The end of the CD

For those of you who like music, Mark Cuban over at BlogMaverick has an amazing post on the evolution of the music industry. If you enjoy music, the next stop for you is to get an ipod like device.

Then it occured to me, that I haven’t used my CD Player, portable or at home, in a long, long time. That I rarely, if ever see anyone walking around with a portable CD player anymore. They have all been replaced by MP3 players. If everyone is switching to MP3 players, whether they are Ipods, in phones, in PDAs, in cars, whatever, then that means that everyone is going to have to go through a multistep process in order to get the music from where or how they buy it, to the place they want it.

That’s not good for the people selling music. Particularly retail stores. Think about it. Apple has done such a great job of selling us on why we should store our musically digitally, that every one is either doing it, or on their way to doing it. Which means that 90 pct or more of music being sold is currently being sold on a physical format that the segment of the music buying public that spends the most amount of money on music doesn’t want. They are being sold CDs. They want to listen to their music from hard drives or flash drives. That’s a problem.

For less than 10k dollars, it would be EASY to put together a multi-terrabyte hard drive based multi-user kiosk that pretty much holds every song ever published. A screen to enter credit card information, swipe a debit card, enter a member number or call for assistance to handle a cash transaction, a couple USB ports, and wireless connection support to transfer the music, and you are in business. Check the music I want. From kiosk hard drive to my MP3 player at speeds that could easily do 400mbs. That beats the hell out of 250k if I’m lucky real throughput at home. It will be like going to the store to get digital prints from the camera is. Self Service, fast and easy

Loss leaders like Walmart and Best Buy can cut their music square footage by 90 pct and sell more music at lower prices. Their inventory carrying costs will go to zero. If someone wants the CD, they can go home and burn it after docking their MP3 player to their PC. Believe or not, the labels will make more money this way because they will make these big boys committ to minimum guarantees at levels they are at now, and all that money after the artist cut, will go to the bottomline.

We have been listening to music all week while we have been on vacation. It has all been via mp3. Read the rest of thepost. He makes great sense and knows the industry very well.

Posted April 7, 2005 by
Fun, Technology, Toys | no comments

The Playstation Personal is out!

Psp

It has arrived.

We will wait a while before we even think about getting one, but I will try it out when I get the chance. Just do not tell my 8 year old…

Posted March 24, 2005 by
Fun, Toys | one comment

Its … a Game, Its… a Quest, It Will Eat Up Your Afternoon

This has been a long stressful day and I am not sure if this game has actually made it better or worse. Special thanks to the 1754 blog, I think, for forcing me to play this game over and over and over.

Go here and play it.

You’ll love it, you’ll hate it. One thing is for sure it will quit being a game real quick and become a quest or borderline addiction.

Posted March 23, 2005 by
Fun, Toys | 2 comments

PlayStation Portable is Coming

This one scares me . I have an 8 year old son with a birthday coming up just after this is released.

The New Playstation Portable

The average price looks to be about $250.00 dollars… before games… UGH…

via Engadget

Posted March 7, 2005 by
Fun, Main, Toys | 4 comments

Red, here is what you can get me for my Birthday!

Forever being the techno geek, I am always looking for the next toy.

Here is the dream, playing Battlefield 1942 on this bad boy.

Samsung to present 82-inch TFT LCD panel – world’s largest

Samsung said it has finished development of world’ largest TFT LCD screen – an 82-inch panel that will be showcased at the upcoming CeBIT 2005 exhibition in Hannover, Germany.

This huge 82-inch panel features a contrast ratio of 1200:1, 600 cd/m ² brightness and a response time of 8ms. It is made using Samsung’s S-PVA technology.

It will be made at Samsung’s new seventh-generation plant which is a joint venture between Sony and Samsung.

Posted March 7, 2005 by
Fun, Main, Technology, Toys | one comment

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