The Sony/MP3 Saga Continues 629
Renegade Lisp writes "Sony's rolling out their new line of flash-based music players to the
market these days. More stylish than ever, they surely look like a
serious attempt to regain territory lost to the iPod, and perhaps even
to create the Walkman of the 21st century. And it looks like Sony has
finally given in to consumer pressure: these new "MP3 players" can
finally play MP3 natively, not just Sony's proprietary ATRAC format.
But wait -- you cannot just put your MP3s onto the device, you have to
run them through Sony's obfuscation software first. The obfuscated
files, when installed properly on the device, can be played. But you
can't just move them around, share them with your friends, whatever.
Well, of course the obfuscation scheme has already been broken by a
brave hacker. But is this really the way to create the "Network
Walkman" of the 21st century? Sony, please wake up!"
Egh (Score:3, Insightful)
We don't want something hip and stylish. We want something that works well.
Oh yeah, I've never personally been able to understand the whole hooplah over the Ipod shuffle, or even the Ipod mini? 1 gigabyte? 5 gigabytes? Do you have ANY idea how old the songs get on your mp3 player if you keep hearing stuff over and over again like a radio station?
I suppose for top 40 teenie boppers, that's okay. Not for me.
20 gig and 40 gig are good sizes, respectfully. The more, the better.
Sony's designs are ugly, too. I barely tolerate the fact that my ipod is white. It's bad enough that Bono is pushing the player I own. Now, Sony comes out with Grape, Cherry and Orange flavors. Ugh!
Why can't they make an mp3 player that's like Nyquil. In the words of Denis Leary, that "original green death fucking flavor, but it doesn't matter..." If an mp3 player is green-death nyquil colored, but has a great interface, and does all I want in regards to playability and reliability, that's all I need.
I'm sure everyone else's priorities will be similar after they buy an orange mp3 player, and throw it against the wall in rage when it doesn't do what they want it to do.
Re:Egh (Score:5, Interesting)
See betamax and minidiscs
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
In this case, I think Sony is probably toast. Apple is the market leader, and it is doubtful they'll give that up. Sony has produced too little too late. And their idea of making the PSP a portable movie player is probably not going to pan out either. I would like to see them do an iTunes-like movie purchase app, though. I don't know about anyone else, but I use my computer as my television. Being able to purchase movies online would mean I could finally stop visiting that *E$#$#$ Blockbuster.
Re:Egh (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Egh (Score:3, Insightful)
I feel your pain. It's too bad, too, as I have a 1970-something studio monitor from Sony that still works, and a... probably 1970-something Sony 3/4U deck that also still works. They just don't build thin
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
This was a fairly clear case of "We don't want our customers to connect our stuff to our competitors' stuff; everyone should just by Sony stuff". Not exactly an unusual attitude among market leaders, but it does show a certain amount of contempt for what customers want.
Their munging of the MP3 standard is pretty much the same deal. "We support MP3. Well, actually, it's not quite MP3, but it's almost the same thing. We've just tweaked it a bit so our stuff won't interoperate with other MP3 stuff."
The best approach would be to tell them that you're not buying their gadget because it's not compatible with your other gadgets. While you're at it, say the same thing to Microsoft and any other company you can find that's doing this sort of thing to you. What we want is a world where everything connects to everything else, and anything you buy works anywhere that you want to use it.
See also: Firewire (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Egh (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Egh (Score:5, Funny)
I am so, so glad I'm not an audiophile.
Re:Egh (Score:3, Insightful)
I have 40GB Nomad Jukebox with about 3GB remaining, and while I don't listen to every track in a sitting, I like the fact that I don't have to switch the tracks on it. Also, I don't need to pick and choose what music I have on there because invariably, I will get the urge to hear the Theme Song from Shaft as soon I've removed it from the player's (or is it playa's?) hard drive.
I put the entire list on shuffle and love the result. My friends think it's a train wreck. "How can you listen to punk followed
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
You are not the target audience.
I suppose for top 40 teenie boppers, that's okay. Not for me
Now you're starting to get it.
I barely tolerate the fact that my ipod is white. It's bad enough that Bono is pushing the player I own.
Ahh....you already drank the koolaid. The marketing dept's job is done.
Re:Egh (Score:5, Funny)
It should also do the dishes and fetch beer.
Re:Egh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Egh (Score:4, Insightful)
As for the colors and design, I agree that many of them are ugly. However, according to your own statements that doesn't matter one bit as long as it functions well. So find one you like, use it, and quit worrying if my model is pink and fallic-shaped.
Re:Egh (Score:5, Funny)
No, fellow goat you're missing the point. No geek wants to see his new toy hanging off the belts of the likes of Paris Hilton and Bono. Thats why I personally hate all things Apple. Technology should not be cutting edge and also fashionable. I pine for the days of laptops that look and feel like cinder blocks evacuated by albino elephants. We as geeks have had to endure childhoods of bullying and female rejection, the one high point is that we've always had the coolest toys, now people like Apple want to come along and make it all cute and accessible. Blasphemy I say.
Now excuse me while load *.OGG files onto my Rio Karma via SHH from a remote SAMBA server...
Just a tip (Score:4, Funny)
I found that when I used the SHH protocol to transfer files, the sound volume was adversely affected. Now I use SSH and it sound much better
Re: None of them get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't bother telling me that piracy doesn't actually cost them anything, it doesn't matter whether it does or not as long as they think it does. If they think it does, and they want to reduce/eliminate it, far better than they do so by leveraging technology to our benefit than try to get their business model legislated.
Re:Egh (Score:2, Insightful)
From TFA:
So because these new Sony players does not have anything GREAT new feature they just fall in the really big set of the-others-that-are-not-iPods list of players.
We want both (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally I want both. Only to the /. world would those seem like mutually-exclusive options.
That said, Sony is such a classic example of interesting design that completely ignores major sore points in implementation, it isn't even funny. I'd have one of their tiny upright-model camcorders right now, if they hadn't required their own special compression format for the resulting movies a couple of years ago. Ah well -- ended up with a different make, which then allowed me to make the choice to grab up a cheap and oh so handy Mac to edit on, and so on. If I'd taken the little Sony it'd have been endless compromises just to stick with their proprietary formatting.
Here we have them requiring me to bend over backwards to implement a sort of personal DRM on my music files. How much more clumsy than Apple's iTunes-purchased files is that? Major, major disincentive to buying for me. Big sore point. That's what they're not "getting." Stylish I like just fine.
Re:Egh (Score:2)
Top 40 teenie boppers like George W. Bush [nytimes.com], you mean?
Vote with your dollars (Score:2)
Yes, I know Sony marketing read /. every day and appreciate all the great feedback but really if you don't like it don't buy it.
YOU DONT GET IT. A turing test for you (Score:5, Informative)
you obviously dont get it as you say. the ipod shuffle is designed to look and feel like it has infintie capacity.
that is to say I would challenge you to a turing test to see if you cold tell the difference between an ipod shuffle and a 80 gig ipod just by listineing to it in shuffle mode.
I'm not kidding, here are the ground rules. A shuffle holds 150 to 300 songs randmoly selected from the 80gigs on your hard drive. You listen to it for a day or so, and have not listened to all 200 songs. then you jack it in to recharge it and while that is going on the shuffle gets refilled. Then you listen the next day. and repeat.
From your point of view it would be no different than listening to your 80 gig drive drive or a 40 gig ipod. you could not tell the difference by listening.
You see the thing you are not understanding is that the software, itunes, makes this transparent. If you had some piece of shit software like win amp and had to drag files by hand onto the device or run them through a sony deobfuscator then you would not be constantly refilling it. But with itunes, CHARGING = REFILLING. since you can just barely play all the songs on a single charge this basically means that in any practical usage you are constantly refreshing the songs before you hear them twice.
Re:YOU DONT GET IT. A turing test for you (Score:3, Informative)
I love MusicMagic Mixer from Predixis, which uses computer analysis of each audio file to determine which songs play well together. Pick one song, or ten
Re:Egh (Score:2, Informative)
i personally own the ipod shuffle. what got me was how lightweight it was compared to the regular iPod or even the mini. i use it all the time when i workout or go jogging. it's quite unnoticeable.
aside from the weight factor, the main thing that differentiates this with other flash-based mp3 players i've seen is iTunes. no, not the store. i have a lot of music already and usually buy the CD
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrast Sony where you have to jump through hoops and have all the check-in check-out and (previously) convert to ATRAC bullzhit... Sony are frankly GONE as a player in this market (and I like their products, I'm typing this on a Vaio.)
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
most people don't give a shit about feature XYZ they just want to play their music.
Well, yeah. Until they've owned their iPod a few months and hear from the friends about the various aftermarket add-ons they can get.
Re:Egh (Score:5, Insightful)
s/hip/usable/
Seriously... the usability of an iPod (in addition to it's "hipness") is what keeps people using it. Not talking about forward/back/shuffle buttons... most players do that well. I'm talking about iTunes (and sync). Ironically, Apple's hardware sells because it's software is so good. Why do people even care about the iMac? Because of OSX.
Re:Egh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Egh (Score:4, Informative)
I bought an iPod because it has the best user interface in the business. I don't care if it's hip and/or trendy. I've never been hip or trendy in my life, I'm hardly going to start now.
More functions!=more usability.
Re:Egh (Score:4, Interesting)
You'd be surprised how many free, legal songs there are on the net. Oh, but you'd know this if you were doing stuff other than downloading RIAA Stuff, right?
For instance, my Overclocked Remix [ocremix.org] folder is 4.88 gig. These are mostly 128kbps mp3s.
My backups folder of CDs I own is 6.81 gig.
Also, it just so happens that having a larger player allows one to encode stuff in higher than 128kbps quality.
Anyhow, I'd like to type more, but morons like you have already cost me enough of my life and regret even firing off this response. :/
Poor, poor you. My heart goes out to you :P
Re:Egh (Score:2)
Dude, I can see that you are pretty hard up for entertainment. Enjoy [fmd1.com]
They're part of the RIAA, are you surprised? (Score:5, Informative)
Distributed Labels of Reporting Companies Sony Classical Sony Discos Sony Japan Sony Labels Sony Music Sony Music US (Latin) Sony Wonder
Re:They're part of the RIAA, are you surprised? (Score:3, Funny)
Sony is part of the RIAA!?
GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!!! *Jumps out the window*
Re:They're part of the RIAA, are you surprised? (Score:5, Interesting)
I bet their internal board meetings are a riot. On one side you've got their hardware guys who don't want to spend their R&D money and waste time/resources on redesigning and rebuilding playback devices that have worked just fine for years to respect the mandated DRM that the RIAA is trying to get into the law books.
Then you've got the label people pushing Sony's attorneys and reps at the RIAA to get this legislation done!
You've got Sony's legal department sending letters to people using Sony's laptops to rip MP3s of songs owned by a Sony label from their Sony DiscMan. And people becoming felons by violating the DMCA when they bypass the copy protection included on Sony CDs. They're violating the copy protection by using hardware produced by ... Sony. It's like a weird hybrid of a Kevin Smith movie and the Twilight Zone.
Re:They're part of the RIAA, are you surprised? (Score:3, Insightful)
Then you've got the label people pushing Sony's attorneys and reps at the RIAA to get this legislation done!
The power people give to the RIAA is amazing.
You do realize that the RIAA is paid by Sony as a trade group to protect _Sony'
Re:They're part of the RIAA, are you surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually the pity and irony is: they're more likely two distinct, separate, exclusive board meetings. One for hardware, one for music label. (and technically a third for movie studio / multimedia label.) Note: I am not speaking from experience, merely word of mouth feedback. IANASE (I am not a Sony Employee.)
Sony, the electronics manufacturer, has its own agenda. Sony Music (now officially Sony-BMG Music) has an obvious other agenda. This gets worse too, because the Japanese company doing all the real innovation in design of electronics products, etc. has next to no contact with the US / North American one. Some products trickle down, yes, but not nearly as many of the 'cool' ones they put out in Japan.
Wired had a fantastic article almost two years ago now called The Civil War Inside Sony [wired.com]. Definitely worth a read.
One should not confuse the two (electronics manufacturer and music label.) Just because you see the "Sony" brand on an mp3 player doesn't mean at ALL that Sony Music had anything to do with it.
If the company was really smart they would co-brand Sony electronics products with Sony music artists. That's the biggest no brainer ever and they have yet to do anything like this. (Not that I would buy a "Jennifer Lopez MP3 player" but I'm sure somebody would.)
ad
The music/movie side is winning (Score:5, Interesting)
More links to same story [google.com]
Very very sad. Explains what happened to the MD which could have been a great format...
CD based MP3 player's don't obfuscate (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:CD based MP3 player's don't obfuscate (Score:2)
Yeah, and it's even easier to share MP3's that are already burned on a CD, than to have to try to copy them back off using USB/Firewire/Whatever. I don't understand why their new flash and HD players have to be so crippled.
I have a Sony D-NF610 CD-based MP3 player that also has FM/AM/TV (audio only obviously)/Weather bands too. It gets insane battery life too when playing MP3's from the CD (35+ hours). It seems to be very well built too. I've dropped mine while riding my bike and it hit the ground an
Re:CD based MP3 player's don't obfuscate (Score:2)
plays MP3 right off the CD, sounds great, batteri life is good, not as long as parents, but that might be age, i think i get 15-20hours, but never really measured as double AAs are che
Re:CD based MP3 player's don't obfuscate (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This story is a TROLL (Score:5, Interesting)
I promptly returned the device to the dealer. And I got so angry about it that I submitted a Slashdot story. It got accepted. And rightly so!
Who is the sore thumb? (Score:5, Insightful)
But then again, maybe I think too much. All these gadgets are sold for brand rather than technology, most consumers really don't care whether or not they can shares songs with others using this device, they can simply lend CDs out like they've been doing with tapes.
As long as Sony has designed a good GUI that users can (1) pop in the CDs, (2) select songs, (3) transfer to the player, its technical responsibility is done.
The more important job is to make it look and feel cool so that you want one if your friend got one.
Re:Who is the sore thumb? (Score:2)
Read more Dilbert. That will explain it all
Re:Who is the sore thumb? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's pretty simple with Sony. On one hand you have bright engineers doing whizbang stuff with electronics. On the other, you have the SonyBMG member of the RIAA, and Sony Pictures, member of the MPAA. Imagine designing a MP3 player, then imaging having Sony music and Sony pictures legal advisors looking over your shoulder telling you to add this DRM feature and
This is why I won't buy Sony audio stuff ... (Score:3, Insightful)
I was actually comparison shopping for an MP3 player this week, and I ruled out the Sony 'network walkman' because I don't trust them to play nicely.
Just IMO but... (Score:5, Insightful)
if this Sony DRM stuff even requires a SINGLE extra click, then imo it has failed and has no chance of making me move away from my iPod (even though the designs I've seen look very nice).
Re:Just IMO but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just IMO but... (Score:5, Insightful)
I want an MP3 player... (Score:5, Insightful)
2. No proprietary formats required.
3. No "DRM."
4. Reliable, built to last, long battery life.
5. Connects to my machine without drivers, i.e. acts like an external hard disk.
Please, just that. And I'll buy it. No need for fancy buttons or stylishness. I'm currently using an HD Lyra 20GB--it satisfies most of those. Its damn cheap (costs under 100USD now), it uses plain old MP3s, it doesn't even support most DRM, its built like a tank, and acts like an external hard disk. However it still requires drivers, isn't very reliable, and has mediocre battery life.
Re:I want an MP3 player... (Score:2)
Re:I want an MP3 player... (Score:2)
Re:I want an MP3 player... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I want an MP3 player... (Score:5, Informative)
Plays mp3s. Plays oggs. Battery life's quite good, to. Though it's not cheap.
Not to blow apple, but... (Score:4, Informative)
The shuffle starts at 99 bucks.
2. No proprietary formats required.
All ipods play wav, mp3, and (un drmd) aac.
3. No "DRM."
Play any mp3 you want.
4. Reliable, built to last, long battery life.
I get around 12 hours out of my 4th gen 20gig ipod.
5. Connects to my machine without drivers, i.e. acts like an external hard disk.
Not sure what os you are using, but (obviously) ipods are seamless with X, and act as a lovely external firewire (or usb2) drive.
Re:I want an MP3 player... (Score:3, Informative)
1. Cheap.
2. No proprietary formats required.
3. No "DRM."
4. Reliable, built to last, long battery life.
5. Connects to my machine without drivers, i.e. acts like an external hard disk.
Aria "own-brand" [aria.co.uk] - £43 for "500MB", £89 for "1GB" seem to work quite nicely. Just copy MP3s onto it like a flash drive, single AAA battery lasts forever, nice easy user-interface on the player itself.
Much better than the crap that comes out of Creative Labs, for example. Anyone want a Crea
Dear Sony, (Score:5, Insightful)
The genie is already out of the bottle. He's not going back in. Give up.
Sincerely,
Everyone
Re:Dear Sony, (Score:5, Funny)
We have a foolproof plan to put the internet genie back in the bottle [fourmilab.ch]. "Trusted Computing" DRM and the "Secure Internet" are double-plus good; only thieves, spammers, cyber-terrorists and pedophiles disagree.
Sincerely,
Minions of the New World Order
Dept. of "Intellectual Property Ownership Society" Propaganda
aint gonna happen (Score:5, Insightful)
Having to use Sony's software to add songs...isn't that what you do with iPod, add songs through iTunes?
Welcome to the Brave New World.
Re:aint gonna happen (Score:2)
Just shows how messed up the system is.
Re:No. (Score:2)
MDs (Score:2)
And furthermore (Score:5, Insightful)
Crazy times.
Re:And furthermore (Score:3, Interesting)
(Among an older crowd this may certainly be true. All things being equal, if my father were to choose between an Apple mp3 player and Sony mp3 player, I am confident he would choose Sony)
Re:And furthermore (Score:3, Interesting)
The Sony? Cause after a few months of handling that iPod shuffle is gonna look like a 12-year-old beige keyboard.
(don't get me wrong, I'm totally sold on iPod line, but the Sony gumsticks don't look bad at all and that OLED is slick)
DRM (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:DRM (Score:3, Insightful)
Truly beautiful pieces of tech (Score:2, Interesting)
Snatching defeat from the jaws of victory (Score:2)
Sony's PSP (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sony's PSP (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with being a content provider... (Score:2)
Not just in music, either. Let's not forget the Librié ebook device [boingboing.net] and its fabulous expiring bookware...
The more I hear abou
Re:The problem with being a content provider... (Score:2)
Direct link (Score:2)
I don't care (Score:2)
Back in yesteryear, you had walkmans, they played all tapes. They could play tapes you copied off the radio, off a deck, any tapes. You did not have to worry that your friend had different tapes than you. It all worked. The best $200 walkman and the cheapest $15 tape player from kmart, it all worked the same.
Fuck corporations. I ain't buying their shit anymore. Why? So in 2 years the standard can change? So I have to re-buy everything al
Dear Sony, (Score:3, Funny)
What a great idea!
Sincerely,
NASA
Just get a Rio (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Just get a Rio (Score:2)
And I own 400 shares of Sony, so there's no excuse for their actions, from my viewpoint. The market cares nothing for one's excuses, only one's actions.
Sony's divided loyalties (Score:2)
It is ironic that a company which ostensibly should be better at reconciling the competing interests of hardware developers and music distributors is still stumbling with this stuff.
Media players should build in transcoding. (Score:2)
I'd love to see more of the portable players support a transcoding interface. I store all my music as 320k oggs, and if there were something that could convert them to 96k mp3s on the fly as I want to upload them, then I'd be cool with that.
If Apple built that capability into their iTunes/iPod soft
Dear Sony Corp (Score:4, Insightful)
Sincerely
Consumer and common sense
PS: good riddance and good luck, you'll need it
Not given in (Score:2)
Why do you care about Sony? (Score:2)
Why do you care if Sony decides to play or not? There are many other options out there, support them, forget about Sony if they don't want to catch a ride.
Apple also Obfuscates... (Score:2, Insightful)
But they do obfuscate.
From a PURE business perspective... (Score:5, Insightful)
I simply do not understand why music downloads have not been embraced by the people who own the music. They are being extremely short-sighted.
The really sad part (Score:3, Insightful)
And they could have done this in 1999, long before Apple got rolling with iTunes. Sony, you screwed up big time.
they DO get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Other tech companies that aren't creating content don't give a rats ass about Sony's video and music divisions. however, the people who run sony are composed of all these competing groups and their interests naturally conflict, because the hardware group has to compete against other tech companies that, as I noted, don't give a fat rats ass about Sony's special IP interests.
As a consequence, in order to placate the Music and Video divisions, the engineers had to come up with a way to allow people to move mp3s to their MP3 player while, at the same time, preventing people fro musing the Player as a transference device for sharing. If it's proprietary, all te better to placate the PHBs in hardware who never saw a proprietary system they disliked (viz Minidisk, beta, ATRAK, etc.)
The good thing about this is: Sony's gear will always be hobbled by having to drag the retards in the Music and Video divisions along, which allows other companies to come in and fill the void without having the 3,000 lb sony gorilla pooping all over the market.
RS
Sony have just lost the plot... (Score:5, Informative)
I for one read the bit about the obfuscation and immediately dismissed their devices as useless e.g. "here we go again.. more of their idiot DRM crapfuscation".
Sony just don't get it do they ? They've simply lost the plot. People just want to play/copy etc. what they want when they want. That's what will sell. The original Sony Walkman was great precisely because you just taped something (either from a record, a CD, the radio or a microphone) you popped the cassette it your walkman and you played it. No fucking about with computer formats/DRM or other unecessary shite.
Sony get your heads round this simple idea "The customer should control the device". The device should not attempt to control the customer. If you try this your device will fail.
Mp3 is the "format de jour" of portable devices. People have collections of mp3 files. I for one just want to "copy them to my portable device and go" (something I can do with my cheap "no name" mp3 player). Sorry but I'm not putting up with anything that gets in the way of that. Not one thing. If I have to I'll just go back to a portable CD player with home burned CDs. And I bet I'm not the only one.
On a simiar note a mate of mine has a Sony DVD player that cost him over £ 200 (uk) It's fussy as hell about the discs you put in it and rejects most "home burned" CD and DVDRs - and it should be said here these DVDRs are mostly of home video footage (of his bloody kids and holidays too... arrghh !!!!)
One of my other mates has a Ronin 215 which cost her £ 23 (uk). In contrast to the Sony it will have a go at anything you put in it and so far she's not found a single disc that won't play in it - even some of the ones her 4 year old son has scratched to bits (another good reason for making backups of your DVD collection)
So we got the players together for a "super test" and when they do both manage to play the same disc can you tell the difference in quality ? Only just but it's very, very close (although we didn't test them on a terribly expensive television)
Moral of the story ? My first mate now has a Ronin 215 as well and it's put us off buying any expensive consumer "media playback" equipment for life.
Sorry, Sony have completely lost it big time and are simply not worth considering for portable audio players.
Re:This is why I hate Sony (Score:2)
Re:This is why I hate Sony (Score:2)
Re:This is why I hate Sony (Score:2)
There's probably a playstation owner out there somewhere with much the same opinion.
Re:You People don't get it (Score:5, Interesting)
Open content formats are the only way to be sure you can access your content, period. Anything else requires trust, and I don't trust corporations because our interests are always in conflict.
Doesn't seem odd to me to want to be sure you can access your content, so it seems reasonable to demand open formats.
"Illegal Activity" is a red herring, and something of the Godwin's Law of copyright arguments.
Re:You People don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Hardly. I own close to 5,000 legally purchased CD's. I don't copy purchased CD's except to create personal copies for the car and the beach (cuz CD's are hardly indestructable, and catalogs don't stay in print forever).
The copy protection means I can't play Sony CDs at work (because loading their software violates corporate policy against loading unapproved software).
So then maybe I decide to put a copy on an iPod so I can listen that way. But wait, if you have a PC you can't do that
Re:This MIGHT crush the iPod... (Score:5, Informative)
The minimum price for one of these is 69 GBP tax included ($130 US). That's for the lowend 256MB version. The high end 1GB model with FM tuner is $300. The iPod shuffle 512MB and 1GB are $99 and $149 respectively before tax.
I wouldn't say that these were any more affordable.
Re:This MIGHT crush the iPod... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Wake up KIDS (Score:2)
I pay for my music, thank you very much. And I convert it to MP3 or unencrypted AAC format so I can keep my own music even if Real or Napster or Apple quits supporting their key management servers.
But this time you're way out of line technically as well as philosophically. Sony's "obfuscation" of MP3 files has nothing to do with DRM. You HAVE the unencrypted files before you install them!
Re:Mod me redundant... (Score:2)
This is true of most of the media companies. They're all trying to lock-down content. It's their collective "wet dream" to make ALL media "pay-per-view".
Get used to it. I expect that in the next decade, the federal government will mandate DRM on everything. They already tried to do it with HDTV.
Re:Mod me redundant... (Score:2)
That's Sony's problem. It's trying hard to protect its content division, while killing its tech division in the process.
Re:Mod me redundant... (Score:2)
Apple's iTunes is hurt by P2P piracy in the same way that Sony's music division is.