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The Beatles still nowhere to be found online

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from ilounge.com

Despite initial speculation that today’s joint announcement by EMI and Apple would be the availability of the Beatles music catalog on iTunes, no such announcement was made by the two companies.

EMI announces DRM-free, higher quality music on iTunes

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from ilounge.com

As anticipated, EMI Music today announced that it plans to make all of its digital music offerings free of anti-piracy restrictions and that iTunes would be the first online store to sell the DRM-free music.

Music execs see DRM-free tracks boosting download sales

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from ilounge.com

According to a Jupiter Research survey, almost two-thirds of European music industry executives believe removing digital rights management (DRM) from downloadable music would compel more consumers to buy music online. The study was carried out between December and January, before Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ call for DRM-free music.

Apple’s Steve Jobs calls for DRM-free digital music

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from ilounge.com

In a rare move, Apple CEO Steve Jobs as written an open letter on Apple’s digital rights management (DRM) system used on the iPod and iTunes. In the letter, Jobs explains why Apple has implemented its FairPlay DRM technology, and explores three alternatives for the future—continue the current DRM scheme, license FairPlay or abolish DRM entirely. Jobs’ letter is in response to mounting pressure from European countries which say Apple is forcing limits on consumers. Jobs says that persuading the major record companies to allow iTunes and other stores to sell music DRM-free is the right move. He says Apple would embrace selling this open music “in a heartbeat.”

iTunes sales 'collapsing'

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from theregister.com

The leading DRM digital download service, Apple's iTunes, has experienced a collapse in sales revenues this year according to analyst company Forrester Research.

Secretive Apple doesn't break out revenues from iTunes, but Forrester conducted an analysis of credit card transactions over a 27-month period.

Major labels begin offering tracks as unrestricted MP3s

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from ilounge.com

After years of selling digital music with restrictive copy-protection technology, major music labels are beginning to make some songs available as unrestricted MP3 files. “The releases are part of an experiment to gauge demand for tracks that can be played on any digital music player capable of playing MP3s,” reports the Associated Press. “Normally, copy-protected tracks are only playable on certain devices.

beaTunes v1.1 Released

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from ipodhacks.com

Looking to do some iPod DJing at your next party? Is finding a cluster of "matching" songs in your library proving to be a challenge? Have a look at beaTunes v1.1 for Mac OS X.

beaTunes lets you build a better party playlist by analyzing the songs in your existing library and storing that information for song-to-song comparison.

Best Buy to launch Apple iTunes competitor

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from playlistmag.com

Best Buy, in cooperation with SanDisk and RealNetworks, is the latest company to join the growing list of competitors to Apple’s iTunes music service.

Best Buy Thursday unveiled a online music service, called Best Buy Digital Music Store, that allows customers to find, manage and purchase music online. It is powered by RealNetworks’ Windows-only Rhapsody 4.0 music service and lets users purchase and permanently download songs and albums, as well as subscribe monthly to listen to an unlimited number of songs, the company said.

Yahoo eyes unrestricted MP3 downloads

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From iLounge

Yahoo wants to offer music downloads without copy protection, according to recent comments made by company executives. “We’ve been publicly trying to convince record labels that they should be selling MP3s for a while now,” Ian Rogers, a director of product management at Yahoo, said on the official Yahoo Music blog this week. “Our position is simple: DRM (digital rights management) doesn’t add any value for the artist, label (who are selling DRM-free music every day—the Compact Disc), or consumer, the only people it adds value to are the technology companies who are interested in locking consumers to a particular technology platform.”

Digital downloads approach 50m mark

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From scotsman.com

DIGITAL downloads will smash the one-million-a-week barrier this year as music fans push sales of singles to their highest level for six years.

The digital revolution, which has rejuvenated the music industry, will see more than 50 million singles downloaded this year.

Apple and Creative could sign peace deal

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By Macworld UK staff

Apple and Creative Technology may find an out-of-court settlement to their current dispute regarding the way iPods allow users to navigate stored content.

The two companies are currently pursuing a litigation paper trail, with Creative suing Apple over claimed abuse of a patent it holds for user interface, while Apple has hit back with patent claims of its own. Apple claimed seven abuses relating to the use of icons, and the display and editing of data.


Apple expected to introduce 10GB to 12GB iPod Nano in 2006

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Gartner Says Strong Sales of iPods Will Drive Growth of NAND Flash Market in Second Half of 2006

55 Percent of iPod Shipments in First Quarter of 2006 Were NAND Flash-Based Players

STAMFORD, CONN., June 21, 2006 - Strong growth in the portable media player market is expected in 2006, as the market is forecast to reach 187.7 million units, up from 134.5 million units in 2005, according to Gartner, Inc. The demand for portable media players, especially the Apple iPod, is a significant driver of sales of NAND flash memory. NAND flash-based players accounted for 80 percent of the market in 2005. Hard disk drive (HDD)-based portable music players made up the remaining 20 percent of the market.

Alternatives to iTunes Expand Online Music Offerings

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Mac and iPod users looking for alternatives to the iTunes Music Store can find them.

One good example is eMusic (shame about the goofy clip art at the site's home page).

Unlike most other download services which use an incompatible DRM format, eMusic sells completely unprotected MP3 files which work perfectly in iTunes and will play on an iPod. Their basic service gives you 40 downloads a month for $9.95. Unlike other subscription services, if you cancel your subscription your music will still work. Unfortunately their music selection is very limited, although they have a decent selection of indie artists & international music.

Affordable MP3 players: the choices keep getting better

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Beyond iPod

Cowon iAudio M3: If you can live without a screen on the main body of the device, the iAudio M3's features and ultraslim form factor put it on the cutting edge of portability. A New York Times editor's choice.iPod is everythere...but if you scratch the surface of the mp3 player world, you'll find hundreds of alternatives. Picking the one that's right for you is a very personal choice. Do you need large storage capacity? Light weight? Tiny form factor? Chances are, someone's selling what you want. Here's a new round-up of players--including iPods, iRivers, Zens, Cowons, and much, much more...like 1,000 more!

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Poll

What's your favorite fitness soundtrack?
Alternative
6%
Country
3%
Dance
22%
Electronica
11%
Hip Hop/Rap
10%
Latin
4%
Rock/Pop
21%
Soul/R&B
4%
World
2%
Mix it up!
14%
Other
2%
Total votes: 164
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