greatbear: (dr evil)
I finally have to raise a half-hearted cheer to Apple for finally releasing their iTunes music from the shackles of their ironically named FairPlay DRM. Millions of people have bought their music over the years from the iTunes music store and most have been pretty happy as long as they remained in the walled garden (or is that 'orchard'?) of Apple. Sure, there have always been ways to jailbreak one's tunes from the iTunes/iPod ecosphere, the easiest being to burn the purchased songs to CD then reconvert to other digital formats, but that introduces varying degrees of degradation depending on the desired outcome. There are also less-than-legal means as well, ones that strip the DRM from the songs leaving the original AAC coding generationally intact. But now that Apple has seen the light of unencombered musical nirvana, they are allowing those who have been faithful to the iTunes musical universe their own way out of the darkness.

The problem is, it's all or nothing.

The current deal to rid ones self of the FairPlay encoded songs for the unencumbered (and higher-bitrate) versions is 30 cents per song, albums for 30% of the album price and 60 cents per video. Not exactly huge, especially if there are certain albums, tunes or vids that you truly enjoy, want higher quality or would like to play on other equipment. The problem is that you dont have the choice. It's all of your collection, all at once, or nothing.

Here is yet another example of how Apple has become all those things that Microsoft was being accused of being by the Appleistas and more. This policy of all-or-nothing punishes the biggest users/purchasers on iTunes the worst, as those with the most purchased songs will end up having the highest 'upgrade' price handed to them. The early adopters get smacked down once again, the same as those who purchased the first iPhones and iPod Touch models had to pay for feature upgrades that later buyers got included with their purchases. This latest cash grab is likely to go over like a turd in a punch bowl, especially by those who have been loyal, long-time customers.

Then again, all this infusion of cash could help keep The Jobs from collapsing into a cosmic string wearing a black turtleneck. Or not.
greatbear: (march of the pirates)
Finally.

It appears that Apple will be selling all music through the iTunes store without DRM. It's about freakin' time. While the FairPlay DRM scheme used by Apple was one of the more flexible out there as far as restrictions and the ability to use your music on a number of computers and iPods, it was still not without it's problems. Those who failed to make proper backups or lost their original accounts by some means would have no access to their music (except through a one-time re-download from Apple), and could not use software/hardware not provided by Apple to play the songs they bought. Now people will be able to use the music they buy however they see fit.

Of course, there's bound to be an HUGE increase in piracy, right? Riiiight.

There will be, of course, a fair amount of 'sharing' going on. But it will be no different than what's going on currently, and that is no different than the countless millions of cassette dubs and what-have-you that had been going on for years prior to the 'net.

To be able to use however they see fit with their purchases is ultimately what consumers want. It's starting to happen, albeit slowly.
greatbear: (forearms)
A fresh take on boring portable radios. It's one for you rockers and metalheads out there.

It appears Plextor is getting out of the computer CD/DVD burner business. A shame, really, since I always felt that their drives were top-notch, albeit expensive. Every PC I have built in the past 7 years here has at least one Plextor drive installed. I gotta say, though, I've had good luck with Lite-On drives as well. They are stoopid cheap, reliable and produce flawless disks.

A computer mouse for people with more dollars than sense. Fashion or otherwise.

A freebie! A Choose Your Own Adventure e-book for your iPod entitled The Abominable Snowman. For PC or Mac, normally 10 bux. I'll let you know how it is later on.

Microsoft plays 20 Questions about the DRM built into Vista. Hey, it's okay. You'll do fine as long as you stick to vinyl and newpapers.

Meaningful stuff coming soon. Stay tuned.

A cold play

Jan. 3rd, 2006 11:12 pm
greatbear: (headsmash)
One of my fave techie sites, Ars Technica, has a little write-up of yet another example of just how far the recording industry will go in delivering a crippled, defective and damaging product to faithful paying customers as well as leaving them no recourse whatsoever in returning such products or repairing any damage done.

I realize that I am preaching to the choir here in my blog. Just today I had a discussion at work with a couple people who basically did not realize that this kind of shit goes on, or is becoming more prevalent day by day. This has not one damn thing to do with stopping so-called 'piracy', and it has never been. These companies want to be able to control every last aspect of how 'their' 'content' is used, and making money on it at every turn. The reactions from these people was nothing short of shock and anger. Spread the word to your non-technical friends. Point out every instance of such heavy handedness from conglomerates and tell them to vote with their dollars. Turn them away from manufactured, focus group-derived tripe and onto talented, independent artists on listener-friendly labels. Your friends, and those artists, will thank you.

And for you Windows users, disable autorun on your optical drives. Your PC will thank you.

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Phil

December 2016

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