Sony Digital Downloads 76
Mad Gav writes "Sony's Music Clip and Memory Stick Walkmans have been around here in Japan for months, but the software from Sony has been lacking, until now. Sony launched their first stab at a digital download service in Japan, albeit with a limited selection of tracks. A single track costs 350 Yen (just over $3) to download. It looks like Sony is finally making serious moves into this arena, and I'd predict that it's only a matter of months before their entire catalog goes online..." The link is in Japanese, but you can understand what's going on there.
Leave it to Sony to turn a good thing bad. (Score:1)
Unfortunately, this is about what we should expect from The Music Industry(tm)(r)(c). They would like to appear to be supporting online music, but really, they are going to do everything in their power to ensure that it doesn't cut in to their sales of CDs. And, of course, I suppose they are going to choose some nice 'open' format like SDMI so that once you've downloaded it, you can't make any copies. Not that I would expect anything more from the company that brought us SCMS and helped stop the consumer DAT.
At any rate this is just another case where we need to just say no and vote with our dollars. Buy the CD instead and rip the music yourself. If you need a good MP3 encoder, may I suggest Xing [xingtech.com]. It's only $20 and you can get it for Windows, MacOS, or Linux (either Intel or PPC). Also, it's quite fast and sounds better than Opticon Producer (IMHO).
Here comes truly illegal software (Score:1)
The SDMI protection software can be reverse-engineered like any software distributed to a hardware near you. This means that utilities to convert the downloaded music to freely copyable MP3's will be created. Will it be illegal? You bet it will, if DeCSS is any indication where the matters are heading.
Somehow, now I have no problems imagining going to the hacker's den and paying him a couple hundred for a diskette with such a ripper.
Re:Japanese consumers are unique (Score:1)
Re:MD is dead - when portable mp3 cdr players are (Score:1)
Re:Unlimited selection? (Score:1)
One goes to a website, browses a catalog of music, and picks out an album. After paying, the company sends him a CD. However, not to keep the customer waiting, they make the contents of the CD available for download in MP3 form. Now, subtract the shipment of the CD. Good idea?
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Re:WOW (Score:1)
MP3 - Lossy Compression
ATRAC - Another Lossy Compression
Make a copy of MP3 and re-compress it. How good does it sound to you?
Re:WOW (Score:1)
Stereo Review's Sound & Vision - Feb/Mar 2000
P 134 - Multimedia Maven Edited by Michael Antonoff
"Pocket Music" section
"Unlike the company's Memory Stick Walkman which must first convert MP3 files into Sony's ATRAC 3 format, the Music Clip accepts either format via a USB cable from your computer."
The files on the web site are in Sony's ATRAC 3 format too.
Price is fair, decent idea (Score:1)
oh well
Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Actually, they probably will. If you want the whole CD, it's cheaper to get the CD, but if you only want 1-2 songs, then it's cheaper to get just the 1-2 songs. I personally have stopped buying more than about 2-3 CDs a year -- something about paying $20 for about $1 (if even that much) in raw materials.
Re:portable player and RECORDER! (Score:1)
Have you ever played with one of these things? They kick ass. I dunno what happened to the idiot marketing folks (or if there was a lawsuit somewhere) but somehow MD hasn't caught on here. A friend of mine got one for Christmas, totally sweet, blows away my Rio (or any other portable MP3er).
That being said, i think they missed the window in the U.S. That window closes the second someone figures out how to put 128mg+ on a porty MP3 or play straight MP3 cds (6+hours per CD). Too bad, those MD players are sweet.
You're right - though things cost more in Japan (Score:1)
That said, the price is still too high. The cost of getting a single into the shops in the high street is high, and there's a risk that you won't recoup your costs if sales are bad. The cost of putting a single online for download is approximately zero (plus some web page development, which will be good for *all* online sales) and there's no danger of not recouping this cost. I wonder what cut the artist gets of online sales? Still the same old 2%?
OTOH if online music sales in general take off then this is probably good for places like mp3.com who are giving artists decent percentages and not ripping the consumer off as much.
Re:New Things = Expensive (Score:1)
New Things = Expensive (Score:1)
MP3 is just not going to cut it, at least not in its current form, piracy is already rampent. i logged onto napster for the first time this weekend and i honestly think the record companies should be very worried, there are usualy around 900gigs of illegaly copied MP3's. a lot of artists put a lot of work into that music and there are thousands of people stealing it 24hrs a day! Its not the the record companies that are losing money, the artist are as well. The record companies will do what they have to in order to stay profitable, and if that mean screwing over the artists because a bunch of idiots are stealing the music instead of buying it, then thats exactly what they will do. So instead of complaining about what sony and others are doing, lets work on creating a tech. that does what we want while still ensuring that the material isn't stolen.
MD (Score:1)
MP3 is a great soft format, but until there's a hard format to match - or several - I'll stick with MD. I don't have half an hour to spend every morning downloading music to an MP3 player; I need to grab some music off the shelf and go! I also couldn't fit my (huge) CD collection, as MP3s, onto my hard disk...
MD is surprisingly popular, and will keep growing. It won't replace CD or MP3, but it'll sit next to 'em. Who knows, perhaps we'll all be storing MP3 files on MD?!
Re:$3 is too expensive - is it? (Score:1)
WOW (Score:1)
RE: CD Rental Shops: Did Sony eat a stupid pill? (Score:1)
Most people in Japan (well, thats an overgeneralization: I mean most Japanese people I know) have MD players. MD is HUGE here.
I dont know why Sony bothers with this whole "download one song off the net" garbage. It's easier just to rent a full length CD (about 300Y or 3$) and then copy it onto mini disc. Thats what a large majority of people and I do anyway.
Why pay 320Y to download ONE song off the internet when i can rent the ENTIRE single or full length CD for under 400Y (4$) and copy it onto MD without losing any sound quality?
Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Memory stick speed (Score:1)
Anyone compared compact flash, memory stick, and SmartMedia cards? which one is fastest?
Japanese consumers are unique (Score:1)
Re:Memory stick speed (Score:1)
I was referring to the actual write speed while taking pics. I hate that damn delay between pics when the flashrom gets full and it has to write to the card. That takes upwards of 30-50 seconds sometimes. In the meantime, I got some fine female with her booty in the air and I want to snap some pics damn it!
Re:Japanese consumers are unique (Score:1)
MD never really caught on big-time in the US. but I hear its ultra-popular in Japan.
Not sure about this comment. I am in the UK (over here MD is gaining popularity slowly) but virtually all of the americans I know have and rave about MD. I personally am more happy with CDR but on recent visits to NYC it certainly seems very much bigger that side of the pond than this.
Source of High CD Prices (Score:1)
Given that CD buyers often are buying whole CDs to get certain key tracks, the 350 yen price makes a certain sick sense. Of course Sony is on crack and you can only feel for innocents that end up buying the cripple-ware players they are making...
Ack! (Score:1)
Re:SDMI = Boycot it like DiVIX... (Score:1)
Some (old) info about the music clip (Score:1)
http://members.home.com/timruss/musicclip.html
Yes, it's neat, but let's don't encourage the crooks in the music industry by buying these things. Hold out for MP3 players, or we may never get any.
Re:Memory stick speed (Score:1)
Re:rip off.... (Score:1)
Re: CD Rental Shops: Did Sony eat a stupid pill? (Score:1)
Well, I didn't say anything about how much the rentals cost, because I didn't know anything about that, but you have a really good point.
In my original post, I was going to say something about renting a CD and then ripping it (to MP3 or CD-R) instead of just taping it, but I couldn't come up with the right words. Copying to MD isn't quite as "open source", but still just as effective.
When you compare this download thing to renting a CD and then copying it to MD, which also doesn't let you make a copy of the copy, you have something almost identical to what Sony is trying to do. The only difference is that an MD-discman is a little bit bigger than their "music pen".
Actually, there's one small difference. It's moving bits, not atoms. If it weren't for the "Japan-only" thing, this would make it possible for people who were not in Japan to import music without having to do overseas mail-order (expen$ive $hipping) or wait for local import stores to receive their own bulk-orders.
But as we know Sony is aiming for world domination anyhow, it is obvious they aren't doing this out of compassion for J-pop fans outside of Japan.
Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Will people actually pay that when they can just rip from a CD?
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Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
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From the who-do-we-sue-next dept. (Score:1)
Music Clip is evil (Score:1)
But that's not the end of the stupidity. On top of the ATRAC3 business, the Music Clip software also employs OpenMG. This is an encryption/authentication scheme that was developed by Sony in an attempt to beat SDMI to the punch. Sony is hoping that if they can actually implement a workable form of copy protection, the rest of the SDMI people will decide to go with that.
So what does all this mean in terms of using the device? Well since the music clip refuses to understand non-encrypted, non-authenticated MP3s, you have to "import" your entire library is order dump it on your device. Your MP3 library has to be converted to ATRAC3 and "protected" by OpenMG. You've just doubled the size of your music library.
Re: ATRAC (Score:1)
Three things:
1) The current version of ATRAC is 4.5, not 3. Almost all Minidisc equipment you encounter these days is either ATRAC 4 or 4.5 and there is a HUGE sonic difference. ATRAC 1 was just horrible. ATRAC 2 was on par with about 80-112k MP3s. ATRAC 3 is on par with 128-160k MP3s. ATRAC 4 is on par with 192-256k MP3s and ATRAC 4.5 is damn near DAT quality (if you come from a clean source).
2) The quality loss of a conversion from ATRAC 4/4.5 to MP3 is minimal. If you like, I can prepare a little demo for you. I have an older ATRAC 4 MiniDisc and if I digitally transfer a CD over, and then take a digital copy back, then encode that to MP3 (at a high bitrate), it is almost totally indistinguishable from an MP3 made straight form the CD source and my gear is of fairly high quality. Even an analogue copy doesn't sound too bad, and the MD's D/As aren't great.
3) ATRAC is not an encripted format. SDMI may be, but ATRAC is not. It's just a psycoacoustic compression model, like MP3.
rip off.... (Score:1)
Re:Memory stick speed (Score:1)
Deleting a specific image takes about a second, as well as formatting the entire memory stick.
Reading from the stick is very fast, even the MPEG movies I've taken.
Re:Japanese consumers are unique (Score:1)
The memory sticks will also be supported by the PlayStation 2. So, I think they will have a good chance of catching on here, unlike the MiniDisc.
The coolest thing about memory sticks are that they have a mechanical switch on them that is used for write protection -- just like on 3.5" floppies.
Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't that a bit pricey? (Score:1)
Re:I took the time to RTFL (Score:1)
Sony's content management software allows you push up to three copies of a track, so in theory you could make a copy for your home hi-fi, one for your Walkman and a further copy for the car. The way it does this is by using a standard software engineering type source code control system, i.e. you check your music in and out of the software. It will also allow you to rip CDs and do the same, and it will also read your MP3 files and turn them into Magic Gate ATRAC compatible files, for all the benefit that gives you. This is a pretty insidious move for Sony, as the next thing they're probably going to do is start watermarking their CD content, so that their Internet connected software can report unauthorized use, etc, etc. Be afraid, be very afraid.
Basically this is the first attempt by Sony to put the MP3 genie back in the bottle under their own steam. The RIAA have proved themselves to be impotent in dealing with MP3, because they're trying to address it in a very 'standards organization' kind of way. It'll never happen, and I'm sure Sony are fully aware of that. It's all very well saying 'just buy an MP3 player', but Sony are going to market this stuff to *death*, and within a year it'll be a widely understood technology by the non-Slashdot reading world. MP3 is great, but so were Betamax videos. That's what you've got to fear.
The best way to deal with tech like MP3 is to do what Microsoft did to Apple, copy it, f*** with it, then pile the cash into merchandising the hell out of it and locking your key users into it. When the Playstation 2 launches, I predict that Sony will do exactly that. They'll have a very friendly, easy to browse, Playstation 2 friendly web site and make it extremely easy for Joe Public to suck tracks onto their Memory sticks with the minimum amount of fuss, all billed to Sony's Playstation 2 dial-up Internet service. Clean and simple. MP3 will rapidly become a voice in the wilderness, unless the MP3 community can do unto Sony what Linux is currently doing to Microsoft...
Re:Memory stick speed (Score:2)
Re:Memory stick speed (Score:2)
A delay of even 10ms can make or break a picture with people in it. For example, take your stopwatch and start and stop it fast as you can and you should see from 10ms to 20ms. Like the trigger finger on a stopwatch, people's faces can change in an instant.
In the world of high speed digital electronics, why hasn't there been an engineer that has programmed a camera to have the ccd ready to capture on an instant?
Re:Unlimited selection? (Score:2)
on the fact that there are relatively few selections available. In case you haven't noticed, there is already quite a market (and grey/black market) for digital music, that does not involve sony. And there is already a certain expectation for the variety and number of selections that one my expect from such a service. Thus the comment was meant to say that Sony's selection is limited, in comparison to what we're already used to seeing.
Re:portable player and RECORDER! (Score:2)
Re:Leave it to Sony to turn a good thing bad. (Score:2)
This clearly shows that they don't understand their own business model. All they think about is profit but they don't see the obvious opportunity to make more profit. If they'd offer music at a lower price online they'd make huge profits because people like buying things cheaply (duh).
Sony is in a great position: they are responsible for about a third of 'traditional' music distribution so they have access to the content, they have their technology (storage, playing, recording you name it). All they have to do is put the two together.
Unlimited selection? (Score:2)
Re:Unlimited selection? (Score:2)
If you login, you can beam a CD, buy a CD, or add MP3's from www.mp3.com.
MP3.com is currently being sued by the RIAA.
A review of this SDMI crap (Score:2)
Here [slashdot.org] is a post I wrote for the previous article which gives one idea about what we can do to kill the sails of these things.
Finally, I feal I should clear up a little miss understanding about the usefulness of this service to us. Many people have suggested that we will break the encryption and pirate the digitally distributed music via mp3. This is not totally correct. We will crack the encryption, but we will probable need to redistribute the songs as ATRAC3 files since the conversion to mp3 will lose a lot of quality. Note: the lose of quality in the MP3 -> ATRAC3 conversion is part of why the RIAA likes this thing, i.e. it prevents mp3 only artists from having good music. Distributing unencrypted ATRAC3 files will not be a problem, but playing them could be a problem and making our own could be an even bigger problem (Sony may have patents on ATRAC3 algorithms so that they can prosicute the people who write the decoding/encoding software). Plus, Sony charges more for the songs then they would cost if you got them via CD, so there is no advnatage in getting this kind of digital music.
The moral of the story is: SDMI and Sony are evil, they must die.
Jeff
BTW> Now, a project to do an ATRAC3 to mp3 transition without losing quality would be cool, but it would also be difficult (mathematically difficult so Joe Average Hacker could not do it).
In defense of Evil Corporations? (Score:2)
Sometimes it seems to me that we leap to conclusions that large corporations are necessarily evil.
They're out for their own interests. For some, that's evil, but that's what most people do, so why should corporations do any better? In the case of content businesses (like movies and music) they have a clear existing interest: their present revenue stream. You'd fight to keep your job if you were unsure there was anything else and your present job paid well - that's exactly what these corporations are doing.
Yeah, large corporations (and large people, large governments, etc.) sometimes squash the little guy. This is called capitalism (or, if you prefer, Darwinian selection). It can lead to abuses. Name a system that can't.
Now before we get into a political flamewar, let me point out a few things about the VAIO Music Clip and its accompanying service:
The music industry knows they looked bad with the SDMI announcement coming out just after MP3 really hit the hype wave. It wasn't as reactionary as it looked, though. The music industry has been worrying about all things digital for years. Had the SDMI announcement come out a year earlier, we might have been saying "Cool! The industry is getting behind digital music!" How many of us have DVD players? Even if we don't like regional encoding?
It may look depressing at times. But if you think Sony's attitudes seem benighted now, well, two years ago, it was much worse. SDMI may not be what we want, but it took Sony two years to get to that point. They're moving in the right direction.
ObDisclaimer: I used to work for Sony. I personally know some of the decision-makers involved in these things - I saw them wrestle with the many issues involved, and in some cases, helped them understand them. But I don't work for Sony any more and don't have any stock or any financial interest in Sony doing well going forward.
MD is dead - when portable mp3 cdr players are out (Score:2)
mambo-x [mambox.com]
then you just burn cdr or cdrw (of 10 hrs or so) and you're in business!
try THAT with MD. you can barely get 70minutes on an MD. and recording on MD is in real-time and no faster. if I'm in a hurry, I can grab a bunch of .wav files and create a cdr of .mp3 files in much faster than real-time (since my computer writes to cdr and not some analog or possibly real-time digital link).
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portable player and RECORDER! (Score:2)
miniCDRW [mp3.com]
like I said, with all the new neat things out there, MD is dead, dead, dead.
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$3 is too expensive (Score:2)
when it comes to sony, just say no. they're not our friends. they don't believe in sharing and open software - they only believe in the almighty dollar (or yen).
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Re:Japanese consumers are unique (Score:2)
MD never really caught on big-time in the US. but I hear its ultra-popular in Japan.
while the US is pretty gadget-happy, I think Japan is even more so. and the sense of national pride helps the population adopt new standards more easily. perhaps the population sees Sony as part of the Great National Good, so stuffing Sony's pockets has a definite trickle-down effect.
but here in the US, we have no such feelings. if anything, there's suspicion about all things corporate Sony.
so until sony breaks apart (never happen) - like microsoft; into software-only and hardware-only components, I'll never trust sony to work on the side of the music lover. they want to keep you spending on both the hardware AND software (music).
for a company like Sony, SDMI isn't just a good business idea, its a religion. and one that I'll never subscribe to.
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Re:MD is dead - when portable mp3 cdr players are (Score:2)
and this 4x dubbing box - I bet its not in the same pricerange as typical consumer gear? or even consumer computer gear?
what does it dub from? I bet you can't dub from a hard drive (pc or unix).
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Re:portable player and RECORDER! (Score:2)
I've toyed with MD players; but I was very into DAT way before MD was even though of; and I'd still take my portable dat-walkman over any MD - anyday. we could get 2hrs standard (with ZERO compression), or 4hrs with some frequency limiting (still was better than PASC or ATRAC compression). and if you used long 90meter tapes you could get 3 or 6 hrs from it. try THAT with MD! ;-)
consumer dat was expensive and unreliable. mostly since the mechanism was a mini spinning VCR head. and like all vcr's, was prone to dirt and misalignment. but if you kept it maintained properly, it would serve you very well.
(I used to do a lot of live concert taping. I can tell you that there were at most 5 MD decks in the taping sections; whereas there were dozens (hundreds?) of dat units being spun. mostly due to the better quality and longer run/play length. oh, and cheaper media, too ;-)
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Re:Japanese consumers are unique (Score:2)
mp3 is far more accessible since its not tied to a media type. in fact, cd audio (44.1/16) isn't really tied to one particular media type, either. but MD IS. and MD is made by a fairly small group of companies, so there's not a lot of price competition going on. over the years since MD has been out, I've not seen any significant price reductions, either.
so given the current alternatives, I see MD as going the way of the 8-track. give it 3-5 yrs and you'll never see MD in the stores.
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I took the time to RTFL (Score:3)
Anyhow, this is indeed SDMI, and you are only allowed to have a copy on one computer and transfer it one time to a digital device, for the low, low
The compression is Sony's ATRAC (the same one used in MiniDisc, which I've heard is a better quality compression format than MP3), and here's the part that
Their site says that "bitmusic will only be available to consumers in Japan; access from locations outside Japan is restricted.". I don't know how they plan to do this, other than by checking IP block ranges (post-CIDR IP blocks are assigned geographically, and I think Japan had only a limited number of IP blocks before CIDR routing was implemented).
And you have to turn on JavaShit to use the web site.
As for the cost, you have to understand the music market in Japan. CDs in Japan tend to cost about 3200 yen (about $30), though two-disc soundtrack sets are usually only a few bucks more. I think it's that high because CD rental and taping of rentals is legal in Japan. CD singles (usually two songs + karaoke tracks) cost on the order of 1000 yen (I think). So the cost really is comparable to that of a single track on a full CD. Oh, and for some reason I do not understand, in Japan, all CDs go out of print two years after original release. Apparently, this happens no matter how popular they are.