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Microsoft Media Music

Microsoft Opens MSN Music Store 690

pbranes writes "Microsoft has opened their online music store today with 1 million songs and it will be officially opened tomorrow when Windows Media Player 10 is released. Music costs $0.99 and $9.90 for albums ($0.09 less than iTunes). Also, music is at a higher quality - 160kbps VBR. You can browse the site with Mozilla, however, ActiveX is required for full functionality so IE is required to use the store. Also, Microsoft takes a hit at Apple for not licensing iPod functionality to third parties (kind of ironic when ActiveX is required to use the site).... If you are an iPod owner already and unhappy about this policy, you are welcome to send feedback to Apple requesting that they change their interoperability policy."
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Microsoft Opens MSN Music Store

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:00AM (#10137580)
    Will the music from MS become integrated with my OS once downloaded it can never be separated?
    • No, but IMHO, this is another one of those features that Microsoft is coming out with that they will attach to Longhorn once it is released, thereby quashing all competition as it will be (heavily) advertised in the OS.

      "Would you like to add a Passport to Windows XP?"

      Sound familiar?
    • by TyrranzzX ( 617713 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @12:49PM (#10140428) Journal
      Don't laugh too hard.

      Ms getting into the content distrobution market is especially scary. If IE and a number of other windows apps are any testament, MS may very well throw DRM out there in their next version of WMP or just autoinstall it through some undocumented API on your machine when you visit their site for support. All of a sudden, the other music companies DRM becomes invalid, and MS's rules supreme on PC's with their DRM and their music store which is the only store from which you can buy music from which'll work.

      Did I also mention they're adding in a virus scanner, and that virus scanner may decide to uninstall p2p apps or block websites deemed by MS as virus havens?

      Then how many years/decades will it take the DOJ to kill the monopoly?

      I'v got my tin foil hat, how bout you?
      • FUDdy Dud (Score:3, Insightful)

        by kylef ( 196302 )

        Ms getting into the content distrobution market is especially scary. If IE and a number of other windows apps are any testament, MS may very well throw DRM out there in their next version of WMP or just autoinstall it through some undocumented API on your machine when you visit their site for support. All of a sudden, the other music companies DRM becomes invalid, and MS's rules supreme on PC's with their DRM and their music store which is the only store from which you can buy music from which'll work.

        T

  • acitveX for moz (Score:5, Interesting)

    by linuxislandsucks ( 461335 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:02AM (#10137592) Homepage Journal
    there are activex plugins for Mozilla folks..

    look in the moz project directory
    • by edgrale ( 216858 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:04AM (#10137618)
      The url for the ActiveX Plugin [www.iol.ie]
    • Re:acitveX for moz (Score:5, Insightful)

      by David_Bloom ( 578245 ) <slashdot@3lesson.org> on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:04AM (#10137621) Homepage
      one of the many reasons I and other people use mozilla (instead of IE) is to AVOID activex controls.
    • Linkage.... (Score:3, Informative)

      • by Anonymous Coward
        "Kerry/Edwards - so much crap, you need two Johns just to hold it all..."

        You're making bathroom humor jokes when your candidate is named Bush? You're making this stuff too easy...
      • Re:Linkage.... (Score:5, Informative)

        by AstroDrabb ( 534369 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:09AM (#10138325)
        That link is to the Mozilla ActiveX Control. That lets you use the Mozilla browser (gecko) in your own applications. Just like you can build your own browser interface with IE, you can do it with Mozilla/Gecko using that control. It won't let you run ActiveX plugins from within Mozilla/Firefox. For that you need the Mozilla ActiveX plug-in [www.iol.ie].
    • by StevenHenderson ( 806391 ) <[stevehenderson] [at] [gmail.com]> on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:06AM (#10137654)
      Do you expect anyone using Mozilla to want to buy from the MSN music store anyways? I think most Moz users would rather die than have a drm-laden WMA file on their comp...
      • Re:acitveX for moz (Score:3, Insightful)

        by alienw ( 585907 )
        Well, Mac users don't seem to have a problem with DRM-laden AAC files, so what's the difference?
    • by nova20 ( 524082 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:07AM (#10137666) Homepage Journal
      there are activex plugins for Mozilla folks..

      Gee, why don't I just go and install Banzai Buddy (or some such crap) and save myself the trouble?

      -nova20
    • Re:acitveX for moz (Score:3, Insightful)

      by 1010011010 ( 53039 )
      Yuck!

      Unsandboxed Windows-only binary executables run via your web browser -- that's not how the web's supposed to work.
  • Macs need not apply (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:02AM (#10137597)
    These are the minimum requirements to play radio or purchase music from MSN.

    HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS

    Windows 98 SE, Windows 2000, or Windows XP
    Internet Explorer5.01 (or later), which supports 128-bit encryption
    Windows Media Player7.1 (or later), we recommend the latest version
    A 233 megahertz (MHz) processor (such as an Intel Pentium II or Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) processor) or faster
    64 megabytes (MB) of RAM or more
    Speakers and sound capability
    Payment with a valid credit card with a U.S. billing address
    To enjoy high-quality audio as a Radio Plus subscriber, you will need Windows Media Player 9 Series (or later)
  • by human bean ( 222811 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:03AM (#10137607)
    Makes Columbia House look good. On the other hand, what the public wants, the public gets...
  • More info (Score:4, Informative)

    by Saluton_Mondo ( 728648 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:03AM (#10137613)
    The BBC also has some info [bbc.co.uk]
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:04AM (#10137623)
    128kbps AAC is at least as good as 192 kbps mp3's. That's not just what I think. Regardless, the poster is overlooking the fact that he's comparing apple's with oranges, as it were.
    • by abb3w ( 696381 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:13AM (#10137743) Journal
      The poster is overlooking the fact that he's comparing apple's with oranges, as it were.

      This is Microsoft we're talking about here. Apple's with lemons is more likely.

    • > 128kbps AAC is at least as good as 192 kbps mp3's. That's not just what I think.

      A 134kbps (VBR) Lame-encoded MP3 sounds almost as good [rjamorim.com] as a 128kbps iTunes AAC. (In the final analysis, they're statistically indistinguishable.) I highly doubt a 192kbps MP3 can't beat a 128kbps AAC. But neither is as good as a well tuned Ogg Vorbis (aoTuV) encoding.
    • 128kbps AAC is at least as good as 192 kbps mp3's. That's not just what I think.

      Apparently, it is. [rjamorim.com] You can see that LAME MP3 actually does better than iTunes AAC on about half the tests - and at approximately the same bit rate. The overall results are extremely close.

      I actually took part in that listening test. This was a double-blind test (like all of Roberto's listening tests) so I had no idea what codec I was listening to, and I could barely tell any difference between any of them. It was only a
  • Feedback (Score:5, Insightful)

    by abb3w ( 696381 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:05AM (#10137626) Journal
    And to whom would we send feedback about the Microsoft's Music Store lack of interoperability with a Mac (even when using IE), or the tiny problem with the beta.music.msn.com Security Certificate ("The identity certificate issuer is unknown"-- probably a byproduct of the Passport Login)?

    • Re:Feedback (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Socket Scientist ( 777417 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @12:20PM (#10140062)
      I actually did send them feedback already. Taking great pains not to appear trollish, I asked them why they continually referred to Apple's DRMd files as proprietary, but never used that word to describe their own system. I also suggested that their campaign (and Real's) to "open the iPod" would resonate better with informed consumers if their own DRMd files were cross-platform compatible like Apple's. For those of us who run both platforms, Apple's is the only solution that works for all of our computers.

      They can wave their arms and gripe all day about the iPod not supporting WMA, but the bottom line is that Apple's not doing anything to prevent Microsoft themselves from supporting DRMd WMA files in Windows Media Player for Mac. If their appeals for openness were genuine, as opposed to strictly self-serving, a good place to start would be to make their own DRM compatible with their own media player on OS X.

  • Quality? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Del Vach ( 449393 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:05AM (#10137631)
    Anyone know how 160kbps VBR Windows Media Format compares to 128 AAC?
  • I don't understand (Score:5, Interesting)

    by and by ( 598383 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:06AM (#10137642)
    Aren't the specifications of "160kbps" and "VBR" mutually exclusive?
  • by Alpha_Traveller ( 685367 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:07AM (#10137657) Homepage Journal
    I don't look at having to burn a CD to bring it into my IPOD a problem. I'm going to want to back up ANYTHING I download from Microsoft anyway, especially if there's any concern that virii might be involved at some time in the future.. I can eliminate any possiblity of a virus arriving on my IPOD by pushing it to CD first. Best to keep MS's Banannas away from my Apples.
  • Higher quality? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Howzer ( 580315 ) * <grabshot AT hotmail DOT com> on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:08AM (#10137675) Homepage Journal

    Sure you're not falling for the old megahertz trap there?

    Higher quality because, in independant double-blind tests, people could hear the difference? Or higher quality because this-here number is bigger'n that one?

    C'mon people, this is /. not cnet. I thought after watching Intel & AMD play the numbers game for years we'd be wise to this stuff. Seems not. Seems all Microsoft has to do is publish a bigger number, and we're all ready to slap "higher quality" on it without even a cursory look at file sizes, compression standards, or those pesky things like some kind of semi-objective test.

    But this one goes up to eleven....

    • Re:Higher quality? (Score:3, Informative)

      by timeOday ( 582209 )
      I hope you feel better now. But since WMA beats AAC [extremetech.com] even at 128 kpbs, there's little doubt that the MS offering is higher quality than iTunes. Add to that the higher bitrate, and it's a slam dunk over 128 kbps AAC.

      Commence critiquing the benchmark, but at least try to find an equally or more credible benchmark that has different findings. From everything I've seen the believe that WMA just must suck is wishful thinking.

      As for the MHz "myth," MHz is perfectly fine for comparing within a single architec

  • Requirements (Score:3, Interesting)

    by bert.cl ( 787057 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:08AM (#10137687)
    After login in with MS Passport:

    HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
    * Windows 98 SE, Windows 2000, or Windows XP
    * Internet Explorer 5.01 (or later), which supports 128-bit encryption
    * Windows Media Player 7.1 (or later), we recommend the latest version
    * A 233 megahertz (MHz) processor (such as an Intel Pentium II or Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) processor) or faster
    * 64 megabytes (MB) of RAM or more
    * Speakers and sound capability
    * Payment with a valid credit card with a U.S. billing address
    * To enjoy high-quality audio as a Radio Plus subscriber, you will need Windows Media Player 9 Series (or later)

    A little further down the page

    Enable cookies[...]
    You must be an administrator on the computer in order for the ActiveX control to install properly. You need not be an admin to use the service once the control has been installed.
    (All scripting options need to be enabled too)

    So why would I need to enable cookies to download music, or have administrator rights, just to visit a site...

    Details: Here [msn.com]
  • by Lizard_King ( 149713 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:09AM (#10137693) Journal
    From the about page:

    From radio to your library: If a particular song on MSN Radio gets your attention, you can click to download it and instantly make it a part of your music library. And if you prefer plastic, we'll connect you to several online CD sellers, including Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.com.

    Amazon and B&N - those are some heavy lifters. A new Axis of Evil? =)

    Interesting though, this is an area that Apple has avoided: making the connection to the hard-copy world. This could provide Microsoft with even more backing and support from some of the entrenched, big players in the music industry. Scary.
  • by dschuetz ( 10924 ) <.gro.tensad. .ta. .divad.> on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:09AM (#10137698)
    Okay, I don't have an iPod, so I may be confused here, but I thought iPods could load mp3s, right? So all Microsoft has to do in order to load songs to an iPod is to sell you an mp3.

    And hasn't Real already figured out how to properly encrypt a song to load on an iPod? So MS could use that approach, too, and sell DRM-enabled songs that would load directly to the iPod. (and don't even start me on whether that's legal or not -- it clearly is, under interoperability clauses, though it'll probably take a court ruling to get that through people's heads).

    Sounds to me like MS is *choosing* not to support iPods.

    • by David_Bloom ( 578245 ) <slashdot@3lesson.org> on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:15AM (#10137773) Homepage
      Mp3 doesn't support DRM. Actually, there are DRM'd mp3 implementations out there probably, but no digital music player will support them. The recording industry will NEVER allow the online sale of an un-DRM'd digital audio file.

      The only common DRM formats out there are Apple's AAC FairPlay and WMA.


      • Mp3 doesn't support DRM. Actually, there are DRM'd mp3 implementations out there probably, but no digital music player will support them. The recording industry will NEVER allow the online sale of an un-DRM'd digital audio file.

        Meanwhile, illicit data sources for music continue to flourish. All the convenience of click-at-home without any of the restrictions that make you wonder when you'll run in to the glass ceiling that stops you from playing your favorite tune on your new audio gadget.

        Sure. Yo

  • by w3weasel ( 656289 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:13AM (#10137739) Homepage
    160 kbps VBR WMA vs 128 kbps AAC... at best I'd bet they are equal qauality

    I hope someone does a full listening test with a blind panel

  • by Jugalator ( 259273 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:14AM (#10137757) Journal
    Among the system requirements of the music store are these:

    (from the FAQ at Microsoft)

    - ActiveX controls and plug-ins -> Download signed ActiveX controls: choose "enabled" or "prompt"
    - ActiveX controls and plug-ins -> Script ActiveX controls marked safe for scripting: choose "enabled"
    - Scripting -> Active Scripting: choose "enabled"
    - Miscellaneous -> Navigate sub Frames across different domains: choose "enabled"


    You also need to install the ActiveX Control to use MSN Music with administrator rights.

    Of course, if you're using an insecure configuration of IE, this is already your settings. Otherwise, you need to setup a new Internet Zone for Windows Media Player with these low security settings and cross your fingers there'll never ever be any exploits to run code in WMP 10's security zone. There's already a well-known exploit in the wild for IE that will work if Active Scripting is enabled (was that scrollbar trick recently in the news, I think).

    Don't you just love the implications of IE integration with media players and all sorts of other stuff? :-P
    • Gee, this is wonderful. I'm thinking of all the people who I've helped out by disabling activeX downloads on their machine thus making them spyware free who will now blindly follow these directions.

      >choose "enabled" or "prompt"

      Yeah, enabled is the way to go. Why get bothered with an annoying prompt when shady companies want to install software on your machine!

      Welcome to the world of Bonzai Buddies, mystery pauses and crashes, and no privacy! I hope you enjoy your new ever changing homepage too!

      Its
  • bitrate != quality (Score:3, Informative)

    by eatmadust ( 740035 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:15AM (#10137769)
    Also, music is at a higher quality - 160kbps VBR

    no, bitrate in not equal to quality. iTMS has the far superior AAC, while Microsoft uses WMA wich comes last (or close) in most tests (except the ones Microsoft pays for ;))
    two tests here:
    1 [heise.de]
    2 [xiph.org]
  • by Moonlapse ( 802617 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:16AM (#10137778) Journal
    There's already cheaper higher quality music out there.....at emusic.com. Its 192kpbs VBR there and average at about .23 cents a song ( it's a subscription plan). IMO the selection there is better than you will find at any of the competitors.
  • by sean@thingsihate.org ( 121677 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:27AM (#10137879) Homepage
    ... it's the same goddam crap you'll find no problem on any of the P2P music-stealing programs.

    One of the reasons I'd gladly pay for downloading music is because it's old or obscure and I can't find it elsewhere. If I wanted Britney Spears or some crap like that, all I'd have to do is look for it on any P2P program and I'd get a billion results.

    Do they think people's motivation for using pay-to-download site will just be the fact that it's legal?
  • by XavierItzmann ( 687234 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:28AM (#10137893)
    From Mossberg's review at the WSJ:

    -only about 500K songs
    -no audio books, gift certificates, spending limits for kids
    -Microsoft runs ads on its search pages
    -click the "Buy" button, it changes to read "Purchased," but that doesn't mean you have the song
    - several thousand of Microsoft's songs will cost more -- some nearly $4 each
    -WMP choked when tried to synchronize songs purchased in Microsoft's own format from the Musicmatch, Wal-Mart and Napster online stores, saying it was "unable to obtain license
    -Overall, MSN Music is no match for iTunes -- yet.

    Mossberg thinks eventually MS will catch up.
    http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/ptech-20040902.html [wsj.com]

    • -only about 500K songs

      Where did he get this figure? MSN Music site itself says they have over a million.

      Mossberg thinks eventually MS will catch up.

      Right. Version 3 will probably be slick. Hey, you know, the site design is already pretty clean and easy. The focus is clearly on the music, almost the detriment of the site itself.

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:28AM (#10137899)
    Got that, NINE WHOLE CENTS!!! Wow, if I buy 100 albums I can save $9!!! I'm dropping iTunes, throwing away my iPod, buying a Nomad and signing up!!!

  • by Zygote-IC- ( 512412 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:43AM (#10138039) Homepage
    I love the, "How dare Apple stifle consumer choice by not opening up the iPod!" when in order to use their music store you have to use their OS, their browser and their media player.

    Yes, Microsoft, they are all about "choice."
  • by failedlogic ( 627314 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:52AM (#10138152)
    Ironic, that Microsoft asks that Apple customers complain of the lack of open standards for the iPod. The same company that will not share it WMA standard among many other things (Windows, IE...)
  • allofmp3.com (Score:3, Interesting)

    by milamber.net ( 188526 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @09:59AM (#10138222)
    The best service I've found for this kind of thing is allofmp3.com [allofmp3.com]. You can encode music as at any bitrate (you can pick custom bitrates and it does on the fly encoding), in any format (mp3/wma/ogg/mpeg-4/mpc/lossless) including downloading the original cd data.

    It costs $10 per GB you download and is legal (because of strange Russian copyright laws).

  • by petard ( 117521 ) * on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:01AM (#10138263) Homepage
    It's disingenuous at best for them to claim that the iPod's a "closed" device. It plays MP3 AAC and WAV files just fine. No Digital Restrictions Management required.

    MS and Real are both allowing export to a restriction-free format to enable use of music purchased from them in other devices (CD players) that do not support their DRM scheme. If they really wanted their music to play on the iPod they could do the same thing with no more ill effect to their business model. Why won't they do that? It must be a misguided gambit to increase market share. And that's fine. They're businesses and naturally want to increase their market share. But don't misrepresent your competition as more closed than you are when that's clearly not the case.

    Feh. The iTMS is cheap, easy, and works on both my Mac and my PC. Its songs play just fine on my iPod, and I can easily burn them to CD. I am happy with the quality of its songs. It's going to take something more compelling than this to draw my attention. It doesn't even look like their music catalog is any better.
  • Store UI Is Lacking (Score:4, Interesting)

    by beejay54 ( 781673 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:14AM (#10138377) Homepage
    This may sound strange to some, but I don't think this web site will do very well at all. As a UI designer and someone who spends a lot of his time on usability. The MSN store is horrible. It is very hard to navigate and there are design logic mistakes everywhere.
    But this comes to no suprise. As many of you may have noticed over the last few months images on the microsoft site have been artifacted beyond belief, they need to fire the kid that does their graphics and web UI's; seriously. Like come on, opposing gradients? WTF!?

    Anyway, here is my point, the people being targeted on this MSN project are not you and me, it's mom and dad and those out-of-the-techie-loop friends of yours. Which from a designer's perspective require a very SIMPLE UI. Not to mention, these are the people that don't understand the web security stuff or DRM and will drop this fast out of frustration. I predict a major redesign over the next few months, this service will fail simply because people won't be able to find and do what they want.

    Rant rant rant.... :o)
  • Any ideas? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by wo1verin3 ( 473094 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:23AM (#10138466) Homepage
    As a test I tried to buy a piece of music...

    1) Provided my hotmail login (passport)
    2) My credit card was on file (which is scary since I haven't purchased anything from them in years.
    3) The credit card on file had expired in 2003 and the expiry date was correct on the MSN Music Store page (correctly showing as expired)
    4) The store allowed me to purchase the music anyway, the credit card is from Canada and the address on file is from a hotel in the US. Not only did they not verify CC information but it's expired
    5) When I check my account via the 'Microsoft Billing" page it shows 'Unbilled Activity for MSN Music' and shows my song purchase, so they bill after a certain period without even checking the credit card on file?

    Huge potential for abuse here... It'll probably change pretty quickly.
  • Album prices (Score:3, Informative)

    by pknoll ( 215959 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:32AM (#10138548)
    Most albums on iTunes are also $9.90, not $9.99 as the sumbitter suggests.

    Microsoft has exactly duplicated the iTunes pricing structure, from what I can see so far.

  • Feedback echoes Real (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fitterhappier ( 468051 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @10:37AM (#10138613)
    From Microsoft's music store FAQ: If you are an iPod owner already and unhappy about this policy, you are welcome to send feedback to Apple requesting that they change their interoperability policy. source [msn.com]

    Does this remind anyone else of Real's recent petition to whip up public opinion against Apple [com.com]?

    In the same FAQ answer [msn.com], Microsoft offers a workaround for getting music purchased from the MSN store on to your iPod:

    [I]t is still possible to transfer MSN Music downloads to an iPod, but it will require some extra effort. To transfer MSN-downloaded music to an iPod, you need to first create a CD with the music, and then you need to import that CD into iTunes.

    I appreciate how open Microsoft is to defeating their own DRM.
  • by CrazyTalk ( 662055 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @11:13AM (#10139108)
    I dont have an iPod or any other portable music player, so file compatiblity is really a non-issue for me. The reason I will stick with iTunes and eschew the MS site is simple - I like the fact that iTunes is a stand-alone client that has full GUI functionality and doesnt require a constant web connection. I can bring my laptop when I travel and even without an internet connection listen to music, create playlists, etc. Plus, the user interface is so much nicer than being "hobbled" by having to do everything within a web browser. Can Microsoft offer that?
  • Sour grapes here? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Smurfpaste ( 786813 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @12:52PM (#10140466)
    From the MSN Music Site...

    How can I get MSN Music downloads to play on my iPod?
    Although Apple computers and Apple iPods do not support the PC standard WindowsMedia format for music, it is still possible to transfer MSN Music downloads to an iPod, but it will require some extra effort. To transfer MSN-downloaded music to an iPod, you need to first create a CD with the music, and then you need to import that CD into iTunes. This process will convert the music into a format that can play on the iPod.We're sorry that this isn't easier - unfortunately Apple refuses to allow other companies to integrate with the iPod's proprietary music format.If you are an iPod owner already and unhappy about this policy, you are welcome to send feedback to Apple requesting that they change their interoperability policy.


    First off, WMA is only a "standard" on Windows not all PCs, and only because MS makes it so. The iPod plays a lot formats (MP3, AAC, WAV, AIF, Audible, Apple Lossless), just not WMA. The only proprietary format the iPod uses is the DRM attached to AAC files purchased from the iTunes Music Store. And that is the iPod owner's choice if they buy music online. It sounds like sour grapes because MS isn't making the licensing fees that would be attached to every iPod that plays WMA format.

    There must not be any advantage for Apple to support WMA or they would have by now. Sure they could sell iPods that would work with other music stores, but that may just cut down the sales from the iTMS.

    Besides, I don't see MS shipping a compatible version of WiMP or IE so Mac users can use the store, and even on Windows you have to use IE (or an ActiveX compatible one) as your browser. MS shouldn't point the finger at Apple when they are using proprietary formats themselves.

    Plus MS apologizing for a lack of ease of use, that's a first, but they're putting the blame on Apple for this. And the balls they have to get people to tell Apple that Apple should change their interoperability policy...HA!
  • by amichalo ( 132545 ) on Thursday September 02, 2004 @03:22PM (#10142148)
    Sure is sad when makeing money gets in the way of making things work.

    I just came from helping a friend burn her first on-line purchaed songs from Microsoft. Too bad they will be her last. Between downloading the songs, getting them into Music Match with the rest of her songs, and then burning them on a CD (after being sure to buy the right CD-RW media that will work with her 4X burner) the songs still weren't able to be played on her portable jukebox, which was the purpose of the whole exercise.

    "Next time, I'll just buy a CD", she resolved after she spent $15 on-line, wasted 4 CD-RWs along with three hours of her time (and one of mine).

    This is the scenario that unfortunately awaits so many folks tempted into legal music downloading by disjointed services looking for a piece of the action.

    In my opinion, it is only the complete solutions (at this time only provided by, by by no means limited to, Apple) that will prevail.

    I say this because of the stark contrast of this friend's experience when compared to my Mac owning cousin of equal computer illiteracy. He, a year ago, sat down and bought a couple CD's of music from the iTunes Music Store, burned them, and was off and running in an hour, including music catalog browse time.

    I don't know what the future holds for on-line music, and I know Micorosft is really gearing up for on-line video so it doesn't give Apple the foothold, but my recommendation is that if the solution is not complete, no company will be able to provide just a slice of the action and be successful.

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

Working...