Mac : Everything around Macs and Apple in general, especially topics related to Mac OS X (Jaguar)
Updated: 4.5.2003; 18:02:17 Uhr.

 

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Dienstag, 29. April 2003

Music stations coming to Apple Stores. Following the successful launch of the iTunes Music Store, recent information reveals that Apple plans on providing access to its digital music shop from the dozens of retail outlets spread throughout the United States.

Although the iMac-powered kiosks will double as information and showcase displays, customers will be able to purchase music and take it home with them, provided they bring along an iPod or purchase a disc to burn. "Apple wants to get the point across that the... [Spymac]
10:42:00 PM    comment []


Fortune on Apple Music Store.

There is an onslaught of articles about the new iTunes Music Store on the Fortune web site, including one entitled "Songs in the Key of Steve" [Jobs].

This particular article includes several debatable statements, including the following:

U.S. music sales plunged 8.2% last year, largely because songs are being distributed free on the Internet through illicit file-sharing destinations like KaZaA.

As I already mentioned in previous items, both the industry and the mainstream media have yet to provide any hard evidence that there is actually a causal link between on-line file sharing and music sales.

This same article, however, does provide some valuable information about what distinguishes Apple's offering from previous attempts to establish on-line music retail outlets. For example, the article explains how Jobs was able to convince the industry:

Apple has also come up with a copy-protection scheme that satisfies the music industry but won't alienate paying customers. You can burn individual songs onto an unlimited number of CDs. You can download them onto as many iPods as you might own. In other words, the music is pretty much yours to do with as you please. Casual music pirates, however, won't like it. The iTunes jukebox software will allow a specific playlist of songs or an album to be burned onto a CD ten times. You can burn more than that only if you manually change the order of the songs in the playlist.

This is exactly the kind of stuff that Apple can be excellent at: very simple and effective solutions to seemingly unsolvable problems. Whether this solution will actually be an effective deterrent is another issue. The important point is that Jobs managed to convince the recording industry that it was a solution. And that effectively makes it a solution.

Jobs rightfully chides the recording industry for coming up with totally absurd schemes designed to prevent piracy. The industry's assumption that everyone is a thief is simply insulting. I am glad to see that Jobs is at least trying, with some degree of success so far, to find a middleground.

There is little doubt, however, that the recording industry views this as a test on a relatively small market, where the potential damage if things don't work out as planned will be minimal.

But regardless of what the industry's ultimate motives are, for once, it pays to be in the minority! (Well, as long as you live in the US, that is. Being a Mac user outside the US is even more challenging, as the current US-only status of the iTunes Music Store, and several other Apple offerings, unfortunately illustrates...)

[Betalogue]
10:38:06 PM    comment []

Won OS X Innovators Contest. NetNewsWire and Spring took first and second place in O’Reilly’s Mac OS X Innovators contest. So cool!

Thanks to O’Reilly for the recognition—it’s much appreciated. And it was great to win along with Robb Beal.

But the main thanks as always go to the people who use NetNewsWire. All your bug reports, feature requests, and support are what make the difference between a so-so app and something better.

The next step is just to continue—fix bugs, add new features. Lots of exciting things are to come. [inessential.com]
10:37:07 PM    comment []


iPod Software Updater 1.3. iPod Software 1.3 provides iTunes 4 support, including playback of AAC encoded audio files. [Mac OS X Hot Downloads]
10:36:20 PM    comment []

QuickTime 6.2. Apple?s award-winning software for creating, playing, and streaming high-quality audio and video over the Internet. [Mac OS X Hot Downloads]
10:36:01 PM    comment []

iTunes 4.0. iTunes 4 adds the ability to share music within the same household, play and encode AAC files, and view album art. [Mac OS X Hot Downloads]
10:35:45 PM    comment []

Apple Introduces New iPods [Apple Press Releases]
10:34:53 PM    comment []

Apple Launches the iTunes Music Store [Apple Press Releases]
10:34:32 PM    comment []

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