Yahoo Introduces Competitor for iTunes
LadyDeath writes "After a year in development, Yahoo has launched its competitor to Apple's iTunes and Napster To Go, a subscription and download music service priced at only $4.99 per month. Tracks are offered in 192Kbps WMA, and can be transferred to portable devices. Perhaps most interesting to the Slashdot crowd is that the Yahoo! Music Engine is built on an open platform that facilitates plug-ins - both DLL and Web based. Podcasting and video playback plug-ins are already available." Update: 05/11 13:06 GMT by T : ian c rogers, formerly of Nullsoft, just led the build of the media player, and writes with information about "the the plugin architecture it supports as well as some of the 20 plugins that are already available for it.
I've posted my thoughts on why someone should or shouldn't use the Yahoo! Music Engine on my blog."
...devices supporting Microsoft's Janus digital rights management technology. jon.... Jon?
pointless DRM based lossy music service. Just what we all need. When will "they" realise that this isn't going to cut the mustard?
But I doubt it'll get the popularity of iTunes
$60 a year for music? I bet that this will encourage the prices of WMA players to drop, and hackers cracking the WMA format. By June 2005, we will have unlimited mp3's for $60 a year. Maybe somebody will create a file sharing network that will decrease the price even further.
Cover your eyes and click this link!
I don't know how a music service that's intended to provide music for "portable players" can succeed when its format doesn't support the player that has 70 - 80% marketshare. It just seems like a losing proposition from the get-go.
"Nature doesn't care how smart you are. You can still be wrong." - Richard Feynman
The lifestyle segment will use iTunes.
The power music consumers will use allofmp3.
What segment are Yahoo selling to exactly, the confused?
My blog
It's hardly going to be a threat to iTunes. The DRM WMA files won't play on ipods, which have over 80% of the hard disk player market and 58% of the flash player market.
I'm really getting sick and tired of all these competeing, incompatible and crippled formats.
All I want is a standard format to purchase music in, that works on every player and that allows me to freaking do with the music I bought what I want.
Pledge now! Time is running out! Point your browser to yahoomusic.com or itunes.com and inject us with cash so we have enough money to sue your ass over fair use.
Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
This is great, but I'm not entirely sure I'd trust Yahoo for music content. I've tried out other music services, but so far iTunes has provided almost everything I've wanted, with a few rare exceptions. And those I've ended up having to order the CD anyway. I do think that Apple will eventually need to open up their format a bit to allow third-parties to at least play their files if they're going to compete with the increasing number of competitors. Sure, for a few competitors, Apple can hold its own. But a thousand tiny rabid dogs will eventually take down the prey. I just hope Apple learns from the mistakes of the past this time around and doesn't repeat the mistakes in a way that becomes fatal.
T3 ani i2 users (like myself) are gonna bankrupt Yahoo and Napster. Do these companies have any limits at all? Otherwise, they are doomed. I could easily download thousands of songs in a day, bursting their $5 threshold. The majority of users won't download that much. I'm sure they have educated economists working it out, but when I see something that looks too good to be true it's usually because it is and I'll get reamed by some legal clause or their company's might as well skip to chapter 11.
"Man, I am so unbelievably stupid."
Forget that WMD thing we never found across the planet, there's WMA right here and WMV around the corner.
Perhaps most interesting to the Slashdot crowd is that the Yahoo! Music Engine is built on an open platform that facilitates plug-ins - both DLL and Web based.
Maybe I can use this service in Linux, but I'm not permitted to play WMA files in Linux - I know, there are codecs (I have them), but they are reverse engineerd, and AFAIK not legal outside Europe.
I tried it out, the DRM is an annoying voice at the beginning of each song that goes "Yahooooooooo-oooooo!". Noone will copy that!
I, along with MILLIONS of people world wide, own an iPod (and an iPod Shuffle). They are, for my money, the best portable music players available. They sure aren't the cheapest - but I'm not a consumer for whom the prices is the main selling point.
That said, my players won't play WMA, which makes Yahoo's years of development a moot point.
I guess that the millions of 15-35 year olds who paid a premium price for our players aren't Yahoo's target market.
I like how this is listed under Apple. Clearly this service is doomed.
This page was generated by a Barrel of Circus Midgets, and that is the way I like it!!!
That's the problem right there. When will someone wise up and give us lossless, reasonably-priced downloads? Until then I'll continue to use BitTorrent.
Wake me up before I go go ;-)
(Extracted from the Wall Street Journal May 10, 2005): The new service, dubbed Yahoo! Music Unlimited, will give individuals unlimited access to over a million music tracks for $6.99 a month, or, alternatively, for $60 a year. The service, which also lets users transfer the songs to select portable MP3-format music players, is priced far below rivals' services: RealNetworks Inc., for example, charges $179 a year for its comparable subscription service.
They are pretty much dead from the start. My old flash MP3 player supports WMA, so do my DVD players. The fine print is that they do not support any form of encrypted WMA files.
It must be the same for millions of similar devices out there in the "real" world. Imagine 70-90% of clueless first time Yahoo music users trying to figure out why their US$ 60 subscription downloaded WMA files just don't work at all....
I just hope they outsourced the helpdesk support because it will get busy.
somehow the idea of paying $5 a month, even for unlimited downloads, is unappealing if i dont actuallly own the music. As much as I hate the nature of DRM at least Apple has come the close to drawing a balance between user control and "artists" rights. as fun as it might be to have unlimited access to music downloads I think the psycological barrier of not actually owning the music will keep most consumers out. At least with iTunes when you buy a song you allways have the option to burn an audio or Mp3 cd.
At the price point Yahoo is hitting I don't see how Napster and Rhapsody can compete. The only way for those two to survive Yahoo would be to have more music than Yahoo.
.79 each. It really depends on how far the plug ins will be allowed to go. I would like that solution simply because the 30 second snippets from iTunes are not enough for some songs.
However iTunes is defintely not threatened. About the only way that that could happen is if the paid per song downloads (burnables) could be transformed into a form that iTunes can understand EASILY. If so you could sample any number of songs from Yahoo then burn those you want for
Yahoo is claiming over 1 million songs... this could be interesting. With a 7 day trial
OK reading further it appears that burnable music can be transfered to your iPod. Even more intersting
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
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TÚ FRACASAR ÉL!
but I'm sure it will take some market share from other subscription based services like http://www.listen.com/ for example.
iTunes is a different market, for different people.
__
Sigs are like arse-holes, everybody has one
Also known as insider marketing ;)
http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-FDuiCSg4eqinB8z.GGJ 7TmAz?p=89
Cover your eyes and click this link!
IE?
Latest service packs?
No Linux? No BSD? No MacOSX?
Competing for the majority desktop, yes, but with whom are the competing? malware?
Perhaps the idea is that if enough companies come out with stores that compete with iTunes, there will be some some of critical mass and some sort of chain reaction.
Heh. Chain reaction.
No, this is primarily to distract us from writing our congresspeople about realstinkingIDiotcards.
I don't like the way there is no detailed TOS or EULA provied, untill you have already signed up for a Yahoo account there by saying yes to Yahoos's default TOS.
Sign up with us then we'll tell you how restrictive we are going to be...
Quote:"If their DRM allows you to do everything you plan to do with the music, then buy it. Novel concept, eh?" I think you mean If their DRM allows you to do everything you plan to do with the music, then rent it. Novel concept, eh?
$4.99 a month is great - really great. If I was running a platform that could play WMA I might even consider it but my Mac and my iPod won't play it. These format wars suck.
Aside from a non-compatible format, I can't stand the thought of all my music going away if I don't want to subscribe anymore. Yes, I can then decide to buy the music but then you're faced with "Okay, I want to stop my subscription and keep these 50 albums but I don't have $500 to lay out right now." Then what? Live without the music or take out a loan.
As a consumer of iTunes music, I am seriously considering going back to CD's so I get the full audio quality, the artwork and I can do whatever I want with it (i.e. send an mp3 to a friend 'hey, check these guys out - you might like them', etc.). While the iTunes DRM is fairly non-intrusive, I'm disliking DRM in any form more and more. I want my music for the long term. I want my kids to be able to play it 20 years from now if they want. I have zero guarantee of being able to do that with my iTunes DRMed music.
Subscription-based services practically guarantee I won't be able to do any of those things.
It must be nice to watch this battle over the niche WMA market unfold from the comfort of Cupertino. These subscription services are a disaster waiting to happen. The WMA market isn't large enough to sustain all the vendors out there. Once the first subscription service folds, everyone will stay far, far away from them. "I paid money every month for my music, then it all went away because they had a crappy business model." Tragic.
With Apple's model, there's no dependence on Apple's success for your music to play. You don't even have to depend on any specific hardware because you can burn it all to CD. $5 a month for the rest of my life for a huge library of music is an awesome deal. $5 a month for that library until the service folds and I'm left with no music isn't all that attractive.
Someone needs to point me to the venture capital firms that back things things (except in Yahoo's case). I have an idea for a company. I think I'm going to call it Webvan.
Making apple cider?
You can get music anywhere. Apple competes with radios, CDs, antique tape decks, vinyl, not to mention mp3 and microsoft.
microsoft competes with, uhm, microsoft. and itty-bitty-teensy-weensy bit players like Linux and Apple.
And not praising wma to high heavens is somehow bashing microsoft?
are flash players.
Hmm.
TFA says, "As with any such music service, songs will become unplayable if the subscription lapses."
/.
How does my portable player know my subscription has lapsed?
As an aside, I read a lot of 'WMA sucks for quality' comments on
How does 192kbps quality compare to 128kbps mp3 (which i find acceptable for portable and mobile listening).
Great news! Yahoo has released a new download service.
It costs only $7 per month, or $60 per year. If the service changes business model, you have no music. If the service changes it's rates to something prohibitively high, you have no music.
It is, in effect, a radio subscription services without radio.
be a bit more precise please, its the iTunes Music Store where you can buy music.
iTunes is simply the player application and its free.
Why I write this ? Ive been told by several PC users that they dont want to try iTunes because the software costs money.
iTunes and iTMS are too confusing...........
Same applies to QuickTime. Most PC people think QT is a player application and movie format/codec. Both wrong.
If you own something you really really like, and it happens to be popular, that doesn't feel wrong.
If you own something you hate and despise, but try as you might you can't find a reasonable alternative, that feels very wrong.
This is perfectly normal. Even ordinary people dislike Windows, but there isn't much choice a lot of the time. People adore their iPods.
Now, if we ever get to a point where people don't like their iPods and they are unhappy they can't move their music, then people will start complaining. This is probably inevitable, and will be messy.
Until then, people are happy. They are listening to their music. Happy people don't complain much. It's really that simple. So... fucking... simple. Dude, come on. How is that not obvious?
"I want my kids to be able to play it 20 years from now if they want....."
You mean like your piano rolls, records (78s, 33s, 45s), 8 tracks, and soon cassettes and little farther out CDs? Although I guess for the right amount of money you can still get those devices...
I think device technology may be your biggest threat overtime rather than DRM. The crisis point is when version xx.x of itunes won't support the first generation of ipods!
lately i've been recording stuff i like off the radio. i don't have time to listen when the shows i like are on so record for listening while walking the dog or flying.
with all the good radio stations available via IP these days why rent recordings?
Also, people(context USA) have been recording broadcast programs for personal use for decades and nary a one has paid a fine or gone to jail...
PULL YOUR FINGERS OUT AND WORK WITH APPLE TO MAKE iTMS AVAILABLE IN AUSTRALIA AT A COMPARABLE PRICE TO THE REST OF THE WORLD, AND STOP PISSING OFF THE PEOPLE WHO KEEP YOU IN BUSINESS.
Plenty of people will keep buying music for themselves for decades. If it only costs them five bucks a month for all-they-can-eat, that's a great deal. If you stop paying, do you really think Yahoo will delete your list of songs? No. If you start paying again you'll be able to download them over again.
DRM is the future, you can't stop it. Your children in 20 years won't be able to buy plain old music CDs anymore because the RIAA won't release it unsecured like that. If they still sell physical media, they'll have changed the format over to something DRM'd.
... something that makes me happily ditch the iPod along with all the GNU/Linux and OS X and rush to buy Windows!
Now, mod me down freely. My karma can't get any worse...
I keep all my music on my computer as fairly high quality MP3s, but nearly all of the new music I acquire now comes from CDs, even though I have used iTunes in the past. Using eBay or Amazon Marketplace it sometimes half as much, and the CD becomes a backup as soon as I rip it. If I lose the file, I have no trouble ripping it again, and I always have a high quality copy of the album stored away.
It just seems like CDs are still win-win, whereas the only advantage online music stores have is that you get the music instantly.
What's also interesting is that the Music Engine supports XSPF, and open playlist standard. XSPF is not yet very widespread, but Yahoo's player has the potential to accomplish that.
See http://www.xspf.org/
Sig Nature
Wait... 192 kbps... that you don't get to really keep.... Why, exactly, would anyone pay for that?
For once I'm amazed - Apple has "gotten" it more so than either of their competitors... now if you could just freely move the music about.
Everyone seems to be getting into downloadable music game (I half expect to see a headline announcing Google Music one of these days).
But is this a currently profitable market, or are they gambling on it being so in the future?
The last financial briefing of Apple Computer stated that they had achieved "about break even" for the quarter.
Break even? When iTunes is the currently the biggest thing around. Why even bother. Presumably for Apple, it's to provide a service to encourage more iPod sales with an easy way to fill them with music. But are the other services gambling on a future where many more people are buying downloads?
What if it's another dotcom, where everyone is jumping into the game, but the profits just don't eventuate...?
"All I want is a standard format to purchase music in, that works on every player and that allows me to freaking do with the music I bought what I want"
Its called MP3.
You can either rip your own CD's, or if the record companies won't sell it to you, rip it from a friends CD.
[insert dissing comment from zealous mac fanboy here]
The MS format for music used by yahoo is self-expiring. As soon as you turn off the service, your songs no longer play.
That's the whole point.
I didn't realize this was "Special Olympics on Slashdot Day".
So Hillary Rosen can complain about Apple shutting out competitors, but it's ok for Yahoo to exclude Mac users. Seriously though, Apple is setting itself up for a fall once again. Yes, they are providing the cool stuff today, but they are diversifying at their own peril. As soon (...) as Longhorn comes out, Spotlight is going to be in a world of hurt, because Microsoft will undoubtedly lock up some metadata thingamajig. They spent so much time making the Mac compatible with the outside world (USB, FAT32, &c) and now they're pissing it all away.
DRM is not about control of the music as it pertains to customers giving it away. In the long haul, RIAA is trying hard to make sure that they control the paltform. Right now, their worst nightmare is that the music downright cheap to produce. In addition, the Internet is offering cheap PR/marketing. It is only a matter of time before the net wrest music production from RIAA/Labels and allows every musicians to own their own future.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
"Stop trying to justify your copyright infringement."
Yeah so what. I don't really care to pay any money to any record company associated with the RIAA. As far as I'm concerned its like stealing money from a crack dealer. Even the police don't care.
At $5, its cheaper than any subscription service.
At $0.79 per non-expiring download, its competitive with other services, and beats iTMS.
The plugins make the service more open than any other.
They already have millions of Launch users and millions more Yahoo IM users, not to mention Yahoo search users to link over to it. If you haven't used Launch, its pretty damn cool. You rate your songs and it plays others that you'll like. I had a $4/month subsription for a while, and it made an awesome radio. This new service will leverage those ratings, playing songs you want to hear, at much better quality than Launch ever had.
Also, it combines Instant messaging with filesharing, something I've always wanted, and have even thought about designing. With some of these features, its actually the next generation of music services. Now that's innovation.
Add a little WiFi or WiMax and play personalized radio on a handheld, combined with the social sharing aspect, all streaming, and it will have fulfilled all of my ideas for what's happening in the market.
When you buy from iTMS music store, you don't "own" the song. You can't sell it to a friend. It has no intrinsic worth.
The truth is, as long as CD's exist, all of these music stores are a bad deal for the consumer.
Its costly, and its not very good. At the same time, I realize there are people who pay $1000 for a purse primarily because of the vanity of a name brand and the fact that its trendy, so I don't blame Apple for selling something at 10 times its worth as long as people are willing to pay.
So all this is really is a cheaper Napster. Whoopee. It's still separate per-track pricing if you want to buy burnable music, and it still only works with WMA-supporting devices. The one thing Yahoo brings to the table here seems to be the fairly easy plugin extensibility, but it's not for supporting other formats, it's more for "cool stuff".
So, in balance, it's a "nothing to see here, move along", but with the Yahoo brand name associated with it. No one WMA music store has been able to make a big splash so far, because of two things: the iPod rules the market at every price point, and thus far the market really is not terribly interested in subscription-based music - despite the endless efforts of the WMA-based companies and the music industry to convince us otherwise.
In the unlikely event that subscriptions start taking off, Apple'll just add it to iTMS, anyways. Short of a sudden overnight shift in consumer tastes, this Yahoo store will just be fighting for their piece of the 20% of the market that simply refuses to associate with anything Apple.
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
Aye, can I have my money back when I stop subscribing?
I subscribe to my magazines and they don't disappear when I stopped my subs (since I left home, anyways..!). So if they want to remove my music, I want to remove their money.
Yahoo introduces competitor for Napster , as the main itunes crowd will be using it on a mac or windows with an iPod .
However this is in direct competition with napster who offer bassicaly the same service for more money
The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
How is this competition to iTunes? This is just another subscription service. This too will pass.
Don't forget the other aspect of the new Yahoo! Music stuff: Their player lets you buy music for $0.99 per track even if you aren't subscribed.
J 7TmAz?p=89
This competes directly with iTunes Music Store... but Apple's overall "solution" is nicer. And on one of their employees blogs (which is completely faked and scripted in my opinion) they pretty much say that if you have a Mac, you're just a loser... (that's the way I read it). What an attitude...
The blog: http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-FDuiCSg4eqinB8z.GG
I'm your huckleberry
Make whatever you wish of it, but Apple is in no hurry to open up the iPod to other online music stores. The device works fine for users. It supports an online store and also the user's own music library through .mp3 and .m4a formats.
Until there is a change in market conditions that address the iPod's dominance, any store that uses WMA as its file format has an inherent flaw in its business model.
Installed it and got a nice little alert telling me that since I'm using Win2k that I won't have support for portable devices. And it force feeds you Yahoo Messenger and other useless yahoo services. I might play with it for a while longer, but I don't think it will be worth keeping.
If microsoft did make a version of Media player specifically for linux, does anyone think they'd get any credit for having done it?
I think its a no win situation for Microsoft in a niche market that more receptive of any solution so long as it's not Microsoft.
Firstly, AFAIK, you can use this service just like iTunes. Don't pay the monthly fee, just your per-track costs. Those you can burn as you wish.
Secondly, why the anti-competitive attitude? "Free commercial music" is an oxymoron. If you want free and legal, visit archive.org and support your local bands.
And I'm one of the ones that supports a subscription service. I'm using Napster-to-Go (will probably switch over since this is a lot cheaper) I can have music in all of the places I normally listen - the office, my home stereo (via a media center with a nice optical connection, so the quality is as good as an MP3 can get), and at the gym. I get to audition a full album as many times as I want, before buying the CD.
Is it any different than renting movies? I rent a movie, and if I like it, I buy the DVD. Is it for the casual consumer right now? Maybe not. But there was a time when only radical enthusiasts knew how to email, surf the web, or burn CDs. That scary technology is now embraced by the young and old.
ITMS works because it (1) allows you to purchase music as you want it (2) satisfies most music companies' worries on casual electronic copying, and (3) leaves ownership of the music with the user once they decide not to use ITMS anymore. The cost of songs match the approximate value per song you'd get when buying the album at retail--in some cases, it's a better price.
Subscriptions revoke your ability to play your music. What kind of deal is that to be locked in to both a service and a format for play AND a compatible player that you hope may still be around in 3 years. A lot of us, in their effort in trying to find ITMS alternatives, are buying the music player equivalents of a 1980's TI-99 computer...eventually a standard will come to the music player and store format where two or three stores exist, all working under a dominant format.
Apple's competitors don't need to make something different, they need to make an identical service that is also iPod AND non-iPod compatible. It's obvious that Apple's scheme works. Why do anything else if that process works? Why DO these competitors not copy what ITMS does?
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I want my kids to be able to play it 20 years from now if they want. I have zero guarantee of being able to do that with my iTunes DRMed music.
I know the feeling. I got a copy of "The Cinnamon Bear" from my dad who has it on Reel to Reel tape. I recently got a better copy off the internet (Public Domain) as MP3's. I'll pass them to my kids on an MP3 CD. None of the DRM stuff can be passed on. It dies when either your subscription dies or your hard drive dies.
The truth shall set you free!
I don't understand how anyone can be interested in this kind of "subscription" service. With the magazine subscriptions of the old days, you could keep your back issues near the toilet for reading forever and ever. This new kind of subscription would be like all your old magazines bursting into flames as soon as you decide you want to quit.
I would never allow myself to be locked-in to anything in this way.
What prevents someone from getting a month worth of service and then downloading everything in sight, then canceling the service? You could listen to a lot before making a return trip.
"DRM is the future, you can't stop it."
.
That is the exact attitude that will mean it is the future and it is unstopable . If we all realise that if we stop buying the DRM restricted stuff fairly soon it will disapear
The only reason its gaining ground is because alot of people are just sitting back and accepting it as an inevatabilite
The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
Not as long as we still have allofmp3.com and similar. Which is probably quite a while - they're not likely to go away unless major political and economical changes happen in countries which host them.
allofmp3.com will surely suport you. Go there, register, pay, download your mp3s of whatever :)
Been there, works.
Yes, yes, two totally different beasts...sort of.
There will be segment which doesn't/can't use Yahoo as a radio service. But many technophiles (which would probably include everyone under 25) would be able to do so if Yahoo made it "easy" for them.
With the proper software on each end, you could hook your DAP to you computer in the evening and sync to your "library" which would get a few extra tunes each day, based on your preferences (think iTunes, with a million song "local" library). The software transfers "enough" music to cover the day - you can d/l 2 to 24 hours onto a device pretty easily (Okay, the latter will require a 2G device) with a playlist or three. Now you've got one to three "favorite" channels, and you can skip the songs you don't like.
As you listen more, the YahooClient downloads extra songs to keep the mix fresh, and you can snag any extras you want. With a daily dock, you're golden.
Heck, if Yahoo were thinking, they'd consider adding some news to the mix - say Morning Edition. You can get that in a few seconds before you leave for the morning commute. It would get auto-loaded and set at the front of your playlist for the day.
Why might this work? $5/month vs $13/month. If you only listen to music, that looks like a bargain. Most folks only need 100 channels of music because they want to find the two or three they like. Heck, my wife has XM and she listens to only one channel. But its one that _she_ likes.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Of course I meant http://allofmp3.com/
I think this is a bit of a defeatist attitude. If the RIAA only released DRM'd media, I hope the world would have the sense to finally stop buying anything from the RIAA.
I think it's important during these times to remember that the potential energy of consumer actions can easily overpower the 'Big Five'.
Most of the music by those assholes is shitty compared to smaller labels, anyway.
Just buy the music on CD's and rip it yourself as MP3...
Why is this so hard to understand?
It cost about the same as iTunes anyway...
Visit London Scalextric Club
We have that day every day.
:(
This may have changed, but last time I checked allofmp3.com did NOT have the legal right to export and sell music to non-russian customers. Basically, "buying" from that site gives you the same legal rights as downloading from any peer to peer service. This may have changed since last I checked, to find out I clicked legal info on their site -- and the legal info is not available in English... that may give a clue as to the legal status of the content from there in English-speaking countries... ;-)
9/11: Never forget it was a false-flag operation
you should run a tobacco company. With insight like that law degrees wouldn't be worth the toilet paper they're printed on, and police would be beating lawyers in the streets. (I don't smoke, I just hate lawyers.)
Every since I've been introduced to allofmp3.org, I've learned some things.
1. Rhaposody, iTunes, Yahoo, etc, etc, They all use the exact, Third Party Database.
2. They are all 192 kbps WMA format. Poor quality and codec for the cost.
3. Why pay $0.79 - $0.99 for a single song. 1 min, 3 mins, is that really fair? Buying the CD only saves maybe $5 bucks. All at the cost of not getting art work, a cover, and half a lossly compression quality with a microsoft codec.
- That's why I prefer allofmp3.com.
1. They are a different database.
2. They supoort all formats for most songs:
codecs (Flac, Ogg, wma, mp3)
bitrate (full, static, variable, 256, 192, any)
3. You pay per megabyte, $0.02/mb to be exact. Much more fair. A full, lossless compression, no audio lossed song may cost around $1.00. Where a lesser quality song will be much much less, $0.04 - $1.00. I pay for the quality I want. Now I can get the full quality song minus the art, cover, case, and cd, for about a $5 savings. That's fair.
"There are artists who sell lossless, reasonably priced downloads. Put your money where your mouth is."
Unfortunately, they all suck.
If you're comparing Yahoo against Apple, you should know that Yahoo is much more profitable, has much larget capitalization, and is in much more solid financial standing than Apple. If anything, you should worry about Apple folding, and then the ipod will be another (grossly overpriced) piece of plastic junk. Yahoo? WMA? They're here to stay.
I hope Yahoo has contacted Craig @ http://www.flipflopflyin.com/3 8d/music.yahoo.com/musicengine/images/hdr_main_web _beta.jpg
about the use of his excellent pixel characters.
that they use in the header at: http://music.yahoo.com/musicengine
or more precisely: http://a1568.g.akamai.net/7/1568/1600/7a67bdc80db
well hopefully he got paid or something for it...
There needs to be an open DRM format for media. Say a byte set in the id3 tag? Yes, it's hackable. That's not the point. Really. Casual copiers will be dissuaded and some people will pay rewards to the artists who want money.
.. All current DRM can be hacked too.
News Flash
This way, at least independent musicians and artists can sell their stuff on the net without having to go through iTunes.
Assuming a musician is fine paying Apple's cut, will a song critical of Apple or Jobs even be allowed to be sold on iTunes (considering he pulled that book from the Apple Stores)?
Who is "we all"? Us 10 or 20 percent of the market? Why do you think "we all", even united, have enough influence to change mainstream America and RIAA's plans? This isn't techie LinuxWorld and us getting rid of bad writers, this is a thousand times bigger.
>This may have changed, but last time I checked allofmp3.com did NOT have the legal right to export and sell music to non-russian customers. "Legal right to upload file" is some new concept I am not aware of, sorry. It is fully legal in Russia, so it may only be made "kind-of illegal" by lobbysts, i guess.
How exactly would a portable player connect to a remote key server?
That's why God made computers.
--
Need Referals? The ref stops here
I used to buy songs off of itunes, but then I realized that I can buy just about ANY CD used for MUCH less off of Amazon. Plus the quality is going to be better than the compressed formats.
If you are willing to wait instead of the "I need it NOW" mentality, you can save yourself a ton of money and have music without DRM and at a better quality.
BUT...if you HAVE to have it NOW...then you have to put up with all of the BS that music download services shove...unless allofmp3.com has a flac version of what you need.....
20 years perhaps before they're gone? Then the kiddies won't be able to share music with their children.
I'm playing CD's I bought in 1983. Gee..that's 22 years ago. And I don't have to ask Apple's or the record company's permission to do it.
In fact, I can rip it and put it on my iPod right now.
And in 20 years, I expect to be able to access that data at which time I can rip it in *full quality* to another format.
iTMS? It won't work beyond your 3rd computer. Good luck.
The *potential* market for Apple computers is anyone looking for a computer (100%), and they get 5% of them. The potential market for Yahoo is 20%, and they will then get some fraction of that.
You make a very valid point, but why is the potential for Apple computers 100% when the potential for Yahoo is 20%?
Obviously I understand that the Apple iPod accounts for nearly 80% of the market that Yahoo is entering, but IBM compatibles account for much more than that in the market Apple computer competes.
Just as I would never consider a WMA based MP3 player at this time (I love my ipod, what can I say?) I would also never consider buying a mac. I only buy computers in part form, something Apple doesn't really facilitate.
--
Need Referals?
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Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
You know you are allowed to backup the music you download from iTMS? Apple encourages you to do it. In fact, they even make a utility "iBackup" that will do it for you! Though, I personally just use rsync myself.
Amazon is not going to give you new CDs if your car burns...
All editorial writers ever do is come down from the hill after the battle is over and shoot the wounded.
You have the fees for the record labels, $.30 + 1.5-3.0% for credit card processing and then it's a grand total of $5.00 a month. Add in that they don't provide it to sell hardware and you have a much smaller operation than what Apple has.
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
Their business strategy is to copy whatever Google or Apple do. ALmost the same as MicroSoft's strategy.
DRM is the future, you can't stop it. Your children in 20 years won't be able to buy plain old music CDs anymore because the RIAA won't release it unsecured like that.
Then, much like now, the RIAA won't get a dime of my money. There are a lot of extremely talented independent artists out there. Try CD Baby.
Looks like Yahoo's acquisition of MusicMatch is starting to pay dividends. I have subscribed to MM Radio and On Demand for a few years now and it is money well spent in my opinion. Type a song or artist, play it instantly. Now you can save On Demand songs to your library to play along side your local tracks. It's a seemless solution that provides constantly changing music for me while I'm at work.
This latest Yahoo news seems to provide the final link... saving On Demand tracks to portable devices. Hopefully this will see its way into MusicMatch in the next release...
Who on earth green lights these doomed projects? I'll tell you: someone who's probably already thinking about his next job.
So when do we get GoolgeTunes??
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. - Douglas Adams
To compete with anybody, you have to create market advantage. Going it on Price alone is pretty tough unless you price is REALLY low.
Yahoo! has combined several elements that make this subscription service worth the price of two cups of Coffee at Starbucks:
- Low price that undercuts competition by 50% +
- $0.79 song burn ability.
- Build your own/120 pre-built radio stations that stream commercial free music to your desktop (look out XM/Sirus?)
- plugins for Instant Messenger and other applications that allow you to recommend songs to friends
- Decent 1M song catalog to choose from (though 33% smaller than Apple's 1.5M - too bad)
Yahoo! obviously looked at the landscape and said "we can't be on the iPod and we have to use WMA DRM, so how can we offer something competetive based on what exists today?"
Now, I don't think Yahoo! is going to get the volumes to make this service profitable since $0.99 downloads don't leave much margin for, well, margin. But the service just might put pressure on Apple to release their own subscription service. And that would be a good thing.
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
When I was a teenager, I was able to play my parent's LP's. I still could if I wanted to. Turntables are still easy to buy. I expect the same will be true of CD's.
We can do it im sure , It just takes us infroming our family and freinds and persuading them that it is a dangeour to our rights . . ..us . . ,even if victory for them is inevatable , then i and hopefully many others will not make it easy for them. ,stranger things have happend
Im not talking just the USA im talking the whole world
This in essence is a tech problem and who do they come to when they have a tech problem
I didnt mean to sound rude i apoligise for that , I just think we can fight it
I will continue to opose it till the bitter end
Perhaps we can succed
The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
Give it a week or two. DVD Jon will most likely release a solution.
I have never seen people complaining about the Apple DRM, yet everytime when somebody else is using DRM everybody screams like hell.
:)
I also don't understand the iPod fashion. For me is the other way. If everybody has an iPod I'd rather buy something else. There are devices out there that even they may not be as good as iPod they are so close that it does not matter.
As for now the Yahoo subscription is by far the best way to fill my device with music. Hey, it even works with my cell phone (Audiovox SMT5600)
I saw a story about this on yahoo last night (can't find it now but I think I have the link at home).
I thought that once said it was 6.99 per month or $60 annualy (didn't mention the 4.99 price) and it also said something about the files expiring after a month so you would have to renew them.
It sounded like a really crappy deal compared to how it comes off in this article.
Did anyone else see that or was I just halucinating?
This idea that Apple is behaving like Microsoft by not supporting WMA playback is insane. Microsoft were the ones that ran off can came up with their own proprietary format in the first place! Apple is supporting the playback of open standards (mp4) and the most common format out there (mp3). How shocking that they do not support the proprietary format their competitor came up with for the sake of screwing them!
Does Yahoo's service require XP in order to do a transfer to portable devices? I am still on Windows 2000 for gaming and such, and do not want to "upgrade" to XP (I know better than to ask if they have Linux support - sigh)
I read that it doesn't support buying tracks and transferring them to an iPod, which is odd. Does anybody know if this will change?
There are 3 primary (legal) ways to get your music now.
1. Buy a CD
Pro: This is the most flexible option. You can burn as many times as you want, get the highest quality sound, nice storage format (CD's are nice and thin and you can fit thousands on a bookshelf), etc.
Con: This is also the most expensive method, especially when you count all the bad tracks on a typical album.
2. Buy a permanent download license for a digital track
Pro: You can burn to a CD (which you can turn into MP3). Your license does not go away as long as your PC does not go away. Download to select portable devices.
Con: Not as high fidelity as CD. Per song price is not better than a CD, if you lose your license somehow, it is good as dead.
3. Get a subscriptioni license for a digital track
Pro: Cheapest by FAR (per song)! Can download to select WMA portable devices.
Con: Not as high fidelity as CD. Your license goes away if you end your service.
Just choose whatever fits you best. What is wrong with that?
iRiver's players are top quality and have superior sound. This comes from personal testing (iMP-400 & H10) and from reading the main tech forums.
What about a plugin that rips off the DRM and converts your songs automatically into mp3.
I dont know much about the different DRM schemes and formats (id like to, any resources?)
I know this isnt the most legal or ethical thing, but how will they account for this?
Hmm unless I just havnt heard about it I guess no other download service has really been hit by this, but they also dont support plugins that would make it easy to automatically convert the users whole library from within the program.
"how can they call it a MINE if everything here is THEIRS?!?!" -Straight Jacket
worse comes to worse, just record the voltages coming off your sound card, put it in a .wav file and encode that with codec of your choice.
Defeating DRM is also the future.
This is a war the RIAA and its ilk can't possibly hope to win. With the increasing saturation of high-tech devices, people are forced to adapt and becoming increasingly competant with technology.
By the time we hit the point where Joe User knows how to find DRM-defeating applications, what hope do the DRM purveyors possibly have?
how cute is that?
Excellent.
Is there a Linux version?
Will it run under Wine?
What about a version for the Mac?
I use a Linux desktop at home and I try to avoid software that ONLY works on one OS.
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Doesnt work on Windows 2003 sucks... iTunes does but I wont use that shit.. musikcube 4life
has anyone managed to signup to this who is in the UK?
I would rather get locked into iTunes and own the music. Then get locked into Yahoo and rent the music.
FWIW, I don't care if people label me a karma whore, and I'm in the "I own a Mac [you insensitive clod]!" segment of "Reasons why not to use Y! media player" below. I highly doubt Yahoo! could duplicate the existing ease-of-use between applications on the Apple platform anyway and still have it be worth their time and money.
Also, while iTunes was an obvious, admitted ploy to sell Apple hardware... it did work, didn't it? :-)
--crap lameness filter--crap lameness filter--crap lameness filter--pretend this is a separator--
While Yahoo! embarks on a proper marketing and PR campaign (shouts out to Liz and Charlene), I thought I'd give you (friends, family, fellow geeks) the real story, human to human, on why you should (or shouldn't) use the new Yahoo! Music Engine.
FWIW, my name is Ian Rogers. I used to work with Beastie Boys, for their record label Grand Royal, at Nullsoft (where Justin and Tom made Winamp, SHOUTcast, and Gnutella), and most recently had a very small company called Mediacode with my main man Rob Lord (who started IUMA and brought Nullsoft up with Justin). We sold Mediacode to Yahoo! in Dec 2003 and Y! has had us in a cave ever since building the Yahoo! Music Engine and some other stuff we can't tell you about yet.
But down to the reason you're reading this. I'm asking you to ditch Windows Media Player (aka WiMP, sorry John, Mark), Winamp (pour out a little liquor), iTunes (sorry Chris and Steve G), MusicMatch (apologies to my new brothers and sisters), Rhapsody (you were my first for-pay love, ya tramp), and Napster (THROW ANOTHER STACK OF BENJAMINS ON THE FIRE!), and use Yahoo! Music Engine instead. (If you're using Foobar2000, keep on, brother man, I ain't going to war with y'all purists.)
Here's why you should switch to the Yahoo! Music Engine:
For the Friends/Family:
* PRICE! $5/month subscription service with subscription downloads (transfer your downloads to your subscription-capable device). Yes, this is the same set of features that Napster is charging you $15 for. This is what they call an "introductory price", kids. Buy a year now. I'm not kidding. It ain't going any lower than this, maybe ever. Buy now or regret missing out on the cheapest year of (legal) all-you-can-eat music ever in your life.
* Personalization! I dunno about you, but ALL the other music services and stores seem incapable of showing me music I actually want without me searching for it. Our pages are PERSONALIZED TO YOUR MUSIC TASTE. The front page for me at the moment contains The Fall, Muddy Waters, Stevie Wonder, Television, and Clikatat Ikatowi. If you know me, you know they're doing pretty damn good.
* CHOICE! If you don't like the idea of subscribing to your music, you can rip CDs, play downloaded music, or even spend $0.99/track if you'd like. Whatever your preference, we make it work. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO PAY ANYTHING TO HAVE FUN WITH OUR PLAYER.
* Community! AOL has the most popular instant message program and not one of their 500 media apps takes advantage of it! LAMERS! Ours allows you to LISTEN TO MUSIC FROM YOUR FRIENDS via Yahoo! Messenger! LEGALLY! YOU HEARD ME! Also, you can find users with tastes similar to you, view their collections, instant message them, whateva. Rad.
* iPod support!Kinda! We support the iPod to the extent that Apple will let us -- which means we support transfer of non-DRM tracks (your ripped and "imported" content) to the iPod.
* Huge catalog of the highest quality files of any paid service. Our subscription service and download store spits out dual-pass 192kbps WMA files. They sound hearty, even in my living room. And, there's LOTS of them. Music everywhere I turn. From mainstream to obscure. 1M tracks and counting. Shatner! Fela! The Germs!
* Free, fast, MP3 (even high bitrates), AAC, Ogg, and FLAC encoding. We support the widest variety o
-Rob
Marriage doesn't have to suck!
IMO DRM would be great if it were applied differently.
Let's say I purchase the rights to enjoy a recording. If the DRM was set up so that I could acquire a replacement copy for any device I wish to enjoy my purchase on, then it's great.
Imagine, your CD collection is stolen. No big deal. You own the right to listen to the music and all you have to do is download a new copy! NO CHARGE.
Of course it would take some sort of standardization, and the RIAA would never go along because so much revenue comes from replacing media.
How many of you have purchased the same recording on"
on-line digital music store format, CDROM, mini-CD, Cassette, Vinyl, 8-track, reel to reel?
Aside from a non-compatible format, I can't stand the thought of all my music going away if I don't want to subscribe anymore.
Exactly. The thing I don't like about these 'leasing' services is they're basically radio, except you can pick the songs. This tends to be fine for those who buy a cd and a month later trade it in (at a loss mind you), but nowadays with digital music, there's no reason to do that anymore. And Yahoo's radio stations are very unappealing to me. I stopped listening to radio years ago because it's just pumped with the same crap that the labels wanna push out the door as quick as possible so they can recoup their 'investment'. Not only that, there are, literally, 1000's of internet radio stations worldwide that do a much better job. Traditional music radio's days of intersting and useful have been over for quite some time.
I want my music for the long term. I want my kids to be able to play it 20 years from now if they want.
That's what JHymn is for. 'Nuff said.
I actually own my music. I'm not worried about its life (aside from making sure I have a backup) and I'll have it 5,10, probably 20 years down the road. There's a great server project for mp3 & m4a files called mt-daapd. I simply copied all my music off to an external firewire hd. Plug that into my fedora server running mt-daapd. Tell mt-daapd where to look for the files and any default playlists to provide to anyone on my network. And that's it. Right now, I'm pretty sure daapd is a iTunes only thing, but you can rest assured that there will be various open source music clients that will support it in the future. Some probably do already.
This coupled with a great lil util called OurTunes allows any friends or relatives who come over to be able to 'borrow' anything from my server. It's a really useful tool.
So you still have options. You just have to consider them and most people don't which is why they complain or stall or whatever. I personally don't give in to the M$ WMA tools as pretty much all of them suck. They're focused more around control and ownership vs. the Apple stuff was about music first and then the DRM stuff second. But then again, that's typical of the M$ way of thinking. Sure, no one likes DRM, but if there's a way around it (which there will probably always be), then fine.
-----
Always another way.
The problem with these WMA look-a-likes is that not one of them has the necessary branding. They spring up each day and the more that come up, the less visibility each individual WMA shop gets. Who'd want to compete in a saturated market which, so far, has proven to be a break-even proposition at best?
People complain about Apple not supporting WMA; however, the logic of doing so is non-existent for them. WMA's a bit player in the market today. People download songs, illegally, in MP3. WMA stores pretend they're selling MP3. It's the de facto standard for audio compression. In the legal sphere, all WMA stores combined haven't held a candle to iTMS.
Yet people still think it'll work? It makes absolutely no sense. If I were someone going to sell music, I'd work at encouraging the other players to support AAC. WMA's a sick horse that needs to be shot in the head, nine times. AAC is a non-proprietary format and it's the logical evolution from where MP3 left off.
I really doubt these companies are bristling with idiots. Microsoft must be paying quite a bit to get them to go along with this. That's my only guess as to why WMA's the tried-and-failed format for these clone stores.
That can be a deal-maker sometimes. If I get a hankering for a certain song I remember one day, it can be coming out of my speakers in under a minute. Going to a physical store takes at least 20 minutes depending on your location, and shipping from an online retailer takes at least a day. I'd never even considered impulse purchases of music before the ITMS lowered the barrier this far, and that's not even addressing the cost argument.
The only CDs I buy any more are ones that I've discovered are not listed on the ITMS (yet).
This begs two questions
1) How long till some industrious chap writes a plug-in that will strip the DRM, convert to AAC and sync it with an iPod?
2) How soon can Apple make an iPod that holds Yahoo's 1 Million songs?
PRICE! $5/month subscription service with subscription downloads (transfer your downloads to your subscription-capable device). Yes, this is the same set of features that Napster is charging you $15 for. This is what they call an "introductory price", kids. Buy a year now.
For someone who is talking "human to human" this is laying the marketing on pretty thick. I find it funny that it's a subscription service, and your music will not work without the subscription (right?). This Ian guy says, as if this is a great reason to sign up, that the 5 dollars a month is an introductory price. So once you buy all those shiny cool WMA files, they'll jack up the price and you'll have to pay more if you want to keep listening to them.
Or am I wrong, and you can burn these to CD?
I also found it funny that he dismisses all the other music store programs out there as a way for the companies who own them to just sell you something. Well, yeah. And Yahoo is just selling something too. And if iTunes is little more than a way to "sell you a utlity," how come I use it and like it and don't own an ipod? Also, how come if he has this opinion of iTunes the Yahoo player looks like little more than iTunes drawn with purple crayons?
Personally, I'm getting a little sick of the iTunes is bad because it locks you in to Apple. So let's go to a different music store and get locked in to Microsoft. Yup, problem solved.
I will say though. There are some neat things that a subscription service can provide, such as the "listen to whatever your friends are listening to" feature that this program has. That's a pretty cool idea. I just don't like the idea of owning something only as long as I keep pouring out the money. I'd rather own than rent.
FiGZ.COM - A waste of perfectly good web space
Let's see..
-99 cents to own a song for, essentially, forever...
-or $5 a month to rent it for, essentially, forever...
I've got enough monthly bills without adding one more to the mix, thanks. I don't need WMA's music rental model, at any price.
- Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
Tracks are offered in 192Kbps WMA
We don't need your DRM!
You can't take the sky from me...
You forgot hidden option (4) - buy DRM track that you know you can strip the DRM from.
That's why the Apple store is the only one I'd buy from. I can either burn it or just strip the DRM and use it licence-free forever.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I just downloaded the player and upgraded my service for $1 (was on LaunchCast) ...
TOTALLY AWESOME. That's all I have to say.
This program is really slick. Tons of features, can still do the music ratings, better player than using IE window for my LaunchCast stations ... etc.
Not to mention that this has set the market ablaze:
"RealNetworks fell $1.54, or more than 21%, to $5.74, while Napster, which reports its quarterly results after the market close, plunged $2.04, or more than 32%, to $4.31. Yahoo shares were up 14 cents to $34.20."
Apple is down over 7% too ...
You can create automatic sync's, that will keep files synced to your player, You can also sync the auto playlists.
For example, if you sync your Top Rated (4&5 Star) Playlist to your player, whenever you sync, that automatically generated playlist will be synced to the device, as you change the ratings, the songs synced to the player change.
It handles video and photos as well, for players that have that capability. I use virtually the same sync settings to sync Music and Video to the storage card on my Pocket PC and Music to my Creative MuVo. Same playlists for each player, + Video playlists for the Pocket PC.
Keep WMA away from me. Talk about a festering pile of horse crap. They think it's just a matter of giving it enough time. They'll learn about time.
That's because in 20 years there will be no RIAA.
Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
Every track I've ripped from my own CD's is in WMA format, and none of them have any DRM at all.
My definition of stealing is this. If I have something an artist is selling, and they did not get money from my purchase - then it is stolen, in all the ways that matter to me.
So while I love the pricing of allofmp3, and I love the format choices, I simply cannot buy from them knowing the artist I like is not getting anything from it.
So it's either iTunes or CD, which does give money to the RIAA but at least the artist gets some too. I just have to hope that more artsist wake up and get off the poison gravy train, I support independants whenever possible to help keep that transition going.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Support non DRM music providers like Emusic which allow users the freedom to choose which hardware their music plays on.
Have you ever been to a turkish prison?
I would say that Microsoft cares about making all the money in the world, and their strategy is control, whereas Apple cares about making a good-sized profit, and their strategy is making a good product.
Dan Aris
Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
How about paying $13 a month and not being able to choose your music?
Have you ever been to a turkish prison?
Great artist like
Ray Charles
Louis Armstrong
Bob Marley
CCR
All DRM free mp3s.
Have you ever been to a turkish prison?
The result is that Apple hardware and distribution continues to dominate the digital music market, and now the RIAA members PLUS the software and hardware manufacturers have to play Apple's game if they want to control consumer actions via DRM. Must leave a bit of a bitter taste in their collective mouths.
Nothing to see here, move along...
"But that's just my opinion, I could be wrong" - Dennis Miller
This likely means it will be five years before Google comes out with gmusic, which will have no subscription fee and will work by displaying ads or something. But by then, nobody will care.
Sometimes I'll see a dell or creative MP3 player, but hands down I notice more people listening to ipods. On planes most of those people are using a windows based laptop too.
"The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
According to ian c. rogers:
"Correct, but you could also do that with the tracks you buy for $0.99 ($0.79 if you're a subscriber) from Yahoo! Music Unlimited, too. That doesn't differentiate iTunes from us. If paid download/burn is your preferred model, we do that, too, same as iTunes and at the same price or better. Yahoo! Music Engine is not *just* a subscription service, you can purchase burnable tracks, too. Point is, we give you the choice, Apple does not."
You're not going to get very far from your house with a streaming music source, even a wireless one. This isn't going to help the great majority of iPod users.
If you do add $72 for your gigabyte of Flash memory, the price difference between your solution and the iPod photo at $350 is pretty low if not non-existant.
D
... this is the New World Market. There can only be one winner and everyone else is a loser. Didn't you know that? Don't you read the mainstream press and pundits?
M$, Dell, Walmart, McDonald's... all your primary needs are covered. Now we just wait for the "iPod killer" so we can get on with our digital music life. And certainly Netflix is going down since Blockbuster is "on-line". Thank god I won't have to think about these things anymore...
It's so simple. Sheesh.
MP3 and AAC are the only real standards in quality digital audio
Aren't you completely forgetting OGG and FLAC?
"That's pretty much the only reason that Joe User would want a non-DRM solution."
No, I want it because when I buy a CD, I make a copy for my wife so we both can listen to it.
Is that okay? Yeah. But I'll bet the record companies don't think so.
Or do you subscribe to the wacky theory that my wife and I must buy separate copies of the same music?
The compression. Most CD's now are compressed to increase the percieved loudness much like most FM broadcast stations.
But isn't it likely (or even inevitable?) that digital audio files will suffer from the same thing? i.e. be mastered from the same digital source, once it's been compressed?
No. He's talking about dynamic range compression. Basically, you boost the volume of the entire track so that the CD sounds louder when you put it in your car. Of course, this mashes the TOP of the dynamics range (volume) into a flat line, **compressing** that range into a smaller spectrum.
Makes most music sound like crap.
This is decidedly different from filesize compression (like mp3 or ogg).
How's the personalization working for you?
What do you think of the feature where you can browse music from friends and members with similar music tastes?
Have you tried the smart shuffling feature?
What do you think of how the service shows you what's already "in My Music" while you browse around it?
What do you think of the similarities explorers? How about the user profiles?
How about plugins?
What bugs are you finding in the beta?
What new feature ideas do you have for this sort of service?
http://music.yahoo.com/musicengine
I also saw some $2 dvd's at wal-mart. The problem was I didn't recognize any titles, and most of the plots looked like a bad idea. Probably only slightly less entertaining than the trash from hollywood, but they still seemed like a obscure collection.
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
1 John 4:14
EVERY @#$@# MUSIC PLAYER WILL PLAY MP3.
The LOCK-IN is that an ipod supports only ONE music service (that offers RIAA files of course).
Because Microsoft is willing to license their DRM (which, ONCE AGAIN is REQUIRED in some form to sell RIAA files -- which is what the mass market wants) while Apple is NOT willing to license their DRM.
If you have an Ipod, you can buy RIAA music from exactly ONE online vendor. Apple.
On the other hand, if you have ANY one of the MANY brands of WMA players, you can buy RIAA music from MULTIPLE online vendors because, once again Microsoft, the big evil corportation, are willing to license their DRM.
Yes, it flies in the face of reason that Apple, who "doesn't make money off itunes, only off ipods" would NOT want to expand their ipod customer base by allowing music from other servicees to play on their portable. Well, it does if you really believe that Apple doesn't view itunes as a cashpot (either currently or in the future).
Please! Love your ipod if you want, but face reality just a LITTLE bit.
"nd you can continue listening to the same music for the same price"
Really? Yahoo has committed to that price point for the rest of eternity?
or are you just full of crap?
What I meant was: isn't it likely that the raw digital audio file that is used to master the CD will be the same one that is compressed to AAC for iTunes? (AAC/iTMS just being an example).
That is, is there any reason why they wouldn't compress the already dynamically compressed audio?
Well, one reason would be that it would be dumb, but seeing as they already do it on radio and CD, well...I'm not hopeful myself.
Er, anyway, hopefully that makes it clear what I meant. Sorry for any confusion.
DRM is the future, you can't stop it. Your children in 20 years won't be able to buy plain old music CDs anymore because the RIAA won't release it unsecured like that. If they still sell physical media, they'll have changed the format over to something DRM'd.
;)
Oh, hogwash!
You are making the assumption that all music is created by the RIAA and that CD format is dead or dying.
1. Even vinyl is not dead. I can still buy brand new vinyls of new releases of bands I like. Sure they maybe are things you have never heard of and I have to order them, but these are professional non-indie releases from Europe and the states. But in reality audiophiles will have access to music they want even if they have to make their own mix tapes.
2. I don't know about the rest of you, but I can't find a great deal of music that isn't RIAA on iTunes which of course forces me to buy CD's from Europe or special order. Most of these are major labels in Europe but they are not a part of the RIAA in the states.
3. Most music that is DRM'd sucks anyways. *coughs* Well that is my opinion, but I think you are wasting your money if you are buying a Britney Spears CD and you're wasting your bandwidth if you are downloading it. Loose/loose situation. Most of you people just listen to music because you've been told it's "cool" or "the in thing" or you want to be all "gansta" like. Well... If that were the case I'd not listen to music at all. (No I don't work at a record store, why do you ask?)
4. If I am still alive in 20 years (see number 5) then I will most likely still release CD's for my record label (see my link for our only CD!)
5. In 20 years, downloading music will be the least of the kids worries...
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
Linux users are entirely screwed either way.
Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
For any of you legal buff's out there....
Is there any merit to somebody filing a lawsuit in the RIAA for requiring DRM on music downloads from the premise that they are effectively writing their own copyright laws, and therefore breaking established law?
A community-oriented lyrics site
I would certainly hope that a music player would support MP3. Any that didnt would be a poor choice. (I dont entirely rule out the possibility that such a device exists)
iPod would/will play music from any source of music that offers music in a standard format (eg, MP3).
I will note that I don't even consider accepting music in *any* sort of proprietary non-standard format, unless it could be trivially *converted* to MP3 format, be it from Apple or MS, therefore vendor lock in for such a case is irrelevant. The only concerns are "Does it play MP3 music", and "Does it offer MP3 music" - any device or service which could not answer 'Yes' to the appropriate question would be of absolutely no interest at all.
I will also add that the only 'digital music playing devices' I currently own include a PC (which does not use any software from *either* MS or Apple), and an old CD player that can play both std CD's and ones containing MP3 - but if I were ever to decide to purchase a new 'digital music player', MP3 would be my only interest (well, Ogg, but I wont hold my breath).
I would have no interest in any capability for, or service providing, any DRM/proprietary format. Any question of *which* of multiple such formats a player did or did not support wouldnt even be remotely relevant.
The argument assumes that the entire point of buying an 'MP3 player' would be to subscribe to some sort of online service - an assumption which is not valid. (Albeit one which I'm sure RIAA and/or the online services would like to help spread)
I don't understand people's issues around DRM. Sure... it's pointless... but all you have to do is buy it, download it, burn it to CD, and then rip the CD to your format of choice (e.g. 192kbps VBR mp3) and *wha-la* - yer DRM-free.
I'm a huge Rhapsody fan - by far the best subscription available, especially with the new support for portables (incl. iPod) and local files.
AAC is far more open than WMA is.
If you're speaking about the DRM - They're both unacceptably closed. If it doesn't play under Linux and on my Treo 600, I don't want it.
(Actually, iTMS accessed via pymusique fits these requirements exactly, which is why I use it.)
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
Yahoo hops on the same confusion, introducing "Yahoo! Music Engine" and "Yahoo Music Unlimited". Slashdot says "Perhaps most interesting to the Slashdot crowd is that the Yahoo Music Engine is built on an open platform that facilitates plug-ins". But so what? Is this interesting if I don't care about "Yahoo Music Unlimited"? Winamp "facilitates" plug-ins too, so... so what?
I tried to read the Ian Rogers page, but it was all blah blah blah rah rah rah. He dives right in with why you should use Yahoo Music Engine with the first bullet point being "PRICE! $5/month subscription service"--but he's not talking about the music engine, is he? He's talking about Yahoo Music Unlimited. So what the hell, even the tech guy can't get this right? Or is he just buying entirely into the "I am a vehicle for PR too"?
Finally, Yahoo Music Engine doesn't run on Macs, and files downloaded from Yahoo Music Unlimited don't play on iPods, so why is this in the category "Apple"?
It's the definition of sound.
The key advantage of CDs (and any subsequent lossless digital transmission) is that they produce far less degradation (in fact, no degradation whatsoever) from the original recording, typically made with very high-end equipment which has very low distortion and very little noise.
Whereas other storage media such as analog magnetic tape (which CDs replaced) has inherent losses no matter how high-end your recording/playback equipment is due to physical limitations of the media itself.
FM transmission is another example - No matter how good the input is, FM transmission is inherently limited in its audio SNR, frequency response, and dynamic range, even in situations with a strong signal. Over any moderate distance, additional channel noise at the receiver will degrade things even more.
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
I bought 3 of these files recently, not from Yahoo, but another well known co. They were the WMA format. Once I got them I wanted to burn them to CD, well you can't. On top of that the next day I ran the Windows Media player, I got some message that it was 'updating my catalog' or some such nonsense. After that the WMA files would'nt play, said they could'nt find the codec. I called and emailed the place I bought if from, they said it was a windows problem, sent me to M$, they said it was a problem with the place I bought it from. This went back and forth for a couple of days.
Finally I called the CC company and asked them. The nice lady said it sounded like a defective product, she asked if the company I bought it from refused to take care of it. I said yes, she said no problem and struck the charges from my bill.
I downloaded iTunes I ( i don't have an iPod) bought my 3 songs.... and there's a big ole burn CD button on the right top of itunes app!!!! I burned my CD and guess what 1 week later I can play my songs in iTunes, I can play my CD... I know iTunes is DRM'd, but it works as opposed to the Crappy MS wma files with thier server resident codecs.
I'm sure M$ will get thier stuff working correctly in a couple of years, after they have more closely ripped of Apple (as usual). But I like iTunes because it works the way it's advertised. When will companies learn that.
So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
How is there zero guarantee? You CAN convert into another format, right? I mean, you DO have to burn it and re-rip it, but you can still get it in a format that, assuming decoders still exist for it in that time span, you'll be able to play it.
Not so with most of the other DRM scheme, since you can't convert it to a different, un-DRM'd format.
So as I see it, you don't have a valid concern, or at least the strength of your statement is much stronger than it should be.
Blake
Apple doesn't have a monopoly. They have a large chunk of the digital music player market. They have a music store that in and of itself brings them ~$0 profit. They have a great business model which any other company can step up and take, and that model is the old "Sell the razor blades and give away the razor" model. Apple sells the iPod and breaks even with the media. They make their money through selling hardware, the iPod. (digression: It's the same with their computer hardware which is why you'll never see an x86 version of Mac OS X.) This is the place where everybody else is failing in the non-subscription based market. Now, you'd think it would make sense to support WMA, but then, that has nothing to do with their monopoly now, does it? After all, their monopoly is in their own DRM scheme and their own digital music store, which isn't making them any money in and of itself. Support for WMA would also open them up to the downfalls that so many users of MS software experience. (EG: have you ever tried playing WMA files on Mac? Even in WMP some of them still suck badly compared to WMP for Windows. Ever tried playing protected WMA files on a different computer?) These problems would make the iPod look bad, and who wants to make their cash cow look bad? This would in turn make Apple look bad. And for what purpose? All because somebody wants support for a proprietary format, and that's not even including the DRM that would come along with it. No, supporting WMA doesn't make sense.
When the computer copies the encrypted song to an iPod, the key is copied as well (if it's not already there- I have about 200 songs from ITMS, and most of them are encrypted with the same key. The program seems to generate new keys every few months.) Programs like jhymn simply read the key from the iPod's key repository and use it to decrypt the audio chunks in the .m4p file, writing the result out as an .m4a file.
There's this awesome program for OS X that lets you make MP3 files for any audio handled by the Mac (e.g. from iTunes, DVD player or any other source).
Is it possible to write a pseudo audio driver for windows and capture the output in a digital form? If so then the music could be re-encoded in some other format (pick your favorite).
I realize there would be a loss of quality in re-encoding the music but given that they claim to support 192 kbit WMA files perhaps this would be acceptable.
And given the exandability of Yahoo's program why couldn't this be created as an add-in and automatically transcode the music (perhaps as it plays for the first time)?
Any windows developers want to comment?
the terms and conditions?
You can buy a burnable copy that is a non-drm'd format that can be transferred to an IPod or anywhere else (a copy you can keep on your hard drive) for 99 cents. If you have the subscription it's 79 cents.
click me
Quicktime is required for two reasons: (1) iTunes uses the quicktime libraries to do the actual sound output, and (2) the DRM functions which do the decryption (and the encryption, when you make a purchase from ITMS) are part of the quicktime libraries.
I still have the same turntable I bought in 1970, and it will play 100-year-old 78's that my parents have, along with all the vinyl I've bought over the years. I recently decided to replace the cartridge. They're still manufactured, and I had no trouble finding them at the local stereo store and on the internet.
I also wouldn't expect CD players to go away anytime soon, as there are millions (billions?, trillions?) of CD's around.
"this is the biggest load of BS ever. please explain yourself. why can't other people support mp3 constant, mp3 variable, AAC, wav etc. ?
the only thing that you can be sure of is that if you have DRM WMV the only people legally using your service are Windows users. seems like yahoo is the one denying support from people."
Apple iPod only supports their proprietary DRM (fairplay), which they will not license to anyone. Apple could license WMA, however, for the Mac and the iPod, but they refuse. It's pretty clear who is putting up road blocks for compatibility to lock in their customers.
Vote for Pedro
Thanks, but no thanks. I'll pass.
--Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
Leaving the idiotic subscription model aside, what exactly are the "usage rights" for purchased music on Yahoo?
How many times can a purchased song be burned to CD? How about playlists? How many times can they be burned? There's nothing on Yahoo's site that answers these questions and only vaguely mentions the option of purchasing "burnable downloads"
How can you buy something when you really don't know what you are going to end up with?
There is only one player, and one player to rule them all. Don't forget, it's still free. It doesn't just play music either.
Video Lan
I'm not understanding the resistance to subscriptions. Anyway, it's a choice, choose the idea that's right for you. Maybe you want full access to a small music collection. Or maybe, like me, you're willing to have somewhat restricted access to a tremendous collection. I don't buy the argument that the music will dissapear at some point. Consider movies: a few of us want to own all our movies so we buy DVDs, but most of us are fine renting movies when we want to watch them. I don't worry about Blockbuster going out of business because I'm confident I'll be able to access movies from a different source. The subscription model is more sustainable than online music stores. It provides a recurring revenue stream whereas stores like iTunes barely make a few cents on each $0.99 song, according to a Jupiter Research study.
Me too (tm). In fact, after being an early enthusiast and buying a good deal of music on the iTMS, I have now pretty much gone back to CDs (usually bought at concerts so the artist receives all the money). I only use iTMS for the occasional instant gratification.
An example of why: I have given some iTMS gift certificates to my 11-year-old nephew and now he has a bunch of songs on his computer. Recently he got a Sony PSP and asked me how to transfer some of his songs onto the PSP. I felt bad telling him that he couldn't transfer any of the songs he bought on-line.
This is the kind of restriction of Fair Use that scares me.
The only difference between Kazaa and allofmp3.com is that with allofmp3 you are paying for the convenience of easier stealing. Don't think you're not stealing just because you're paying money.
Yahoo should tie their DRM to my new RealID national ID card so that I could play their music on any device, any time, any where. Then I, for one, would welcome my new totalitarian overlords with my shiny new iPod.
since neither Macs nor iPods support any form of WMA, much less the DRMed version, this article seems to be on apple.slashdot.org to start a flame war where the majority of people say:
1. It doesn't work on my iPod or Mac
2. I want to own my music, because Steve told me that I do.
Guess what. You're not their target market.
Vote for Pedro
Subscription services aren't really a competitor to buying music. You're not paying to own music, as you point out. You're paying to be able to listen to any of the ~ 50,000 albums they own, instantly, from your computer. The two important points are: 1) this is not a service that would be reasonable to expect for free 2) it is a service that is eminently useful if you spend much time near Windows and like a wide variety of music.
The same point you made comes up every time there's an article about subscription services. I'm not sure how else to say it: you are paying to be able to listen to any of tens of thousands of albums, instantly, from your computer. If that's not attractive to you, fair enough, but stop criticizing it for failing to be something it's not trying to be.
Why won't this work:
Different formats that require different players.
Hollywood Video and Blockbuster Video both do OK because they both rent and sell content that will play in the same devices. (DVD Players or VCR's)
If they both had started up today and insisted on selling movies that each required different hardware players I.E. -- Blockbuster decides to bring back the BETA format tapes (AAC) and Hollywood Video decides to go with laser discs (WMA) -- and the consumers all have VCR's (MP3)....would anybody be surprised when they did nothing but confuse and piss off the customers?
I understand that up to "4 billion" people have purchased Ipods, and that market pretty much has to be listened to....So Yahoo! comes up with a service that supplies WMA's that cannot be decoded on the defacto hardware base? Hu...Hell I am not an Ipod guy, and I have 3 or 4 "generic" MP3 players that can also do WMA.....But not the DRM-WMA.
It is fine to let the software format help define the hardware format when the market is new....But after becoming entrached over a 5 or 6 year period it seems ludicrous to push a software format that will not play on the millions of devices already purchased and in use in the market place.
Stupid.
(+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
WTF is wrong with you Ipod people? Your bitching about Yahoo for not selling popular tunes in NonDRM mp3 format? Are you people fucking stupid? Yahoo who cannot under any circumstance sell MP3 files from top 40 artists without DRM is supposed to support the Ipod? How?
Apple will NOT allow anyone else to license their DRM. So wtf is Yahoo supposed to do? Oh right I'll go along with you idiots. They are supposed to somehow magically support the Ipod via plain old mp3. *cough*
I can't believe the number of pro-Ipod mods there are here who keep modding this garbage up. btw No offense to the normal Ipod users out there who aren't caught up in the "ipod is the greatest gift to mankind" craze. Much offense to those who have completely lost the ability to be logical.
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
Assuming I live 50 more years. At $60 a year that would be $3000 for a lifetime of unlimited* music (not including inflation, because it's all relative). That sounds like a good deal to me.
Note: I'm still not signing up. *grins*
*limited to the companies that sign on
"Man, I am so unbelievably stupid."
Something interesting that I just noticed is Yahoo's command-line plugin which allows you to use shell-like commands (ls, cd, etc.) to browse their store.
It's really nice idea in theory, but unfortunately only works on an OS with minimal shell integration. Perhaps they'll support Linux and OSX soon, then again with their WMA-fetish, probably not.
Absolutely right. Some "monopolistic practices" are. Oh, and I'm sick of the cliche posts too... if only the particularly retarded ones.
We've all heard about how artists are not compensated for their music adequately. How does artist's compensation work for these subscription plans? Is the money split evenly over the entire collection? If so, I'd be pissed if I was Metallica and had to share revenue equally with Clay Aikins.
Is it legal to download music from site AllOFMP3.com?
All the materials in the MediaServices projects are available for distribution through Internet according to license # LS-3Ì-05-03 of the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society. Under the license terms, MediaServices pays license fees for all the materials subject to the Law of the Russian Federation "On Copyright and Related Rights". All the materials are available solely for personal use and must not be used for further distribution, resale or broadcasting.
Users are responsible for any usage and distribution of all materials received from AllOFMP3.com. This responsibility depends on the local legislation of each user's country of residence. AllOFMP3.com's Administration does not keep up with the laws of different countries and is not responsible the actions of non-Russian users.
All Of MP3's Terms of Use Contract
Other supporting sites on legalities of useing ALLofMP3
ALLOFMP3 FAQ
Misticriver Forum
A third Forum
and put it on Ipod. They even have pics of someone doing just that on the website.
click me
This is what I have to say to everyone here today.
Joseph?
I half expect to see a headline announcing Google Music one of these days
/. so:
But.... this is
1. See an emerging trend in music download services
2. Launch "Slashdot Music" (ogg format, naturally)
3. Profit!
"She's furniture with a pulse"
Excuse me but did you read my post at all? I gave my own definition of stealing and I'm sorry, you can post all the documents and links you like but if the artists take on my purchase of a song is less than arouding error I consider that stealing in my own mind. Case closed. To you it may not be, great if you can live with it. I can't.
.99 is never too much for a song I like).
I can deal just fine with stealing when it's the only recourse though. So I'll happily download anything not for sale or where the artist is charging too much (though
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I own an iPod. Actually, two. I rip most of my CD's and buy from iTMS. While I'm not nuts about DRM (I'm up against the five computer limit allowed), I also don't see a viable alternative. WMA is unacceptable.
Why? Well, I also own several G4 Power Macs running OS X. If you've ever used WMP on a Mac, you'll know it performs horribly. Even if it's the only thing running. I can imagine how WMA files will. On my linux boxes, I don't have a supported option. no iTMS, no nothing.
Yahoo's music service doesn't support my OS of choice. Now, should I bitch and complain that they need to "open" it up? Or, am I served just as well by iTMS (the devil I know) and can realize, that they are somply catering to the majority?
Yahoo's requirements:
*
Yahoo! Music Engine Software
*
Microsoft Windows XP or 2000
*
Internet Explorer 6.0+
*
Windows Media Player 9.0 or higher
*
Pentium III 300 MHz processor (WMP for Mac can't even RUN on a 300 MHZ Mac...hell a 600 MHz G4)
*
128MB Ram
*
Broadband connection for streaming and buying music
*
Latest Windows Service Packs
Napster's requirements:
PC only, Napster To Go-compatible player, Windows XP, Windows Media Player 10, Internet connectivity.
So regardless, I'm locked out.
All the railing I've seen in this thread about DRM, about choice, about how easy it is to license WMA... it's does not run/work well on a Mac. it does not run/work at all on linux. It also is not supported via these music stores on the Mac. They don't have a snazzy little front end. So isn't all the bitching about Apple's DRM not providing choice BS? You don't get choice of any other OS with Yahoo or Napster, so if I did have a Rio (which I do, but dont use anymore), I'm still a Mac user, so I'm locked out.
Apple provides that interface for it's own OS (remember iTunes and by default iPods were Mac only for awhile) as well as Windows and I PRAY for Linux soon. So yeah, I have to live with thier DRM, but at least they service my need. To the others Mac users don't exist.
Blacker than my baby girl's stare. Black like the veil that the muslimina wear. Black like the planet that they fear...
I'm sitting here listening to a song on my iPod Shuffle that I bought at Napster with a gift card from my wife last Christmas.
I bought the 10 songs the card allowed me to buy at Napster, burned them to CD, popped the CD into my iBook, and imported the tracks into iTunes. I filled in the blanks with the track name and artist and synced the files over to my iPod.
My point is, I wasn't locked into only iTunes. I buy the majority of my music online from ITMS because it's convenient.
"For a successful technology, honesty must take precedence over public relations for nature cannot be fooled." -Feynman
" WMA is the lock-in(out), not the iPod. Afaik, Ipod will happily play MP3 (If not with the stock software, then certainly with alternate software), which is the only 'not locked in' format.
"
What's so special about mp3? Anyone can license WMA, so there is no lock-in. Apple refuses to a) license fairplay. b) support any other DRM standard on iPod. It is clear that Apple is the one locking you in. Your post is pure spin.
Vote for Pedro
Fact is, Yahoo! is the only large company that's actually focused on features for the user, with no alterior motives. We want users. Not only that, we want network users so we can to tie together all the services we offer.
I laughed my friggin' head off. No alterior motives! That's rich.
Since they're running this service out of the kindess of their hearts, just to attract users, I'll be expecting them to let me permanently purchase songs for less than 99 cents. Otherwise, it's clear they're still making something like a dime-a-song profit... which would be an alterior motive. Like wanting to attract 'network users'...
As usual, parent modded down by a pro-Microsoft troll.
......big freakin deal. I've gotten so annoyed at all of these stupid music download services and their B.S. differences and B.S. DRM and blah blah blah that I've actually gone back to buying CDs.
And you have made the quality of your sound on these files crappier. Compressing stuff that's already compressed, ick.
Not to mention what you describe sounds like a royal pain in the ass.
Carl
Vote Libertarian
Say you have a libary of 100 cds with an average pricepoint of $15.
Instead why not take that $1500, invest it at maybe 4% apr, and you'll get back the $60/year you need to subscribe to yahoo.
By purchasing cds you tie up captial which is essentially being used to license your music anyway.
Also i'd say that subscription based services ARE more likely to gaurantee future access to your music. If yahoo fold then you just subscribe to raphsody instead and you'll stil have the million + songs that you had with y!.
Does it still only play 30 second clips for mp3s your friend has? Anyone want to test it out with me? Y! Messenger name: ssj4android
> If you have an Ipod, you can buy RIAA music
> from exactly ONE online vendor. Apple
You can _directly_ buy _digital_copies_ of RIAA music from exactly one online vendor.
I can buy RIAA music for my iPod from innumerable vendors via other means. E.g.,
1. Log onto Amazon.com
2. Purchase CD
3. Two days later, for free (thanks Amazon Prime!), CD is delivered
4. Put CD in computer
5. Wait 10 minutes
6. DONE. All "RIAA music" on the CD is fully available on my iPod.
Honestly, if you're _really_ concerned about the whole DRM issue (and I agree it's a real issue), then purchase physical CDs for more or less the same cost as on ITMS, and own digital copies of the music in the non-DRMed format of your choice.
Only 20 plug-ins? Heck, my lawnmower has more than that, and it's an old steam-powered model from 1890.
MP3, for digital music collections on your computer, started with the hacker culture and thus uses NO restrictions. The obvious usefulness of restrictionless digital music collections resulted in rapid popularity, which spawned and entire industry of portable and in-car MP3 players.
Congratulations hackers on innovating a popular "itch to scratch" and leveraging first-mover status to have essentially *won* the format wars for audio!
Most labels except the shitty big ones we're always complaining shovel CRAP offer MP3s for sale.
So what are the rest of you complaining about *except* that you want more lube for your next assfucking?!
Yes, it would be nice to have that last mile of Free as in Freedom with Ogg Vorbis. But the competition isn't over format, it's about *content*! Convince more musicians to offer *valued* content in the Vorbis (or FLAC) format, and you'll see more devices supporting it.
.....but does it play OGG VORBIS?
90% of everything is crap. Also, crap is relative.
I think something that everyone has missed here is the transfer over IM feature neatly tucked away on the subscription part. Apparently its full download, not just alla iTunes shared libraries. Thats worth the $5 in my books.
Does Yahoo have the cash or sufficient stock value to swap to buy a major RIAA label? (Not a rhetorical question, I actually don't know, haven't had occasion to look.)
Tech Public Policy stuff
take the battery out if you don't use it then, your 30 days will become 45 if you stop the clock every night for example...
Not so with most of the other DRM scheme, since you can't convert it to a different, un-DRM'd format.
jHymm for iTunes, Old Winamp + out_stacker for any WMA DRM. Only difference is that with jHymm I keep the same file sans drm. With Winamp I have a lossy uncompressed wav, so I either recompress it and lose more quality but recoup major space or I go lossless such as flac.
Can I get an eye poke?
Dog House Forum
I burned them to an Audio CD which I then imported as AAC files.
How is that compressing something that is already compressed?
"For a successful technology, honesty must take precedence over public relations for nature cannot be fooled." -Feynman
And how much is DIY going to cost up-front? How much more if one has to pay somebody else to set it up? And ... if nobody buys, the musician gets to eat the business loss.
Also, this is money a musician doesn't have to work for over and above uploading the track. No inventory hassles, no worries about bandwidth.
11 cents is also comparable to the 25 cent/album royalties which a band can expect for it's label.
I tell musicians to pick up on this via http://www.cdbaby.net/dd?f=1, they handle CD and digital distribution for musicians. IIRC, iTunes doesn't deal direct with non-RIAA labels.
BTW, CDBaby's numbers don't match yours, they's suggesting a musician is more likely to clear around 50 cents/track sale.
Tech Public Policy stuff
I just played with the beta of the Yahoo! music program. It's pretty slow with my 13K tracks -- lots of pausing as I browse. It makes iTunes and WMP 10 seem speedy.
The deal breaker for me: no support for "Album Artist"... and it completely ignores multiple "Artists" (Contributing Artists) per track.
Once you use "Album Artist" to organize compilations, soundtracks, mix albums, etc... anything else is useless. It keeps browsing nice and clean.
Don't get me started with iTunes' brain-dead "compilation" flag! I can't believe Windows Media Player 10 rules in this regard.
AAC+Fairplay -> Uncompressed CD -> AAC
Compressed -> Uncompressed -> Compressed
That last step is RECOMPRESSING the files.
This isn't rocket science.
And if you are going to just re-import them as AAC, why on EARTH aren't you just using something like hymn or whatever it's called? Besides saving the quality of the music (because no re-compression is done), you also save a CD.
I said "the companies associated with the RIAA"
I'm sorry, I'll type slower next time so even you can understand.
Of course, as a mac user, I cannot play DRM'ed WMA files anyway.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
I don't understand how this is supposed to hurt Apple's iPod. By being incompatible? By being worthless? Are we supposed to throw away the iPods, get rid of our Macs, run right out and buy a Wintel box and invite the hackers, pop-ups, spyware and viruses so we can save 10 cents on a crappy mp3?
Wasn't Napster the Windows alternative, here to save the universe from those nasty pirates? Didn't they just lose something like $23 million? Everyone must have been too busy installing patches to listen to music.
And there's this thing called radio. I don't have all the specs, but I've been listening to it for 50 years and never had to pay for it yet.
Why is no one reading this ?
The subsidies are most likely internal, either in the form of trying to get ad revenue (or even payola), or by running the store as a loss-leader to improve market share.
Buying a label is a lost cause; they don't have much in the way of intrinsic value. It's the same problem they had eight years ago... they don't get it, and can't take advantage of the opportunities that are theirs to grab!
Disclaimer: I don't own a digtial musice player, but if I did it would be an iPod and there are a nujmber of reasons behind that.
1. Confusion. There is a problem with the various Windows WMA music stores, a big problem: There are too many of them. Napster, Yahoo, MSN, Coke, Wallmart etc. Yahoo's store looks like the cheapest/month, at the moment, but I'm pretty sure that some other store will somehow compete pretty soon. The problem is that these stores are not compatible with one another (obviously) and that there is no vast difference between them. While they all offer subscription, only a few offer the ability to download and buy single tracks. This cannot be stated enough. All of these stores are fighting amongst one another for a small slice of the market. They all claim to be "The iPod/iTunes alternative", but the reality is that they fight amongst one another for the paying twice for the same song. Once to listen to it on subscription, and twice to "own" it forever.
3. Features vs. Ease of use. All of these stores, and especially this Yahoo one, offer loads of features. Look at this idiot geek wetting himself about features like skins and plug-ins. He's basically saying that WinAmp is now part of an online store. The thing is that one of the reasons that the iPod and iTunes is so popular is that it is very very simple. It offers a basic, easy to understand business model. Basically, it is, you pay for a song and you can play and do with it what you want afterwards, basta.
The iPod doesn't have built in TV, FM, or a razor. It just plays music. It's also simple.
Most people just want to listen to their music that they bought. They are not interested in skins for the player, or OGG format or having to fork out next month's payment.
4. All of Apple's competitors complain about the iPod and iTunes not being "open". What they are essentially complaining about is that they don't have a slice of the pie. If they were in Apple's position, they wouldn't open their stuff to Apple either.
Uhhh....you lose even more sound quality converting to another format and tools like JHymn are around until Apple decides to make those file unplayable. They've done it before, they'll do it again.
If you have wooden ears then you're right. Even so, why so I have to do all of that work?
As I see it, the poster does have a valid concern.
Man, you almost got me there. Good one! See, you came in, talking about financials like you knew something and I had to actually follow your like to find that you are totally full of crap.
... well, you recall those kids from Berkley?
From your own like, YHOO P/E is 54.5 while AAPL is 30. Certainly a premium for a company that makes nothing and got their asses handed to them by some kids from Berkley a few years back.
Secondly, shares outstanding for AAPL, 817 M compared to 1.385 B for YHOO - hmm, someone has been diluting the hell out of their company to get financed and retain employees. Now Apple does this too, but Apple controls itself.
What does this have to do with anything? Well, you start your flame with a discussion of market capitalization - a calculation of price per share times number of shares which just tells you how much the company could be worth if someone ever bought the company off eTRADE (hah!)
So it's no wonder YHOO has a 48B mcap vs. AAPL's 27B - YHOO trades at a 45% premium over AAPL because of the sky high P/E for a company that
Look, all joking aside, take some sage wisdom here and sell YHOO while it is getting a good deal of attention. When YHOO disapoints on this Music Unlimited thing because it can't make any money with an all you can eat $5 buffett, Walstreet will destroy it. If that isn't good enough reason, know that the P/E can't go much higher - that's why when Napster and Harmony dropped 25% on YHOO news, Yahoo only moved inches. No where to go but down.
What to do with your money if not put it in YHOO? You can come join me over in the AAPL ownership circle. It's a great time to buy AAPL. (It may be a Mac news site, but they are quoting Pipper Jaffray's Gene Munster.
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
"Because Microsoft is willing to license their DRM (which, ONCE AGAIN is REQUIRED in some form to sell RIAA files -- which is what the mass market wants) while Apple is NOT willing to license their DRM."
Microsoft does not have any hardware player of its own, so they must hand out licenses to make their shop successful. MS is nowhere near as generous or open where their own cash cows are involved.
"If you have an Ipod, you can buy RIAA music from exactly ONE online vendor. Apple."
Yup.
"On the other hand, if you have ANY one of the MANY brands of WMA players, you can buy RIAA music from MULTIPLE online vendors because, once again Microsoft, the big evil corportation, are willing to license their DRM."
I do not really know how things are in the US, but here in Europe, must WMA stores buy from On Demand Distribution (OD2) in the UK. So, you get the same WMA songs from OD2 with five different shop frontends. No big deal.
"Yes, it flies in the face of reason that Apple, who "doesn't make money off itunes, only off ipods" would NOT want to expand their ipod customer base by allowing music from other servicees to play on their portable."
Actually, it does't fly in the face of reason. Apples business model is about a tightly integrated system of iTMS-iTunes-iPod. Everything comes from one company, and everything works well together, ans Apple runs and supports the entire system. MS could not care less if the WMA player you bought breaks down tomorrow, or if the company that made it delivers firmware updates or stays in business.
I too want to pay those who are owed money (but I've heard reports of the RIAA ripping off artists as well). I was hoping you would clarify anything by providing more information that I might have missed before. Don't take it personal, but your previous two posts didn't provide any information that could rebuttle my post. So I did some more digging and I did find something. So I will post it here for those who (like me) didn't know before.
The following information was taken from museekster.com
The Music Industry's point of view
The Music Industry claims that Allofmp3 is illegal. Their opinion is that recorded music has three sets of rights. The songwriter has the copyright to the song, the artist his own rights in it, and the record label and producers a third set. Allofmp3 is paying the songwriters, via the collection agency ROMS, but they are acting without the permission of the other copyright holders.
Alan Dixon, general counsel of the IFPI explains their position in an article on Guardian.co.uk
We have asked Andy Mincov, a Russian lawyer and webmaster of www.copyrighter.ru, to comment on Alan Dixon's statement. This is what he replied:
"As for the comment on Alan Dixon, I'm not sure what he meant my a Copyright Code during the Soviet era, because there has not been any such document". The Music Industry has not taken any legal action against Allofmp3 or ROMS. IFPI Russia's legal adviser, Vladimir Dragunov, has admitted that legal actions don't have much chance of succeeding. read more
So I think this was the information you were trying to explain. There are 3 copyright holders:
- The Songwriter
- The Artist
- The Label maker and producer
Under Russian law only the Songwriter holds offical copyright status, therefore the are the only ones who get paid. I do agree that Artist should be compensated for their work, which most of the time is also the song writer.However, with this new information this raises a question in my mind, "Should or how much, if any, money should be given to the record label and producer?" This is due to the fact that if the artist mixed and produced the song all on their own, and the record label is only marketing and distrubiting their content on CD, paper covers, and media (the CD it self, not the songs), essentially the music distrubitor is now allofmp3, not their record label. That's another ball of colorful wax of possibilities that would probably lead, most of the time, to compenstaion eventaually owed to the record labels.
I hope this was the point you were trying to get across. If not, I would definitly encourage a continued friendly discussion. Thanks.
Apple's format is based on an open standard, MPEG-4. Microsoft's format is entirely proprietary.
Yahoo! would have been free to use MPEG-4 AAC as Apple does, and create a DRM wrapper as Apple does, then talk to Apple about adding support for this DRM wrapper in the iPod.
There is a world of difference between what is or is not illegal, and what I consider stealing. That's what you are skipping over, I never said one way or the other anything about AllOfMP3.com being legal.
I am talking about stealing in the moral sense. Not the legal sense.
Yes AllOfMP3 is legal in russia. And if they make it legal to shoot babies who cry on airplanes I'd think that was wrong as well.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
- their catalogues
- current artist contracts
- distribution networks (which are IMO, obsolete)
- their better producers and technical people
- their CD pressing plants if this isn't all outsourced.
Their management adds negative value.Unfortunately, Steve Jobs had a chance to buy Universal and turn access to their catalogue into a profit center for Apple by running it like a real business and instead, chose to reinforce the RIAA business model by paying them by the track and cross-subsidizing iTunes with iPod sales, increasing the market cap of all the RIAA labels in the process.
What was he thinking? I think it was a short-sighted decision to make the price of profitable entry to the "sell by the track" market unviable for anyone not already in the music hardware business.
Sony hasn't been able to take advantage of this because their in-house RIAA label has been pushing "screw the user" DRM into their music hardware... that's why their interesting minidisc format was essentially DOA.
Sooner or later, I think some hardware company will bite the bullet, buy a record label, and bundle 50-100 free tracks from their own catalogue with an iPod killer with a comparable UI and better bells and whistles than the iPod. That'll also have a negative effect on the value of digital tracks from major labels as a whole. There are plenty of other possibilities for an consumer technology company that's decided to do its own thing in the music market.
Apple had better have something new and better at that point if Steve Jobs wants to continue looking like a genius instead of a goat.
Tech Public Policy stuff
Show me the competition, I've been looking for more than a year now, and can't find ANY competitor, NONE.
Please, show me those music shops with about a million songs I can download on my mac.
I'm all for openness, and wouldn't mind some serious competition, it's healthy. But those fucks make each and every shop a windows only party.
To which I say Fuck you very much.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Try this:
(1) Install Yahoo Music Engine.
(2) Tell it to "search for music".
(3) Observe as it corrupts the MP3 tags on all files that it can find.
I just had YME trash the MP3 tags on 3800 files that were correctly cataloged by iTunes. The problem is twofold:
(1) YME doesn't understand the concept of "total number of tracks in an album". iTunes labels files as being "Track 1/14". On finding an MP3, YME immediately strips the track count out, leaving it as: "Track 1".
(2) When you actually PLAY a file in YME, it corrupts the "comment" field by putting some sort of metadata about the number of times played in there.
In short: YME trashed almost 4000 music files and started randomly stomping on comments of files that I actually played.
Result: Uninstalled this piece of shit software and have a very very low desire to ever try it again.