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iTunes for Windows being launched on Oct. 16.

Eug

Lifer
:camera:

CNET article:

Apple to launch iTunes for Windows

Last modified: October 9, 2003, 10:08 AM PDT
By Ina Fried
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Apple Computer is expected next week to expand its online music service to Windows-based computers.

The Mac maker has scheduled an event for next Thursday at San Francisco's Moscone West convention hall. "The year's biggest music story is about to get even bigger," Apple said in an invitation to journalists.

The company is expected to launch the long-awaited Windows version of the iTunes Music Store at the event, according to Wall Street brokerage Needham. Apple earlier said it would release the Windows service sometime before the end of the year.

Although Apple popularized the pay-per-song store idea when it launched the Macintosh version of the service in April, the market is quickly becoming crowded. Musicmatch has launched a similar service and is expected to partner with direct PC giant Dell. Roxio announced its Napster 2.0 service on Thursday, with PC seller Gateway among its partners. Others, such as Yahoo and Amazon.com, are seen as likely players, while more PC makers, including Hewlett-Packard, are expected to partner with one service or another.

Needham analyst Charles Wolf estimated in July that online music stores in the United States could generate $3 billion in annual revenue, assuming they can capture 15 percent of the free file-sharing market. Wolf projected that Apple could claim 20 percent market share, giving it a potential yearly revenue boost of $600 million. Apple said last month that it had sold 10 million songs through the iTunes store.

Still, even those optimistic about the market don't see Apple getting a major boost to the bottom line.

"At a profit of less than 10 cents per song, the music store does not represent a major income opportunity for Apple," Wolf wrote in the July report. Still, the company could benefit from increased iPod sales, he said.
 
And if iTunes for Windows is anywhere near as good as iTunes for Mac OS X, the iTunes Music Store is gonna be huge.

And Apple is gonna sell a whole new boatload of iPods.
 
...I think I'm gonna return that Zen NX and get an iPod. I think iTunes will be a huge hit with Windows users.
 
Just curious - what made iTunes for Mac OSX so good anyway? Isn't buying songs as simple as finding the artist/album you want, finding the song, and clicking "Buy"? (I've never used iTunes so I wonder what's the fuss)
 
I wonder if it's sound quality will compare to foobar (if they release the software for itunes too)
 
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Just curious - what made iTunes for Mac OSX so good anyway? Isn't buying songs as simple as finding the artist/album you want, finding the song, and clicking "Buy"? (I've never used iTunes so I wonder what's the fuss)

I was wondering about that also...
 
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Just curious - what made iTunes for Mac OSX so good anyway? Isn't buying songs as simple as finding the artist/album you want, finding the song, and clicking "Buy"? (I've never used iTunes so I wonder what's the fuss)
I dunno what iTunes for Windows is gonna be like, but iTunes for Mac OS X is a really elegant package.

It's a single program that incorporates: an MP3/AAC database with full search functions, encoder, decoder, playlist editor and manager, iTunes sync software (automatic) for the iPod, online store, and MP3 or CD-audio burner all in one. It even burns DVDs. It's freakin' amazing.

The other good thing is that the AAC restrictions are nowhere near as bad as that buy.com WMA fiasco.

iTunes PR page
 
Originally posted by: Eug
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Just curious - what made iTunes for Mac OSX so good anyway? Isn't buying songs as simple as finding the artist/album you want, finding the song, and clicking "Buy"? (I've never used iTunes so I wonder what's the fuss)
I dunno what iTunes for Windows is gonna be like, but iTunes for Mac OS X is a really elegant package.

It's a single program that incorporates: an MP3/AAC database with full search functions, encoder, decoder, playlist editor and manager, iTunes sync software (automatic) for the iPod, online store, and MP3 or CD-audio burner all in one. It even burns DVDs. It's freakin' amazing.

The other good thing is that the AAC restrictions are nowhere near as bad as that buy.com WMA fiasco.

iTunes PR page

Sweet, sounds pretty cool. I'd probably use it if its anything like what you just described
 
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Sweet, sounds pretty cool. I'd probably use it if its anything like what you just described
I just hope it's as good for Windows as it is for the Mac.

Apple doesn't have a great history of Windows implementation. eg. iPod for Windows uses the sh!tty MusicMatch software right now (which I have too), and QuickTime on Windows is just mediocre (even though it's excellent on the Mac).
 
Originally posted by: Eug
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Sweet, sounds pretty cool. I'd probably use it if its anything like what you just described
I just hope it's as good for Windows as it is for the Mac.

Apple doesn't have a great history of Windows implementation. eg. iPod for Windows uses the sh!tty MusicMatch software right now (which I have too), and QuickTime on Windows is just mediocre (even though it's excellent on the Mac).

Never used MM so I can't comment on that. I have very little experience with Mac stuff so a lot of what you said went over my head 😕 QT doesn't seem all that bad, it's just that there are so many other formats available that Winamp or WMP can play that there's little use for QT
 
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Never used MM so I can't comment on that. I have very little experience with Mac stuff so a lot of what you said went over my head 😕 QT doesn't seem all that bad, it's just that there are so many other formats available that Winamp or WMP can play that there's little use for QT
Yeah, QuickTime on Windows 2000 and Windows XP on a normal system is OK, but it's not as seamless as with the Mac. And QuickTime on Windows NT sucks @ss. I've always had problems on NT, even though it's supposed to be supported. And I hate the nag screen.

 
By the way, iTunes for Mac is free. Hopefully, it will be free on Windows too.

They'd be crazy not to make it free, because if good it will get a huge following, and will act as a funnel for iTunes Music Store and iPod sales.
 
Wait a second - we all said that fair-priced music online was the reason we were still stealing with MP3s; we didn't mean it though. I don't wanna pay!
 
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Wait a second - we all said that fair-priced music online was the reason we were still stealing with MP3s; we didn't mean it though. I don't wanna pay!
Ironically, I don't buy from the iTMS since the music company licences don't yet extend to Canada. I just browse the store and listen to previews of songs, and then go out and buy the CD. Then I use iTunes to encode to MP3 and manage everything with MP3.

ie. It works just fine for MP3... but ideally you should have paid for your music already. :music:
 
I can't wait - competition is good. I wonder if Apple will have any promotions, like Napster gives 5 free tracks, for signing up. 🙂
 
Originally posted by: Nocturnal
How big is Itune's library of music? Are there a lot of songs on there or just top 20 tracks?

Last offical count I heard was 250,000 songs but that was way back in July. New tracks are added every Tuesday and Apple just signed a deal w/Matador Records (an independent label) to start selling their artists' music on iTMS.


Lethal
 
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