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Goodbye CDs

September 23, 2008 by Sam Sloan   || Category: Technology News

Just as vinyl once gave way to compact discs as the main physical medium for music, could CDs be replaced now by a fingernail-sized memory card?

Perhaps not entirely, but SanDisk Corp., four major record labels and retailers Best Buy Co. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. are hoping that albums sold on microSD memory cards will at least provide an additional stream of sales.

The companies unveiled plans Monday to sell memory cards loaded with music in the MP3 format, free of copy protections.

Called “slotMusic,” the new format is meant to address two intertwined trends.

Most albums are still sold in a physical format — 449 million were sold on CDs in 2007, while 50 million were sold digitally, according to Nielsen SoundScan — yet CDs are decreasingly popular. Albums sold on CD dropped almost 19 percent last year.

Given this, the record labels — Vivendi SA’s Universal Music Group, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group Corp. and EMI Group PLC — are hoping slotMusic can be another physical revenue source, and one that is more versatile than CDs given the kinds of gadgets people carry around these days.

Unlike when the CD was introduced and people had to buy new players, many people already have the ability to play slotMusic albums, since many cell phones and multimedia players support microSD cards.

These new albums will come with a small USB dongle that lets buyers use them with computers, too. [The USB dongle will also enable users to transfer the songs to iPods, which don't have memory-card slots, via a PC.]

“Particularly in this kind of economic climate, the idea of being able to use an electronic device you already own to enjoy music rather than going out and buying a dedicated player is pretty compelling,” said Daniel Schreiber, who heads the audio-video business unit at SanDisk, which created the microSD card format and is working on the technology behind slotMusic.

Schreiber said slotMusic albums will be sold on 1 gigabyte microSD cards, which means they will be able to hold a full album and related content such as liner notes and cover art.

Buyers will be able to use extra space on the cards to hold songs and photos from their own collections.

[The files will be MP3s encoded at a bitrate of 320 samples per second, the highest possible setting ensuring roughly CD-quality sound.]

The cards and dongles will come in boxes similar to current CD packaging, and Schreiber expects the cost of slotMusic releases to be “in the ballpark” of current CD prices.

It’s not yet known exactly when — or how many — albums will be initially sold in the format, but Schreiber expects retailers to give a “sizable amount of shelf space” to slotMusic albums.

The albums are expected to debut at multiple retailers, including Best Buy and Wal-Mart stores in the U.S., and later in Europe.

Rio Caraeff, executive vice president of Universal Music Group’s eLabs digital music unit, said the label will initially release about 30 titles in the slotMusic format. The titles will include old and new albums, such as one by singer Akon.

“We want to provide the benefits of digital music to people who go to physical retail environments,” he said.

Asked whether he sees the format taking the place of the CD, Caraeff said, “I think we would certainly hope that would be the case, but I don’t think we are so tied to that.”

NPD Group entertainment analyst Russ Crupnick sees a potential for slotMusic to emerge as a compelling format.

He said the industry needs “desperately” to give people a new reason to head back into the music sections at brick-and-mortar stores.

“Not that we want them out of the gaming section, but once they’re done looking at ‘Guitar Hero’ we want them to come look at the music section,” he said.

Source: Fox Sci-Tech News

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Comments

5 Responses to “Goodbye CDs”

  1. Michael Mennenga on September 23rd, 2008 5:49 pm

    I’ll be supporting this idea. If they are offering up music with no DRM, this is a milestone day for all of us.
    They may get it right this time. We’ll see.

  2. Tallgrrl on September 24th, 2008 9:46 pm

    This isn’t giving me a reason to “head back into the music sections at brick-and-mortar stores.”
    BETTER MUSIC is a reason for me to buy more music…and most of what I like they don’t sell at brick-and-mortars like BestBuy. (And I don’t shop at WalMart. For anything. Ever,)

  3. Tallgrrl on September 24th, 2008 9:51 pm

    By the way…
    If I have to look at CD Album art and read the liner notes on my monitor, I’m very unhappy. I’ve done it. I don’t like it.
    It’s bad enough to have to read them with a magnifying glass…and I’m not THAT old, so don’t even go there.
    I recently got a USB turntable and am transferring parts of my record–as in LPs–collection into mp3s for my iPod. I’ve gotten re-acquainted with how albums were put together from the art to the liner notes and liner art to the flow of the content on the 2 sides.
    Not to mention that warm “hisss-POP!” of the needle drop.
    Good times….good times.

  4. Michael Mennenga on September 25th, 2008 2:03 am

    Gang,
    The reason to support this is not that it is more convenient, or that the music is any better. The reason to support it is that is is digital music that is open and free of DRM or other security systems, and most important…
    IT”S NOT iTUNES!
    Any competition in the digital realm for the 800 lbs gorilla that is the on-line music giant is a good thing.
    Think about this a bit and I think you’ll agree. This is a good move on someone’s part.

  5. Eric the Blind Geek on October 2nd, 2008 4:43 am

    I think this could be a case of too little, too late. If I don’t care about DRM, I can get my music easily from Itunes. Better yet, I can get MP3s at almost as good a bit rate from AmazonMP3.com. Why would I waste time buying little fingernail-sized thingies at my local music store? Have you *seen* how small micro-SD cards are? You could lose them in your pocket lint! I know I’m in the minority here, but I’m really getting tired of the smaller-is-better mentality we seem to have adopted over the past few years. Give me something to hold onto, dammit! If I want a physical copy of something, I’ll stick to CDs, thank you very much. They fit nicely on a shelf, you can hold them in your hand, and you don’t have to worry about dropping them down a crack in the floor!

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