Archive: April 28, 2003

<<< April 27, 2003

Home

April 29, 2003 >>>


iTunes Music Store

Monday,  04/28/03  10:22 PM

iTunes Music Store
(click for fullsize screenshot)


So, I'm sure you heard, Apple announced their new online music service, the iTunes Music Store. 

They are charging $1/track, and they have deals with all the major labels.  Crucially, downloaded tracks can be downloaded to iPods and burned onto CDs, with no restrictions.  The service is integrated right into iTunes, Apple's free music player.  { By the way, this means it is Mac-only, at least for the time being... }

It looks really, really nice.  $1/track might be too much - I think $.50 is the right price point - but they're definitely on the right track [sorry].  You can preview 30 seconds of any song right in iTunes.  Buy the track, download it, listen to it, copy it to your MP3 player, and burn it onto a CD, all within one app.  The response time using a cable modem was instant.  And the content was there - in my unscientific sampling they seemed to have every artist I could think of, except the Rolling Stones.  { What's up with that? }

It took no time to get setup for buying tracks (they obviously subscribe to the PayPal school of "ask no questions you don't have to").  I downloaded Dead Man's Party by Oingo Boingo in ten seconds, and poof; it was sitting on my hard drive and I could play it (I'm listening to it now).  I downloaded the whole album, it has nine tracks so it cost $9.  I copied it to my iPod, and then burned it to a CD.  So easy...

Time will tell if people really are willing to pay for music this way.  I think people will pay for a great experience (consider Starbucks).  The price might still be slightly too high, but they're getting close.  It sure beats any other online music service hands down (I've tried them all).

As soon as you see it, you'll say "this is the way online music should work".

 

Monday,  04/28/03  11:48 PM

L.T.Smash verbally spanks Chirac, while at the same time reminding us of the long alliance between the U.S. and France.  So we see that Chirac has not only messed up the present relationship, but also sullied the past and placed the future in jeopardy.  Le fool!

Economist Steven Levitt has won the prestigious John Bates Clark medal in economics.  Levitt's most famous co-written paper is The impact of legalised abortion on crime.  [ thanks, Jason ]  GNXP also links this 1999 article in Slate by Levitt and Steve Sailor: Does abortion prevent crime?

In addition to Apple's iTunes Music Store, they announced a new 30GB iPod.  Looks really nice.  I have a 5GB iPod and only recently filled it up.  This one is thinner, lighter, cooler, and holds six times more music.  Hmmm...

Salon likes the iTunes Music Store, too...

So does Fortune...  Dr.Dre: "Man, somebody finally got it right".

C|Net reports: XM satellite radio comes to the PC.  A service with 101 channels which costs $10/month.  On the surface, it would appear price-competitive with iTunes Music Store, eh?  So when is someone going to make a Tivo for radio?

So, do you think Apple is going to do this with movies, too?  I bet they are.  Look for a Quicktime-related service with a similar user model; you preview movies for free (Quicktime is already the largest movie trailer site), download them for a reasonable price, play them, and burn them to DVD all from one application.  The already have an application called iMovie, but it is a movie editor.  How about iVideo?

Salon reports baseball attendence is on the decline, 5% over last year, apparently.  Does this mean people have lost interest?  Is this an economic effect?  War hangover?  Interesting...  Personally, I become an avid Dodger fan right after the Lakers win the NBA championship.

 
 

Return to the archive.