The Future of Digital Audio 296
Andru Edwards writes "It can be said that the current digital music scene can be a bit overwhelming with all the competing technologies and file formats. No matter what format you use, these fairly new compression methods make it easy to carry along your entire music collection with you wherever you go, surpassing anything we could have done a decade ago. So where are we headed? This article examines what the future of digital music will bring, both from the hardware and software perpectives."
No Vorbis? No FLAC? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No Vorbis? No FLAC? (Score:4, Insightful)
What about a new format? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: New format(s) (Score:3, Insightful)
For audio, I think the eventual winner will be the format not with the best quality per se, but the best lock-down ability (DRM) to get the major commercial people behind it. In terms of pure audio, I think OGG might be the best quality format for now, but has nobody built an *opti
best DRM will be the future format (Score:5, Insightful)
In the future the format that provides the easiest,fastest, and most reliable way to copy whole libraries of thousands of albums at one time will be the most widely used format, regardless of any copyright law.
Not Exaclty (Score:2)
Re: New format(s) (Score:2)
This is why I say the digital format war was settled 5 years ago. There's a reason why we still call all these devices "mp3 players" after all.
There's no great need for better compression at lower bit rates as hard drives get bigger and cheaper. I mean the fact is there are two
Re: What about a new format? (Score:4, Informative)
But apart from a proof-of-concept, no-one's actually written a bit-stripping program yet.
The obvious conclusion is that, rightly or wrongly, not too many people are concerned about bit-stripping...
Re:No Vorbis? No FLAC? (Score:2, Insightful)
i RTFA and i thought it was pretty good. the greg guy sounds like he has an agenda to push (touting napster/rhapsody subscription model or zen being more intuitive than iPod) but otherwise, it was a fairly entertaining read. lack of one detail about a format is no basis to dismiss the entire article as horrible, which
Re:No Vorbis? No FLAC? (Score:2)
flac on dvd (Score:5, Insightful)
So we have portable CD players that play mp3's. That's nice. Plop in a CD-R with mp3's into your portable CD-Walkman-type device, and you are good to go. Who needs hard-drive players that cost much much more and that you have to keep plugging into your USB or firewire port?
CD-Audio is silly. DVD-audio is silly. If you can have a portable device that plays FLAC, which there are (they are hard-drive based) from Rio, I think - then what's the point of having huge uncompressed audio files if you can cut the size in half and still have the same sound quality?
Flac does support 24+ bit audio, so instead of using up tons of storage space with that 24bit 96khz quality, just compress it losslessly.
What we need - and I don't know if there are issues with CSS, etc... but we need a Walkman-type device, not much larger than a CD (you know, those round-type things you can get for $50) - that supports DVD data disks.
A DVD data disk is the same size as a CD data disk, and it can hold about 12 lossless - CD Audio quality albums (give or take). Plop in a data DVD that has flac files on it - I think this is much easier in terms of storage space, backups, and not having to connect to some USB or Firewire port all the time every time you want to change the disk.
What I want is a portable FLAC player that accepts DVD data disks - as our embedded processors get more powerful, the need for uncompressed streams like CD audio or DVD audio will be unnecessary.
A portable DVD data player that plays FLAC. That's where it's at, man. Just like the $50 CD Walkmans that play mp3s, except one that plays FLAC and accepts data DVD disks.
Re:flac on dvd (Score:2, Insightful)
With a DVD bases solution, you wouldn't be able to generate playlists on the fly and store them (unless the player has built-in RAM to store the playlist), and it wouldn't
Re:flac on dvd (Score:2)
Obviously, some folks prefer the hard-drive ones, and that choice is a good choice and a valid choice. But I guess it surprises me that the DVD isn't being used (it's not like this is some hypothetical either-or world - we CAN have both) - perhaps it's CSS and other Macrovision restrictions - but in the future, if w
Re:flac on dvd (Score:2, Informative)
This is close (Score:2)
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0%2C1759%2C821305 % 2C 00.asp
It plays mp3-dvds as a walkman-type device (and happens to double as a USB dvd reader and cd writer).
Unfortunately, I'm pretty sure the only lossless you'll get out of this is WAV, so no compression. But if you've got flacs on your hard drive, you could transcode them to high-bitrate mp3s, save a crapload of space, and probably never notice the difference in casual listening. And you'd
Re:No Vorbis? No FLAC? (Score:2)
Another factor will be players. Major player support is mp3, wma and aac these days. Some no
Just part of a pattern. (Score:4, Interesting)
Digital music is so 15 minutes ago (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Digital music is so 15 minutes ago (Score:2)
Re:Digital music is so 15 minutes ago (Score:2)
No Matter What Future Holds, One Thing Is Certain (Score:5, Insightful)
All the while, prices for these new formats will either stay the same, or go up, due to "increasing costs of production" and stay that way.
RE: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:5, Insightful)
There's always an analog solution to a digital problem. If you can play it once, I guarantee that someone will use that one time to hook it up to their computer and record it in a non-managed format. If you can only listen with X-brand headphones with a special adapter, someone will cut the cable and make a way to record the sounds in a different format.
No copy protection is fail-safe. As such, they will all fail.
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:3)
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:5, Funny)
Though it would be fun to try.
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2)
Save your ammo for the things you intend to serve for dinner...
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:5, Interesting)
You just put very quiet warbly tones into the audio with a binary message encoded in them... When you play it back, the playback machine hears the tones and refuses to play any further.
There is no way of filtering them out as they do a random walk, and you trash audio if you try to remove them with hi-q notch filters anyway.
This system was mooted a few years ago, and got a lot of complaints from 'audiophiles', but it was quickly realised that if you did not tell people the tones were there, they cannot hear them.
So, the tones came back, and are on a large number of CDs released in the last few years, waiting for the DRM tech to catch up to make use of them. They survive analog copying very well.
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2)
If you can't get them anymore, you'll be able to import them from Canada or China.
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:5, Informative)
Aside from which, I could just use the always open legacy analog hole, play it back in a sound booth with multiple mics for pickups. Isolate speakers, 2 mics cross matched to each, recreate without wiring. Filter inaudibles out, no message left.
Data cannot be configured to protect itself. It must necessarily be accesible to the user, and there are suffiecient of us in the 6 billion plus population to figure out a way around it. If the data can be accessed, it can also be changed.
They tried that, it didn't work (Score:2, Informative)
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2)
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2)
And since that's so unlikely that we might as well say that it will never happen, the only use for the warble-tone watermark is just that: Irrevocable watermarking of illicitly-traded MP3s, with the vaguely-purposeful hope of easily identifying the source material.
There just isn't any R or M in this quasi-incarnation of DRM.
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: NMWTFH, OTIC (Score:2)
We use raw AIFF in the studio where I work, and it is easy to bump it down to an mp3. I could even do it right now...go grab one of the glyph disks, plug it in, open the project, export the mastered stereo track to mp3, open my favorite GNUtella client...
Luckly, I love my job, and the artists w
Re:No Matter What Future Holds, One Thing Is Certa (Score:2, Insightful)
Companies will try harder and harder to make sure DRM exists in all these formats and is ever more restrictive ("Oh, well with our new Super-Duper Audio Discs, you can only play it 5 times on one single device.")
All the while, prices for these new formats will either stay the same, or go up, due to "increasing costs of production" and stay that way.
Precisely why I will not buy this "new" technology. It is just a money grab. I never did buy the CDs available that I used to have in record and tape
left something out (Score:2)
Man, I was hoping for discussions on what the maximum sample rate that makes a difference is, or how much sample resolution future systems will have. (12 channels of 96-bit 1MHz audio!)
Re:left something out (Score:2)
no music for you (Score:5, Insightful)
free replacements (Score:5, Informative)
Funny thing is, the stuff I bought online I just went and downlaoded again. All I had to do was put my email address in a form and Magnatune [magnatune.com] sent me a list of every selection I bought from them and provided a link and password for me to grab them again.
Huh. Maybe the problem isn't that the music is fragile, only that your rights are. Maybe the solution isn't worrying so much about "backups," but making sure that you give your money to someone who respects their customers.
Re:free replacements (Score:2)
Re:free replacements (Score:3, Informative)
Re:no music for you (Score:5, Insightful)
The songs I've ripped to computer are mirrored to no less than three hard drives on separate computers - just to prevent what happened to your friend. And it's all ripped from CD so it's not like it would be gone forever if I had a crash. I just like the redundancy because I value my time. It took a long time to encode 300+ CDs to Ogg...
Hmmm... perhaps this will be a new niche for the insurance industry? 'MP3 insurance'.
Don't laugh - it's not even remotely funny.
Re:no music for you (Score:2)
I have CD's that I bought in 1983 or 1984 that are still in perfect condition (WOW, 20 years!)
This jibes with the CNN article as far as storage conditions. I'm always careful to handle CD's by the edges and keep them stored vertically.
Re:no music for you (Score:3, Informative)
Re:no music for you (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally I think that there needs to be a shift in how online music industry works, maybe a central DB of all the songs that you have legally purchased and the ability to get them from there at any time, anywhere, in any format, for any reason (ie: giving the consumer the right to the music they've purchased). Of course, bandwidth and labor costs would prevent something like this, and again I'm sure the RIAA wouldn't want you to be able to not have to buy something a second time.
Re:no music for you (Score:2, Informative)
I'm not sure thats fair, I can't imagine that it's all that hard to phone you're local insurer up and say "i'd like to insure my CD/tape/MD/betamax/hi8/2" reel to reel/8track colection".
Not to say though that you couldn't insure a hard drive however there could be problems that the data ever existed if lost and also whether it had been copied off before a fatal partition wipe.
Insurance for CDs (Score:2)
-David
Re:no music for you (Score:2)
This central global music database already exists, it's called Kazaa.
Re:no music for you (Score:2)
But then again I suppose that's what backups are...
-David
Last sentences of the article (Score:5, Insightful)
So why does everyone seem to be trying to take it away?
Re:Last sentences of the article (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a distortion of the issue to claim that companies are against digital audio (CD and DVD-A are digital formats). The freedom discussed is the ability to download your music online and take it with you on portable players.
Illegal copying of music that is copyrighted by content owners is what they are fighting against. They have a right to have their works protected by law so that they
how about just better quality. (Score:2)
I'm sorry but my mp3s still dont sound no where as full as my good old fasion vinyl purple rain album.
Re:how about just better quality. (Score:2)
Wasn't it the other way arround? I was pretty positive that vinyls had lousy freq. response (and noise, fragility, and so), but they blew away digital media concerning dynamic range, which might be one of the reasons they're reputed to "sound better" for certain music styles (like classical, where poor dynamic range can kill a recording).
As for compression,
The future of digital audio: DRM (Score:5, Insightful)
Article sez:
Yah-huh. And after that it makes the observation that:
Isn't it patently obvious? These people don't even know what freedom means. Their view of freedom must include being yoked to someone's cart.even better (Score:5, Interesting)
"Copyrighted ideas?"
Who the fuck are these people? A bunch of jr. high students? I would call this article a circle jerk, but it's too self indugent for that...
Re:even better (Score:2)
Oh, wait...
Give me seamless integration (Score:5, Interesting)
He really has a point there. I got sick of burning CD's, so I bought an MP3 player. I use a car-kit (bless those things) to listen the music from my MP3 player. I use the FM transmit sometimes, but just like the article says, I have trouble finding available frequencies. New compression methods/formats are all well and good, but I'd like to see better integration between audio devices. I want to be able to stream music from my audio unit and have my car audio system pick it up and play it
There are car MP3 players, but the ones I have seen require you to burn a CD with MP3's on them.
Not the most IP-aware crowd (Score:4, Interesting)
Hector, I hate to break it to you, but ideas can't be copyrighted. He probably meant to say, "patented" (which would need more rewording to be really correct, but it's close enough). Maybe I'm just nitpicking, but it seems like he's not familiar with patent law terminology. Or else I'm reading it wrong - is he really afraid that somebody will implement the ideas in the article? Why would that be something to be afraid of? Is he afraid he won't get his cut? He's a journalist - he's paid to talk about his ideas. If he wanted more payment, he should be an entrepreneur.
summary (Score:5, Insightful)
- all music companies care about DRM, and they will all continue to care about DRM
- Apple will face more competition for the ipod
- all audio players will get smaller in size
- hard drives will get cheaper, as will audio players in general
- tivo-for-audio (something that has existed for more than a year) will continue to exist
- some guy thinks players should display lyrics like a karaoke machine
- they think consumers want a single device for everything - pda, audio, phone, watch, video player - even though integrated devices are unsuccessful in many other areas of life (tv/vcr, fridge/web browser, etc.)
The above items are all written by me, and certainly omit some of the details. But I fail to see how any of this reveals anything interesting or unexpected about "the future" of digital audio.
Re:summary - exactly (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:summary (Score:2)
Re:summary (Score:2)
- they think consumers want a single device for everything - pda, audio, phone, watch, video player - even though integrated devices are unsuccessful in many other areas of life (tv/vcr, fridge/web browser, etc.)
At first I was going to agree with you, but then I realized I took my watch off today because I didn't need it since my cell phone has a clock on the front display. So I guess it is a phone/watch.
I have an iPod I really happy with, but if I could set up a special playlist and download a gig of
Re:summary (Score:2)
Re: summary (Score:2)
Well, yes, but you could equally well argue that one single device is far less likely to be stolen than any of the umpteen you'd otherwise be carrying around with you.
Why should I care about formats? (Score:3, Interesting)
For me, that pretty well sums up the present: everything just works, and I don't have to worry too much what format AV files are in. I don't know if it's because I don't use them much, or because the Debian packagers have done a really nifty job of getting things set up.
I suppose that if it were my hobby, I'd want to know all about those file formats, but I shouldn't have to know to have things just work.
Re:Why should I care about formats? (Score:2)
Re:Why should I care about formats? (Score:2)
Total time is about 2 minutes.
Now, I do generally know by sight the most comoon non-prepackaged codecs (DivX, FFD) and most of the other, odder ones I can either find, or are actually already installed by default.
Re:Why should I care about formats? (Score:2)
Just like the 'PlayforSure' slogan WMP seems to have picked up.
less than epic (Score:2)
i'd like to point out that CPU usage on a lot of audio processors is getting worse, even for the same task. A lot of the Via solutions dont try to offload anything at all. Its really quite disheartening.
And my other big pet peeve, syncrhonized audio. xntpd should let you sync a couple systems clocks, and music software should be able t
Re:less than epic (Score:2)
Chicken / Egg situation (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless you come up with a format that will play on existing hardware players, it'll be extremely slow to adopt.
It all boils down to DRM (Score:4, Interesting)
Andru: The thing that I see as being the biggest issue going forward is DRM (digital rights management). iTunes has their DRM for their AAC files, while Microsoft has another for WMA. Of course, they are trying to make it easy with their PlaysForSure initiative. Sony has yet another for it's ATRAC files, and MP3 has none. Therefore, an iPod cannot play any WMA files, and nothing but an iPod can play Apple AAC files. Music purchased from Sony Connect can only be played on Sony digital audio players. Why all the confusion? Fine, we understand that the RIAA wants to protect it's property, but do they have to do it at the expense of causing mass confusion amongst casual music buyers? Even better, why can't these protected files just work across platforms? If you look at DVD's, there is one protection standard. We should have the same thing for our digital music. If there was an effective DRM solution out there, it would seem that the music stores would have no choice but to support it as it would ease the minds of the purchasers, thus bringing in more cash.
That's where it all hits the fan - DRM. If the RIAA wasn't such a greedy bunch of pigfuckers, we could all trade MP3s and get dinged for each trade (say, a dime per trade), and everyone would be happy. Napster had a system like that under works, and were ready to roll it out, then it was reduced to a smoke hole in the ground over in Redwood Shores.
Dime a Trade? I'd do it. Especially if a source got a rating (this way asshats who rip stuff at 64 mono, have clicky messy files, or are shills for the RIAA, can be avoided) like in EBay. You would have to use a specific client, and that client would be wired to your bank account. Everybody happy, and we could all use plain vanilla MP3s - no muss no fuss no chocolate mess.
RS
Re:It all boils down to DRM (Score:4, Insightful)
Wired to a bank account?
Gee that wouldnt prevent anyone from making choices. People that use opensource platforms can't listen to music? How about people that dont have bank accounts?
That market will slowly push out proprietary systems, or those with DRM, as each one's protection is cracked, or the format is ignored entirely, etc.
I for one will never buy a media device that enforces any sort of DRM (unless there is some use for it that avoids the DRM functions). That includes digital TV's, DRM'ed music (online or pseudo CD), and anything else they come up with.
Let's look a little further (Score:2)
But peering around that, the coolest radio gadget would be one that tune tunes *every* station in the area simultaneously, and stores it all. Forget about scheduling a recording; if you discover something interesting, you can go back and listen to the whole thing. Then go even farther back, and listen to the previ
Re:Let's look a little further (Score:2, Insightful)
All I see is yet another attitude that music is something to be consumed, and not produced.
I wish for a very low cost digital format (like sony minidisc) but without consumer drm crap that serves to lock ME out of my own music that I create.
If I use a Sony portable MD to record music that I wrote and performed, and the MD does not permit me to extract my recording fully in the digital domain, my rights have been abridged, because Sony has leveraged copy control over my c
The New Ipod (Score:2)
Wireless at it's best????
This speaks loads for the credibility of the authors who make such a dumb gramatical mistake lol.
Re:The New Ipod (Score:2, Funny)
And this speaks loads for the credibility of, well, you.
Re:The New Ipod (Score:2)
Ultimate file format (Score:5, Interesting)
Think about it, the stones have introduced their remastered collection on the new 5.1 CD format. Beyond that home theater has 6.1 and 7.1, and a few other formats that I'm sure I have never heard of. The trend is toward more data being given to the listener in a recording. The logical conclusion is a copy of the master. By including a fader move script and effects script, I can play the recording as it was created by the studio engineer. Or, perhaps I am a fan of the band's bassist, so I push the bass to the front of the mix. Mabey I like the bootygrove music, so I dump the drumline and dub in a drum machine backing track. Perhaps I like to have my rap music with disgusting bass, so I crank all the bass in my favorite gangsta ditty. I can also fool with the balance, effects, etc. as much as I want.
As digital processing power gets cheaper, doing real-time remixing with 24 tracks in realtime becomes a viable option. You already have something similar going on in video games.
Personally, I hope this happens in my lifetime. I can think of several albums that I love that I would spend $100 to have a high quality copy of the master, just to be able to fool with them and listen to the results.
Re:Ultimate file format (Score:3, Insightful)
I couldn't imagine the horror of being a recorded musician and having people messing around with my carefully crafted tracks. Add to that the fact that your "effects script" concept is inherently flawed, in that non-digital effects (ie, real stuff like overdriven tubes or even just a particular fuzzbox) are used extensively in music production, and the whole thing falls apart.
I'm reminded of th
Re:Ultimate file format (Score:3, Interesting)
I couldn't imagine the horror of being a recorded musician and having people messing around with my carefully crafted tracks.
So don't release for that format. It's a free country. I am a musician, and if someone wanted to re-mix my music, I would be flattered. People remix the HELL out of everything these days, it's not like you could stop them.
Add to that the fact that your "effects script" concept is
This article (Score:3, Informative)
Just what we want? (Score:2, Funny)
Quoth the article:
We want to lose ourselves in the music during those long commutes, and digital players will eventually take us there.
I don't know about you, but the last thing I want is the asshat behind me "getting lost" in the latest Britney song and putting a thousand-dollar dent in my fender.
Keep your immersion crap away from people operating heavy machinery, mmkay?
WIFI (Score:2)
Soon you'll be able to say, store all you music at home (or on someone elses server if Microsoft, Aol or whoever get there way), and pick it up in you car, on your 'walkman alike', at work, or just in the living room.
Say a reasonably compressed song ways in at 3MB and lasts 6mins you should be able to get that down in real time with a 100bps pipe, WIFI can easly cope with that, and 3G should be able to provide.
Now all we have to do is outlaw DRM becuse it ef
Yes, but what about the FUTURE of digital audio? (Score:4, Funny)
Andru: [...] I am not expecting huge storage on these phones either, otherwise they become indirect competition to the iPod. Instead, I think we will see the phones able to port about 50 tracks.
ME: Bah! The phones will certainly be strongly branded as iPod phones, and Apple will certainly recieve licensing fees. That's not competition in any meaningful sense. In addition, time has shown that any attempt to limit a music player's usefulness arbitrarily (like a stupid 50-track limit) will certainly backfire. They say themselves later on that hard drives are great because you can store your entire music collection. If musicphones are limited to 50 tracks, I predict abject failure, and I bet the cell phone manufacturers are right with me.
Hector: With the players of the future, we will be able to schedule personal recordings of incoming broadcast music on a given hour, and play it back when we have the free time.
ME: Bah! There's already products [pogoproducts.com] that do this, and although they are popular in a small part of the population, Pogo is not going to upset the iPod any time soon. If you really want to see a model of the future, I'm pretty confident it's to be found in Podcasting [wikipedia.org]. As traditional media middlemen grow increasingly desperate to preserve their vanishing way of life, more ways are found to completely bypass them. Podcasters are individuals who make their own audio content, and provide it for download. Why cling tenaciously to traditional audio delivery methods such as radio with its primitive 1-second-of-audio/sec transmit rate when there are better methods available? Imagine instead a few aggregation service providers and recommendation engines with links and software to help find and download the freshest Podcasts you're interested in!
Hector: I'm tired of having to burn CD's if I want to play my files on my car stereo.
ME: I've been using my Nomad Zen in my car for two years. What's your problem, Hector? I'm not disagreeing with your desire to have a nice wireless way to hook up my Zen to my car stereo, but, dude, BO-RING. Think about this instead: When you pull your car into your garage, it uploads information about what you've been skipping over and what you like to listen to during various times and various driving styles to your home media center, which then, next time you log on to shop for music, makes recommendations, which your car stereo downloads wirelessly across your 802.11 net.
ME: Or heck, 802.11 is so ubiquitous nowadays, your car could download a track or two while you're in the supermarket parking lot (because it's a relatively big download) and store it encrypted. When you get back to the car, your heads-up display could ask if you want to buy the song. A quick purchase transaction later, you get the unencryption key, and away you go. New music on the fly.
Andru: One thing I do expect in the future, is to see flash MP3 players slowly diminish from the market. While it is more shock absorbent, I just don't see the cost of the medium as being feasible going forward, especially with hard drive prices plummetting.
ME: Buh? Maybe they haven't noticed that Flash prices [forbes.com] are also on the move. Assuming the same size, speed, and reliability, I consider it a non-issue really.
Andru: With convergence coming into play, people are wanting to start putting pictures and video on their portable devices as well.
ME: Yes, just as Sony's Photo Walkman and Video Walkman were follow-on smash successes after the breakthrough cassette player. Oh wait. No, sorry, I was just smoking cr
RTFP (Score:2)
Yeah, well... (Score:2)
The future is for mobile phones (Score:4, Interesting)
Mobiles will get harddrives. The first one of these is already announced [theregister.co.uk].
Once those micro HDs get cheaper and implemented in more mobiles, mobiles will be at least as functional as an iPod mini.
The reason mobiles will win over all other devices:
1. You might leave home without your music player, but you will always take your mobile. Mobiles far outsell mp3 players. The mobile is the primary gadget, others are secondary. This means mobiles will get more upgrades and get them faster because there's just more money in it.
2. Smartphones are much more flexible than consumer devices like an iPod. They're basically pocket computers. You can just install a java program to teach a mobile how to play
3. Because of Java Micro Edition (J2ME) MIDP2.0 and higher, the mobile is a universal platform. Unlike the iPod, Creative, iRiver, Rio, PC, Mac, Linux which all need a platform specific program. You can just create one type of program, J2ME, and it will run on all mobiles regardless of processor or operating system. And unlike the PC where Java is held back because of Microsoft's opposition and Sun's mistakes. Java on mobiles is pre-installed. You just cannot easily program/extend consumer (mp3) gadgets like you can a mobile.
In my opinion geeks should go for mobiles because of these reasons. In addition, mobiles will give you the same way to escape DRM hell like you're escaping it on your PC. You just use non-DRM playback software and content sources because you're able to. The cool futuristic features the article is talking about like: "we should be able to share songs from one person's player to another. How cool is that?" Are already possible with a bluetooth mobile, Java MIDP2.0 and the bluetooth API for MIDP2.0
At the moment, mobile manufacturers and network operators are often putting up barriers to freely use them any way you like, as you are using your PC. This is because the phone network operators are afraid people will not download their DRM content. However, as people discover their mobiles can be their mobile PCs, phonemakers who don't free up their products from restrictions will lose market share because in the end, the public is the customer. I also think operators will win bigger by a free mobile market than with a restricted one.
Am I missing something important? I don't think so, and so mobiles will be the future all-in-one gadgets.
My next phone/music player/organizer/whatever will be a Nokia 7710. If it's not hobbled.
By the way, for the "I just want a simple phone" naggers:
1. What are you doing on Slashdot?
2. Powerful doesn't automatically mean difficult to use.
3. There ARE simple phones so buy those and don't try to force your view on mobiles on us. Be happy we love our gadgets.
8-track (Score:4, Funny)
Binary music! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:analog digital (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:MP3s (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is He Bill G.? (Score:2, Interesting)
I expected something more visionary in an article that tries to predict the future of Digital Audio.
I intended to suggest headphones that reduce unwanted ambient sounds by cancelling it out with destructive interference or something like it.
But, somewhat to my surprise, Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] told me that Noise-cancelling headphones already exist [wikipedia.org].
So why haven't I heard of them? Are they dispo
Re:Is He Bill G.? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Indeed, OGG rogks (Score:2, Insightful)
Some more time, maybe?
My time is not worthless enough to re-rip my entire collection.
I rather put that time in something else.
Re:Indeed, OGG rogks (Score:2)
I suppose you could go straight from ogg to MP3. That could at least be scripted, but I bet it'd reall
Re:Indeed, OGG rogks (Score:2, Informative)
Higher res actually does sound better (Score:4, Interesting)
Because only mp3 matters... (Score:2)
Re:Because only mp3 matters... (Score:2)
Re:I predict that within 50 years... (Score:2)
Windows XP will soon be replaced, and I am still not flying [userfriendly.org].