that Apple’s just-announced GarageBand will do to music what the Mac Plus, Word, and the dreaded San Francisco font did for personal publishing? Moof!
Another Macworld Expo SF
is starting today, and along with MWSF comes Steve Jobs’ Keynote. It starts in about 20 minutes and there has been much speculation about the announcements. Cheaper iPods? iBox? New Digital Hub software?
Damien Barrett, truthteller:
Mac OS 9.x is dead. Amen.
Is this it?
So today Apple unveiled its iTunes Music Store. $0.99 a song, handled through iTunes and facilitated by a .Mac or Apple ID. Is this the move that makes non-infringing online music happen?
The biggest story I missed
during my mini-hiatus over my wedding weekend (and subsequently) was the Apple-Universal Music story. It took me by surprise, but I agree with this analysis from Eric Hellweg of CNN/Money: it is a very tantalizing idea.
It’s clear that the record industry is too antidiluvian to figure this out on their own – even Sony, who would be a natural for a similar strategy, can’t seem to figure this out. But this whole thing is like the classic prisoner’s dilemma, but one in which all of us could benefit from the defection of just one player. In a way the music business is correct as it stands now – as long as none of them defect, they are achieving their optimal outcome as a group. But when one of them does decide to go, that’s it – the only optimal course will be to join the flow.
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