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Catholic Media Connections

Apple Unveils Wireless, Touchscreen, iPhoneless-iPhone iPod

September 6th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

iTouchApple unveiled an iPod with a touch screen that can browse the Internet wirelessly, as the company fights to maintain the digital media lead at a time when it faces renewed attacks from rivals. In addition, Apple’s iTunes music store will begin selling songs over wireless connections. [More…]

Starbucks to Offer Free iTunes Access in Stores
New nano
Apple and Starbucks are entering a deal to allow people to buy songs wirelessly from Apple’s iTunes store in Starbucks shops without paying WiFi access fees. Starbucks hopes to boost both coffee sales and its new music business, while Apple’s iTunes seeks to sell more downloads. [More…]

Hear some more on the announcements from Buzz out Loud podcast from CNET

Amazon announces long-rumored DRM-free music store

May 16th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

From Ars Technica:

Amazon dropped the bomb today by announcing its DRM-free music store. The previously-rumored store will be launched sometime “later this year” and offer unprotected MP3 files for purchase. The Amazon music store, which does not appear to have a name yet, will offer “millions” of songs from over 12,000 record labels. [More…]

It looks as if we are, at last, seeing the beginning of the beginning of the end for DRM. It is my hope the major labels will see they are at a competitive disadvantage because of their crippling consumer’s music through digital restriction manipulation.

I also hope Amazon has the ability to give iTunes a run for it’s money in the area of music, movies, tv, and most especially podcast distribution.

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Apple: DRM-Free Tracks To Cost 30% More

April 3rd, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

From Podcasting News:

“Apple today announced that EMI Music’s entire digital catalog of music will be available for purchase DRM-free (without digital rights management) from the iTunes Store worldwide starting in May. DRM-free tracks from EMI will be offered at higher quality 256 kbps AAC encoding for $1.29 per song.

In addition, iTunes customers will be able to easily upgrade their entire library of all previously purchased EMI content to the higher quality DRM-free versions for just 30 cents a song. iTunes will continue to offer its entire catalog, currently over five million songs, in the same versions as today—128 kbps AAC encoding with DRM—at the same price of 99 cents per song, alongside DRM-free higher quality versions when available.

“We are going to give iTunes customers a choice—the current versions of our songs for the same 99 cent price, or new DRM-free versions of the same songs with even higher audio quality and the security of interoperability for just 30 cents more,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think our customers are going to love this, and we expect to offer more than half of the songs on iTunes in DRM-free versions by the end of this year.”

“EMI and iTunes are once again teaming up to move the digital music industry forward by giving music fans higher quality audio that is virtually indistinguishable from the original recordings, with no usage restrictions on the music they love from their favorite artists,” said Eric Nicoli, CEO of EMI Group.

With DRM-free music from the EMI catalog, iTunes customers will have the ability to download tracks from their favorite EMI artists without any usage restrictions that limit the types of devices or number of computers that purchased songs can be played on. DRM-free songs purchased from the iTunes Store will be encoded in AAC at 256 kbps, twice the current bit rate of 128 kbps, and will play on all iPods, Mac® or Windows computers, Apple TVs and soon iPhones, as well as many other digital music players.

iTunes will also offer customers a simple, one-click option to easily upgrade their entire library of all previously purchased EMI content to the higher quality DRM-free format for 30 cents a song. All EMI music videos will also be available in DRM-free format with no change in price. ”

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Stereo File Tutorial from IHR

April 3rd, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

The guys at Inside Home Recording (IHR) keep pumping out quality shows. In show #39, they provided a tutorial on how to split and join stereo files using only cross-platform, free software.

I wrote the guys to see if I could pull out their reviews from a previous show of the Samson’s Zoom H4 and M-Audio’s MicroTrack 24/96 field recorders and Derek wrote back informing me that their shows were released under a Creative Commons license that allows me to do just that. I sure do love CC licenses!

So, if you are interested in learning more about the dealing with stereo files, then give this segment a listen (it run 5:36). You may also find it helpful to take a look at the screen captures as well. They help illustrate the tutorial quite well (just scroll down through the shownotes to near the end and you will see the images).

Enjoy.

Guilty Pleasures

February 14th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

I took a look at my iTunes podcast list today and realized I have some really strange selections in there. While I have a bunch of casts to which I listen, there are a number that I have come to label as my ‘guilty pleasures’ (gp). These casts are not the ones I feel I should subscribe to. The are all slightly risque, off topic (?), out-there, or somehow rub my belief system in some way.

Here are my main gps in no particular order:

Ask a Ninja - Off the wall, tangential, bizarre, fun, brilliant. If you want a ninja’s perspective on life (or grizzly death), then this video cast might be for you.

The Onion Radio News - A faux daily news report that runs about one minute. It is really out there. It can be offensive, harsh, insightful, and just plain weird. If you find your “weird quotient” is low on any particular day, this might be for you.

Rory Blythe - Smartest Man in the World - A weekly rant essay. The cast has nothing to do with intelligence, often it is about the exact opposite (umm, whatever that is). Well written, pretty well produced, and often causes me to laugh out loud (this is one of my guiltier pleasures).

Diggnation - Two young guys sitting around, drinking, talking tech, and ocassionally throwing around the F bomb - what else can I say - a definate gp.

The Princeton Review Vocabulary Minute - Easiest to justify since both ‘Princeton’ and ‘Vocabulary’ are in the title. However, if you listen to the cast, you will know why it is a gp. It is musical, erudite, and subtly bizzare.

I’m guessing we all have these guilty pleasures. I’d love to hear about yours.

Steve Jobs Guilty of Heresy!

February 9th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

From Podcasting News, several responses to Steve Jobs’ call for doing away with DRM:

“While Steve Jobs call for the record labels to end DRM has been warmly received around the world, his remarks’ reception from competitors and the labels themselves has been downright chilly.

Executives at the major labels dismiss Jobs’ challenge, saying that eliminating DRM isn’t going to happen. The marketing director for Microsoft’s struggling Zune portable media player brand dismisses Jobs’ remarks “irresponsible.”

The Universal Music Group, the Warner Music Group and Sony BMG Music Entertainment have declined to comment. But several industry executives said they viewed Mr. Jobs’s comments as an effort to deflect anti-DRM criticism from Apple.

Apple has been challenged recently in several European companies because of the lack of interoperability between iTunes and other portable media players. Its copy-protection has been ruled illegal in Norway, and Holland and other countries are challenging the company, too.

Based on the music industry’s response, though, don’t expect an end to DRM anytime soon…”

and

“While Steve Jobs may have a vision for the future of digital music, Warner Music isn’t buying it. The company said on Thursday it will keep anti-piracy copy protection for digital songs sold on services such as Apple Inc.’s iTunes Music Store. The company’s comments come two days after Apple Inc.’s chief executive Steve Jobs called on the four major music companies to drop digital rights management software as a way to boost digital sales.

Warner Music chief executive Edgar Bronfman Jr. said in a call with analysts that the argument to drop copy protection also known as digital rights management (DRM) is “without logic and merit. We will not abandon DRM.”

I for one think Steve Jobs is a witch, once he turned me into a newt. . . well, I got better!

Steve Jobs Challenges Music Industry On DRMs

February 7th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

A very interesting article from Podcastingnews.com:

Apple CEO Steve Jobs posted a surprising statement on the company’s site today, challenging the music industry to abandon DRM (copy protection) on digital music downloads.

Jobs outlines three possible futures for digital music:

  • Continue as is it is now, with each manufacturer competing freely with their own “top to bottom” proprietary systems for selling, playing and protecting music.
  • Apple could license its FairPlay DRM technology to current and future competitors with the goal of achieving interoperability between different company’s players and music stores.
  • Abolish DRMs entirely - according to Jobs, this is clearly the best alternative for consumers, and Apple would embrace it in a heartbeat. If the big four music companies would license Apple their music without the requirement that it be protected with a DRM, we would switch to selling only DRM-free music on our iTunes store. Every iPod ever made will play this DRM-free music.

Jobs concludes by asking that people concerned with DRM convince the record labels to license their music to Apple and others DRM-free, saying that “Apple will embrace this wholeheartedly.”

Jobs’ statement is clearly self-serving; the company has faced criticism and legal battles from several European nations over its monopolization of digital music formats.

Nevertheless, Jobs move demonstrates his intuitive mastery of public relations, redirecting criticism of Apple’s monopolization of digital music to the record labels and their licensing restrictions. [More…]

There are many fascinating aspects to this move - first, Steve Jobs is not only involved in distribution through the iTunes distribution channel, but he is a major stakeholder in content creation (when Disney acquired Pixar, Jobs became a major shareholder in Disney). So, while not in the music business per se, he is heavily invested in both creation and distribution.

Second, I listened to a podcast just this week that discussed that it was in Apple’s best interest to maintain the status quo in DRM. Since Apple benefits from the phenomenal success of iTunes not only from the revenue generated from the sales of songs but primarily from the fact that iTunes is ‘closed source’, it creates a demand for iPods. The DRM then locks people into Apple hardware. If I own a thousand dollars worth of music that is DRM’d in a proprietary and DRM’d format, then there is a huge barrier to leaving for other hardware solutions.

I am not so sure that this is just a publicity sleight of hand, Apple is a major player in the music industry, this could be, as the article suggest, Jobs’ move to stay ahead of the curve. Just when others are playing catch-up with Apple, Apple is looking to change the landscape once again.

This may be the reason for other news of an attempt to unseat Apple as the kind of online media distribution. But then again, one of the players there is Disney. Hmmm.

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PDFcasting and Tourcasting

January 26th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler

There has been some interesting buzz on some media blogs regarding what some are calling PDFcasting. It is an umbrella term that relates to the downloading of text documents (in the pdf format) to iPods and other mp3 players.

Apple has the potential to shake up the printed magazine and book market just like they did with music andiPhone book? now television and movies. It’s good news for trees but bad news for some ivory tower-type fat cat print executives. It works like this: Apple could begin distributing textual content via iTunes in PDF format. The documents could easily be read as text or even spoken to you via Apple’s text-to-speech technology [More…]

The article from ZDnet also points to other articles from Frank Barnako’s Marketwatch blog and Barnaby James’ Adobe blog.

Apple may be taking steps in this direction, but what I found most intriguing is what is already possible with pdf docs along with podcasts. One of the postings pointed to a travel writer/guru Rick Steves’ podfaded cast (xml) that provides audio tours. What makes this cast more interesting is inclusion of pdf maps of the tours as well. His solution was to offer each file (audio and pdf) as separate downloads. The audio portion of the audio files are offered as AAC files. Since AAC’s support ‘chapters’ there are images throughout the casts of the sites he discusses.

It is all very well produced and is a good direction for anyone wanting to do tour casts.

Anyways, if you know if any other good tour casts, let me know. Also, let me know what possibilities you see in the PDFcasting.

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50+ Free Courses from UC Berkeley for Your Ipod

January 15th, 2007 by Michael Kreidler
  From the Open Culture blog:Berkeley3“This is nothing short of impressive. Last April, UC Berkeley, one of the premiere schools in the country, announced its plan to put complete academic courses on iTunes. Fast forward nine months, and you can already find 59 full courses ready for your iPod. Simply click here to access Berkeley’s iTunes site (or here for the Rss feed).

No matter where you live, you can access at no cost the very same courses attended by students paying full tuition…”[More]

For more academic podcasts, see Open Culture’s University Podcast Collection.


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iPod Hack

November 17th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

iPod Hack

When I bought my mp3 player last year, I considered an iPod. A couple of things kept me from it. First, I naturally stear away from trendy items. I guess it is my mistrust of the great unwashed masses. My attitude is ’since I hold most people in contempt and just about everyone wants it, it must not be very good’. It may not make sense, but hey, I’m a complex guy. Besides, I hold up the continued popularity of Clinton and last week’s election results as a kind of ‘proof of concept’.

Second, I don’t like being locked into systems. The iPod can only buy iTunes music. This being the case, I thought the iPod should be given away a loss-leader for iTunes. That, of course, is another topic for another day.

It turns out that I was kinda right on the first topic. There have been a growing number of complaints about how short-lived iPods can be. Sure, if you sell 7.5 trillion units, there are bound to be a few bad eggs. I’m just saying I was not totally wrong about my first assertion.

I was an article today from Reuters that got me thinking about item #2. It turns out that there may soon be available an iPod hack that will open it up to any music download system. That would be sweat. You can read a bit of the article below.

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Not even the lure of one million songs could separate Stanford University student Rolf Steier from his iPod.

When Stanford partnered with Yahoo to offer students a free subscription to Yahoo Music Unlimited, Steier — like most other people he knew — didn’t bother to check it out because his iPod won’t let him play songs bought from other online music stores.

“I don’t know anybody who used it,” Steier said. “I don’t even remember anyone who considered using it.”

The issue is the same for many music fans because Apple makes content bought from its iTunes online music store available only for its own products, while songs purchased from other online stores typically do not work on the market-dominating iPods.

But this could soon change — because of a 22-year-old hacker who as a teen cracked the encryption on DVDs and now has developed a system compatible with Apple’s “FairPlay” copyright technology that allows iTunes music to play on other devices and gives iPod users access to other music stores.

“He imitated Apple’s system; he didn’t remove any copyright protections,” said Monique Farantzos, whose DoubleTwist Ventures plans to license the code to businesses. “He made a system that behaves in a similar way.” [More…]

I don’t know if we are going to see lawsuits from or threats of lawsuits, but it really is a boon for every iPod owner. Of course, the vast majority of the great unwashed mass of iPod users will never hack their beloved iPod. I just figure this is another support of assertion #1.

So, what did I buy instead of the iPod? I bought the iRiver H10. It was more expensive and more difficult to use, but it was just one more way of not bowing to ‘the man’.

Wow, am I feeling petulant or what!