Amazon launches DRM-free music service
by Ruth Suehle
Just as the DRM-filled, iTunes competitor wannabes Virgin Digital and Sony’s Connect drown quiet deaths in the pool of online music, web giant Amazon jumps right in.
The Silicon Valley Insider weighs in on its pros and cons:
The downsides: The store doesn’t work nearly as quickly or smoothly as iTunes, almost certainly because it is browser-based. Navigation is clumsy, and getting a good sense of what’s in the store is pretty tough — it’s a hunt-and-peck operation. Amazon wants you to install its own MP3 downloader, which you’ll need if you’re buying an entire album. And its catalog isn’t as robust as iTunes’, even when comparing offerings from the same labels: EMI, for instance, sells the Rolling Stones’ Let It Bleed via iTunes, but Amazon only seems to have the Stone’s later-era music.
The upside: The songs Amazon does sell are usually priced at 89 cents to 99 cents a piece (though some cost more), they download reasonably quickly — and they work on iTunes. You haven’t been able to say that about any other digital music store up till now, and it’s potentially a huge deal: Amazon can now offer music as an impulse purchase to its customers — and provide the labels with their first realistic Apple alternative.
From reading the reviews out so far, media fans appear to have forgiven Amazon for the messiness of Unbox and in general are pretty pleased with the new music offering. How’s it working out for you?





September 25th, 2007 at 10:47 am
So, I thought I’d give it a try. Bought myself the Amy Winehouse “Back To Black” album.
$8.99 - the mp3 downloader is quick and not too ugly. Though, as a user of eMusic, I like their downloader a little better. Amazon’s feels a little too… stale, I guess.
But, the songs sound great through my speakers here at work - nine bucks for 256 kbps is a good thing compared to iTunes. Add in no DRM and I think it’ll stand the test.
Hopefully.
October 1st, 2007 at 1:22 pm
Is there a chance of getting native support for MP3 downloader on Linux? Is there at least specs published or reverse-enginered ?