An Overview Of Present, Future of Music Technology 148
prostoalex writes "IEEE Spectrum magazine is running a feature article on the state of music and current digital formats. They point to an interesting phenomenon in the digital music world that Steve Jobs emphasized as well: for the first time in music history, the next big format was not about better quality (SACD and such) but about better portability (MP3). 'It was only five years ago that the music industry was facing a civil war over the next-generation disc-based music format -- the successor to the wildly successful CD. At that time, hardly anybody doubted that the music would be encoded optically on a round plastic disc the size of a CD.'"
Make no mistake (Score:4, Insightful)
All the future formats will be about replacing CDDA with "DRM".
Oh, it will be marketed as being about increased audio-fidelity, but it's all about getting rid of those horrible "insecure" CDs.
Re:Make no mistake (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Make no mistake (Score:3, Interesting)
The question is whether DRM will be optional (Score:3, Interesting)
If they do, then that could be a big plus for the Open Source OS's.
And if it does wind up a government mandated thing, then would the Open Source OS's be forced into following suit? (ie, will Open Source OS distros have to come from outside the US?)
On the other hand, if the DRM'd formats *aren't* forced
Re:Make no mistake (Score:2)
Ummmm...hello? The cassette, 8-track, compact disc, and mini-disc were all about portability.
The one thing all these formats have in common is they fit in your pocket.
I'm hard-pressed to think of any high-quality audio formats that have caught on in the past 30 years. ADAT, SACD...the few examples I can think of are pretty esoteric and are usually found in a recordin
Re:Make no mistake (Score:2)
and also... (Score:3, Funny)
SACD vs MP3 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:5, Insightful)
The two aren't mutually exclusive. Some people want portability, and that's fine, but what I want is a high quality update of the CD; with it's quality, maybe with more channels, and with the ability to scale it down *myself* if I want to take it with me on an iPod or such. Give me high quality, no DRM, and I'll work out what I want to do with, thanks very much. Oh, and I will pay for it, if it's DRM free, because that means it's portable to me (as well as being high quality). I have a rack of about 500 CDs sitting here beside me as a testament to that.
And this isn't about digital files. Digital files could be great, if they were decent quality. I'd buy lossless versions of the digital masters by the truckload if I could... but not versions that are worse than the CDs I can already buy (128kbps typical online music store vs CDs 1411kbps).
Anyway, I think the main reason that the MP3 is popular is not because it's just portable, but because of that portability it's easy to pirate. Listening to music on portable music devices is fine, but when you stick a 128kB MP3 on a decent hi-fi, or in a car, it sounds like crap. Until they provide us with something more compelling than free (but crap quality), they're going to have a big piracy problem (as opposed to a small one).
But the record companies are going to learn one way or another. If what they put out costs the same, but in every other regard is a backwards step, there are going to be a lot of people throw up their hands in disgust and look for something better. Or at least different.
I (we) don't just want portability, we want fidelity. MP3 and co do not provide that. They'll only get so far in the market without taking that into account.
-- james
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:5, Insightful)
128kbps MP3s have noticible artifacts when I play them back through my Nakamichi AV-8 amp + Mordaunt-Short speakers, that simply aren't noticible when played through an iPods headphones.
Variable bit rate encoding helps a lot here.
Makes me wonder why given all the hulabuloo about 'Digital is Forever' that Valenti and his morons trumpet, they persist in offering 128kbps DRMed audio from their download sites.
I guess they simply want this distribution method to fail.
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:3, Interesting)
IMHO around 128 kbps with lame is where it gets diffcult to tell the difference in an ABX test.
I use OGG a lot, too. It is pretty good.
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:2)
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:2)
i'm also one with a large collection of CD's (no, not 500, i'm somewhere around 260, unless you count all my recorded shows and then i'm probably well over
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:3, Insightful)
If commercial artists don't get millions of dollars for cranking out commercial crap, that's a real heartbreaker. If I want to listen to their crap for free, well good for me. This is the liberating nature o
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:1)
On the other hand for bands that want to put out th
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:3, Insightful)
For many people, music has become more like a "soundtrack" to their lives. Things like personal stereos, computer CD players and car cassette/cd increased the market for music because people would not have to sit down to listen, but could have it around them. However, the equipment for most people generally has low quality amplifi
Re:SACD vs MP3 (Score:2)
The iTrip coupled with WiFi uploading of tracks may well turn out to be the killer app for the MP3 generation, its just so damn convenient.
only that.. (Score:3, Insightful)
cd is good enough for store sold, holds an unit of music riaa is willing to sell and on just about any consumer system cd itself isn't at fault but the crappy speaker/amplifier used to play it.
it's going to be hard to convince people to switch to a 'better' format when cd really sounds good enough, is already widely spread, and people have cd players everywhere.
Re:only that.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:only that.. (Score:1)
Re:only that.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:only that.. (Score:1)
Re:only that.. (Score:2)
Portability... And security (Score:5, Interesting)
So I end up wondering... With the business they want, and with self-destructing DVD's [slashdot.org] already a common thing, plus time-limited DRM's, how long until we are reduced to the age of "renting" everything... even that which we purchase fully?
And then, on another front, how long before people start realizing that if people just want to hear the music, Digital-Analog-Digital conversion completely strips DRM... Then how long before some crazy laws come out that make that illegal, and anything that can "Facilitate" such functions illegal... so no computers will have line in anymore, and posession of microphones will result in a still fine and jail term?
Re:Portability... And security (Score:5, Funny)
Just returned my rented steak, fries and salad back to nature. Thank you.
Re:Portability... And security (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Portability... And security (Score:2)
Luckily, your tinfoil hat is good up to 935 F.
Re:Portability... And security (Score:2)
OOoooooo!! I never knew that!! Hey Joe!! Your Tinfoil hat will protect you up to 935 F! Let's try that out!
Two hours later
Well, good news!! The tinfoil hat survived! Joe, on the other hand, was not rated that high.
What about cassettes? (Score:5, Insightful)
Um... Wasn't that the point of cassette tapes? They were a dominant format for a while and the reason they replaced vinyl was their portability and robustness (maybe play-time, too.) Certainly it wasn't about sound quality.
On another note, why does MP3 have to replace CD? For my money, I really don't think that there's any likelihood that'll happen. CDs are simple to use, store enough data, are lossless, and come with pretty packaging. All good things. I can't see why there can't be two parallel distribution systems.
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2)
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2, Interesting)
Going from vinyl to cd's you had to buy the cd, because you couldn't transfer an album you already had... fine, for The Industry. CD's are not lossless compared with vinyl, it's still a digital format whereas vinyl is basicically analog..
Now, people are encoding their cd collections without the help of anybo
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not a sound engineer, but LP's were pretty noisy and had much less dynamic range than cd's. Different types of loss, but still a loss. Think of the sound you would hear as the needle rode in the groove before the music started. That sound was always there. There were many other quality issues with LP's, so I gladly switched to cd. It was a night and day difference in sound and convenience.
I know there are LP zealots out there who love the warm rich tones of vinyl, but I for one welcome our cd overlords. LP's sucked.
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:4, Informative)
From: http://georgegraham.com/compress.html
In 1982-83 when compact discs were introduced, it was like an epiphany for us audio folks. For the first time, consumers could purchase a recording in a medium whose dynamic range exceeded that of $20,000 professional tape machines. Now I know that there are vinyl-philes who still swear that LPs sound better than CDs. But right now I'm talking about signal-to-noise ratio and dynamic range. Putting aside the arguments about the analogue digital conversion process, I don't think anyone can make a convincing case that an LP (or a cassette for that matter) has a dynamic range that comes within 20 db of that available on a CD.
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:1)
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2)
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:1)
Me? I am happy with 128-320 kbs encoded mp3 as I don't have an expensive HI-FI anyway
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:4, Insightful)
CD's are not lossless compared with vinyl
OK, that's not what lossless means in this context. Technically every format is lossy compared to the original source because any recording is inferior to actually being next to whatever's making the original sound. Microphones aren't perfect. Headphones, speakers and even studio monitors aren't perfect. Let alone the recording formats.
In this context, lossless means that when you transfer a clip of audio (or video for that matter) from one format to another, the two versions of that clip are completely identical. As far as I know, this is impossible with all analogue formats.
If you copy a twelve track master tape of an album onto a record or a CD, it will lose some of its fidelity. If you copy a record to tape or a CD to tape, it will lose fidelity.
This is the important part: transferring one digital copy of a file to another. Encoding a CD audio track or .wav or .aiff file to .mp3 or Ogg Vorbis is lossy, because cunning trickery is used to get rid of all the parts of the sound that most human beings can't hear. FLAC and Shorten, however, are lossless because they preserve the data exactly.
For example, try this on a *nix machine:
The first line encodes a wave file losslessly. The second line decodes it. The third line compares the two. They are identical.
This is useful for several reasons. None of the reasons are how good it sounds; Ogg Vorbis quality three can probably convince most people (I know I can't tell the difference between that and the original audio). However, say you want to encode your CD collection to mp3, and then a year later you want to encode it to Ogg Vorbis instead. Transcoding (that is, transferring a file from one lossy format to another) sounds terrible. It's best to keep a lossless copy of your songs so that if you change your mind about the lossy format to listen to them in, you can automate the process.
Another, less likely, advantage is this: you can use steganography to hide data in wave files (steghide does this, for example). Losslessly compressed wave files retain this hidden data. Now you can stash your porn or ROMs where no one will think of looking, and even keep a backup on a P2P client.
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2)
Thank you for hitting the nail squarely on the head.
By now, I've encoded my entire music collection twice, once in 128 kbps mp3, and by now in 128 kbps AAC. It would have been a giant step backward the second time around if all I had to work with were those mp3 files, instead of the CD originals.
This is why I still purchase CDs, except for those times when I purchase from iTunes Music Store those few songs I like from otherwise insipid albums. The phot
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2, Informative)
hmm., that's not true for any music that does not involve recording an analogue source.,
i'm an electronic music composer and all my sources are already digital.,
i can savely say that the production process from my studio to a CD is pretty much totaly lossless.
there is of course some processing involved along the way but this is both intentional and enhancing so i would not consider that lossy.,
Re:What about cassettes? (Score:2)
I wasn't actually comparing CD to vinyl there. I was contrasting CD with MP3. Actually, I don't think the term lossless can be applied to any analogue system. The term fidelity is much more useful in these circumstances. And vinyl's fidelity ranges from sublime to bloody awful, depending on the pressing, turntable used, stylus, cartridge, etc.
Don't get me wrong here, I think vinyl's an excellen
I hate round plasic discs... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I hate round plasic discs... (Score:2)
Re:I hate round plasic discs... (Score:2)
There's no way that Admiral Kirk would allow that change to basic human language to be made!
(to any of you nodding your head in agreement, the mystery of why you don't have a significant other has been solved.)
Re:I hate round plasic discs... (Score:2)
MPEG AAC != Dolby AC-2 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:MPEG AAC != Dolby AC-2 (Score:2, Informative)
Apple never mentioned AC-2 anywhere. In fact, they usually expand AAC to Advanced Audio Coding in their explanations. I wonder where the author got that wrong idea.
Let's see how long it takes for this myth to spread across the internet...
Re:MPEG AAC != Dolby AC-2 (Score:1, Troll)
--Kimota!
Need for DRM? (Score:1, Funny)
I wonder how he justifies that considering one of the strong points of the leader, MP3 is no DRM.
Cheers (Score:2)
Thanks for putting the nail in that coffin, Apple! Surely a key factor in the iPod's success is in its size.
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
I work testing and repairing all sorts of electronics for a UK Hi-Fi company and I see a fair old few MP3 players returned.
The vast majority of iPods returned have nothing wrong with them that a good RTFM loudly directed at its owner wouldn't fix.
Unlike Philips HDD060 which is a piece of garbage, it has to be charged for 14 hours out of the box or you risk fucking it's battery, and Philips don't see any need to inform custo
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
Care to elaborate? I was going to buy one and now am looking into the successor models HDD050 and HDD065...
Re:Cheers (Score:3, Informative)
Quite a problem if the owner does not know that they have to charge the unit before use.
This problem is so bad that Philips opened a unit specifically to put new batteries into the units before sending them back out.
The unit though it can be used as a removable HDD will not play mp3s that you simply drag and d
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
Eww. That really sucks. And I guess it's unlikely they changed that with the new models, although they finally went ahead and used USB2.0 with those, which is the main reason I didn't get the HDD060. A friend says his iPod can't do that, either, though, is that true?
Thanks!
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
True sadly, you can store stuff on it but nothing more :(
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
All true.
I don't know of any ipod mini "style" players without DRM. You didn't mention the Rio Carbon (5GB) , but t
Re:Cheers (Score:2)
I really don't get why the other manufacturers don't support this, though. I wouldn't call it DRM - I can play MP3s on the players anyway, no matter if I move them using Explorer or some third party application, so why bother enforcing the usage of a 3rd party app? Bah.
MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:5, Insightful)
Filesize: But when a new computer comes with a 200Gb harddrive do most people these days even care that MP3 maybe isn't the most effective compression algorithm? I mean, you've got plenty for space so who cares if the typical music collection is 5Gb or 10Gb?
Quality: Most people are happy with CD quality. 192Kb MP3 pretty much gives you that quality. Most people are more than happy with MP3, especially on a portable device where listen conditions are 'suboptimal' shall we say.
Portablity vs DRM: This is the killer feature of digital music. The music industry wants to stop it, for everyone else it is all about being able to move music around. This is the one 'feature' that people do not want to see go.
What I've trying to say here is that people are more than happy with MP3 and the 'problems' with MP3 really aren't an issue for the majority of people, while these replacement formats kill the one feature that people really care about.
Good luck marketing your new formats, music industry. You'll need it!
--
Simon
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't mean to be the smelly hairy audiophile (anyway, I'm not) but the 192Kb MP3s that you refer to suck as soon as you're not listening to them on those shitty iPod headphones.
Like many other college students, I've invested a bit in a decent hi-fi (as much as I could afford) that has decent comp
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:2)
I wasn't meaning to be comical. It should be:
Sorry
-- james
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe to you. I have some decent headphones (Sennheiser HD 497) and I can't tell the difference between CDs and lame --alt-preset-standard (VBR, about 192kbps). I'd say most people are in the same boat.
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:2)
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:2)
My hearing tends to cut off at around 21 kHz. When you test your ears, make sure yo
Re:MP3 vs the rest: Is file size really an issue? (Score:2)
Is DRM Necessary? (Score:5, Interesting)
The premise that we can't do without DRM is based on a couple of unfounded assumptions. One is that people will always avoid paying if they can. This has already been proven wrong by the success of iTunes Store (and to a lesser extent competiting offering), despite the fact that there are plenty of sources of free music on the internet (especially P2P software like Kazaa and eMule). The second is that DRM actually works; actually there have been convincing arguments [mit.edu] that this will never work, especially considering the fact that a D->A->D conversion will produce very good results (probably as good as 128 bit MP3) and is basically impossible to prevent.
Then consider how much of a turnoff DRM is for customers. I think a good analogy is the early software industry. It used to be that floppy disks were crippled with "copy protection" technology, and a lot of software required the use of a hardware dongle. Nowadays these approaches have gone the way of the dinosaur and software companies tend to rely on much, much lighter weight protection like a simple license code. The reason is that copy protection was more likely to deter well-meaning novice users than hardened hackers, resulting in reduced sales. The software industry eventually realized that the right price points and distribution mechanisms were going to raise their revenues and profits a lot more than these "protections".
To me it seems logical that the music industry will eventually go the same route, even if it means that today's leading players will be dethroned by more forward-looking challengers. They're only clinging to DRM now because they are terrified of cannibalizing their existing revenue streams. This might work for a while but history suggests that they can't hold back the tide of technology forever.
Re:Is DRM Necessary? (Score:1)
>It used to be that floppy disks were crippled with "copy protection" technology [...] Nowadays these approaches have gone the way of the dinosaur [...]
Bought a game lately? Floppys are gone, but customer-agitating CD-protections are the rule, not the exception.
Re:Is DRM Necessary? (Score:4, Insightful)
I also find it instructive, whenever a music industry lapdog or article starts lauding "copy protection" (as this article does) to mentally substitute the phrase "business model protection" because that's what it's all about (protecting rights to exclusive distribution of music). But there's no doubt in my mind that consumers have rumbled this and won't let the market players get away with it.
Re: DRM just adds useless overhead (Score:3, Insightful)
There was a Slashdot story [slashdot.org] earlier about an interview [engadget.com] with MPAA's Jack Valenti, who said: "I really do believe we can stuff enough algorithms in a movie that only the dedicated hackers can spend the time and effort to try to plumb through those 1,000 algorithms to try to find a way to beat it". He really
Re: DRM just adds useless overhead (Score:1)
Region coding that is difficult to change means that the manufactuer effectively has multiple production and distribution lines. (one for each region).
In an ideal world, the sales in each area will be constant, but, as Apple found with the multi-coloured iMacs, Joe Public preferred some colours over others.
The same applies with the players. If, say, Europe has a sudden surge, at the expense of Japan, then all the players made for Japan sit on the warehouse shelv
DRM for Everyone! (or am I paranoid?) (Score:5, Informative)
Anyways, look out for many of the DRM features lying around to be activated in the near future. The biggest concern will be in memory cards, as most of them have built in features to erase the file after a certain number of plays.
Also in the near future: DVD players having their playing rights revoked (a code on the disc only allows keys stored on approved players to access the content. Both of these are not "coming-up" technologies, they exist at this very moment in hardware, it is just a matter of time before manufacturers activate them.Re:DRM for Everyone! (or am I paranoid?) (Score:2)
Also in the near future: DVD players having their playing rights revoked (a code on the disc only allows keys stored on approved players to access the content. Both of these are not "coming-up" technologies, they exist at this very moment in hardware, it is just a matter of time before manufacturers activate them.
Could you elaborate on this please?
Bullshit! (Score:3, Insightful)
Good PR... (Score:2)
Alas, the world doesn't work that way and doesn't look like it will change anytime soon. Most people are not technical in nature and rely on a balance of information - mostly given to them by the mass media. Don't blame them - they simply don't kno
Re:Good PR... (Score:2)
Re:Bullshit! (Score:2)
Um, I can't find those guys at iTunes Music Store. D'you think Napster has them yet?
Not the first time (Score:2)
Give me DVD audio over CD quality any day (Score:4, Funny)
I don't want portability. I'm not going to store 15,000 songs on an MP3 player. Heck, most of them will sit there unused for months. I want quality, DVD quality specifically. The difference between DVD and CD audio is just amazing. People might say there isn't much of a difference between the two, but chances are they're either deaf or have never heard the two compared to each other. It's just sooooo much better than past technologies. The problem is that no companies are putting their music out in DVD format.
Any of you who have audigy 2s, go get your discs and search for your DVD audio sampler disc. You'll have to install creative's junky music player to get it to work(I haven't found a DVD audio plugin for winamp that works with it), but it's worth it to hear the difference. Go on, do it, you can uninstall everything when you're done. You'll be amazed.
First time in history... (Score:3, Insightful)
After all, the phonograph record was a step down in quality from live music, but ever more portable tha a full band or orchestra.
Time we stopped calling this "music industry" (Score:2, Interesting)
WAV? Compression format? (Score:5, Informative)
WAV isn't compressed format at all (check filesize against audio data rate), IS fully (not virtually) lossless, and although the format wasn't designed for it, being raw audio data, ofcourse you could stream it.
Re:WAV? Compression format? (Score:2)
And for more fun (because it's almost raw PCM), try cat foo.wav >
Re:WAV? Compression format? (Score:2)
Technically, the term "lossless" does not even apply, because (as you said) wav isn't a compressed format.
WAV IS NOT A CODEC! (Score:2)
Bad Title (Score:2)
creating backups of your music data ... (Score:1, Interesting)
Accessibility not Portability (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, increased portability is behind the success of the iPod and other portable players. However take a look around you the next time you're riding the train, taking the bus or walking down a busy street: count how many people who are actually listening to ANYTHING, be it a MP3 player or even a portable CD player (excluding cell phones). Chances are it will be less than 1 in 10 (even for here in NYC).
The portability market is finite, and it has just about reached the s
Re:Accessibility not Portability (Score:2)
1. if 90% of people out there aren't listening to portable devices, then there are 90% of people who are potential consumers for a good portable device.
2. Sure the portable market is finite, just like pretty much every other market for anything is finite. I seriously doubt it is anywhere near saturation. The fact that players are selling as quickly as they are would seem to suggest there is plenty of demand still.
2.5. The younger crowd is likely going to be the major market, and they *do*
It's not about portability any longer! (Score:2)
Not the first time... (Score:1)
Some argue that the CD was the same.
So this is nothing new.
Not the first time for portability (Score:2)
Portability has been an important feature of audio formats for years.
1. 45 RPM records. Relatively durable with a hole big enough to stick a thumb through for ease of carrying.
2. 8-track and casette tapes. Made car and portable audio practical.
Recording Performances Separately (Score:2)
Of course, first we have to get the record c
Re:Recording Performances Separately (Score:2, Insightful)
So in order to be able to do "selective listening" as you propose, you would have to have each seperate track available. And by doing so, you of course mutliply the size of the song x the number of tracks. Basically, the only place you could fit this onto is a DVD, and a whole album with all the tracks available would
Bah... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bah... (Score:1)
"DOS addresses only 1 Megabyte of RAM because we cannot imagine any applications needing more." --Microsoft, 1980, on the development of DOS.
"Windows NT addresses 2 Gigabytes of RAM which is more than any application will ever need." --Microsoft, 1992, on the development of Windows NT.
Re:Bah... (Score:2)
Re:MP3, but improve the quality (Score:1)
Really? I didn't know that. Thanks for the info, I will revisit itunes/ipod.
Re:MP3, but improve the quality (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem is that even the registered version of an MP3pro converter would max out at 128kB, with 192kB "quality". Nice, but not really "enough". Everyone seems to be racing to the 96-128kb SIZE point, without realizing that it's not really all the great to listen to unless there's a lot of background noise, or the equipment you're playing it on comes in a heat-sealed clamshell. And 64kn in every format I've listened to sounds somewhere between AM and FM radio, with digital artifacting added as a bonus. I'll take 48 or 64 for spoken spoken word, but please don't say you use it for audio unless you are listening to it while mowing the lawn.
I finally gave up on lossy formats and started re-ripping everything in FLAC. Now I can transcode through foobar2000 to whatever the format dujour is, or to a format which will fit in the space I have on my portable player.
* Sony MDR-V6 in my case...quite the bargain IMHO, but get the Beyerdynamic 250/290 replacement pads - they're much more comfortable. See http://www.audioreview.com/PRD_118127_2750crx.asp