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Apple Starts to Wind Down the "iPod" Brand
Gizmodo ^ | 6/8/11 | David Frommer

Posted on 06/08/2011 2:37:05 PM PDT by mgstarr

click here to read article


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To: max americana

You bought music with DRM, and it’s still DRM. What a concept!


41 posted on 06/09/2011 10:04:54 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: max americana
can you download music without Itunes?

Download? Yes. Load it into the music library of an iDevice or onto iCloud? No.

42 posted on 06/09/2011 10:10:14 AM PDT by ReignOfError
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To: Nik Naym

Hints are that the iPod Nano 7 will have a camera. They’ll remove the clip to do it, and otherwise use the current form.


43 posted on 06/09/2011 10:26:49 AM PDT by ctdonath2
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To: max americana
Did Apple just announce complete music pirate amnesty for $24.95?

Sure looks that way, doesn't it? All it cost Apple is $150 million and 70% of the take. I suspect that Apple's pitch to the record labels went along the lines of "something is better than nothing, and a couple hundred million dollars is a lot of something."

I think iTunes in the Cloud will have huge numbers for its first year. $25 is a small price to pay to get a quality upgrade on thousands of tracks, even if you just have them on one computer and one iPod and won't get much out of the cloud functions. Even for the tracks that I ripped from CD at 128K about a decade ago, when I didn't know better and hard drive space was scarce, $25 is a bargain compared to the hassle of re-ripping discs, deleting the old ones, and then having to rebuild my playlists.

There will likely be a drop-off after that, as the dedicated music pirates launder and re-download their tracks and have no further need for it. But I think there will be enough users to make it an ongoing profit center for both Apple and the labels. If Apple just breaks even, it differentiates iDevices and the iTunes store in a useful way.

So, the idea is that you pay Apple $24.95 a year, they scan your old music collection, upgrade all your pirated/ripped tracks, and give you back legitimate music.

Under the strict letter of the law, I suspect your upgraded pirated tracks are still not entirely legit. But there would be no way to prove it.

44 posted on 06/09/2011 2:54:36 PM PDT by ReignOfError
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To: max americana
I'm not clear how getting exactly what you paid for, an unlimited number of times, constitutes punishment.

Only part of iCloud is currently live -- the part that lets you download previously purchased tracks. Music Match, the $25/yr. service that launders CD rips and such, is not yet available. I suspect that iTunes purchased tracks will get an upgrade for paid subscribers.

45 posted on 06/09/2011 2:59:15 PM PDT by ReignOfError
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To: Allegra

RE: While I have my songs loaded on there, I still use my tiny iPod Nano for listening to music.

Same. I have about 30 songs on my iPhone but still keep my 5,000 songs on my iPod photo which is pretty old, but completely functional.


46 posted on 06/09/2011 4:11:20 PM PDT by big'ol_freeper
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To: mgstarr

I have two iPod Classics and they are loaded with identical music/video for the kids. They are especially useful when in a car like my husband’s or my mother’s where there is no dvd player.


47 posted on 06/09/2011 7:33:06 PM PDT by Peanut Gallery
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