Music: Then, now, and tomorrow
#2
Posted 07 July 2009 - 03:45 AM
Being able to play back your own music from your own computer (kind of like a 3g/edge version of a Sonos system?) would be very nice though.
I have a vague feeling that this will be possible with the iPhone/iPod touch in the not so distant future, but then again, who really knows what apple is and is not going to implement!
Nice post though, portability and options have changed a lot indeed! I remember being stuck in a car with some friends for 12 hours on the road with one Doors tape, I can tell you I no longer enjoy riders on the storm ;) (just kidding, I still do, but it took a while!)
#3
Posted 07 July 2009 - 03:57 AM
#4
Posted 07 July 2009 - 04:11 AM
#6
Posted 07 July 2009 - 04:27 AM
#7
Posted 07 July 2009 - 04:44 AM
I can also imagine that, with a well-thought-out subscription service, you'd have access to a personal library with playlists and the like. It just makes sense.
Kirk
#8
Posted 07 July 2009 - 04:58 AM
My first tape unit was a 4-track player which I used during college, later on a cassette then a CD player and now the iPod. I disagree, however, with the comment that digital music has matured. None of these products can play the depth and beauty of the vinyl record which is why they are still so coveted today.
Having said that, I love my iPod. No more having to listen to the awful music on the radio, I can play exactly the music I want, when and where I want.
The last thing I would ever go for is either a subscription service or cloud service. I don't want to rent music, I want to own the music I like. As for cloud service, that would only work in places I don't want to be, such as cities. I live in the intermountain West where it can be 100 miles between towns with spotty cell phone service and little WiFi and cloud service would give me an iPod brick, a small brick, but still a brick.
To sum it up, Apple provides me exactly the service I need. They can offer these other services if there is a demand, as long as they don't take away the current services.
#10
Posted 07 July 2009 - 06:08 AM
Now, you can actually carry everything with you in a form where you can really see your library and find what you want. The convenience of having everything on one small, gorgeously engineered device is what I really enjoy. It takes advantage of an external connection, but is not dependent upon it for basic iPhone & app function. The cloud enhances the functionality, but does not define it.
Relying on the cloud would be a step backward.
#11
Posted 07 July 2009 - 06:42 AM
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That's great. I imagine you can effectively divide people by age based on whether they understood the ka-chunk in that quote. I'm probably among the youngest that do. Don McLean's "American Pie" had the entire title track on program one and then the program switch in the middle of the second song, Sister Fatima.
#12
Posted 07 July 2009 - 06:48 AM
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Because the RIAA would throw the mother of all hissy-fits. Again. This was already tried several years ago and they were destroyed for distributing, even though the recipients already had the stuff being distributed. This is one of the most fundamental and long-standing issues with the RIAA. They're insistent that when you buy (a license to listen to) music, your rights cover the combination of content and medium. You may very well have the CD of "News of the World" but as far as they're concerned you don't have the right to listen to it on a taped copy or over a network connection. They're wrong, of course, but every once in a while they find a judge willing to go along with one specific instance or, more often, they're able to threaten the violators into complying with their idiocy.
#13
Posted 07 July 2009 - 07:34 AM
bastion said:
Keep in mind that the RIAA is the music industry. And, so far, that industry has been keen on subscription services because they provide a steady and fairly predictable revenue stream. If everything is the product instead of the latest hit, artist, or trend, you're less subject to the whims of the moment.
#14
Posted 07 July 2009 - 08:02 AM
The biggest ISP/mobile operator (The AT&T of Denmark) has a concept of "Play" which for a fix amount (perhaps even include) you can chose from 2 million songs. But it uses DRM which must be supported on the PC/Mac and mobile phone.



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