Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Microsoft reaches deal with Real, end run for iTMS?

An interesting development in Microsoft's digital music sales ambitions: they have settled a long-standing dispute with streaming media company, Real Networks. This after last week's news that Microsoft broke talks with the music industry over royalties rates for launching their own subscription service.

This is interesting since Real already has a license for their own subscription service, Rhapsody. While many companies are making a play at digital music services, only Apple's iTunes Music Store has seen widespread success. iTMS has cornered the downloads market so companies like Real have bet that they can find success by using a different sales model: subscriptions. If these subscription services gain traction, it could prove a viable competitor to Apple and Microsoft obviously has been making moves in that space.

Now it looks like perhaps Microsoft is looking to jump into subscriptions by proxy, using Real as a partner. Could we be seeing the beginnings of an end run to take down iTMS? It will be interesting to see how this plays out considering the acrimonious talks Apple and the music industry have also been having...

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Scream If You Hate Web 2.0

I'm tired of reading all about Web 2.0... Nomenclature is an important facet of human existence, but this is just a crass marketing term. Spitshine ideas that have been floating around for years and suddenly they're a hip, new thing? Nonsense.

I don't give a damn about Wiki's page calling "the new web" a platform for serving applications. Give me a break. To call the web anything other than a platform is to ignore its development. We are seeing exciting new stuff on the web because it was designed that way. Sure static HTML is simple and boring; but it's a metaphor for the programming concepts involved with presenting things over the Internet.

It doesn't matter that those concepts got better with time or got other technology bolted on top. The obsession with tacking a revision number adds little value other than the buzzword du jour. Stop trying to classify things as "oh that's so Web 1.0" or bless the latest startup company "a stellar example of Web 2.0".

Keep version numbers for products. Leave the damn mediums alone with their traditional names...