Sony to Buy Gracenote 146
Ian Lamont writes "Sony is buying Gracenote for $260 million. Sony will use Gracenote's online music database in its own digital content and devices, but Gracenote will operate separately and keep its own management. It's an interesting move, because many other entertainment companies and services depend on the Gracenote database, including iTunes, Yahoo, Winamp, and even the onboard stereo system used in some new Cadillacs. Gracenote has been criticized for turning the once-open CDDB project into a 'quagmire of heavy contracts, licensing fees, forced user registration and anti-competition clauses.'"
You've Got It All Wrong! (Score:3, Funny)
Seriously, where does all this distrust and hate for Sony come from?
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What about the mentalty of their customers ? (Score:1, Insightful)
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I don't. The only music I buy online is from Wal-Mart where they sell me unlocked MP3 files and never from Sony or EMI.
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Vaio laptops are great.
The PS3 is a fantastic machine. So was the PS2.
I'd buy a Sony TV but they're damned expensive.
So sod the ethics. I guess I'm not a music customer though.
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Pioneer, Yamaha and Apple have all done well by Sony's nonsense. And say what you want about those companies, none of them are even close to Sony levels of dumb and evil.
I have a PS2, but I'm skipping the PS3 even though I'd love to play the new Gran Turismo.
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This line of reasoning cracks me up. The legal papers say "Sony" on them, don't they -- or at least RIAA, of which Sony's a member. The rootkit was distributed with CDs that said "Sony BMG," correct? The PS3 says "Sony" on it, doesn't it?
That means they are using the same corporate goodwill to sell you all three products -- lawsuits, rootkits, and shiny baubles. The name "Sony" carri
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As long as the revenue from selling the tainted products appears on Sony's balance sheet, it's their responsibility.
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If it'll help, I'll dedicate tomorrow's Two Minute Hate session to BMG, just for a change of pace. But after that, it'll be all about Sony again.
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So did Kevin Mitnick, but he still went to prison. Why didn't anybody go to prison for XCP [wikipedia.org] (alternate less serious link [uncyclopedia.org])?
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Kevin had less gold.
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Also:
Show me ANY company that has not tried to introduce proprietary standards. Wii/Gamecube is owned by Nintendo. Compact Disc is a Philips-owned property; ditto the ubiquitous audio cassette. VHS is owned by JVC/Matsushita. It's rare to find a format that is "public domain" for everybody to use. Nearly all formats are owned by some company.
Re:You've Got It All Wrong! (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:You've Got It All Wrong! (Score:4, Informative)
In fact, it's downright weird to find proprietary things on the PS3 - GHIII's proprietary wireless dongles just make no sense in the context of how the system operates.
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CD
And the PS2 had a Linux distro made for it - by Sony.
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Ebook Reader (Score:2)
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Yes, they would sell you access to what you own. (Score:1)
That is the crime but it's more Gracenote's than Sony's. The CDDB was created by it's users and Gracenote has no right to treat it like an exclusively owned resource. The database itself is everyone's property and the free alternatives, of course, will be easier to use and better kept. Gracenote's new deal with Sony is a low point but one that was entirely predictable when they started acting like they owned the CDDB. Sony should be ashamed of this too unless they turn it back into an unrestricted resou
Re:Yes, they would sell you access to what you own (Score:2)
:DDDDD
Hilarious!
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Yay! (Score:2)
I guess... (Score:2)
freedb (Score:5, Insightful)
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If you want to protect something like FreeDB from sell outs you need to
1) Ensure that the data format and service protocol is wide WIDE open (XML, standard query structures), but the license prohibits switching the service protocol to the same data set
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CDDB's Missing Features (Score:4, Funny)
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You forgot the most entertaining part -- genres.
FreeDB is like having the idiot know-it-all-friend that provides hours of conversation after he's gone.
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They worked hard to earn my distrust... (Score:2)
So they made sure I didn't trust them out of the box.
It's been said before ... (Score:2)
SONY Loves Closed, Proprietary Systems (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:SONY Loves Closed, Proprietary Systems (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:SONY Loves Closed, Proprietary Systems (Score:4, Insightful)
Then prices on Blue-ray shot up (gee, who'd have ever expected that to happen), early adopters have discovered that their expensive players can't play new Blue-ray discs thanks to Sony continuing to muck with the spec, leaving the PS3 the only future-proof Blue-ray player.
But thanks to Sony purposely crippling the PS3 in order to try and leverage what they viewed as their console monopoly into winning the HD format war, they lost out to Nintendo and Microsoft. Every game release that has a PS3 version and an XBox360 version is better on the XBox360, without fail. Check the reviews.
As an added bonus to Sony, just when they were starting to get close to actually making money on the PS3, the US economy started to collapse. Since Sony is a Japanese company which is based in yen, the falling US dollar is causing them to lose even more on every US sale than they were before. The US won't be seeing a price cut until the dollar stops its nosedive. The way the US economy is going, Sony may have to actually increase prices.
They did manage to "win" the Blue-ray war. They won by losing their strength in the console market, and they won just in time to have the US economy collapse so that they can no longer count on sales there.
To top it all off, the war they "won" wasn't really worth winning. HDTV adoption is picking up, but it's still a trifling fraction of the viewing population. Blue-ray became more expensive. DVD is good enough: Blue-ray won a meaningless war, at a great cost for Sony.
Blue-ray's victory is meaningless.
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Every game release that has a PS3 version and an XBox360 version is better on the XBox360, without fail. Check the reviews.
This simply isn't true. For example, the preferred version of Assassin's Creed is the PS3 version. The big problem is that Blu-Ray is very slow at loading data off the disc (compared to DVD-ROM) and designers have to take that into account, usually by caching data on the hard disc. In theory, this means that PS3 games can actually perform better, but only when they're loading game data off the hard disc.
The 360's online service is also generally regarded as better than the PS3's, so online-heavy games (lik
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False. Well, half-false. I don't know much about minidisc, but I do know the pros did NOT use the Betamax standard. They used the Betacam standard with component video recording that produced a higher-resolution image. (Today the pros use Digital Betacam.)
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Saying that Betamax/Betacam are the same is like saying HD DVD/Blu-ray or NTSC/PAL are the same. It doesn't make logical sense, because you cannot play a HD DVD inside a Bluray, you cannot watch an NTSC broadcast using a PAL set, nor can you play a Betacam tape inside a Betamax machine. It just won't work.
Betamax and Betacam don't even record at the same speed (Betacam runs pproximately three faster tha
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Beta is pretty obvious. Ask anyone who owned one who didn't switch to VHS a few years after purchase. Since then you can probably find remaining Beta tapes and players rotting in attics across the world, despite the higher video quality.
Minidisc co
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Betamax-II (used by Hollywood for commercial release) was 240 horizontal analog resolution.
VHS-SP (again, used by Hollywood for their releases) was 240 on standard VHS and 250 on VHS HQ.
There's no difference in video quality. They are virtually identical.
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Saying Betamax/Betacam are the same is just as incorrect as to say that Betamax/VHS is the same, or HD DVD/Bluray is the same. It is Not correct. They are incompatible formats, and they will not play each other's recordings.
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Now what?
They have lots of experience making money with consumer electronics that leverage open formats - Walkman, Discman, and the metric assloads of VHS and DVD players they have sold. They have ZERO experience leveraging a market dominant position into profit.
Their attitude seems to have been "We make X dollars with Y percent of the market. So we will make X*(1/Y) dollars wi
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Incorrect. Sony already achieved success with:
Betacam (professionals)
Compact Disc
3.5" floppy
DVD (Sony is a founding member of the consortium which developed the format)
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All sony contributed was the (bad) error correction.
Betacam is just a product line, not a media standard. DVD is another example of a joint effort that sony did not control.
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To say Betacam is not a "media standard" is akin to saying VHS is not a media standard (or more accurately: formats). They are both a type of media format, with VHS dominating the consumer world, and Betacam dominating the professional world (almost every show between 1985-2000 is stored on Betacam-format)(example: Star Trek TNG and DS9).
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I'm no Sony apologist, but whenever Sony appears here, people point out that Sony always push for proprietary formats. If and when Sony is launching a new consumer product which uses a proprietary format, I can see the validity of raising the formats. However, in this case, the burden of proof is on the people raising it. Gracenote CDDB has an entrenched market position - Sony can't exactly introduce a new proprietary format here.
Ot
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The Motivation for Proprietary Systems is Simple: (Score:1)
Profit (with fewer lawyers).
Who can't understand and endorse something the requires fewer lawyers?
The CDDB I contributed to?!!?!? (Score:1, Interesting)
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Musicbrainz (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously. Musicbrainz was created after the CDDB fiasco (and FreeDB had its own share of problems). It operates under a non-profit organization to guarantee its freedom.
And on that feature bullet-point list, they add an API to recognize what that "Unknown Artist - Unknown Title.mp3" file you have.
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I already have tens of GB of MP3s in iTunes that I burned from CDs myself -- and iTunes automatically looks up the tags in CDDB. I see that I can short-circuit that lookup and manually tag all the files myself via unchecking the "Look up CD names from the Internet?" option in the Advanced pane of the preferences, but is there a tool (e.g., an AppleScript) that'll update my Library from Musicbrainz or FreeDB or whatever?
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http://musicbrainz.org/doc/FreeDBGateway [musicbrainz.org]
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http://musicbrainz.org/doc/PicardDownload
I have to agree with the parent poster, MusicBrainz is by far the best thing going ethically and practically. Enjoy!
Re:Musicbrainz (Score:4, Informative)
http://sourceforge.net/projects/ieatbrainz/ [sourceforge.net]
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*Admittedly it's possible Sony won't close off access to Gracenote for other companies.
Did you hear the sound loop on (Score:2, Flamebait)
These days, even though Sony is huge and not all parts or employees are particularly evil, I don't think I'd even use their batteries as a paperweight on my desk.
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Granted, the combination isn't as portable as a book of matches, but they have a larger area of effect and can be activated at a distance, so you don't accidentally burn your fingers.
SHIT!!! (Score:2)
Or better yet, get Winamp to not use Gracenote? [uncyclopedia.org] If it's using Gracenote to get song titles, why won't it use FreeDB? [wikipedia.org]
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Filenames: Plugins\Gracenote dir: CDDBControlWinamp.dll | CDDBUIWinamp.dll | CddbMusicIDWinamp.dll | CddbWOManagerWinamp.dll | Cddb*.dll (misc libraries).
Adds support for looking up Artist/Album/Title/etc info for Audio CD's.
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(See Point 4 here. [freedb.org] )
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4. Profit!!!!
Some ideas. . . (Score:2)
2) If that's not possible, there are several open source media players (I'm not sure if they all use freedb or can be configured to, but. .
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2) Search engines will give you a list of players, and I'm sure there are hundreds of them at least, but the search engines won't tell you which ones are like XMMS (My favorite, it's on the Linux side of the PC) or which ones suck. Having a few dozen friends (fans? slashdot is weird) give reccomendations is far, far more useful than any search engine.
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Thank beby jebus for... (Score:1)
Ti Kan (Score:1)
snoy's heavy breathing (Score:2)
Wow, I can see the boner in Sony's pants all the way from here.
Wow. So what will Apple do... (Score:2)
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Color me surprised... (Score:2)