We7, a new advertising-backed streaming service with DRM
The music business will launch a new online music jukebox containing 250.000 tracks in April.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/mar/10/sony.netmusic
The site is backed by Peter Gabriel, SonyBMG.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/mar/10/sony.netmusic
The site is backed by Peter Gabriel, SonyBMG.
4 Comments
If you're writing a whole number, you don't need a decimal ans especially three '0s' after said decimal.
</sarcasm>
Clam down MG, Eklek is from Albania, Andorra, Argentina, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada (French-speaking), Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Chile, Colombia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Estonia, Faroes, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Greenland, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia, Iceland, Italy, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Moldova, Netherlands, Norway, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, South Africa, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, Ukraine, Uruguay, Venezuela, or Vietnam, so it's okay for him/her to use this convention.
I asked the internet.
^indeed
Thanks for the link cheesemoo!
Anyone has a comment on we7 and new initiatives to gain money in a world of digitized media?
I have my doubts about the advertisements added to the mp3s. e.g. I remember they tried this with free phone services with advertisements in between/in the beginning, but it has failed to catch on.
For videos, I guess it's not so bad somehow... if I can get the content elsewhere without them, I will. If the only (free) way to get something is to watch a (short) ad, then I don't mind terribly. I just switch tabs and let the ad play in the background while I do something else.
For music though... I don't know how I would like this. Lower-quality audio with forced ads, not really a good deal. I like to just queue a bunch of stuff up in Winamp, and then I'm good to go. The whole point is that I know I have several hours of good, uninterrupted music waiting for me. Honestly, if I wanted to hear a song so badly that I was willing to listen to ads just to hear it, I would either actually buy the song or record the streaming version and edit out the ads, which really isn't worth the trouble.
Maybe some people can go for this, but I can't see a scenario where I would use a service like this.
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