Comments on: Is microSD the music medium of the future?
SanDisk announces partnerships with major music labels for future album releases on microSD cards.
SanDisk announces partnerships with major music labels for future album releases on microSD cards.
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In the end, the MicroSD is another storage device. Content is what is important.
but Micro SD would be a great replacement for floppies, but i think pen drives already have this role, they are not as small os Micros SDs, but at that size, it's just too easy to lose them.
-The price is lower than that of CD's (say maybe $5.00-7.50 per card)
-They come out with some kind of case that holds several to many microSD cards, maybe even one that fits in a wallet or purse?
Otherwise, the music industry (particularly the RIAA) is gonna have to face the facts.....that many people prefer to download music in this generation
I think if you're going to make physical content, make it something worth collecting physically, like a gatefold LP with beautiful artwork. Packaging digital content and selling it on costly flash media is like bottling NYC tap water...oh wait someone's doing that. Something to be said for marketing i guess.
For the past couple of years mp3 players have not been available with memory slots. That wasn't good for SanDisk or us. A library of memory cards is more convenient (as well as better for SanDisk) than either either internal memory or CDs.
The next step will be the following business model for recorded music:
A one or two GB disc of music, text, and pictures, each day -- sold and used kind of like a newspaper, and priced like a newspaper.
My town of a quarter million will alone contribute a hundred groups, and won't we be proud and grateful to be able to check them out.
(The daily GB will also be available as a download, but I disagree with the other commentors because who wants to wait and pay for all that bandwidth.)
Ofcourse the daily GB should also have a bunch of oldies.
By the way, soon computers in general will be solid state, and these memory disks will replace external drives.
First -- lower the price.
Second -- give me options. $5 for a 320kbps album? Sure. Included on the card is a coupon to download the lossless version? That's more like it.
I hope they bring back records.
myspace.com/notoriousnickoli
First, the waste of physical resouces and then the whole idea of a distribution mechanism for delivery music in an inferior format. Why not use a lossless format to at least give me the quality of a CD.
...But, then if you can provide the music is a lossless format without DRM, why not just allow me to download it?
MiniDisk comes to mind.
PS, why more MP3 players don't have SD or microSD slots boggles my mind... I put movies on my SD cards for my ZEN so I can use the onboard memory for MUSIC..
1) People don't want to go to a store to buy music.
2) Practically nothing uses MicroSD except a few phones and cameras. My phone stores apps on the card so I need it in, and cameras don't play music. SanDisk is not going to convince people to get new devices just to be able to transfer music from tiny cards they don't need. Maybe if it were SD cards it would at least sell a few before they realized it was a terrible idea.
3) Uh... after those first two is a third reason really necessary?
Honestly, the only possible market for this is impulse buyers that already happen to be at a store that also sells music. That doesn't sound like a big demographic.
- by MarkCarras September 23, 2008 3:24 PM PDT
- Most do not have the tweezers or the time for MicroSD. Ok, this format maybe ok for little girls with a pink phone, but your average user will not have the patience for something so ridiculously tiny. It begs the question "When is it too small?" Trying to sell music on a format that already leaves so many frustrated just shows how clueless both the music industry and the people who make smartphones really are. Bring back full size SD!
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