Originally posted by: Tripleshot
Paying anything close to a dollar a song is the equivelant of going to walmart and buying the CD.:Q
I bet they're hoping nobody notices that. The per song cost should be far below current CD costs, because of all the manufacturing, distribution, retail overhead, etc. that they'd be cutting out. Fat chance though. Format changes are made to increase profits and to figure out how to sell you that Beatles/Rolling Stones/Pink Floyd album for the 3rd or 4th time.
I'll stick with a combination of downloading and buying used/CD club/sale CD's at an overall average of $5-$6 per CD (~$0.50 per song with full uncompressed audio, liner notes, and the satisfaction of having a tangible product on the shelf). $0.50 for an MP3 is a ripoff to me. $0.99 is highway robbery.
The only way I'd be interested is if the offer is unlimited downloads, unrestricted file usage, an option for 192kbps or better, and full access to major labels' back catalog at a flat monthly rate. The supreme convenience of that is worth money. In fact, I'd probably put up with some restrictions on the file usage if they could come up with that deal.