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Sony Admits MP3 Error

inflex writes "In a rare show admission of taking a wrong turn, Sony's officials have admitted that their stance on MP3 players was wrong." While this was pretty obvious to anyone who has ever shopped for a portable MP3 player, it is nice to see Sony admit their shortcoming. Ken Kutaragi puts it best when he says, "We're growing up," and with any luck future devices won't be crippled with silly formats no one uses.

8 of 587 comments (clear)

  1. pretty simple, really... by jxyama · · Score: 5, Insightful

    give consumers what consumers want, not what you want consumers to want (to make the most money)

  2. it's about time.... by Viceice · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sony is about one of those companies seriously capable of making a real iPod killer.

    iPods are by no means a superior product. it uses dated technology and lose out in terms of features and price to other players. What makes it sell is that it has the Apple brandname behind it.

    I think Sony is about one of few competitors with the sort of brand that can compete if they get their act togather.

    --
    Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
  3. Re:Article. by Rigor+Morty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Out of all of the parent article, the most significant part of the posted article for me was this one unintentionally-included word...

    >Adblock

    Because the post is about a large company realizing the market isn't swayed by it's actions, this single word is profound, in a poetic justice sort of way. It says that the consumer, not the producer, has final say in what they are exposed to.

    It's almost an ironic recursion. It's hard evidence of the future direction of market interests.

    --
    Remove the spamfreak to speak.
  4. Re:Now if only others would do the same by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know parent will get modded up because he mentions the words "DRM", and any paranoid rant about DRM on /. gets modded up automatically, but WTF???
    Sony was apologizing for not including MP3 support on their MP3 players(they only supported Altrac) not that they are getting rid of altrac. Oh, and in case you didn't actually know, iPods support MP3, so I'm not really even sure what basis in reality your post has. Oh, and AAC is open, just the DRM on Apples music store purchases(called fairplay) is not.
    Please, RTFA and know what you are talking about before your next paranoid rant.
    Thank you come again.

  5. Crippled with formats... by DWIM · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...with any luck future devices won't be crippled with silly formats no one uses.

    Devices are only crippled when they don't include formats that everybody wants. They can include all the formats in the world as long as they include the ubiquitous ones too. If they don't, then they are indeed crippled.

  6. Re:Ogg by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As storage becomes more plentiful and cheaper, the improved compression matters less and less, a 10% space savings on a 5 megabyte file doesn't seem worthwhile anymore. Even when scaled up to 50 Gigabyte collection 5 gigs doesn't matter so much if storage costs $0.50 / Gig. Meanwhile there is a standard which everyone accepted that works "well enough" for 97% of consumers, and supported by nearly every audio program and device - MP3. That last point is a sticking point, I'm not going to narrow down my available choices by 95% for one obscure codec, that's like voters that vote on a single issue and that issue only.

    Now, I wish people would drop RAR. ZIP works fine and I hate having to dig up an unRAR program for the occasional oddity I might download.

  7. Half true. by abb3w · · Score: 4, Insightful
    iPods are by no means a superior product.

    Incorrect.

    it uses dated technology and lose out in terms of features and price to other players.

    Correct; by any and perhaps all of these means, there are a number of products definitely superior to the iPod.

    However, if your means of comparison is file space per gram or per cc, it has few competitors; and if your means of comparison is based on quality of interface, the iPod is definitely superior to the competition. One need not use bleeding edge tech to create a superior product, you can simply put existing stuff together better than anyone else.

    Apple does human-use engineering better than almost anyone else. I didn't find the cost worth the improved usability, and went with an Archos product. I also prefer a command line to a window; this may mark me as an uber-geek, but far more certainly marks me as a weirdo. (Of course, the fact that I refer to iPod users as "pod people" is more obvious evidence....) Most humans place a higher value over improved usability than on improvements to other features.

    I think Sony is about one of few competitors with the sort of brand that can compete if they get their act togather.

    With this, I agree completely.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  8. Re:Good by shrykk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes! This is what we need to happen. Every time some company comes up with their own propietary DRM system, trying to corner an entire market, people need to not buy that product. Someone else comes along with a more open system and eats their lunch, and the company gains insight.

    --
    #define struct union /* Reduce memory usage */