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Napster Sells 5 Million Songs

mattmcal writes "CNet reports that Napster has already sold 5 million songs. The number is impressive despite lagging behind Apple which maintains a 56% market share according to SiliconValley.com. The integration with portable devices must play a key role in the download volume which Apple has also developed for the mini iPod."

5 of 340 comments (clear)

  1. Subscription? by erick99 · · Score: 5, Informative
    In one of the articles....

    "Gorog said he resists comparisons with other subscription services because of incongruities in the way subscriber numbers are reported. 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."

    It's important to note that you still have to pay if you want to burn a song to a CD or otherwise use it outside of your computer. You do, however, get to use the song on up to three computers. Just a point of clarification because the article might lead one to believe that for a subscription fee you get unlimited downloads to use as you please and you really don't.

    Keep Smilin'!

    Erick

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
  2. Comparing Apples and Kitty Kats by amichalo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Usually I like to interject my own thoughts, but I will let the numbers speak for themselves:

    4/28/2003 - iTunes Music Store for Mac launches
    5/5/2003 - iTMSfM sells 1 millionth song
    5/14/2003 - iTMSfM sells 2 millionth song
    7/22/2003 - iTMS sells 6.5 millionth song
    10/2003 - Napster launches
    10/2003 - 300,000 Napster 1st week sales / 1.5MM iTMS sales same week
    10/2003 - iTMS for Windows launchs (~13MM songs sold to date)
    12/9/2003 - iTMS sells 20 millionth song
    12/16/2004 - iTMS sells 25 millionth song (2.5MM/mo.)
    2/2004 - Napster sells 5 millionth song (1.25MM/mo.)

    On the bottom 1/3 of this page is a chart and analysis of the numbers too.

    WARNING: My two cents -
    Interesting that while Apple's numbers are much higher than Napsters', and Apple had to overcome the initial proof of concept that it would even work, so many REMAIN critical of the service.

    Interesting still is that those same critics won't even spend a few dollars to give iTMS a *TRY* before they ink their mal-informed pens.

    --
    I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
  3. Samsung Napster mp3 player by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 5, Informative

    I keep seeing this over and over. Everyone seems to have forgotten that Napster does have a hardware mp3 player. Samsung makes it, but it carries the Napster name, and you can bet they get a piece of each sale.

  4. Re:define "viable alternative" by Golias · · Score: 5, Informative
    Clipping is not a problem specific to the CD format. Clipping comes from the studio monkeys running the sound too hot for their own boards. This is not done by accident... songs that sound "louder" on the radio tend to sell better, so studios compress the hell out of the sound and cram as much of it near peak output as they possibly can. Rush's "Vapor Trails" album is a tragic example. Everything, including the vocals, sounds like it's being played through a 10W amplifier at full volume. (Too bad, because muscially, it's probably their best album in the last decade or so.)

    The "problem" with CD's is the 44.1 K sample rate. A 22KHz sound wave only gets represented by two bits, and with many of the crappy early digital encoders from the 80s, it might not even be sampled from alternate peaks of the wave.

    Of course, the typical American geek's hearing pretty much ends around 16 KHz (at best), so you could do as CD zealots do, and insist that anything above that frequency doesn't really matter... except it does, because of the way it colors overtones, which are what gives most sounds their timbre. If you put a typical music-lover in a booth and make them listen to a double-blind test between a live microphone feed of a singer with piano accompaniment, and the same live feed where everything above, oh... say 17 KHz is filtered out, they will spot the difference.

    However, most of people's concerns about the compromise of "the digital sound" turned out to be unfounded. Early CD players (and some of the cheaper ones today) sounded too bright and tinny as a result of inferior D/A conversion algorhythms.

    When an LP is "cut", the low-frequency waves are dialed way down in amplitude, because otherwise you would have a grove that moves outside the stylus's range of motion! A pre-amp in the turntable (based on an industry standard established by the RIAA) boosts the bass back up again. Unfortunately, this electronic equalization results in massive, boomy, slightly unnatrual bass. Through the 70s, the stereos which did the best job of tweaking LP sources to sound natural gained the reputation of being the best playback equipment. Listening to a good-condition LP on a top-notch 70s "hi-fi" stereo is an extremely rewarding experience.

    When CD players arrived in the early 80s, the same stereos that played back LP recordings with a "warm, rich" sounded bright, harsh, and shrill when playing back the same recordings on CD.

    Over the years, better logic, better error-correction, and better playback components (as well as better digital encoding in studios) have all resulted in CD's that sound every bit as good as LP's.

    In the late 80s and early 90s I was a total LP bigot, but to not change my position these days would be ignoring the evidence given by my own ears. Hearing "Dark Side of the Moon" on a $300 Rotel CD player through high-quality speakers is every bit as satisfying as hearing the LP on a $4000 air-baring, laser-guided turntable, if not more so.

    So yea, CD's are not a bad compromise at all.

    However, 99% of the time I'm listening to music, it's either on a portable player, in my car, or at my computer desk. In those environments, AAC is not only good enough, it's very difficult to notice the difference between it and the CD.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  5. Re:I have tried both Napster and iTunes by etpinge · · Score: 5, Informative

    Been there done that.... trashed a box after downloading a few songs. The music wouldnt even synch to the iPod or back from. Couldnt use an iPod extractor to get the music back to the computer.

    I emailed Apple iTMS and explained the situation. They tweaked some settings and my music was available for download and reauthorizing onto machines free of charge.

    iTMS support said they normally do not support such a request, but since they responded within 1 hour of the original email request with a positive response, and within the another hour to mysecond email requesting that users should be able to deauthenticate machines from within iTMS, I think they would be open to assisting us blockheaded users.