abuse.

    As computers can include actual sales logic and monitor and manipulate user behavior in ways that other products cannot, it is simply a worrisome development that needs to be watched. I suspect that the number of ads delivered in software will increase exponentially during this next decade. We've are seeing the transition from software being the end product to simply being the medium for selling other services. There will need to be thought into what is abusive and what is not abusive.

  54. Re:I am sad by badriram · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I think you're overgeneralizing from Microsoft and their vendors. With a Mac, yeah it comes w/ iTunes and Sherlock and whatnot. But you can use other programs without any negative consequences
    I do not know about you, but i can run just about anything on windows too. Hell I run KDE on windows sometimes, oh and on my mac, and on my linux and oh wait on my BSDs tooo.
    I like opensource. I get to do what i want, where i want

  55. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

    Just because you design a device doesn't mean you want to build it. Ford makes several concept cars every year at a cost of millions, very few of which make it to market.

    In business, it's all about being prepared. When the music scene blows up, they wanted to have an option and not be sitting in development. The scene has blown up, and the explosion came with an Apple logo on it. Making a compatible device was probably prohibitively expensive, or prohibitively risky. So they thanked the iPac music developers very much and made a deal with Apple. Seems like a better idea to me than putting millions of bucks into releasing a subpar unit.

    --
    Hey freaks: now you're ju
  56. The problem with your plan is by xintegerx · · Score: 1

    If you only use 30 minutes a month, the best way to go is this. Buy a tracfone.com phone for 70-90$ during the holidays when it includes a thing to extend your deadline a full year for free. You also get 30 mins with it. Then buy a card for $80 for 350 minutes, which are going to be streched out to a full year. (The original purchase also gave me a free 20 minutes every time I buy another card for the next 12 times). Then buy a a yearly extention card for $99 that adds alike another 200 minutes (plus 20 from the bonus) and extends your deadline another year. And, any minutes you don't use remain on your phone! Forever!

  57. iTunes!=Money by $criptah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why would HP deal with Napster? Song distribution does not bring any money. In fact, Apple claimed (in an old article on TheRegister.co.uk; sorry for no URL) that their iTunes online store did not bring any profit. The money that they recieved for the service was just enough to cover their legal expenses. Apple has created the store so they could sell iPods and provide an efficient way of music distribution. By giving people a player and a source for music, Apple said, "Here is our player that you can buy for a lot of money, and here is a source where you can get the tunes. It is stable and everything works together!" And this is why the whole scheme worked out perfectly fine. Within several weeks Apple has distributed a substantial amount of songs, and guess who bought them? It is a perfect match for HP because they can profit from HP branded iPods and an existing (and stable) online distributor. For anybody in business it is a no brainer. What about Napster? Well, Napster was good when it counted. However, not is it completely useless, there are too many fish in the sea.

    1. Re:iTunes!=Money by shark72 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "Why would HP deal with Napster? Song distribution does not bring any money. In fact, Apple claimed (in an old article on TheRegister.co.uk; sorry for no URL) that their iTunes online store did not bring any profit."

      I think people are extrapolating way too much from Jobs' statement. When he stated that they were breaking even on iTunes and making the bulk of their money on the iPod, lots of Slashdotters have assumed:

      1. That he was being fundamentally truthful (ie. not counting the entire iTunes/iPod ad campaign expenses as an iTunes expense, or similar shifting of numbers which companies do all the time)
      2. That this is to be a permanent situation -- that is, that iTunes, unlike many other new businesses, doesn't have a bunch of startup costs like development and advertising which will go down over time, and that their cost of sale will remain constant (ie. they are not expecting fees paid to the record companies to every go down).
      3. That the profit and expense model of any other given music download service is fundamentally identical to iTunes -- that is, the other vendors are spending the same amount on advertising, have spent the same amount on development and other startup costs, and make the same margins and have the same costs per sale.

      Those who've run a business know that these are groundless assumptions. Extrapolating "song distribution does not make any money" based on a statement that Jobs made about Apple's own unique business many not be accurate.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    2. Re:iTunes!=Money by vingt · · Score: 1

      >> Song distribution does not bring any money

      Yet. And probably won't until some online distribution mechanism gets popular enough to be a demander instead of a supplicant. Currently the record companies have the upper hand. That can change. Someone's probably counting on it...

    3. Re:iTunes!=Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      they are not expecting fees paid to the record companies to every go down

      This raises an interesting question: Apple iTunes is essentially dependant upon being able to license the currently popular music. Now, Apple will obviously have secured licensing for a reasonable amount of time, but there's no way they've got licenses to do so in perpetuity.

      What happens when the licensing term is up, and the RIAA realises that iTunes is completely dependent upon them? After all, it's not like Apple can go shopping elsewhere to get the currently popular music.

      The only sensible thing, from a business' perspective, is to charge through the nose from that point on. But Microsoft will be getting ready to ramp up their offering at that point. What happens if they ofer a boat-load of money for exclusive Internet rights? Microsoft could essentially sweep the rug from under Apple's feet.

      Is there a standard way of getting around this problem in contracts? It seems to me I'm overlooking something obvious.

  58. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called "market share". iPod has it. HP could either try to go up against the stereotypical 6 oz. white gorilla...

    Or simply co-opt the gorilla with the promise of bananas.

  59. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since they manufacture their laptops next to the ibooks why not do the same thing with the "music player", cost efective I would say.

    and of course my favourite: always better to start form scratch than take on someonelses half finished "idea".

  60. Comparison by vxvxvxvx · · Score: 1

    Yuck, you have to buy physical cards? The pricing seems about on par with vmobile, if you purchase the yearly cards. (The first year is a little better, following years are worse however as compared to vmobile. $100 for 200 minutes (or even 220) is more than $0.25 per minute.) Besides, you're chaining yourself up for a whole year.

    1. Re:Comparison by Patik · · Score: 1

      And vmobile has much better phones, no cards necessary to add money, and really good reception wherever I've gone (from Cape Cod & NYC to Iowa). Plus you only have to put down $20 at a time which is manageable for a college student.

  61. sharingthegroove.org or bt.etree.org... by colatek · · Score: 1

    is a great source for music. it uses bittorrent. I have found a ton of live music here (which is the way I prefer to listen). www.sharingthegroove.org bt.etree.org

  62. your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how about: I think, if I am

  63. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by filmsmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Good luck with the iTrip. In my opinion, it blows goats. The signal is weak (because it pulls from the iPod battery) and blocks the control for the remote control. Also, when I took it on a car trip a month ago, I kept hitting the tracks for it and it kept changing the damn broadcast frequency on me! I know they say it's not supposed to, but it happened to me far too often.

    After that car trip, I moved to the Monster iCarPlay. It charges AND broadcasts through the dock port. Plus, since it's pulling the broadcast power from the car, it can be stronger. I was worried that the lack of broadcast stations (Monster's 8 vs iTrips 112? I forget) would really do me damage in a big city. Yet since I've had it, I haven't had to change the station once. The signal is so powerful, it pushes out every other signal. Lastly, I've now got my remote hooked up to my iPod when I drive so I can tuck the iPod nice and safely away.

    It costs $80, but after the $40 for the iTrip and $40 for another charger... well, the math is damn easy.

    fs

  64. XM and Sirius will toast Napster by MacTitan · · Score: 1

    XM satellite and Sirius will eventually be the biggest contenders for iTunes.

    The capital these 2 companies have put into creating libraries of music, new content and delivery makes iTunes, Napster and MusicMatch combined looks like peanuts.

    What happens when they enter this market of downloading individual tracks and streaming playlists? Combined they already have a tech savy 2 million customer base and rapidly growing. They could offer services for a minimal additional mo. service fee. Getting customers to add services to a monthly payment is much easyier than getting new customers.

    If Apple and XM or Sirius teamed up to offer one of thier librararies with iTunes as the store front, they could may a serious contribution to legal downloads. They need the Apple iTunes interface to make it a success and a promotional in.

    Here come the "iTunes XM Store". Now that would be a coup. Although, they could try to duplicate Apples succes on there own (not likely)

    XM could even be the conduit for licensing some of the indi music.

    Philip

  65. Re:HP should be sued via class-action by kalislashdot · · Score: 1

    The exact reason why I build my own computers and get Windows in a box from the store. Everytime a family member get a pre-fab computer I spend 3 hours uninstalling all the crap. I no lnger build computers for them as I end up supporting them and I hate being hardware support. "No I do not know why you get the BSOD, call the manufacturer".

  66. oops by JoeRobe · · Score: 1

    i originally though this said:

    HP Humped Napster for Apple

    --
    The best way to predict the future is to invent it.
  67. Happier offices with iTunes by johkir · · Score: 1

    Many offices have at least a few Apples in one department or another. We have iTunes on all our machines, and with network sharing, we all can enjoy the plethera of songs. Napster, so far, has no OS X client. Not to mention the built in radio browser for radio stations all over the world, not just Napster's brand. And with daapd, linux can share along too.

    --
    These are some of the things molecules do...... given 4 billion years -Carl Sagan
  68. Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

    Go with Belkin's TuneCast ... it's like 30 bucks and does the job better than the iTrip. You can only broadcast to 88.1, 88.3, 88.5, or 88.7 but the signal is great and it sounds good in the car.

  69. Not made in Cupertino by rustman · · Score: 1

    Apple could likely make more money in the long run by building overseas production and distribution capabilitie

    I hate to tell you this but they're already made in Asia. No one builds their own factories anymore, they all use "Contract Manufacturers" so they can scale up or down easily without worrying about fixed factory investments!

    When I got my iPod, it was shipped from Malaysia (or maybe Singapore?).

  70. But that 1% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... will make you damn fat.