MTV Bails on Microsoft's URGE Store 144
Marlowe writes "MTV's once-ballyhooed partnership with Microsoft appears to be all but dead. MTV is teaming up with RealNetworks to form Rhapsody America, with Verizon handling wireless distribution. It's a big blow to Microsoft, too. 'With the creation of Rhapsody America, the writing is on the wall for MTV and Microsoft's Urge music store partnership. Although the Microsoft-MTV marriage was announced with great fanfare, it was likely headed for divorce court right from the start due to Microsoft's plans to turn PlaysForSure into a second-class citizen with the launch of the Zune — and its self-contained music ecosystem.' When asked about the future of Urge, MTV Music Group President Toffler was terse. 'We are in discussions with Microsoft now and will be on Windows Media Player 11 until further notice,' he said. While the Urge brand will ultimately disappear, Toffler said that 'a lot' of Urge's elements will live on in Rhapsody America."
gg no re (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:gg no re (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes, the game goes not to the strongest or the swiftest, but to the one that's free.
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But I can't seem to find The Pirate Bay's figures for how many users they have, or how many billion tracks have been downloaded. Are they keeping track? It'd make it a lot easier to compare to Apple's numbers for iTunes.
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Are there any examples of Microsoft ever participating in a mutually beneficial relationship with another company?
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Other companies that entered into deals with M$ weren't so lucky, compare with Sendo [theregister.co.uk] who partnered with them only to (article alledges) have their IP stolen and forced into bankruptcy by unfair business practices. That's what I'd call getting screwed, at least Creative are still in business.
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That's like asking if anyone has ever entered a mutually beneficial relationship with Count Dracula.
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That's Count Chocula, silly.
Because they are businessmen (Score:5, Insightful)
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You seem to have confused Microsoft with NORML [norml.org].
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Isn't that the point? They made a partnership and persuaded MTV to use PlaysForSure, then after making the deal, they decided to effectively sideline PlaysForSure and switch to the Zune instead.
BTW,
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While I agree with you in principle, to be fair, Microsoft dropped "PlaysForSure" after the deal with MTV to create URGE had already happened.
Isn't that the point? They made a partnership and persuaded MTV to use PlaysForSure, then after making the deal, they decided to effectively sideline PlaysForSure and switch to the Zune instead.
Did Microsoft really drop or sideline PlaysForSure after creating the Zune store? AFAIK, there are still several big-name online music/video stores that continue to use PlaysForSure [playsforsure.com]. Adding Zune (which doesn't make sense to me) does not necessarily mean they abandoned PlaysForSure.
To me, it looks like Microsoft continued its support for PlaysForSure after creating Zune. MTV is the one who dropped Microsoft/PlaysForSure. MTV may have gotten a better deal from Real Networks and saw a larger market from the
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That's the way it has been spun in the media. I don't know whether adding Zune to PlaysForSure 'makes sense', but it does look like Microsoft is abandoning PlaysForSure customers and music companies by conspicuously refusing to let music bought in that system play on Microsoft's own heavily-promoted music player. If you do launch a DRM-infested proprietary music file format you should at least make some effort to ensure the f
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Ironically enough, the one instance I can think of is Apple.
MS's $500 million investment probably saved the company from bankruptcy. This was at the low point of Apple's market share, reputation and stock price. MS propped them up because they knew Apple customers were potential MS customers too, even if they didn't use their OS.
The deal also called for a new release of Office on Mac, which en
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it was $100M. apple was far far away from bankruptcy at the time. however, apple did need to sure a version of office of mac for their future viability. ms likely propped them up because they heard the DOJ breathing down their neck.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
$500 million? Saved Apple from bankruptcy? Microsoft invested $150 million in non voting shares and Apple had over $6 billion in cash in the bank at the time. They were nowhere near going bankrupt. Also Apple customers aren't "potential" MS customers, MS is the largest supplier of Mac software after Apple. What saved Apple was the return of Steve Jobs and his focusing the company on profitable products like the rollout of the iMac.
Also, except for Office 6 when MS tried to use the same code base for Mac and Windows versions, the Mac version, starting with it's debut for Mac before any PC version existed, has often been thought of as better. Partly due to MS' use of the smaller Mac market to test new features that if well received become part of the Windows version, but also due greatly to the developers in the Mac Business Unit at Microsoft which are true Mac users.
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There's very little irony that a company like Apple, which continues to be 1-5 years ahead of Microsoft on most fronts, continues to thrive in spite of the me-too, Milli-Vanilli, corporate giant always breathing down its neck.
You must have used one of those old Pentium processors with the FDIV bug to help you write this statement, because somehow it computed $150 million a
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Commercial offerings are often limited to private home use only. The other offerings can be played at the block party on the big screen or other social gathering. I just downloaded the older Little Shop of Horrors and Night of the Living Dead.
http://www.archive.org/details/Little_ShopOf_Horro rs.avi [archive.org]
http://www.archive.org/details/night_of_the_living _dead [archive.org]
Note many of these links are
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What makes MTV think.... (Score:5, Interesting)
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"Who do they think they are, we're M-Fucking-T-V! We'll bury them with this new system!"
Everyone thinks their team can win, whatever the odds...
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Who better to partner with? What other software colossus has such a large captive audience?
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That is an interesting point, and I don't doubt that you are right, the question that I have is this. Of those 12-18 year olds, how many of that actually see MTV as Music Television anymore? There was a time, not that terribly long ago, where they actually spent a considerably portion of the day playing music and were influential in the early careers of many musicians. How true is that anymore? How much M is left in MTV?
As an aside, when I first heard MTV was partnering with MS, I thought, with MTV's hel
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Seriously, music videos have not been a part of that station since the late 80's.
MTV2 was a bit better IIRC (last time I watched was about 7-8 years ago.
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I have an iPod and a Creative Zen. Guess which one I use more? (hint: it's NOT the iPod)
What I don't get is why Microsoft shot their own "PlaysForSure" into "PlaysForMaybe" with their Zune. That strikes me as the most fundamentally stupid thing they could have possibly done, pretty much torpedoing both projects in one fell swoop.
It's a dog food thing - Microsoft wants other companies to buy into PlaysForSure but
Every Empire falls eventually. (Score:1)
Something cheaper and better will come out eventually.
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And yet here MS is, tied neck and neck with Wii for 1st place as PS3 flounders.
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That's like putting a toddler against an adult in the 100 yard dash, but giving the toddler a 20 second headstart. Sure at 25 seconds they're 'neck and neck'. But that's a pretty meaningless thing to say. At 26 the adult's left the toddler far behind, and at 30 the race is over and the toddlers still crossing the halfway mark.
The Wii is selling overall more than twice as fast as the Xbox and
Easy: a different model (Score:1)
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Of course it didn't work, which is why the Zune cut it off at the knees in hopes that the Zune Store could do what the iTunes Music Store did.
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Well, ignoring the fact that you can buy an ever-increasing number of songs from the iTunes Store that will play on any platform, on any device, the iTunes ecosystem is not centered around the store. The ecosystem is the iTunes software and the iPod dock connector -- everything else is just the product of the day.
iTunes was a fantastically successful
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No tears shed here (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, who really cares about these services anymore, now that WalMart is offering EMI and Universal MP3s without DRM for cheaper than iTunes, at 256 kbps....
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Yeah, a psychiatrist would probably be a better option.
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I agree. I sometimes wonder whether Microsoft's Marketingdroids run on Win ME. By word association, "urge" connects in my head to "bowel movement". Brown Zunes don't help this. Nor, for that matter, does the use of the word "squirt".
My tip for MS though is that it's time to call it quits. When you are losing contracts to a company whose media player is so universally reviled that even die hard
Re:No tears shed here (Score:4, Funny)
Look on the bright side, they could have called it "Surge", think what a PR disaster that would have been.
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Even worse they could have left it "URGE" and made it work with the Zune. Then you'd all the time have people offering to squirt you some URGE noises.
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Clearly, there was no Urge Overkill here.
MTV...Music.... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Laguna Beach killed the video star
Laguna Beach killed the video star
In my pants or in my car,
We can't go back, we've gone too far.
Laguna Beac
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That being said, content creators and publishers will look to MT V to drive them to their own distro sites, like Itunes and gbox.
Because someone will ask.. (Score:4, Informative)
n., pl. -hoos.
Sensational or clamorous advertising or publicity.
Noisy shouting or uproar.
tr.v., -hooed, -hooing, -hoos.
To advertise or publicize by sensational methods.
Rhapsody? (Score:1)
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Me, I'm all for alternatives. Rhapsody, Napster, iTunes, give me more options, and let me decide!
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Unlikely, given that Real purchased Rhapsody they didn't create it. The bought it as part of their acquisition of listen.com
I've subscribed to Rhapsody for many years. I don't know why you say they couldn't make it work?
I've always been more prone to losing CDs than collecting them, so a subscription service suits me perfectly. That it works thro
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I just got to thinking how it never captured the presense that Apple did through iTunes or Napster did during it's heyday. But then again, Rhapsody is still going strong on a "slow but steady" course, and has outlasted all of it's competition to date.
Yet another victim... (Score:4, Informative)
The whole Urge thing lacked the strategic finesse and vision Microsoft would otherwise be capable of.
There's only one strategic foundation that can challenge Apple+iTunes and Urge was not it, and the Rhapsody-MTV-Verizon approach is not it either.
Re:Yet another victim... (Score:4, Funny)
Will we finally get 64-bit Vista compatability? (Score:1)
Convergence of 3 Irrelevant Dinosaurs (Score:5, Interesting)
Real managed to totally blow an overwhelming lead in streaming media as Realplayer was allowed to die on the vine. Add MTV to the mix. They were relevant to the music scene about 20 years ago. Now it's just reality TV plus advertising. And Verizon...a CDMA network with the highest prices in the country and a track record of disabling phone features that cut into their "buy it from us or not at all" corporate culture. Yeah, that ought to be a real powerhouse for peeing away a few hundred million of investment capital.
*yawn*
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...all but dead... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:...all but dead... (Score:5, Informative)
On the the other hand, the phrase 'anything but xxx' means the speaker doesn't think the thing is anywhere near 'xxx' even if other people do.
Hope this helps.
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I've also heard many times that "I could
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"could care less" isn't an idiom, it's sarcasm. For some reason, most people don't get that - even a lot of people that say it. See this link [worldwidewords.org], although that writer only kinda starts to get it near the end. It is definitely a Queens, New York example of sarcasm.
And it's wrong to suggest that those who say it don't know that "couldn't care less" is the correct form. However we may talk here, we're not all dumb.
btw, the proper
Proprietary Vendor Lockin (Score:2)
I don't want music in a proprietary streaming format any more than I want a subscription service for my Cheerios.
When will music companies get it? They have to compete with *free* mp3's that can be played anywhere, anytime, on a myriad of devices. Why would I pay a lot for "branded" streaming music that locks me into Verizon's craptastic service and force-feeds me what the MTV marketing nazguls think I should listen to?
This is not a troll! (Score:4, Interesting)
Does MTV count for much of anything anymore? I know when I was in high school they had a lot of pull but the last I had seen of them was that they seemed to be like a fish in it's death throws on dry land. They tried to release a few films that saw little or no profit, their music empire was reduced to 10 music videos a day and the rest of their shows were a couple of really really bad "reality" shows that were as predictable as most pre-teen dramas on Nickelodeon.
I'm just wondering if they ever got their shit together or if the modern pop scene is so bad that this passes as a "music" channel and people are forced to stew in their own misery and filth or defect to VH1 with all the Glenn Fry, Enya and Stevie Nicks videos one can tolerate.
Re:This is not a troll! (Score:5, Interesting)
So, to answer your question, I have no idea. But from what I can tell, MTV counts for at least as much in my sister-in-law's life as her actual life. Seriously. I've seen her crying over breaking up with her boyfriend, and she was less sad than the time she was crying over what turned out to be a break-up in a show.
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There's no one out there that advertises to the 18-25 intelligent male segment. In terms of real, live, people-watching-TV-numbers, it just doesn't exist.
Some 18-25 intelligent females are all about Laguna Beach. The same reason the 26-40 fema
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Of course not--intelligent people between the ages of 18 and 25 don't watch television. Hell, even stupid people from the ages of 18 and 25 have turned to the internet half the time. Where do you think YouTube comments come from?
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Mac vs. PC (Score:4, Funny)
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I bet I could get more views that Urge ever had users.....
-Doc
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You're spot on there, and the final proof of this has been delivered by Microsoft themselves.
Look at the Zune (if you can). Look at the box, the device and then try to find a Microsoft logo.
You won't, because there isn't one. Microsoft know that their own branding would lessen the Zune's appeal,
From Wikipedia (Score:1)
* urge, a strong desire
o Sucking urge
Har har (Score:2)
The negation is true as well!
Corporate insanity (Score:2)
Under
Awesome! (Score:4, Interesting)
That is, if MTV ever showed music videos anymore...
If MTV had 1/2 a clue, they'd convince their corporate masters at Viacom to drop the suit against YouTube, team up with YouTube as their music video section, make sure that every music video on YouTube had a link on it to an MTV online store selling DRM-Free MP'3, and then split the profits with Google. Anything else is just playing catchup with Apple. Using music videos driving music sales was their business model in the 80's, and it can be once again if they move fast enough, and any online music store that doesn't take the iPod into account is doomed to failure before it even launches.
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MTV and music? (Score:1)
Memo to MSFT: avoid the consumer market. You suck. (Score:2)
The whole Urge debacle is a product of a marketing effort that was in a desperate hurry to play catch-up. It was doomed from the start.
On the surface, a partnership with MTV sounds like it would work, but nobody at MS bothered to do any decent market research. Does anyone out there regard MTV as hip and trendy, especially for music? (We are talking about a channel that had "we don't play music" as its tagline until only recently.)
If MSFT's management team is staying in place, it should diminsh its presen
RealNetworks? Are you F#&@$ing kidding me? (Score:1)
I can picture it now. A room filled to bursting with fools telling each other how they have to go to their children for anything Internet related and than laugh like it's cute. When are these aging Baby Boomers going to realize that pleeing ignorance of the Internet is like saying you don't k
Query (Score:1)
partner with MSFT, help them build presence, lose (Score:2)
The Zune-scape Microsoft is attempting to create for i
This makes me confident (Score:1)
My friends think I'm arrogant when I presume to judge big, rich corporations. But then stuff like this happens, and I'm reminded that ultimately, it's one or two guys who make decisions in these companies, and they are mortals just like me.
Now if they really applied the "wisdom of the masses", their own employees
Bad pattern of behavior... (Score:1)
How about iRiver's Clix? (Score:2)
'Course, on the other hand, we told iRiver they were making a mistake by moving away from (more or less) open mp3 and ogg players. Maybe they'll see the light, now...especially with DRM seemingly being abandoned more and more.