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[ARSCLIST] interesting
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/10/business/10music.html
now that Universal will open up its catalog to standard non-DRM formats, I think everyone else
(Warner Music, Sony/BMG) will quickly follow suit. This will probably be the death knell for the CD,
figure it will demise slowly over the next 5-10 years and no material will be issued on CD after
that.
I see this as possibly good news. Apple seems to have set the bar higher for quality at the higher
price. I still think 256kbps AAC is not CD quality but it's a heck of a lot better sounding (to my
ears at least) than 128k. I'd like to see full CD quality for $1.29 a song, and that may end up how
it goes since Apple has introduced the idea of competing over sound quality. What will probably
drive this will be viable competition to iTunes, which so far hasn't emerged.
Also possibly good news, it seems to me that a company like Universal, with vast stores of already
digitized material sitting out of print and making zero money right now, would want to make
everything available online at a price since there are almost zero production costs vs. packaging
and manufacturing CD's. It seems to me -- and I don't pretend to understand how Big Music sees their
business model since it's made little sense from the outside for quite some time -- that you'd want
to flood the market with choices and count every $1.29 as found money if the material was out of
print previously. This might be over-optimism by a collector, though, given Big Music's continuing
shotgun-to-feet MO.
Anyway, very interesting to see DRM going to the great grave of Bad Ideas, where it belongs. The
lesson for history -- treat your customers like thieves and they will turn on you.
-- Tom Fine