HP Dumped Napster for Apple 236
Pieter Townshend writes "Found on GMSV: 'In the days leading up to Napster's re-launch last October, a deal that would have put Napster links on millions of Hewlett-Packard computers went bad. HP withdrew from the agreement at the last minute, its reasons for doing so becoming clear three months later when it announced a surprise partnership with Apple to feature the iTunes Music store on HP computers and sell Hewlett-Packard branded iPod music players.'"
One reason why I think (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with the $15 a month is, I don't want to have to pay if I don't use it for a month. As it is I have spent less then $10 a month on iTunes store (and this month I might not spend anything), for me it has been cheaper. So if I look at it I have saved about $25 by not going with Napster. And since I am the only one in my circle at work that uses it, but every one here drinks Pepsi, I am getting free songs from my co-works (that or they would just trash the winning caps), but that is just a non-issue in the long run. With the iTunes store there is great integration into OS X and my iPod.
Also it does cost $.99 do download the song form Napster, so you have to pay for access then to download. From Napsters (www.napster.com) front page "Choose your own tracks for $0.99 each, or get the whole enchilada for just $9.95 per album."
Re:One reason why I think (Score:2)
$15 a month (Score:5, Funny)
Personally I have gotten most of the pre-Internet era music from Kazaa Lite, so paying $1 a song would suit my needs much better. Or I could just stick with Kazaa Lite some mroe.
Re:$15 a month (Score:2)
Re:$15 a month (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, I'm tired of seeing "there is no good music" comments, there is a TON of music in any genre being released all the time, and even when there isn't, there's usually a massive back catalog of things that most people don't own, and could look at.
Re:$15 a month (Score:3, Interesting)
Then I found my old collection of cassette tapes in my parents basement, all the 80's indie/alternapunk bands that I remember so fondly... Most of that stuff isn't so good either. But life was a lot more fun then, so the music seems a lot better.
Maybe I just hate modern bands because they're all younger, richer and having a lot more fun than me.
Re:One reason why I think (Score:5, Interesting)
Margins? (Score:3, Interesting)
If so the business plan would be to run the music store without a profit, in order to sell iPods without a profit, in order to sell macintoshes. But that doesn't sound too smart, so I'd be willing to believe they do make money on iPods, and maybe what I heard only applies to the first models.
If anyone knows any more or less real numbers on Apples iPod margins, I'd
Re:Margins? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Margins? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Can't be (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple could likely make more money in the long run by building overseas production and distribution capabilities, but it would require a huge investment up front. Apple does have lots of cash on hand (close to $5 billion!), but right now time is far more of a concern for them. They want to establish themselves in as many marketplaces as possible, as fast as possible, before competing MP3 products get there. It would be no use for them to spend all kinds of money breaking into new markets, only to find that some other vendor has been saturating that same market for six months already with cheaper (albeit less cool) competing product.
Re:One reason why I think (Score:5, Informative)
>>form Napster, so you have to pay for access
>>then to download. From Napsters
>>(www.napster.com) front page "Choose your own
>>tracks for $0.99 each, or get the whole
>>enchilada for just $9.95 per album."
You're confusing two different things.
Napster allows the following:
1) Subscribe for $10 a month and have unlimited download access to songs, you can not burn these but can download so as long as you are a subscriber. The vast majority of the library can be accessed by download but there are a select songs that are 'buy only'
2) Purchase a single track for $0.99. No subscription required.
3) Purchase a single album for $9.99. No subscription required. It's a one time purchase and not tied to anything else.
Re:One reason why I think (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think (Score:3, Insightful)
You don't read at above a 3rd grade level, do you?
Re:Wrong - Re:One reason why I think (Score:5, Informative)
Re:One reason why I think (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:One reason why I think (Score:5, Funny)
RC cola is better anyway.
Re:One reason why I think (Score:3, Funny)
Pepsi is 99% water, so I figure that's close enough.
The other problem. (Score:5, Insightful)
But then the question is, what happens as the users realize it's even cheaper to listen to the internet radio built into iTunes for $0 a month.
Okay, yeah, you can't choose exactly what song you hear next on internet radio. But generally, if I go "hey, I want to listen to X specific song", this indicates I'm going to want to listen to it again someday in the future. Unless I keep paying for Napster's streaming service for the rest of my natural life, I can't get that. Perhaps worst of all, last I heard not *all* of the songs Napster has up for sale are free to stream when you have the $15/mo service, and there's no way to tell which songs can and can't be streamed unless you've already paid for the service.
The $15-to-stream-from-our-library thing is a really neat business proposition, and I'd call it real innovation, but I just can't see buying it. I'd rather just stick with actually buying in some form the tracks/albums. And if you're only looking at buying tracks/albums, Apple's software works both on my macs and my PCs, and they seem to have a bigger and more indie-friendly library. I think I'll stick with them.
Re:The other problem. (Score:2)
I am torn on the idea myself. I do know that once I started buying songs from iTMS, after several months of thinking about it, I had to push myself away from the keyboard after 50 songs. It's downright addicting. The interface design is fantastic and really encourages jumping around through recommendation links. This leads to many, "Oh man, I love _____ (fill in song/album/artist)" moments. A quick click-charge-downloa
Re:The other problem. (Score:5, Funny)
The worst part is, now there's a $0.99 tax on getting a song stuck in your head.
Re:The other problem. (Score:4, Informative)
it's a business decision (Score:5, Informative)
Re:it's a business decision (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe you can tell me where I can buy a NEW HP consuer PC that doesn't come with Windows XP?
Maybe then you can tell me what your point was?
Napster Sigma? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Napster Sigma? (Score:5, Insightful)
It was probably the hardware... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Napster Sigma? (Score:5, Insightful)
The most likely reason is that Itunes store is the only store going right now that it showing success.
Napster is a great name. When people Hear the word "Napster" they think "Download Music". The problem is that their software isn't as great as it used to be and people are starting to realize it.
AAC versus WMA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:AAC versus WMA (Score:4, Informative)
I've been looking at the choices in media media formats and I have not been very happy with the fact that WMA (WMA7 from what I have learned) has been showing up everywhere. I don't want to have a MS-proprietary format running everywhere. I know it's supposed to make my life easier (and make it easier for MS to extract more money from me later, and don't tell me they aren't trying to think of some way to do this).
With iPod Mini and iPod-HP, iTunes pre-installed on HP computers, with a very significant market share being carved out, and with AAC as the contendor to WMA it seems as though Apple has done the right thing at the right time. Once AAC is established as the popular everyman's format, then consumers will be locked into Apple's system.
This isn't something someone can just Netscape. Once someone is locked into a format, then any purchased music is stuck in that format. Unless the record store allows you to go back and download the media in an alternative format, you are stuck on that format (apart from burning / ripping yourself, but then you'll have aliasing issues to deal with).
Re:Huh!? (Score:5, Funny)
But its Apple DRM. Which is good for some reason. Unlike Microsoft DRM, which makes baby Jesus cry.
Re:Huh!? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huh!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huh!? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Huh!? (Score:5, Informative)
WMV, on the other hand, is exclusively owned by Microsoft. It's also available in non-DRM flavors, but is only licensed for use on platforms that have been granted MS' okay. Which are few, basically just Windows and OSX, maybe X-box.
You need licenses for either format, but AAC licenses are available to anybody with available reference implementations. And I think -- think, mind you -- that AAC doesn't require a license for free-as-in-price encoders/decoders written by hobbiests. At the very least, you can get free decoders at www.audiocoding.com, open source of course.
So yeah, AAC's not open like Vorbis. But unlike Vorbis, the industry invested a lot of research into it and actually wants to use it. As such, AAC is heading for the same popularity as MP3, whereas WMV is looking more like, well, ASX. Vorbis will eternally be a hacker's tool because it doesn't have the visibility nor the clout of AAC in the industry...but as it's going to be eternally tweaked, it will no doubt continue to sound better at comparative bitrates.
Re:Huh!? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh!? (Score:2)
It's easily stripped off with QTFairUse [slashdot.org] (you'll need to stick with iTunes 4.1 to use it, though). All of my iTMS downloads have been "fixed" with it.
Fly on the wall, eh? (Score:5, Funny)
Steve Jobs
Carla Fiorina
Steve Jobs
Carla Fiorina
I'm glad (Score:5, Insightful)
Smart move, HP! Good on their part, good for Apple, and most importantly, good for the customer.
Re:I am sad (Score:5, Insightful)
The boxes coming out of the shop should stop being called "computers" and should be correctly identified as "ad delivery units."
You have no clue. (Score:4, Informative)
No, computer manufacturers are choosing which programs they, as manufacturers, want to pre-load on a machine. It may or may not have to do with contracts or what the sales guys want, or even what the hardware developers want, or download what you want. The point is, it you don't like what's loaded on your machine when you buy it, go to any decent hardware retailer and build your own parts, it's all plug and play, no tech experience required. It's an afternoon project. Then load what you want. But a manufacturer can load whatever fit's their fancy.
Re:I am sad (Score:3, Interesting)
Alienware and Apple do not do such things.
Re:I am sad (Score:5, Insightful)
I think you're overgeneralizing from Microsoft and their vendors. With a Mac, yeah it comes w/ iTunes and Sherlock and whatnot. But you can use other programs without any negative consequences. Many people use other programs for a lot of things. Heck, you could set up to log directly into XWindows if you want and use no Apple software (other than their changes to work on the hardware, natch).
Now, Apple computers may not be easily configurable at purchase time as far as hardware goes, but they use industry standards and most pieces you'd want to replace you can. But all of their software packages are just that - software packages.
I have no idea what you mean by 'ad delivery units'. My computer is a tool that actually lets me get things done.
Re:I'm glad (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow, I didn't know it only took a few months to become THE industry leader with a solid and proven track record. That is an accomplishment.
Re:I'm glad (Score:3, Funny)
But hey. We all know Apple is dying too, don't we?
HP don't play that way, Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
Which would make Microsoft unhappy [slashdot.org] and it did and for other reasons [slashdot.org] as well. That Microsoft took iTunes so lightly [slashdot.org] is a mystery [slashdot.org].
Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. (Score:5, Insightful)
In the same way that Microsoft took the internet lightly. Coming to a Theatre near you: Microsoft inbeds its music service in Windows $version.
Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. (Score:4, Interesting)
That Microsoft has to grow is a fact, that they keep missing the ball is evidence they were lucky with the OS and not terribly good business people besides that. Of course, they'll integrate a search engine with music service and eveything else into Windows is a given. That HP is playing maverick to Microsoft and Intel is fascinating.
Re:HP don't play that way, Microsoft. (Score:4, Insightful)
MS is going to have to actually compete in this arena - something they are notoriously poor at.
M$ arm twisting (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:M$ arm twisting (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously, though, how does eschewing Napster for iTunes benefit HP from the point-of-view of independent operation? Instead of being dependent on Napster and MS, and having to develop or purchase and promote an unknown player, they're dependent on Apple, and get a really popular, already developed, and expertly promoted player to go with.
It has nothing to do with gai
Re:M$ arm twisting (Score:3, Insightful)
1-They are differentiating themselves from other computer makers.
2-HP is reducing their lock-in with MS (indirectly but it's still one less tie)
3-The iTunes / iPod combination is highly successful and therefore very visible, so this lands them a lot of brand recognition to ride on.
i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess I must've been imagining things when I was playing iTunes downloads on my Palm with AeroPlayer (after having converted them from AAC to Ogg Vorbis). Stop spreading FUD.
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:2)
The post didn't say that, only that DRM was a reason to pick iTunes over Napster. The usages restrictions are different with each service, and iTunes comes from the company spurned for their "Rip. Mix. Burn." commercials which said "it's your music."
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:5, Insightful)
It was a matter of "what the consumers seem to think is best" vs "a high risk untested service from a start up whose only merit is name recognition." They went with the company that has the better chance of being there next year...and the one with $5bil to work with.
Re:i would love to have been a fly on the wall... (Score:4, Informative)
They sell a desktop, the d220 [hp.com], with Mandrake, no MS license bundled into that price. They also sell quite a few servers with Linux on them. In fact, they support Linux [hp.com] quite a bit.
They almost have it (Score:2, Insightful)
Here's what I want.
1. On Demand Access - meaning I can login from anywhere and stream the music to my PC or internet connected device.
2. Download / Burning Rights - I want to be able to create cds that I can take with me and play in the car.
It's that simple, hell work a deal out with ISP's and let them offer it as a val
Re:They almost have it (Score:2)
2. What's to prevent you from burning LOTS of these CDs and giving them to friends?
You may say "well I can do that today", but you can't as you don't have an original CD of "just about every song ever released". What you are proposing would give pirates very easy access to illegaly copy just about every song...
This is why "they" are all pushing DRM
Re:They almost have it (Score:3, Insightful)
Subscription models only work if you are not allowed to own a copy. =
Of course, no model that prohibits you from owning a copy will work either, because most of us don't want to "rent" our music. This is the real reason why subscription-based services ar
Pay by month or each time? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? I could finally get that "one song I wanted" issue out of my system. Why by the entire "Queen: Greatest Hits" when I can't stand "Another one bites the dust", and just want "Bohemian Rhapsody"?
Once that was done, I slowed down. I'll still buy an album once every 2-3 months when the fancy strikes me for something new or when another band joins (I'm still holding my breath for the Beatles to get into the music stores, even though I'm starting to see black spots).
So why use a subscription service? Maybe if I could copy those tracks to my iPod (or some other MP3/portable music device) I could almost see the worth of it, but for $15 a month compared to $10 every 2-3 months, I don't see the worth of it.
Otherwise, I think that Napster, and other online stores like unto it, are pretty much in trouble. As the article states, they really don't have a revenue model. The songs probably barely make enough money for the bandwidth/server costs/customer support (meager though the latter should be), and Apple has made no secret that iPods are driving its profits. Sony has come out with their service with probaby superior encoded tracks, but selling them at $1.99 a song is a death kneal for all but the dedicated fans. At that price, I might as well just buy the CD and rip the songs into FLAC or something instead of wasting time downloading them from Sony.
In the end, I see Apple surviving, then as time goes on perhaps making a bigger chunk from the $0.99 per song track once they become the de facto standard (Apple? A dominate player in something? Shock!) and not having to rely so much on iPod sales. I see advertising based music sales doing pretty well - Coke and so on, but my money's on 12 months from now a lot of those services offering iPod compatible tracks through a licensing deal with Apple.
Of course, I could be wrong, but the trends so far seem to support it.
Apple Domination... (Score:4, Interesting)
You still see a lot of Apples in graphics and sound industries, but Apple's not been so great about maintaining their niche. [I mean, hell, Photoshop, one of the reasons for having a Mac in the 90s was one of the reasons people didn't want to switch to OS X, as Adobe wasn't going to make the jump right away].
When I worked in we development, I saw us go from 6:2 mac:pc user preference, to their current 1:12. [As most of us mac users left... and the manager [one of the two pc users] kept hiring non-mac people] . Okay, that might be a bad for empirical evidence.
The real question is going to be if Apple can keep the lead, or become complacent, and have someone else take the market from them.
Re:Pay by month or each time? (Score:4, Interesting)
Reminds me of one of the other factors the RIAA seems to ignore when looking at sales trends. Many of us older folks have spent a lot of money not only on new music, but to replace all the vinyl we still wanted to listen to. I don't remember where I read it about a year ago, but it seems most of us have replaced everything we think worth replacing and have slowed our purchases to new stuff only.
IOW the upgrade gravy-train in over for the RIAA and they still haven't figured out how to maintain sales with only new stuff.
Napster's Public Image (Score:5, Interesting)
iTunes vs. Napster (Score:5, Insightful)
Say what you want about Apple, but they keep coming up with great innovations and products that are slick, well designed and quite useful. HP made a very wise choice here and I think they will make a handsome profit from it. Not to mention Apple being "validated" by someone in the WinTel clique, and having a WinTel producer OEM their gear and install their software by default. This is win-win for Apple and HP, and not bad for consumers.
Yes, there is the DRM issue, but is it realistic to think that there will ever be a time when there is no DRM on material like songs? While I wish DRM wasn't necessary, Apple's license is pretty good - use on multiple machines, use on multiple iPods and burn them onto MP3 disks. Perfect? No. Good enough for the vast majority? I'd say so.
Re:iTunes vs. Napster (Score:3, Informative)
It's the best DRM/Purchasing out there, which is why iTunes MS has risen to the top.
Re:iTunes vs. Napster (Score:5, Informative)
Just a small correction: You can burn them to audio disks, you cannot transcode them to MP3 but have to encode from an audio disk to MP3.
(of course solutions exist to get around this but their use is not allowed for by the iTMS usage terms).
breakups... (Score:4, Funny)
H-Pod? (Score:5, Funny)
--- Ready to be modded down this time...
Re:H-Pod? (Score:5, Funny)
HiPod?
Just a thought. (if any HPers read this and use it I want one for the idea)
Re:H-Pod? (Score:2)
Re:H-Pod? (Score:5, Funny)
Or perhaps they will use the "hip" naming conventions they use for other products and call it something like the h3845a Digital Audio Player.
Re:H-Pod? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:H-Pod? (Score:2)
The ``doPi'' of course.
Napster's Client (Score:5, Insightful)
HP isn't dumb (Score:5, Interesting)
No company that has no source of generating any profit is going to exist. The only reason Apple can afford to do iTunes is because they are using it to sell iPods, which do make them money. Napster has no such device, and as such have no hope of staying in business for long. Roxio may have thought that they would sell CD burning software as a reuslt of Napster, but I imagine most people already have burning software that they are happy with.
I give Napster another 6 to 12 months, at best.
Napster's a baggage (Score:3, Insightful)
They say this and that case is settled, but it's BS. You know those damn lawyers keep spawning like bacteria.
Re:Napster's a baggage (Score:3, Informative)
IANAL, but if a company breaks the law and then goes chapter 11, you can't be held accountable for their actions if you buy their liquidated assets. I mean, if I buy one of those fancy, meshy office chairs from the Enron yard sale, you couldn't sue me for sitting in it. Roxio is sitting o
Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tunes (Score:5, Interesting)
This is an interesting article. It appears that Compaq had a good device for tunes before being purchased by HP. THe question is why did HP go and outsourced tunes appliance when it already had one it purchased from Compaq? Lack of faith in Compaq? Then why did they they buy Compaq? Did they even know it existed? Then the question becomes did they even know what they bought?
Interesting...
Re:Reg article on HP and dropping the ball on tune (Score:3, Insightful)
My guess would be that they took a look at their own device and they took a look at what was already out there and then made a deci
The problem with "legal" music services... (Score:5, Insightful)
I already own all the legit releases by the artists that interest me, but last time I checked I still need about 1,000 Bob Dylan shows just to get that part of my collection up-to-date. God help me when I start on the Grateful Dead or Phish!
Thank goodness for broadband & good ole FTP server software!
Dude, use furthernet.com (Score:2)
Re:The problem with "legal" music services... (Score:2)
I bet this is a temporary problem. I have heard talk about some artists making such items available on iTunes. Currently you can get "exclusive" tracks from many artists on iTunes and those are often special cuts, remixes and/or live performance versions.
Re:The problem with "legal" music services... (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, this is soon to be a "legit." Titled Bootleg Series 6, it now has a release date of 23 Mar 2004. The iTunes "exclusive" is a pre-release promo.
Remember, if it's on iTunes, it is approved by the artist's record company. Last time I checked, Dylan was not contracted to Doberman, Wanted Man, Yellow Dog, Sick Cat, Crystal Cat, or Trademark of Quality, although those labels have definitely
5 reason of why Napstare will fail (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting marketing (Score:4, Interesting)
Question: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Question: (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Question: (Score:5, Informative)
subscription is silly (Score:3, Insightful)
And plenty of internet radio's offering great music for free anyway.
The Real Reason (Score:3, Insightful)
As Steve and Phil told us at the very beginning, and as reality has proven - THERE IS NO MONEY IN SELLING DOWNLOADABLE TRACKS. At least, not for the reseller/portal provider. Apple knew that from the start, and told us as much. They would make their money from sales of the iPod, which would in turn drive more music sales, expand the library, and in turn create more iPod sales.
But the rest of the gang thought they could change reality and make some easy money where it did not exist to be made. Sure, if BuyMusic's million-songs-per-day fantasy had come true, they might have made a few bucks on that volume, but it didn't.
Carly is a smart woman, she figured this out before Napster did, and she made an educated guess that Napster would last about as long as Right Said Fred. (bet you don't remember them!)
Re:The Real Reason (Score:5, Funny)
and she made an educated guess that Napster would last about as long as Right Said Fred.
I'm too sexy for my iPod.
HP Ipods (Score:5, Funny)
iTunes!=Money (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:iTunes!=Money (Score:5, Interesting)
"Why would HP deal with Napster? Song distribution does not bring any money. In fact, Apple claimed (in an old article on TheRegister.co.uk; sorry for no URL) that their iTunes online store did not bring any profit."
I think people are extrapolating way too much from Jobs' statement. When he stated that they were breaking even on iTunes and making the bulk of their money on the iPod, lots of Slashdotters have assumed:
Those who've run a business know that these are groundless assumptions. Extrapolating "song distribution does not make any money" based on a statement that Jobs made about Apple's own unique business many not be accurate.
Think about it... (Score:5, Funny)
Dumped-Napster
DumpedNapster
Dumpster
It all becomes clear.
Re:Dog eat.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Their first business model was to encourage a generation to steal and leech money from the them as they stole.
Their new one is to get those same people to pay for what they have previously been encouraged to steal.
Born To Lose.