MP3 Dead? What, Already? 202
bob_jones writes "Zdnet is reporting that in an interview with Mark Cuban President of brodcast.com that MP3 is doomed because no one has an economic interest to keep it alive. He also compares it to disco.
" Mark has an interesting point, but I think he basically misses the point-economic interest isn't everything. He thinks Real Networks or MS will absorb MP3. Odd.
Some companies are already getting it (Score:1)
Sorry, you dorks are wrong, the suit is right. (Score:1)
I guess that's why you're here.
- A.P.
--
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
MP3 is dead? (Score:1)
You must be new here... (Score:1)
Could you please explain how Linux continues to flourish then?
Mark Cuban's motivations are a bit transparent... (Score:1)
colin olkowski
http://www.thecosmos.com
MP3 Music Share
This man obviously has no idea what he's talking about. Broadcast.com gets $100 from an IPO and all their competitive intellegence can come up with is that, "No one has the economic incentive to keep it (MP3) alive"?
Broadcast.com seems to be in the RIAA's back pocket, and I'm sure none of their clients have requested MP3 encoding. They're scared to death of it. The RIAA and the major Labels are so far behind the curve it seems that they can only resort to making controversial statements like "Mp3 is dead".
Teletypes (Score:1)
ASCII came in with Teletypes, and was a big improvement over Baudot code that ran on Telex machines.
(I barely remember Baudot and may not be spelling right. No relation to Bridgette I think... But I digress.)
There was only upper case and a few punctuation marks. I have this funny feeling we only had 5 bits to work with.
It does surprise me that the HTML entity set hasn't been expanded to include some basic typographic symbols: N- and Mm-dashes; typo quotes and apostrophes, bullets, check marks, check boxes; integrals and sigmas and deltas.
Not to mention smiley faces.
I guess we need a new ISO-8859 kinda thingie. How about ISO-Font.2000?
Sorry, you're wrong, troll. (Score:1)
You make the invalid assumption that in the near future we will experience an all around 10x boost in storage and data capacity. (I get this from the fact that a 40 meg cd audio track can probably be compressed into about 4 megs of mp3. maybe I'm a little off)
If this were the case, and the desire for more music to be stored locally and immediatly accessibly did not increase at all, then you might be right, because then people could use the higher fidelity standard. But I don't think such increases are going to occur in the immediate future, and even if they do, who says that given the choice between more mp3s and fewer slightly higher quality audio files I would choose the latter? I know people who a few years ago were happy with 500 megs of mp3s, and now have about 10 gigs. Their storage capacity grew 20-fold and yet they didn't start storing cd audio files instead of mp3s. They just got more mp3s.
And what about RNWK? Think they'll be superfluous soon? not a chance. In the first place, as you so rightly pointed out, there will be a need for video compression for a while. In the second place, even if internet data transfer speeds got an all around boost by 10, realtime broadcasts of audio would still be impossible since the higher data transfer rate would almost invariably lead to more people using real audio broadcasts.
And you were referring to the Nyquist sampling theorem, in case you were wondering. But you don't seem like an educated person, so you probably don't care.
mp3 is not a "better" format than cd! (Score:1)
>Um, how is throwing away 90% of the data >"better"?
Just because your file size may be 90% smaller doesn't mean 90% of the data just got chopped off. Mp3 is a compression format specialized for audio, and a lot of the data just got compressed into 10% of the space. You can still hear the drummer hitting his sticks together, the crowd cheering between songs, everything. Almost CD quality, plus you can set what bitrate you encode at to the point where you simply can't tell the difference.
Audiophiles might not all like the quality of mp3's, but they should still appreciate the incredibly small size.
omot@lotek.org / www.lotek.org
Half right (Score:1)
--
YMMV! :) (Score:1)
--
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Consider the source (Score:1)
Saying MP3 is like Disco is such a lame comparison, a better comparison would be to say MP3 is like cassette tapes
He says that the content providers will own the industry, not the contend creators. What a dismal outlook for anyone who is willing to put the time and effort into creating music people will listen to. Basically he's saying all musicians are whores to the content providing pimps.
What a crock.
Translation? (Score:1)
Umm, you can't make a Beowulf cluster out of them?
Seriously, though, I think it means that when broadcasting it, you can't easily adjust the quality to the bandwidth available, and thus transmit lower-quality sound if that's all that will go through or higher quality when you have a high-bandwidth connection.
No-one knew how to pay for it (Score:1)
Re: Translation? (Score:1)
Re: Disco (Score:1)
dashes (Score:1)
FUD FUD FUD: Heavy on the F! (Score:1)
Anyone wanna bet that if the Redbook audio format for CDs was just being developped today that it would have copy protection and region locking garbage wedged into it?
Hemos' dashes (Score:1)
Visual separation increases readability; logical separation tells the browser that it can break a line.
Incidentally, --- isn't uncommon as a replacement for an em-dash, because that's the TeX code for it.
never seen it like that.. (Score:1)
Basic FUD 101 (Score:1)
MP3 isn't open. As I understood it, legally there's nothing stopping Fraunhofer from ordering an injunction or something similar and declaring that all MP3 encoders and decoders are covered by their patent(s). (In fact, I believe they've done so, but aren't enforcing it...)
Any ``standards'' propigated by businesses with pecuniary interest in that standard aren't ``open'' by any means. The original architects of the internet were working off of government grants, not off of the idea that what they were creating would make them rich later. It'd be nice if a large body like the FSF could similarly fund research into truly open standard formats.
Besides, there's better ways to analyze music than DFT's, wavelets being one method...
MP3's dead? (Score:1)
He's right - sorta (Score:1)
But MP3 the movement (what other name could we use? the "digital music revolution"?), whatever format it champions, isn't going away anytime soon.
I think this guy's "problem" (he may be doing it on purpose) is that he's confusing the two. Just because MP4 or AAC or MS Media Player 4 or RealPlayer G2 or whatever can compress files better than MP3 doesn't mean that people are going to stop distributing music freely over the Internet through places like MP3.com.
I think he'd rather people did stop exchanging full music files over the Internet, so people like him could make money on pay-per-view or SDMI or whatever, and he's trying to tie the future of the digital music culture to the fate of the MP3 format (at least in the eyes of the press).
Stupid (Score:1)
Economic interest is the only thing that matters.. (Score:1)
The music industry may suffer as a result of the mp3 craze. But the average musician is already suffering, and the successful ones are too successful by half.
MPEG4 will be "the next forgotten music codec"... (Score:1)
No Subject Given (Score:1)
I'm usually one who doesn't take sides in format battles, but in this one only one outcome is true: MP3 has already won.
One of those reasons, as you mentioned, is it's open source origins allowing it to be used anywhere. Another is that there are applications out there from computer applications like WinAmp or Media Player to integrated systems like the Rio. The applications are well done and easy to use. Every piece on MP3 I've seen in the news shows a college kid with a Mac or Windows; obtaining and listening to MP3s is very nearly for dummies.
The methods are also remarkably stable. While not quite point-click-and-drool, it's not too difficult to rip a CD or burn your own.
I think the biggest problem the recording industry doesn't understand is the relationship between MP3 and CDs. Personally, I rarely use MP3s. I download 'em and burn them to CDs that I can use in my stereo or car portable. That's the reason why I keep a library of MP3s around. It's certainly not because of the inconvience of lugging my laptop around or paying 3-4x money for a Rio player over a portable CD player.
Sure the recording industry can come out with a cool new standard that they can charge for, but who would buy it when it's so easy to rip/burn your own using that old, poopy MP3 standard? Especially since "poverty" is a reason that many give to download MP3 over buying albums in the first place?
Speaking for myself, given the choice of spending the 2-4 hours it takes to download MP3s, encode them to
MP3's are all about instant gratification (Score:1)
The artists! (Score:1)
fucked by the distrubution monopielys. only the
people who control the curent broken distrubution
methouds have no ecnomic intrests in mp3. The
artists and consumers have grate instrest in not
filling the pokets of the big labels.
-Jonathan
Thief (Score:1)
IP is government-run extortion system supported by big-businesses like microsoft and disney.
IP is the next war on drugs.
IP is obsolete.
ps. i am not a script kiddie.
pps: see ipnot [ipnot.org] for justification of the above position.
__
Microsoft's ASF Files (Score:1)
MP3'3 are a 12 to 1 compression sceme. It is very hard for me to believe that a 24 to 1 compression of a CD could sound better. It simply does not make much sense to me. When recording digitally I don't even like using anything less than 32 bit proccesing ( which of course gets reduced to make CD format ).
I see two problems with ASF files:
1) Microsoft owns it. That simply SUCKS if it is true that it is better.
2) Until I hear it with some acoustic music with a 3D stereo field and I actually think it sounds better, I can't believe it.
The only "good" thing is you may be able to stream this format, and in that way it may be better than Real Audio. But Better than MP3? I don't believe it.
This says it all. (Score:1)
or something.
/dev
Nope (Score:1)
/dev
Doomed to fail, eh? (Score:1)
at least until some company decides to embrace and extend
and replace good ole MP3 with a proprietary format
you need to pay $$$ for. The fact is, though, that
MP3's have been great for small-time bands who can't
or won't sell out to the big music establishment who
fear the implications of the MP3 format. They're
cracking down on artists because they're scared, not because
it's some "doomed to fail format". Just a few of my
thoughts... flame at your discretion.
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
Translation? (Score:1)
I have free MP3 encoders and decoders on my hard drive, so the minimum entrance requirement of any new format is that the encoders and decoders must be free. If that requirement is met then the new format may proceed to prove its superiority.
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
>No. In fact they are both proprietary and you must pay for use of either (ie. no free encoder or decoder).
Oops! Then I guess it's MS Audio 4.0 that's dead as far as I'm concerned.
Misunderstandings about economic interest (Score:1)
But WE are the ones having an economic motive for using MP3 - christ, I haven't bought a CD for six months, and yet they keep rolling in. How's that for economic incentive?
Think about big name bands giving free concerts. Do they have more economic incentive for their activity than unknown bands posting their MP3's on the net for free download? We're talking about music here! To have people listen to music that you've made, to have them sing along with words that you put together - this is a drug more potent than any of the ones otherwise flourishing in the music business (people trading such substances, by the way, have economic interests - not that it matters much to the current discussion).
Bottom line: Economic interest doesn't control us anymore. Free music, free software - what's the difference? The invisible hand, figuratively speaking, has stopped masturbating the invisible pecker, and it will inavoidably go limp. This is bad news for the "economic interests" that want to screw us, but it's excellent news for those of us who don't need economic interest to yank us out of bed in the morning...
PS: I've heard Clinton knows how to handle a Cuban - who'll tell him we've got one that needs to be stuffed here?
Babbling morons, that article was! (Score:1)
What Mark Cuban Actually Meant (Score:1)
"how economically and gracefully a server delivering a stream scales...its easy to deliver 100 simultaneous streams, it gets a lot harder delivering 100k simultaneous streams and more. So its how the server scales, how the server interacts withother servers and with users and what kind of programming interfaces are available to enable all of this"
I believe that Mark is thinking in his own terms of Broadcast.Com, which needs to be capable of serving a potential 100k streams. MP3 would have to be packaged in something like Shoutcast or Icecast that is dependable and scalable to this level. It isn't...yet.
Whether Mark is also trying to just poo-poo an explosion in webcasting that didn't come from Broadcast.Com is left up to the reader
There is an MP3 plug-in for RealPlayer G2, and RealNetworks is talking about making it more tightly integrated. This may be the scalability answer.
Truth be told, I don't think MP3 is the best solution for large, live events. It is a great solution for music-on-demand.
Mind you, MP3 is now an old codec. New vector-quanitzation technology (such as TwinVQ aka VQF) is going to make MP3 quality music available at lower bitrates. The question is whether VQF will be licensed in a way to make it "the next MP3" or "the next forgotten music codec."
MPEG4 multimedia standard will include several audio codecs, including as low as 2kbps speech, VQF, and high-bitrate high-fidelity music codecs as well.
Disco (Score:1)
Disco still has a strong culture, only these days we call it House, (or Electronica, if you can't dance
Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.
Stupidity (Score:1)
Paying for MP3's? (Score:1)
I also have a few tracks that i've paid for via GoodNoise [goodnoise.com].
--
No all wrong (Score:1)
--MD--
No Subject Given (Score:1)
in Linux either. I don't think the argument
holds any water.
Oh what a brilliant analogy (Score:1)
an analogy between a style of music and an encoding format. how idiotic can you get?
Eris Knows... (Score:1)
lil'l nugget o fun.
HAH! MORON! im listeining to the format you sound the deathknell for at this very moment...!!!!
KNow why brite boy?
Coz' I dinna like getting a single CD for theone song I like. Nor do I appreciate $40+ prices for anime songs.
might as well sound the Heavenly Trumpet for the
~Grell
"Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony."
Disco (Score:1)
This stuff lacked much of the deep grooves and syncopated beats. It sucked so much, the word Disco was forever tainted.
There is a huge industry around House (and Jungle/Trip-Hop/Acid Jazz/etc,.) right now. It happens that most of the players in this industry are indie labels, at least the ones that know quality music.
MP3 is pretty entrenched right now because there is an abundant supply of free encoders and decoders, as well as artists that sell or give away music in this format, thus satisfying the free market forces of supply and demand.
Of course, the media companies feel like they have a God given right to be the middleman of every transaction. God forbid people do business among themselves!
Mike
Economic interest (Score:1)
The reason MP3 will eventually die is that another, substantially better format will come along - a format that is sufficiently good to make people want to make the effort tp convert/recompress all their mp3s....
This is a good excuse... (Score:1)
damon
Jealousy (Score:1)
The only thing fluid is broadcast.com stock; right down the drain.
--Ivan, weenie NT4 user, Jon Katz hater: bite me!
Hemos' dashes (Score:1)
repeated--like this.
A "-" is a hyphen, not a dash. A double-hyphen is the standard replacement for a dash, when dashes are unavailable due to character set.
ZDNet trash - there's a reason - I AGREE. (Score:1)
As happened here. Just about all of the 100 or so replies on ZDNET trashed the article, Mr. Cuban's rationale, and questioned his motives.
I would have thought this would be one of the collective purposes of the slashdot community -
to promote the values of a piece of technology worthy of promotion, and provide logical and
well-reasoned opposition to the FUD tactics of others who would otherwise benefit from its demise.
If fact, slashdot comments are probably better utilised on sites like ZDNET rather than here - as most of the time on slashdot you're preaching to the altar boys, not the masses.
Perhaps an ongoing ZDNET pressence by slashdotters
will turn ZDNET - ie. if every FUD article they write gets hammered (thoughtfully), they'll get the message. They do have a comercial interest in their articles after all - so public perception is paramount to their continued success.
A filter for ZDNet crap!!!!! (Score:1)
I'm impressed (Score:1)
Economics is dependent upon interest. (Score:1)
- Wing
- Reap the fires of the soul.
- Harvest the passion of life.
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
He's right ... mp3 will eventually die (Score:1)
The only real reason that MP3s are used at all is that they allow you to compress a 10 MB/Minute PCM data stream into a 1 MB/Minute file.
Once the internet speeds up by a factor of 10, and writable DVDs hit the market, you'll be able to transfer and store uncompressed, lossless music files as
And then MP3 will die out.
- jms
Economic interest (Score:1)
DUMB!!!!! (Score:1)
True! (Score:1)
Utterly clueless (Score:1)
Since the current alternatives are neither as inexpensive, efficient, or portable I don't see how this guy has case.
Probably the only thing that will "kill" MP3 is if someone were to release an even more efficient / better quality encoding algorithm to the public domain.
-OT
Just what we need... (Score:1)
Whatever.
What about VHS or audio CD format? (Score:1)
Re: Hmmm.. Is it just me.... (Score:1)
One must also remember that not only must a new format be better in all of the above ways, but it must be SIGNIFICANTLY better, such that it will justify converting all my old mp3s to this new format. I'm not going to go through that much work for a measly 5% space savings...
MS Audio 4.0 (APPLE?) (Score:1)
Correct me if I'm wrong, and email me your opinions, but not your flames.
quit your day job and contribute to GNU then (Score:1)
What about VHS or audio CD format? (Score:1)
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
vfq (Score:1)
Whadda ya mean "No economic interest"? (Score:1)
It is true, there will be few people making money off of MP3s, at least in the short term. However, there is a HUGE volume of people SAVING money by using MP3s.
Don't get me wrong, I do not in any way support the wholesale piracy of music. But so far, the economic benefits derived from MP3s are on the side of the consumers, and they will be the ones keeping it alive. The format may "die" in a corporate sense, where major producers refuse to produce music in them, but I can't think of any way that music can be encoded sufficiently to prevent people from ripping it via a Line-In port on their sound cards.
Sure, sound quality will be lost, but then that's what MP3 is all about, isn't it. The controlled loss of quality in a tradeoff against file size.
MP3's played via a Rio, or whatever, will become the medium of choice for commuters, joggers, etc. Who gets "CD Quality" from their headphones anyway? (Outside noise always seeps in when I listen on the train or whatever). Cassette producers will have to worry about MP3, though. Why record tapes, when I can store MP3s on a non-consumable, reusable medium...
I beg to differ (Score:1)
Natas
/. needs a FUD Icon (Score:1)
Thief (Score:1)
While in general I disapprove of software piracy, it should be pointed out that grand theft auto is not a good analogy. When you steal a car, the rightful owner doesn't have it anymore. When you illegally copy software, you haven't taken it away from anybody.
ZDNet crap (Score:1)
mp3 and disco... ummm yea (Score:1)
business execs who have their heads up their ass
thinking that they can publicize an opinion
despite not knowing shit. cummon.
mp3 is here to stay. Linux is here to stay.
not cause of the profit to be made but the
superior technology and public backing.
-Z
quit your day job and contribute to GNU then (Score:1)
Isn't using MP3 selling out anyway? Or do you honestly think that the ISO/IEC working committee isn't composed of, and funded by, "industry"? Do you think the patents surrounding MP3 aren't owned by "industry"?
Maybe the RIAA doesn't want to get involved with MP3 because there is a monopoly in the MP3 licensing business? People complain that they don't like Microsoft because of the lack of choice. What choice is there when it comes to licensing MP3 patents?
Besides, I thought AAC was going to fix all of these problems. If it does then isn't MP3, in fact, quite dead?
Sorry, the suit wrong, the dorks are right. (Score:1)
Secondly: Do you usually write comments with a thesaurus handy?.. Since when is it proper english to tack "less" and "y" to loss?..
mp3 and disco... ummm yea (Score:1)
is supposed to be on the MUSIC???
what an idiot....just another business geek
flapping his mouth!
mp3 and disco... ummm yea (Score:1)
of L3ENC sitting on my hard drive (and "the man"
cant find a way to make that copy blow up) they can all kiss my ass because i will continue to produce mp3's
knowing that someone as stupid as Mr. Cuba can be the president of a company gives me hope of ruling the world someday
Joe Blow don't read zines, buddy! (Score:1)
Sometimes we need the mirror of the mainstream to reflect our community/attitude/personal ethics system so we can see what others see, and work some PR magic to make the mainstream come over to Our Side.
~BTW, the grammar in the title was intentional, folks. Nothing to see here, move along~
What about VHS or audio CD format? (Score:1)
Basic FUD 101 (Score:1)
Of course MP3 will be dead... (Score:1)
It's just a file format, as long as people are intrested in archiving music and trading it online it'll happen, mp3 or otherwise. Hell, there were even people with phat pipes who copied songs on
MS Audio 4.0 (Score:1)
No. In fact they are both proprietary and you must pay for use of either (ie. no free encoder or decoder).
---
"A society that will trade a little liberty for a little order will deserve neither and lose both."
Economic interest will preserve mp3 (Score:1)
Economic interest is the only thing that matters.. (Score:1)
PSHA! Im worried about MP3 economics... (Score:1)
Economic Interest?!?! WTF? (Score:1)
Some companies are already getting it (Score:1)
When we finish, I'll try and post an article on it, I think the Slashdot crowd will like it.
-Richard
But I want to make money every time you listen... (Score:1)
From reading the article, I get the feeling that Cuban is lusting for a pay-per-view dynamic. He wants to make money each time you listen to the song. Sort of like a worldwide jukebox. The best way to do this is by delivering the content as a compressed encrypted stream. Fortunately its a really knotty problem figuring out how to deliver the music and not allow it to be stored or shared. My guess is that they are spending a lot more money to develop the 'copy protection' scheme than they are putting into bettering compression. They want control over the format, content, and distribution. As digital internet connections become more common and migrate towards the TV, this kind of technology will become an economic powerhouse. However mp3 is not the format that can be used to exploit it. In fact, it becomes a liability for the new distribution scheme. They want it killed or at least marginalized as soon as possible. ZD seems awfully happy to help. In fact, Im beginning to think that their magazines should have "Special Advertising Section" printed on all of their editorials.
I'm impressed (Score:1)
Nope. The closest is micros~1's attempt at embracing and extending. Which means that you end up getting ? interspersed throughout your text (or something similar.)
I believe the "real" name is an em-dash (single hyphen in the word intentional.) It basically looks like a long hyphen. Which is why the double hyphen (--) is used to emulate it. Can't be represented by ASCII, though. Just like a number of other typographical symbols (such as "real" quotes--the proper way to do them is ``text'', rather than "text," but that way looks crappy on most displays, so I don't do it.)
ASCII sucks for proper typesetting.
--
- Sean
People have been pushing vfq for years... (Score:1)
But MP3 is still ubiquitous... vqf is no more than a fringe technology.
And to be quite honest, that's fine with me. The quality of my MP3's is quite fine, thanks. I have almost 3 gigs that I encoded off my albums, and I can play the 2 back and hear no discernable difference.
And yes, my sound system is quite high quality. Still no problems.
--
- Sean
Kewl. Thanks for setting me straight. \0 (Score:1)
--
- Sean
You are compltety wrong!!!! (Score:1)
"MP3 is not scalable" (Score:1)
Of course, do customer care? No.
How can Frauenhoffer have a patent on this? (Score:1)
They are a German tax-financed research institute. Software patents are not granted in the EU and hopefully never will be. Did they patent it in the US?
I can see that the original code is not GNU protected. In my experience in Europe we are less aware of how necessary that is, because companies in general do not tend to act so agressive i.e. they aren't that sue-happy as in the US. It is kind of ironic: in a more "socialistic" Europe the awarness to defend our open-source freedom is less keen than in an agressivly capitalistic USA.