Comments on: RealNetworks rekindles iPod tech tussle
Company's Harmony software regains iPod compatibility, despite Apple's charge of "hacker tactics."
Company's Harmony software regains iPod compatibility, despite Apple's charge of "hacker tactics."
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
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service are only compatible with each other. By far the most
popular. It's like saying VHS fragmented the tape market or
Microsoft fragmented the OS market.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2004-07-21-digital-music-players_x.htm
about 21.5 million were "next generation players". of those, "well over 5 million" would be ipods.
i know no one who owns an ipod. i've never even seen one, except in a store. i know plenty of folks who own other mp3 players. most of them chose to play mp3 music because of this fragmentation of the market. they have a higher confidence that their music collection will remain compatible with any future player because of that decision.
mark d.
Let's say 5 million ipods were shipped/sold. Let's say there are 285 million people in the U.S. That would be 1,754 ipods per 100,000. That does not sound like everyone ha an ipod. ipods are mainly ubiquitous in urban environments or a public commuter environment. I don?t have an ipod. I have a media pc which I use to stream music and burn to cd?s. I use itunes. So, get off your soap box and face reality?not everyone will want or need an ipod. Personally I will buy an ipod PHOTO when the prices drop.
iPod is great, but its not for everybody, and in a year or two, it won't even be for most people.
NWLB
****
www.NWLBnet.blogspot.com
that they are virtually out of sight. At least, I've never seen any
reason to bother with Real's products, no Real-based files show up
anywhere. But I have seen lots of reasons not to.
And with MP3 working for everyone, there's hardly fragmentation.
For example, I have over 8,000 songs on my iPod and only 12 of them were purchased from iTunes (and I use the term "purchase" loosely because they were actually free, from the Pepsi promotion.)
If I were going to buy any new music, I would buy the CD and rip it. Why? Because I LIKE having the ENTIRE CD - all the music, the lyrics, the CD jacket, etc. Plus, I can rip the CD in any format I want at any data rate, as opposed to buying a typical 128k file with DRM.
This whole debate is just silly. Besides which, it seems as though iTunes is the BEST store out there. So why whould anyone want to switch?
Maybe Congress will do something; when your next COLUMBIA CD from the store works only on a SONY player. The same people own both brands. This is what we have already with Napster, ITunes, Real and the other screwed up onloine sources.
NO THANKS...
- Money for nothing!
- by The_Raven April 27, 2005 9:38 AM PDT
- Of course the music industry would love to see all online music services go subscription only. They get more money for nothing that way.
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- 5 Million iPods?
- by aabcdefghij987654321 April 27, 2005 10:33 AM PDT
- There were 5.3 Million iPods sold last quarter. So there are many more iPods out there than some people here suppose.
- Like this
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(17 Comments)