Posts Tagged ‘technology’

MP3 on iTunes: Right format, BUT…

March 24, 2009

Well, they’ve done it. Apple has finally started selling MP3s through the iTunes Music Store (ITMS). However, they’ve driven me back to plastic CDs in the process, and they may have driven-up music piracy as well.

I just downloaded Darlene Zschech‘s excellent rendition of Agnus Dei from ITMS. I originally heard it on Pandora for iPhone. (If you don’t know what Pandora is, it’s an excellent Internet radio site.). Darlene Zschech has earned a reputation as one of the best worship leaders in the world, and this song is a wonderful example of her talent.

The Problem

So imagine my disappointment when I get to the peak of the song, worshipping right along with her, only to hear a familiar static crackle erupt in the background of the song. “Fingerprinting”, “watermarking”, or whatever you may call it, it’s still DRM, MP3-style. Just like Amazon has done with many of their MP3s.

Now, I’m no audiophile. (Carrie will gladly tell you how good my hearing is.) So this is not something the average listener is likely to miss. It certainly interrupted my enjoyment of the song, and left me wondering when I could get to a store to buy the CD.

What?

When I bought an MP3 from Amazon and found watermarking throughout the track, I forgave them the offense. I figured they had a lot of PR money riding on being the first-to-market with legal MP3 downloads. (I forgave them, but I haven’t been back. Watermarking is why.)

But Apple is known for higher-quality stuff. They have always priced their products above the competition, and have earned their keep (under Steve Jobs’ leadership) with consistently industry-leading design and customer support. I’m guessing I won’t be the only customer who feels their investment in Apple just lost some value. And with the Palm Pre just around the corner, the “fall” of ITMS forces the iPhone to stand on its own, making the Pre look that much more attractive as an upgrade.

The End Game

So where does this leave us?

Apple

In my mind, Apple is risking the monopolistic tie between the iPhone and the iTunes Music Store. If their target audience – the buyer looking for higher-quality goods – stops buying music in ITMS, there’s nothing to prevent them from switching to another phone platform like the Palm Pre or Google’s Android. Since Apple has been getting bad press lately for behavior reminiscent of Microsoft’s Bill Gates era, I hope this means they’ve got a different plan for keeping customers.

The Labels Win

I believe Apple made the switch to MP3s due to market pressure. Steve Jobs has always given lip-service to eliminating DRM, to keep the Apple faithful…well, faithful. With Amazon’s service apparently doing well, they must have felt the time was right to sign-up for MP3 offerings from iTunes. Amazon probably wasn’t too hesitant about watermarking their MP3s as long as they got to be the first to offer them.

But Apple’s acceptance of the same terms signals to me that the two best chances we had to put DRM to rest are gone, and that the labels have finally won. The labels tried everything they could – suing ISPs who allowed music to be downloaded through their network, polluting the pool of trafficked files with corrupted or watermarked versions, and even suing their own customers in an attempt to stop the slow march of progress. But now, with the cooperation of both Amazon and Apple, the labels have managed to destroy the quality of purchased downloads from the two biggest legal sources online.

In other words, the labels have won. High-quality music can no longer be downloaded legally.

The Customers Lose

Sadly, I will go back to buying CDs. With the labels’ victory, ripping purchased CDs becomes (again) the only way I can hear the music on my iPhone as the artist intended it to be heard.

Thank you Preston Gralla

March 10, 2009

Thank you for trying Linux. Twice. Even though you had trouble.

Thank you for seeking-out and listening to the advice of people who are experienced Linux users. And thank you even more for having used your literary talent to combine and “translate” their advice into an article readable by non-technical Windows users.

But thank you most of all for using your time and talent to promote Linux. You written a fair evaluation of Linux for prospective converts, and that will help to get more people to try Linux. But just as importantly, you have also journaled the first-impressions of the uninitiated. That is something many of us long-time Linux users can neither remember nor correctly describe. Those who wish to fix the problem must first understand the problem, and you have done the Linux community a service by describing that problem well.

Amazon Kindle: Bad Solution to a Make-believe Problem

March 4, 2009

Why Buy It?

Downsides:

  • $350!!!
  • Lose your Kindle, lose your library.
  • You can’t resell a Kindle book. (Or, for that matter, give it away.)

Upsides:

  • The books are (marginally) cheaper

Why Sell It?

But let’s look at why the publishing industry wants everyone to use them:

  • DRM on books prevents resale and forces all would-be readers to buy new
  • Eliminates publishing and distribution costs per purchased title, which more than makes-up the reduced price of the book. (And we’ll never know if Amazon raises the price of paper books when the Kindle versions are released released.)
  • Presents the technological possibility of revising books in-place after publish or purchase to reduce PR impact of errata, or possibly even to change the book’s content.