Try http://www.audiolunchbox.com/
They offer a variety of plans - either a la carte or subscription with no DRM and they have a huge selection of indie music
If the major labels really want to try an interesting experiment, why not offer the albums on a store like http://www.audiolunchbox.com/ or emusic.com where the users don't feel handcuffed by DRM. Just a thought..
Sites like http://www.audiolunchbox.com/ Magnatune, eMusic and mp3Tunes are one main reason why this trend is happening. NO DRM, Oggs and sometimes even FLAC - I'd say that is one major reason for the shift. Smaller sites with less mainstream content that let their users actually own the files unrestricted seem to finally be catching on. RIGHTON
Try http://www.audiolunchbox.com/ They offer a variety of plans - either a la carte or subscription with no DRM and they have a huge selection of indie music
If the major labels really want to try an interesting experiment, why not offer the albums on a store like http://www.audiolunchbox.com/ or emusic.com where the users don't feel handcuffed by DRM. Just a thought..
That's a good question - I guess time will tell how this all pans out - have you heard of http://www.badfruit.com/ yet?
Sites like http://www.audiolunchbox.com/ Magnatune, eMusic and mp3Tunes are one main reason why this trend is happening. NO DRM, Oggs and sometimes even FLAC - I'd say that is one major reason for the shift. Smaller sites with less mainstream content that let their users actually own the files unrestricted seem to finally be catching on. RIGHTON