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Jordan Sissel
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Sun, 04 May 2008

The iTunes model

I bought my first few songs on itunes tonight. Easy process, but it's yet another apple product I don't fit into :(

For a full album in the store, I pay $8 to $14 for a CD, assuming I buy it brand new from Best Buy or another retailer. On iTunes, I pay $10 on most albums. In a second-hand music store, I'd pay somewhere around $3 to $9 for the same music.

Let's assume (correctly) that I'm not buying a CD for the purposes of ripping it and sharing it on bittorrent.

What am I gaining by using iTunes? Not much. If I ever lose the music I have to repurchase it (from what I understand), which mirrors exactly the issues of losing a physical CD. I'm additionally locked in to Apple as a vendor as soon as I purchase a song. Furthermore, for practically the same exact price, I get music with less quality and more restrictions. How does this make sense? Given that "less quality" and "more restrictions" automatically devalue a product compared to the same product without those problems, why does this business model succeed?

I'm not an audiophile, so CD vs 128kbit doesn't make me upset, but I do like to copy my music around. I have basically three places where I listen to music. My iphone, my house, and my office. All of my music is at my house. Some of my music is on my iphone, and none of my music is at my office. I can stream music from my house to my office, but only if it's in a format playable at my office, which usually means drm-free data so things like mplayer and xmms can consume it.

Only some songs are available in "iTunes plus" - an option to download higher-quality and drm-free music, and nothing I've downloaded today is available that way.

Even if you considered Amazon's MP3 service, it's still a better value to buy the damn CD and rip it yourself. Ripping a cd is a one-click action these days on every platform available, so where's the cost justification in these online services pricing their data at or above what I pay in a store? :(

Comments: 6 (view comments)
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Permalink: /rants/the-itunes-model
posted at: 01:46


6 responses to 'The iTunes model'

Adam posted at Mon May 5 10:15:22 2008...
Are you sure about the losing the MP3 part? I could have sworn one could download purchased songs (if logged into your iTunes account) an unlimited number of times on up to five, registered devices. I haven't actually tested this, so I'm only assuming this to be true.

With regard to Amazon's DRM-free service, I think your only right in some cases. If you buy albums because you listen to the whole album, then yeah, getting a used CD at CD Warehouse is probably your cheapest option. If you just want a single pop song, grabbing it for sometimes less than a dollar straight from Amazon is pretty nice.

Personally, I'm more interested in music subscription offerings. I wish iTunes would do a $10 or $20 per month subscription system where you'd have access ti the entire iTMS on your iTunes/iPod/iPhone devices. I think MS has something like this for the Zune already.

Jordan Sissel posted at Mon May 5 13:09:49 2008...
Yeah, my music listening habits fit excellently with a subscription model. I tend to like whole albums rather than individual songs, and entire discography access on a subscription service would be nice.

Dan posted at Tue May 6 04:36:53 2008...
Comparing any MP3 download site to a 2nd-hand music store is just unfair.  They serve entirely different purposes.

Online music services are much better for downloading 1 or 2 songs off an album, and 2nd-hand music stores are much better for buying albums.  But you have to admit iTunes has a great interface, works seamlessly with your iP(od|hone) and is much less evil than other music companies.

Or we can all agree Pandora is the solution to all music needs.

Rusty posted at Tue May 6 09:44:00 2008...
Subscription services could be cool, but good luck finding one you can stream to mplayer. :-/

I am not an audiophile either, but flac and vorbis are better than mp3 and are free.  So, why is mp3 being perpetuated so strongly?

Jordan Sissel posted at Tue May 6 12:08:08 2008...
MP3 playability is universal. Ogg and Flac playability is not.

Free or nonfree, the end user doesn't care. They just want it to play. I think many players still don't support ogg or flac, and the only heavily used audio formats are AAC and MP3 (followed distantly by WMA). AAC wins because it's Apple's codec. MP3 wins because the Napster generation chose it. WMA wins because Microsoft has boatloads of cash to use to fight Apple.

At the bottom of it, I don't really care what the codec is, or how great FLAC's lossy encoding is. My ears don't care, and my patience runs out when I can only play music in half of the places I need it - which brings us back to mp3.

bp posted at Sun May 18 23:28:48 2008...
I had a hard drive crap out on me a few months ago, and not being all that smart all my iTunes purchases went with it.  However, a simple email to the tech-support granted me access to all songs I had bought.  They don't "document" that process, but it does exist.


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