Apple and Fox Set to Announce Movie Rental Deal 192
mudimba writes "Apple and Twentieth Century Fox are about to announce a deal that will allow users to rent Fox movies over iTunes. The deal will allow people to download movies that will only play for a limited amount of time. 'Pali Research analyst Stacey Widlitz said the deal follows a trend of Hollywood studios selling directly to consumers and cutting out the middleman. "It's just a sign the studios feel ... that another distribution channel is where they are choosing to go, and incrementally it hurts Blockbuster and Netflix," Widlitz said.'"
What a great business model! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What a great business model! (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe something like that can be done with the DRM on movies too, but I doubt that any time soon it will be easy and convenient enough for anybody to do to have any noticeable impact on their business. Even if some people crack and share their files, the majority won't.
And the nice thing about rentals vs. purchase is that they can very easily change their crypto methods at a moment's notice without having to be backwards compatible.
Not that I would ever be a customer unless the price is right (it won't be) and they serve up 720p h.264 files at at least 4mbit. (they won't do that either)
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Why not? XBox has been doing this for over a year (720p at something like 12mbit) - it's VC1, but obviously Apple's format of choice would be H.264 for the same scenario. This isn't exactly revolutionary - it's not even new. Amazon has online movies, xbox has them, movielink has them, cinemanow has them ... so Apple's joining the game too. Apart fro
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At least the XBox service is evidence the studios are not totally opposed to HD at a decent bitrate, there may be hope yet.
Now all we need is a good box to play them on - I don't want a noisy '360 that I would not use for games anyway. A proper HD Apple TV 2 would be good - so lon
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Build it and they will come...
If HBlueDVRayD players really were discount box shifted, I would buy one. Unfortunately, that is only the case in the US; the rest of the world still pays a premium for first-gen players! The low sales are probably primarily due to the fact that there are two competing standards; those who don't know or care don't buy as with any new
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In fact, I have stopped buying DVDs in anticipation of having an HD player; buying an SD DVD seems like a waste now.
I had done basically the same thing, but for a few movies that I really wanted (Harry Potter: OtP for example) I've picked up the DVD/HDDVD combo disc. It plays in my current DVD player (which ironically is connected to an HDTV and upscales), and it's got the HD version already on the disc. I figure whichever player comes out on top it should still play the DVD side of the movie, and if it happens to be HD-DVD then I can play the Hi-Def version as well.
Personally, I'm betting on HD-DVD anyways. The play
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Considering that the vast majority of p2p material isnt even SD I rather doubt it. Heck, ripping my own DVDs to disk, with a good encoder I dont notice enough quality difference to make it worth the 50 cents worth of diskspace to use full SD quality.
In what few blind tests I've seen not even experts can reliably tell what's HD content or upscaled SD content under normal viewing conditions, so why bother? You might as well stick a HD sticker on your old TV and be as amazed wit
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You are free to set whatever personal standards you wish, but that quality is good enough for the vast majority of people. And I'm not being elitist... it's good enough for me, also. There's a trade-off between perceived quality, storage space, and bandwidth, and the sweet spot is different for different people. I want better quality than youtube, but don't particularly want HD. DVD quality is fine... heck, I'll often settle for VCR q
Fairplay is "honor system" DRM (Score:4, Interesting)
Nobody needs to crack it, because iTunes DRM is "honor system": iTunes will happily make a perfect digital unencrypted copy of an audio track for you any time you want, without QTFairUse, by burning to an audio CD.
Which I routinely do every time I buy a track from iTunes, because I took their advice about making backups of all my music to heart. Good thing too, when a couple of reinstalls on a bad system drive took me over the limit of authorizations... it was the only way I could play my music while waiting for them to remove my authorizations manually. If you (any of you out there) haven't made audio CD backups of your iTunes music, I heartily encourage you to start.
Yes, re-ripping will introduce some distortion if you don't re-rip to lossless... but I can't detect any on anything but classical music, and I haven't bought classical music on iTunes in years. I mean, really, if you care about quality why aren't you buying and ripping CDs, or at least sticking to iTunes Plus tracks (which are, incidentally, DRM-free).
And the fact that there's not an easy equivalent for video is one reason I've only bought a few TV shows from iTunes, to fill in series I've missed. The video side of iTunes seems like a sideshow, really, music is where it's at.
Good argument for subscription music (Score:2)
I much prefer the Zune Marketplace Zunepass, and URGE before that, as a model. A fixed monthly fee, and I can download whatever I want, whenever I want. Last night I downloaded all of the Rock Band tracks, including most of the albums they were off of, and 85% or so of them were available via subscription (the Metallica stuff required a purchased download). Nice way to
Bad argument for subscription music (Score:2)
That seems rather an odd bit of logic there.
Here I am with a music library collected over the past 30 years, containing quite a bit of music that's no longer in distribution, some of which will never be republished until it goes out of copyright, and the solution to backing it up is to prevent me from having acquired a permanent copy in the first place. Well, I suppose
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No one's EVER going to crack the encryption algorithms so that a temporary movie becomes permanent! It's BRILLIANT!
If it's cracked (which will be *extremely* difficult--don't think that just because DVDs are so easy to decrypt that that means all DRM is futile), Apple will just update iTunes and FairPlay. At worst, there will be a window of time where rentals can be de-DRMd. You won't be able to all of the sudden "rent" a ton of movies and decrypt them, because by the time it becomes cracked, the new FairPlay (which is certainly already prepped) will be in place, so any new rentals will not be crackable via the already
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"(Almost) no one's ever going to BOTHER cracking the encryption..."
It will all come down to pricing and convenience - if the price is right, and the restrictions aren't absurd, most people will be more than willing to pay to download yet another TV-show-season pack.
Of course, media companies do not have a history of being very smart about either - but the greatest problem is neither with th
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By the time somebody's gone through all that, they could have found Bittorrents of the movies and downloaded them. Non issue.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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I an app developer, not a driver developer, but I have seen a few programs, like TrueCrypt [truecrypt.org] fake-out the Windows Driver Architecture into using a driver that isn't associated with actual hardware.
I don't see any reason that this won't work for Video and Sound drivers (until MSFT tries to shove trusted computing down our throats). I have been considering researching the feasibility of/writing a [OSS?] driver that would take the output and encode it directly to disk. This bypasses the need to actually target
Cryptographic model (Score:5, Insightful)
Which won't work for DRM.
The basic premise in cryptography is keeping the key secret, exchanging them securely with the destination user while avoiding them to be catched by undesired 3rd persons.
With DRM, the problem is that the person to which you securely transmit the keys (the user, so he can watch his movie) and the person you're protecting the keys from (the user, so he won't make unauthorised copies) are the same person. You're supposed at the same time give the keys to the user and prevent the user from using them.
So the mathematical model behind private/public systems, etc could be perfect, that won't help a system like DRM which is broken by design.
can't rent (Score:5, Insightful)
One can't rent digital data because an integral part of renting something is returning it at the end of the rental period. Some people get this, and some people don't: http://www.bash.org/?104052 [bash.org] (warning: language).
Yes, I know they mean DRM. This is slashdot, so nobody has to be reminded that DRM is impossible.
Re:can't rent (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:can't rent (Score:4, Informative)
Just a point on the Amazon service. I've used it with my Tivo, and the prices are really good. Actually, I just opened another tab to check the current prices, and ended up renting Transformers for $0.99 and Waitress for $1.99. Most of the rental* prices are around that. The really nice thing about Amazon's downloads is that it's just the movie. While this means no special features, it means no previews and no annoying menus getting between you and the movie.
*And yes, I said rental. Semantic arguments are teh lame.
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Do you vent against The Man simply because you can? This is one of the *rare* cases where DRM is creating a legitimate market for a product, as opposed to merely tying the hands of consumers.
None of the usual anti-DRM arguments are valid here. You are NOT purchasing a permanent license to the work. It only lasts for the next 24 or 48h, so the usual arguments of inability to transcribe to another hardware's format is not valid here either. Unlike most DRM, the restrictions placed upon your purchase would b
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So you don't pay full price and can watch it for a few days or some other period of time. After that, you aren't allowed to watch anymore without paying again. Everyone who isn't a Slashdot pedant calls this "renting a movie". There's nothing wrong about describing it as a digital movie rental service, because that's just how customers are goin
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faster to go to the video store (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:faster to go to the video store (Score:4, Insightful)
Going to an actual video store or even using netflix is just too much of a hassle. The membership. The dues. The fees. The lines. The people. The interactions. The driving. Screw that.
What needs to happen is the half-assed cable "on-demand" services need to have more than a few dozen stupid movies -- all either free or for $7 a movie with only 24hrs to watch them. That's ridiculous. Give me a week to watch something I buy. Drop the price to something more reasonable. And then expand the selection from 200 films to 100,000. I will never need netflix or a video store or to buy an actual DVD ever again. I will always resort to the very affordable (preferably) massive library on my television with the flick of a remote control.
Why is it taking so long to accomplish that? It's 2008...
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Umm... explain to me how a downloaded copy will be of higher quality than just renting a disc, particularly if you don't want it to take a week just to download the thing?
Re:faster to go to the video store (Score:4, Insightful)
Something that perpetually fascinates me, which presumably relates to the autism of geeks, is that automatic assumption that all media has to be owned and collected: terabytes of ripped DVD material, etc. I assume these are the people who can never actually see a concert, because they spend the whole time photographing and recording it. I own a handful of films of DVD, although I go to the cinema (the ultimate rental, in a sense) once a week. I rent occasional films, that I missed at the cinema, or want to see for some other reason, and after watching them once, from end to end, I'm quite happy not to have them around any more. What do these people with hundreds and thousands of films _do_ with them? I'm increasingly puzzled at what I myself should be with the thousands of CDs I've acquired over the past twenty years: how many of them do I listen to? How many of them, indeed, have I listened to more than once?
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the real advantage of o
Re:faster to go to the video store (Score:4, Insightful)
Regardless, no matter *how* close your video store--even if you live *in* it, I can start watching a film from iTunes faster than you could from your live-in video store. Hell, I'd bet I can start iTunes, find a movie and start watching it before you can turn on your TV and DVD player, find and load the disc you've already rented, and start the movie (without even taking into account the FBI warning and superfluous DVD startup animations that will delay your movie no matter how fast your DVD player starts).
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And don't pretend instant gratification is anything new. The microwave oven, television, telephone, railroad, pony express, sail ships, chariots, carrier pigeons, smoke signals, well, my point is, wanting things faster is nothing new, nor is it anything bad.
I mean, why would you *want* to go to your local video store when you can just click download and watch immediately? Perha
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Further, most people with digital cable or satellite have video on demand so sometimes renting a movie just takes a few clicks of the remote. I'll likely use this service when I travel for work. I can rent a couple of movies, load them on my iPhone and have something to watch at the airport and on the plane. I used to have to buy the movie when I wanted to do this, with th
A week after the first rental film goes live... (Score:3, Insightful)
Almost certainly it'll be Windows only at first, but very soon thereafter, the Mac OS version will appear.
And then the race will be on! First QuickTime will be patched, then the intercept applications will be patched to defeat the QT patch. The subsequent QT patches will break all sorts of things, like iPhoto and Garage Band and anything else that uses the QT engine.
Hilarity ensues for a year or so until Fox says "Screw it! We're not making enough money off this."
Rest of world pays no real attention, as they're too busy watching all the movies and TV programs they've downloaded via The Pirate Bay and from USENET.
In other words, what we're all doing RIGHT NOW.
Re:A week after the first rental film goes live... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yep... (Score:2)
If you can make it simple for them you'll make money.
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The opposite observation (Score:2)
My ex was studying psychology (not exactly a bunch of computer nerds).
We got her a MP3 player for Christmas. And somewhat later, for her birthsday I wanted to offer her gift-coupons for her to go and buy whatever CD she would like to rip and store on the player.
Reaction of all her co-students whom I asked to help ? "Why pay for something she can get for free on LimeWire ?".
So my experience is the exact opposite. For every effort that companies make to attract 1 pay
Re:A week after the first rental film goes live... (Score:4, Insightful)
Lawbreaking != immorality.
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Lawbreaking != immorality.
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I offer you something at a given price with a restriction. You break the restriction so you get unlimited, unrestricted use. The thing I sold you came at a low price because of that restriction.
I wouldn't call it stealing, but it sure is wrong. If you think DRM is wrong, don't buy it--but it is still wrong to buy DRM'ed junk, then remove that DRM and enjoy the junk at bargain price.
Re:A week after the first rental film goes live... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, and the Boston Tea Party was wrong. So was the American Revolution. We should *always* do what the government demands. Always.
Your kind will soon enough be naturally unselected.
You mean like apartheid? (Score:2)
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In Saudi Arabia, the law is that homosexuals be put to death.
Not everything your government says comes straight down from heaven.
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Until then all the morality you can preach won't change a thing.
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Yeah, Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Ghandi, everyone who signed the Declaration of Independence, et al, etc.
Immoral lawbreaking criminal bastards the lot of them.
Lock 'em all up and throw away the key, that'll learn 'em!
Re:A week after the first rental film goes live... (Score:5, Insightful)
The biggest problem will be getting the movies to where people want to watch them (ie, the TV). Fortunately, Apple has the Apple TV for just that.
The iTunes music store was easy enough, cheap enough, and the DRM was unobtrusive enough, to convince a *lot* of people already "doing that RIGHT NOW" to actually *buy* music again. Then they did the same with TV shows (until NBC/Universal decided they'd rather have people "pirate" their shows instead of buy them through Apple). There's no reason to expect the iTunes movie rentals will somehow fail to do the same thing, again granted acceptable pricing and usage terms.
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apple is the middle-man (Score:4, Insightful)
This doesnt cut out the middle-man, it just makes the middle-man apple.
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No pressing discs. No printing boxes. No shopping finished product to distributors.
There's still a retailer involved, but a bunch of other middle-men are removed.
Cutting out the middleman? (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't Apple the new middleman?
Media outlet repeats rumor from media sources (Score:4, Funny)
Film at eleven.
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Bandwidth and the TV (Score:3, Interesting)
My concerns are around the following:
-Downloading times. If we were to assume that the quality of the file being downloaded was equivalent to an uncompressed DVD (~4GB), I'm not willing to wait the 8hrs to download it. I'm a comcast subscriber, and the 'on demand' feature should be how things are delivered. Sit down at the tv, scroll to the movie. Click 'pay' and you get it for 24hrs, watch as many times as you want.
-Getting the movie to the tv. I have both a PC and a macbook pro (laptop). However, neither are very good at getting video or audio to the stereo/tv. The Macbook pro had DVI out, but for audio, i have to use a USB to composite (red/white) cable. So even if the media is Dolby5.1, the laptop sends it to my stereo in.. 2channel stereo. While stereos/TVs move towards HDMI, computers are just moving to DVI.
I'll buy into downloading movies if i'm not forced to a) upgrade my broadband connection from cable/dsl to an OC-3, and b) have to replace my laptops with a desktop/mediacenter pc with an optical out/HDMI.
Reminds me of Vista, This is a great OS, if you upgrade to 4GB of RAM and quad core cpus!
Re:Bandwidth and the TV (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Bandwidth and the TV (Score:5, Informative)
What are you talking about? Every Macbook/Macbook Pro has audio OPTICAL OUT. It'll do 6.1 DTS.
Don't blame the hardware if the problem is that you don't know how to use it.
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Cables are pretty cheap too, at least not too bad
Re:Bandwidth and the TV (Score:4, Informative)
As for getting it to the TV, that's what the Apple TV is for. Unfortunately, the Apple TV currently doesn't support streaming movies directly from the iTunes store. This seems exactly like the sort of thing Apple would update for a rental service like this.
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I wonder how long (Score:2, Redundant)
I need a DFD (Score:2, Redundant)
Either Stacey is full of it, or I'm missing something. I need a DFD (dataflow diagram).
How is iTunes cutting out the middleman? Wouldn't iTunes be the new middleman? Wouldn't iTunes be
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Don't Read Manuals (Score:2, Insightful)
Flaimbait? Really? (Score:2)
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What a total freakin' bore... (Score:4, Funny)
Oh never mind! Trek 69 was just delivered to my AppleTV.
audio DRM failed, now they try again (Score:2, Insightful)
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Listen, I think DRM is a failure, too. But this post is crap.
1. There's no consumer backlash against audio DRM on a large scale. 1+ billion songs sold through iTunes proves this. Conusmers may like DRM-free s
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"Narrow customer base" for iTunes? I'd like to know what the hell you are smoking. It's totally mainstream. iTunes is one of the most popular software applications in history.
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Clue 1: Audio DRM is different from Video DRM. Clue 2:People have already fully embraced Video DRM via the DVD.
How would the limited-use DRM work? (Score:3, Interesting)
If I watch the first 30 minutes of a movie, does that count as one full viewing? Does it mark the first 30 minutes as being watched once, so I can watch the rest of the movie X times but I can only watch the first 30 minutes again X-1 times? They CERTAINLY couldn't make it count as nothing, cause then people would never watch the credits of the movie, or whatever, and it wouldn't count.
And, I presume these will sync to video-capable iPods. If you only get to watch it three times, whats stopping me from downloading it, syncing it to my iPod, and then watching it three times on my computer AND iPod EACH.
Ok... so all of the above relies on a method that allows you to watch it a certain amount of times, instead of a method that lets you watch it unlimited times within a certain time period.
I know far less about DRM and encryption than guys like DVDJon, but whats stopping me from changing my Mac's system clock?
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DRM and Limits (Score:2)
A good bait for hackers to circumvent it.
As stated previous postings, DRM is an illusion, renting digital files doubly so.
No mention of late fees (Score:2)
Can DRM Work? (Score:2)
On the other hand, the current iTunes DRM works pretty well, and most people don't seem to bother with breaking it. Why? Because fair use usually doesn't get in their way. I bought a
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Long answer:
On the other hand, the current iTunes DRM works pretty well, and most people don't seem to bother with breaking it. Why?
The current iTunes DRM works because Apple makes it trivial to bypass it. They even tell you how to do it without finding or downloading any new apps: MIX, BURN, RIP. Many people don't bother until the first time they run into a problem with Fairplay, but making an audio CD backup of iTunes tracks as you buy them is not only sensible but encouraged (and nece
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Market Research (Score:2)
Geeks are into watching TV shows on their computers. Normal people (aka "non-geeks") are not. Normal people don't want to sit at a computer and watch a show, and they want it immediately rather than waiting for it to download. Normal people tend not to even have internet connections good enough to enable a "rent
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You sound bitter and jealous by your example. How does renting a movie via digitial download apply only to the wealthiest of society?
DIVX failed, FlexPlay failed... (Score:2)
as far as I know, every attempt to deliver a pseudo-rental experience by providing a time-limited copy--as opposed to a physical copy that is physically returned--has failed.
All of the promoters of these schemes simply assert that consumers will perceive this as being just like a rental, only better because you don't have the inconvenience of having to return the copy.
But a decade of experience seems to show that whether consumers ough
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Pretty Much Old News (Score:2)
This has been pretty obvious for a while now...
I hope Jobs hasn't started fooling himself... (Score:2)
Apple is going to fix Quicktime on Windows? (Score:2)
The biggest problem I see with it is that Quicktime on Windows, well, it's got reliability problems and it's got performance problems. My wife downloaded some episodes of one of her TV shows and had to borrow my first gen Mac mini to watch them, because her *much* faster and more up-to-date Wintel box couldn't play them without cutouts... no matter what I did in upgrading drivers and reinstalling Quicktime and the rest of the Wintendo voodoo games.
It plays WMV and RM just fine.
Apple is the Middleman (Score:2)
Why is this exciting or news even? (Score:3, Insightful)
In the non-iTunes reality, people have been renting Videos online for over 6 years more. Look up Vongo, Cinemanow, Movielink, as well as some of the subscription based music services that also allow limited video and music video downloads.
I like most people in the non iTunes wrapped world have been clicking my media center remote to grab the latest movie online from my chair for a long time now. Yes Media Center 2005 and Vista work great with online Video rental services, it is one of the reasons to pick up a remote for your computer even if you don't use the tuner and DVR functions of media center. (Let alone the online content access to stuff normally found on the old TVLinks sites automatically available inside Media Center)
The only news here is the Fox deal, not the 'renting' of freaking movies, even though it is a new model to Apple.
I know that 'owning' the rights to music is a great plan or getting access to stuff the Windows world has had for years is always exciting to Apple users and they think Jobs invents it everytime, but come on...
As for renting media, I pay my $15bucks a month to Napster or Rhapsody and have access to virtually every song ever made and reload my Creative Zen on a weekly basis with about 1000-2000 new songs. THis also includes loading my Theater computer, and the rest of my family's MP3 players with everything they could even want. How much would that cost in iTunes world?
I guess the part that kills me, is that I have avid iPod and iTunes friends that won't pay for subscription based music, but yet they pay for the deluxe TV/Cable package everymonth or have several XM devices they pay 20-30 bucks a month for, when they oculd be be podcasting and paying a music subscription service cheaper and getting instant access to literally millions of songs as faster as your connection can grab them.
I'm not a personal fan of the Zune, as MS's plans got screwed over by the wireless restrictions, but the model works better. Buy if you want and burn it to CD just like iTunes, or don't and just pay the subscription fee and get access to all their content on a monthly basis.
Consumers are finally taking notice of the 'cable bill' subscription concept and this is driving users to Zunes and non-Apple WMA based devices. Think of it this way, give your kids the option, I can buy you 4Gb Ipod that is cool, but you can only buy 10 songs a month, or I can buy a Windows PlaysforSure or Zune device and for the same money you can download everysong you ever wanted to fill the device.
Kids get the difference here, even if the Apple drones don't. Ipod is cool, but there is the high school and campus crowd of non iPod users that are considered in 'the know' that become more trendy with access to a larger selection of music and videos and movies and TV Shows without having to buy them.
Besides the geeks in the crowds that like the Zens and even cheaper Insigna 4gb players that have better audio support and better video quaility that even the most expensive iPod. Pick up a old Zen M or newer device and not only does the internal screen kill even the new iPods, but the A/V out is DVD resolution giving you a portable Movie jukebox to hook up at any friends house to watch movies on the fly.
I guess the whole iPod thing has left some of us geeks a bit bitter, as we have seen better devices doing what the iPod started years before the iPod, and continue to seen better sounding and more capapble MP3 devices from other companies, but once again Apple's marketing can turn average into spectacular. Maybe instead of bitter, we should just be in awe of Apple's marketing machine and go on our way and buy better quality devices cheaper than iPod with the horrible iTunes lock in 99% of the average users get sucked into.
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Will it clone the output to my HDTV? (Score:2)
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The limitation you are experiencing is because you are using the Quicktime player, instead of iTunes (or Front Row, if you have a Mac). Yeah, it's dumb, but you really wouldn't use
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