Microsoft to Launch Online Music Store 416
yonnage writes "Microsoft is expected to enter the online song store market this week, which should put the software giant head-to-head with Apple Computer in the music business at last.
The launch of Microsoft's iTunes rival will be timed along with the beta release of Microsoft's new Windows Media Player 10, expected on Thursday, sources say. The store will also be in beta mode, lacking some of the features that will be added later, sources said."
From the bonus disc (Score:5, Funny)
Rosoff: Wasn't I supposed to say this bit about how we allow customers to burn downloaded playlists ten times?
Director: Oops. Sorry. I forgot to blank that out.
Rosoff: And what's this Apple logo doing over here?
Director: Like I said, I forgot to blank some things out. We're done. Thanks. Go home.
It's about time! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, wait...
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Informative)
Once it's open it's not hard to install one of these [google.com]. They have fitted plugs, like your PC fan. It's a standard battery too. Used in some PDAs, and the like.
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Insightful)
Most small electronic gadgets use proprietary batteries now, e.g. digital cameras, mobile phones. This is because Li-Ion batteries can be made very flat, small and light.
You can buy an iPod new battery online and install it yourself if you want. This is hardish to do because the device is tiny but not beyond the skill of most people. If you don't feel like opening your iPod, Apple can do it for you f
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Funny)
Nah, MS is moving into the battery market next and all of it's devices will require a porperly licensed MS XPXPXP Batteries. Need to charge your XPXPXP batteries? Plug the special MS charger into the USB port of your computer and purchase recharge time at MSN.com... WARNING: Charging your XPXPXP batteries with a non-MS charger could cause an electrical surge damaging your ho
Re:It's about time! (Score:4, Funny)
I don't understand this argument -- specifically when made on slashdot; it seems like most readers of slashdot would welcome an excuse to take their iPods apart and replace the battery.
~jeff
Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:2, Insightful)
THink about it. IN the long run which are you going to spend more money on, the player or the music. The music. do really want to save 30 bucks buying a rio or a whatever to play your MS locked in music. Or do you want the best you can get. freedom is overated I think.
Re:Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:4, Funny)
Converting a song to WMA is kind of like bootlegging a concert by sitting in the nosebleed section of a coliseum and recording with a palm-sized dictaphone with a built-in mic. Sure it sounds a *little* like the music. But who would want to listen to it. Much less *pay* for it.
I'd rather listen to my dad play Glenn Miller Orchestra tunes on a kazoo than be subjected to anything encoded in WMA.
Don't even get me started on all that "Please wait while we contact the server and check out your license to play this song..." crap that goes in Windows Media Player.
If this is going to be the competition for iTunes, they've got nothing to worry about.
Re:Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:4, Funny)
Got a torrent?
Re:Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:3)
Comparing lossless to lossy compression isn't fair, so do what I do and convert the lossless stuff to MP3 for your favorite portable (I burn them to CDRW's which play on everything I've got).
Re:Monopoly hadware versus monopoly software (Score:4, Informative)
iTunes only authenticates a song purchased by a user that hasn't been played on the computer before. Once you enter the proper password, it no longer goes through the authentication process, and you can play offline to your heart's content.
Coincidentally, this can also be used to circumvent the five comp limit on protected AACs; authorize five computers to play your tunes, then use Apple's web form to de-authenticate those machines. The nifty thing is, this process is only done on Apple's end, so the five computers still think they're authorized. You can now allow five more machines to play your songs. As long as the first five never go online ever again, you're set. ^_^
Tin foil alert level at Orange. (Score:5, Insightful)
No it has nothing to do with selling Windows. It has to do with furthering the MSFT domination in every single technological market that they can slide their way into. The XBox hardware doesn't make them money but they are still getting their name out there and making money via some other channel (additional hardware, monthly Live subscriptions, royalties, whatever).
This is going to be no different. Get the people used to the MSN Music Store. Get them buying songs. Get them buying hardware. Get them used to seeing it in Windows. Make it an integral part of Windows. DRM the BIOS, DRM the OS, and DRM the Music, DRM the hardware/player, RIAA is happy, people get their Music, people are happy, money comes in, Bill is happy.
When the market is comfortable with seeing WMP and MSN media everywhere they are going to LOVE seeing it in their favorite theatre, on their favorite DVD, etc. Then the MPAA is happy and they will happily embrace the format which they are currently rejecting.
What I want to know is when WMP is going to just NOT work when you won't let it phone in what you have been watching/listening to. I've been waiting for that day to come. I wouldn't be surprised if it happened in WMP10-1 or WMP11. It's not like 99% of the people don't know that it is doing it and it's not like they care if it is. Most of these people don't have firewalls and even if they do they happily click to allow it to connect out permanently. Anything to make that annoying little box stop popping up.
Tin foil alert level is currently Orange but may raise when the MSN music store gains a foothold.
Monopolies of the world- Unite ! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Tin foil alert level at Orange. (Score:5, Insightful)
I usually try to distance myself from the tinfoil hat crowd, but given Microsoft's history of "success" in the desktop software market, it wouldn't at all surprise me to see this hapen.
Re:Tin foil alert level at Orange. (Score:4, Insightful)
If history is a guide, Microsoft will use the same tactics it used to integrate IE into the OS, to integrate DirectX (and therefore the DRM tools) into the operating system, assuming they haven't been already. If only we could view the source code for DirectX, we could know what someone else has installed on our computer and has left lying dormant. I don't think it's responsible to Trojan-horse features onto a user's computer without them knowing, and then claim sanctuary under a license agreement. In other words, if those features are already on my computer, they had damn well better have been explicitly declared to me well before I signed a license agreement.
Nobody owns my computer but me. Microsoft has no right to load my computer with features that I don't want and can't get rid of. Would you buy a car that costs 25% more than it should, simply because the manufacturer added more features than you needed? Of course you wouldn't! I build my computers, and that includes software. Operating systems should not be an all-or-nothing thing. You don't want the clock? Fine, no clock! You don't want DirectX or an HTML renderer? Fine!
So, when Microsoft gets busted for unfair pricing, is it because they're overpricing, or is it because they had to fund R&D on features that the end user can't use, can't find, and can't get rid of?
And that's just the insidious way that Microsoft is able to get away with nothing more than fines: nobody in any branch of government understands what "MSHTML.DLL" is, or what integrating it into the operating system really means. All they know is that there's an icon in the toolbar, and when you click it, it opens up a window.
Cars, skyscrapers, airplanes, poured cement. All these things are easy to test and inspect by either overseeing their construction or taking them apart and looking at what's inside. Who looks at software? Nobody.
Re:Tin foil alert level at Orange. (Score:3, Funny)
HP would be willing to fight MS over something like this,
especially since HP sees iTunes/iPod as a way to differentiate their
offerings from the likes of Dell and Gateway.
Re:Tin foil alert level at Orange. (Score:3, Insightful)
What MS is doing is no different than Apple, although they actually aren't quite as bad because they're not locking people into hardware they create. Also, if the system is anything like iTunes, the songs themselves won't ne
Interesting... (Score:2, Interesting)
Security through Obscurity (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
*Of course* there's no mention! Microsoft isn't going to strut around saying, "we've got a music store like Apple, BUT WE RESTRICT OUR MUSIC EVEN MORE! You'll love it, trust us."
BTW, I have 6 invites. If anyone wants one, I'll happily give them out. I've got nothing better to do with them anyway.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
RIAA:Microsoft::plump:fat (Score:5, Funny)
Re:RIAA:Microsoft::plump:fat (Score:2)
Re:RIAA:Microsoft::plump:fat (Score:3, Funny)
use RIAA::Microsoft::plump::fat;
When the hell did THAT module show up on CPAN????
Re:RIAA:Microsoft::plump:fat (Score:3, Interesting)
It'll be like a battle-royale between EULAs.
WMP10 Beta is already available! (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.micro soft.com/windows/windowsmedia/mp10/default.aspx
WMP10 Beta has been out for a while, so that's kind of confusing..
Re:WMP10 Beta is already available! (Score:4, Informative)
<URL:http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia /mp10/default.aspx>
Click here for that link [microsoft.com].
Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Prediction (Score:2)
Re:Prediction (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Prediction (Score:3, Insightful)
MS will relase a thousand press releases about how "innovative" their services is. If the govt tries to intervene they will complain that govt regulations are preventing them from "innovating" apple's ideas and technologies.
Re:Prediction (Score:3, Funny)
Oh yeah and it'd be nice if some of the m
It could be the Windows domination all over agian (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It could be the Windows domination all over agi (Score:2)
Re:It could be the Windows domination all over agi (Score:2)
Very conceivable that MS could make an OS that will run on a more standardized MP3 player and fully integrate with the MS music store ala ipod & itunes.
Although, looking at the MS track record for producing what they'd like (and it working) smart money says "immenant failure".
But it doesn't sync with my iPod (Score:5, Interesting)
I haven't even up(down)graded to WMP 9 yet, it's so sticky with DRM issues.
Adult rock, here I come! (Score:2)
Re:Adult rock, here I come! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Adult rock, here I come! (Score:2, Funny)
No talent ass-clown.
Next week's article... (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft Songlist (Score:3, Funny)
Will it live up to the MS name? (Score:2, Funny)
I have come to expec
Microsoft has to own everything (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not about "choice" -- it's about Microsoft.
Re:Microsoft has to own everything (Score:2, Interesting)
Get your facts right.
IBM, Dell, GE, Walmart etc. there are about 120 other companies which have more money than Microsoft.
Re:Microsoft has to own everything (Score:3, Insightful)
It is about choice. It's about which of the many high-quality and innovative Microsoft products you have to choose from. Choices abound!
For precedent, remember Henry Ford's possibly apocryphal statement: "Any color, as long as it's black"
Remember, kids: Microsoft is looking out for us. They're our friends. They're helping us with all the potential pitfalls of potentially incompatible competitors' products. All they ask is that absolutely everything we buy, see or do is made b
Re:Microsoft has to own everything (Score:3, Insightful)
If you were a Microsoft stockholder, would you want the company to look at the pile of money out there in the music business and say, "No thanks, I couldn't possibly eat another bite, I'm full"?
Companies exist to make money for their shareholders. That's the only reason they exist. Unlike a person, the company doesn't have a conscience. There are things you wouldn't do for money,
What's the point to all of this?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Microsoft has to find a way to be better than iTunes, rather than just selling music in the .wma format. Otherwise, I don't think they'll be beating out iTunes any time soon. Challenging it, yes. Ending up the most popular, no. Maybe it's wishful thinking, but I would think by now that those who were going to purchase music online wo
Gosh, what a nice horizontal monopoly you have! (Score:2, Insightful)
what you read online
what you listen to
what you buy
and what you watch
so it can 'market' to you better... I know this is nothing new but maybe these 'free market' guys should have been closer behind Msoft's breakup... If Microsoft goes into commercial sale
I havent RTFA, but I bet (Score:2)
DowsTunes
The downside... (Score:3, Funny)
These people have no shame!
Re:The downside... (Score:3, Funny)
I Think Not (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple is well in the lead and I don't see them losing the lead unless MS comes up with something better than just another "hey, me too!" store.
Re:I Think Not (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I Think Not (Score:3, Interesting)
I totally agree with you on your point (IE absolutely stomped Netscape's butt back in the day - now look at what a pile it has become compared to recent Netscape/Mozilla versions), but that was a simple software-on-software comparison. This is a little more complex because it involves cash transactions and hardware - not just a software technolo
Re:I Think Not (Score:3, Funny)
They have something MUCH better than Apple as far as hardware goes... Freedom of choice.
Has Bill Gates ever had an original idea? (Score:2, Insightful)
Windows was copied from Apple Macintosh, but now nobody can use the name "Windows" except Microsoft.
Oracle and PostgreSQL are SQL servers, so Bill grabs the name "SQL Server" and acts like the market for databases is supposed to belong to him.
Not that there is anything wrong with that.
Re:Has Bill Gates ever had an original idea? (Score:5, Informative)
Err...no. The name "SQL Server" comes from Sybase, the company who they originally licensed from. It's also why both Sybase and MS SQL Server have quite a bit in common with Transact SQL, though they vary significantly in dialect.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Has Bill Gates ever had an original idea? (Score:3, Insightful)
He's not just following Apple, BTW. Dell's got the Jukebox, Rio was the first portable MP3 player out there IIRC, there are a handful of USB key/MP3 players out there as well. MSFT is just capitalizing on the settling player market, getting in when the cost to develop the technology is the lowest. They'll pick and choose the featureset of the lowest common denominator, undercut all the other devices on the marke
Where's the love, man? (Score:5, Insightful)
Alpha version, that is. (Score:5, Insightful)
No to be a picky bastard or anyhing, but projects without full features was called alpha state to me, last time I checked, while full featured, still in-test is beta.
Funny quote... (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't this how all their software works ?
I was thinking that they....... (Score:5, Interesting)
A second leg of that campaign is bearing fruit this year, as a wave of Windows-based entertainment hardware comes to market. Some of these will be portable devices, dubbed Portable Media Centers, running a slimmed-down version of Windows that includes Microsoft's new Janus copy-protection tools. This technology is expected to give a boost to subscription services by allowing the music to be put on portable devices for the first time.
emphasis mine
Why on earth would you need a Windows GUI on a device the with the same comparible size and power of an Ipod?
I wonder if in the future they'll bundle Media player 10 and the MS music store with Longhorn.
Re:I was thinking that they....... (Score:5, Interesting)
Screw MS (Score:5, Interesting)
I know i know, yes they have to ruin the world.. but i can still be annoyed at it..
grr. note to self: need to take action.. stop evil empire..
Lacking features (Score:5, Funny)
Like security?
Re:Lacking features (Score:2, Funny)
Leveraging a monopoly (Score:3, Funny)
Partner Driven (Score:2, Interesting)
Cheers,
Erick
Why MS will succeed at this (Score:5, Insightful)
\ MS will say that they are at the top of their game, until they are (which in some cases is never). They have the money to make mistakes like no one else. They can have no features, barest functionality, poor implementation, and still create hype and users - all through the marvel of $$$.
The Apple iTunes store doesn't have anything to worry about for a long while, but MS will beat their dead horse until its a threat. Not a big threat. Nobody cool is going to use MS's service.
At the end of the day - that's what it's all about.
dealerships (Score:3, Informative)
Xix.
Higher bitrate, folks! 160 Kbps VBR! (Score:2)
Extension of Monopoly (Score:2)
iTunes will win out (Score:5, Interesting)
Why MS Tunes? (Score:4, Insightful)
When iTMS came out, MS said explicitly that it wasn't going to get into the music download business. It's partners (or, I suppose, potential victims) already had large investments in online storefronts, and its other partners already sold WMA-enabled devices.
So why did MS decide to get into music?
I think the HP/Apple deal had something to do with it. One of MS' biggest customers went with another vendor (Apple). That must have galled MS. The PC side has device vendors and music stores, but there was no single-vendor solution. The WMA hardware vendors were probably complaining to Mama that MS wasn't helping them on the software side.
And when you look at it, how stable is are the WMA-based music stores? Real? Napster? Wal-Mart? Any of them could flake out at any moment, deciding that the business wasn't good enough. None of them are stable enough for a real long-term partnership.
By providing an MS music store, MS removes one barrier to WMA-based music stores: vendor instability. It supports the WMA-licensees. It opens up licensing opportunities.
Note there's no consumer benefit here, really.
The question is will MS be able to run this afterthought storefront?
iTMS is about the iPod, not Apple. People use iTMS because it's easy and nice to use, and it works with their pod. MS Music is about...hardware vendor support?
It'll be interesting to see how long MS Music lasts, and more interesting to see who the first few licensees will be.
Believe it or not they're doing it right! (Score:5, Interesting)
A few months ago I was at a music conference when I got into a deep discussion with this guy about our love of West African music. He's been doing an African music radio show for 20 years, and has met Fela Kuti, and been in this band doing Afropop, too.
So after half an hour of talking about this, I said, "I'm sorry I don't know your name." - and I flipped around his badge. He was one of the heads of Microsoft MSN Music! I cringed a bit and said, "Oh. Uh. Microsoft? Whoa." I'm generally a MSFT-basher. But I said, "Well --- it's nice to know they have someone like you inside the big beast."
He said, "I was surprised, too, but guess what? They actually found 8 other guys like me, too. People who have been in the music side of the music biz for at least 10 years. People running folk radio shows, and jazz magazine editors and such. Real MUSIC people. And they told us to make the online music store of our dreams."
They're going to be selling the entire CD Baby Digital Distribution catalog - and in fact they pursued us pretty strongly. Even on the tech-side of things, they're really doing everything right. (Yeah yeah of course they insist on DRM. You expected Ogg Vorbis?)
But anyway I just felt you have to give credit where credit is due, and I can tell my fellow Slashdot nerds in advance that I think the MSN Music Store is really doing it right.
Re:Believe it or not they're doing it right! (Score:3, Interesting)
yeah, I've had similar experiences really meeting the "nice guys" from within MS. One time I even had a 20 minute discussion w/MS' CFO (John Connors) about the exorbitant prices for their development tools (Visual Studio, among others). He nodded his head in agreement, at the end of the conversation said, "You really have a good point about this -- I'm going to have my people look into this..." Later that day before he left the conference, he got up to announce his departure and said, "Some of you asked
Re:Believe it or not they're doing it right! (Score:4, Insightful)
It's people like that who get people like you to sign deals. This really reminds me of that write up on how the big labels use ex-members of indie bands to get new bands to sign contracts. "How bad could they be, they are just like us?".
Just imagine a day when MS has a 100% control over online music and they want to "renegotiate" their contract to "better suit" the "consumer". Any label that hands MS the rights to distribute their music is putting themselves in a position where the network effect will force them to have a lower position when doing business with MS.
Beta is being misused! (Score:5, Insightful)
The store will also be in beta mode, lacking some of the features that will be added later, sources said.
Seems to me that lately, Beta no longer means a testing phase. It now means "Hurry and saturate the market with an incomplete product so we can make money now and take business away from competitors!"
"Plays for Sure" ?? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think its fair to say then that, somewhat ironically, Apple won't be one of their partners. I'm fairly sure that Jobs won't want a "Plays for sure" logo on iPods, or iTMS. Which makes me wonder:
Given the huge popularity of iTMS and the iPod so far, will we see the beginning of another "Betamax vs VHS"-style technology battle? Will this be the move that forces Apple to license FairPlay in order to keep sales of iPods up? After all, if this is likely to be bundled in future versions of Windows, or even - perhaps - in future interim releases, then that's some 9x% of the planet with a music player that's tied to services that aren't apple, and using a music format that is not compatible with the iPod.
Or (somewhat unlikely), is this going to be the service that people finally realise what it means to be locked into vendor platforms? After all, all I saw on zdnet was a mention that it used Janus for DRM encoding - what was not mentioned was what limited rights was it permitting you to exercise? Surely if something like this hits the mainstream music-buying public there will be some kind of backlash.
Non-MS wma stores might as well just give up (Score:3, Insightful)
Also none of the wma online stores have the features that iTunes at least has to differentiate it from the MS store. They don't use different software. Their software and any prominance to any particular online store is supplied by their biggest direct competitor! What store do they think Windows media player will give prominance to. And they know perfectly well MS' business practice history esp. with regards to bundling e.g. Netscape. Any popular hardware player that plays theres will play MS's. Even the name of the format "Windows Media Audio" suggests that it is a MS product and lots of people have the idea that MS products work best with other MS products.
Basically they are screwed. Their biggest competitor controls their fundamental technology and the way their customers use it AND has a reputation for ruthlessly abusing their monopoly powers. They might as well just close up shop now and be done with it. Only MS and iTunes will survive. But this is what you get for trusting MS I suppose...I wouldn't be surprised if MS only co-operated with the other stores long enough to get the required intelligence on how to run an online store as they've done it before and I can't see MS ever having any ideas about wanting to share a market with any competitors. Sharing is not part of the MS vision.
Re:Profit ? And no, no lame 1,2,3 joke ;) (Score:2)
But then again, it's probably just a good way to fsck Apple in the ass.
Re:Profit ? And no, no lame 1,2,3 joke ;) (Score:2)
They wouldn't (at first.) They have enough money to undercut the competitor, drive them out of business or at least marginalise them, and then they have a monopoly and can do as they please.
Re:Profit ? And no, no lame 1,2,3 joke ;) (Score:2)
But this seems solely to be a competitor, only to drive another one out of business / harm their business ; instead of going for a profit themselves.
But as you said, maybe in the long term, there is profit to be made.
Re:Profit ? And no, no lame 1,2,3 joke ;) (Score:3, Insightful)
Having said that the profit will come in later. If MS is able to leverage their current monopoly to gain a monopoly in online music distribution they will be just like the RIAA. They will be able to charge everytime anybody buys
Re:Profit ? And no, no lame 1,2,3 joke ;) (Score:2)
Re:timing? (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess the same thing was said a while ago by the executives at netscape.
Re:timing? (Score:2)
Re:timing? (Score:2)
Re:timing? (Score:5, Interesting)
Instead, they failed to compete even with the meager feature set offered by IE, pumped their money into one of a million useless portals, and they fell apart.
Is this Microsoft's fault, for exploiting their monopoly to crush Netscape? Maybe. But the prevalence of IE hasn't crushed Opera. It hasn't killed off the much smaller OmniWeb either. In fact, Netscape's sorta-funded Mozilla arm is doing fantastic against IE, almost everybody who tries Firefox sticks with it.
Moral of the story: if you're gonna survive competetion from Microsoft, you'd better get on your fucking toes. Make sure you're always one step ahead (not hard, Microsoft maneuvers with the speed and grace of a Cadillac Brougham) and don't ride your success.
I don't think we have anything to worry about from Apple in these respects. Unfortunately, the key to doing more than simply surviving Microsoft is keen marketing in the face of price cutting and a good-enough mentality. Microsoft is, after all, the Walmart of software companies when it comes to price cutting. If they can shave $.11 off the cost and sell at a loss for two years, they have a chance of burying Apple and everybody else.
Re:timing? (Score:3, Insightful)
What do you mean IE is a bare-bones browser? IE's 4.0 supported XML / CSS at a time when Netscape 4.0 was a baby.
I have used IE 5.0/5.5/6.0 for developing applications from 2000 onwards and i have always the features packed in to IE far, far better than Netscape.
IE supported XHTML/XML/XSL scripting and DOM model before Netscape even knew what they were. Microsoft implemented most standards including CSS stuff like tags which were proposed by W3c.org when no ot
Re:timing? (Score:2)
I would imagine with that whole 'desktop market dominance' thing. We've been through this before. [wikipedia.org]
Re:timing? (Score:2)
Because Microsoft has lots and lots and lots and lots of money.
They can can sell at a huge loss to undercut iTunes, and still it will be at a tiny cost to their bottom line.
Re:timing? (Score:4, Funny)
You buy a copy of Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 87.
You click in the "My Music" folder.
The happy little Windows XP(tm) screen comes up with the bar on the left with lots of options.
The top option is "Buy music from the Microsoft Music Store".
Click on that option, IE comes up and the downloads are automatically added to the My Music folder. You can then use the music player features built into the Music folder to play them.
It will be easy and seamless. It won't be as slick as the iTunes+iPod combo, but like Windows itself, it will be Good Enough.
By the way, I had an interesting talk with a friend of mine about why he likes Windows. He's a crusty old man, and it turns out the pretty girls in his neighborhood turn to him for their Windows problem fixes in exchange for sexual favours, and the guys give him beer. He blesses Bill Gates every day for putting together such a "shitty product"! He also likes the challenge. So he's well stocked with beer, women and challenges, which makes for a fun retirement indeed.
I had to laugh. He has a point
D