Yeah it's not a bad deal when you consider this, then it's basically like paying $5/mo for unlimited music rental.Originally posted by: Sawyer
I have a friend that does this but he has a drm remove and keep some of it. The Zune Marketplace also gives you 10 tracks a month that you can keep even when you drop the subscription
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
Yeah it's not a bad deal when you consider this, then it's basically like paying $5/mo for unlimited music rental.Originally posted by: Sawyer
I have a friend that does this but he has a drm remove and keep some of it. The Zune Marketplace also gives you 10 tracks a month that you can keep even when you drop the subscription
Personally, though, I hate the idea of renting music. I stick with CDs and occasionally buy MP3 tracks at Amazon.
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
True, for some it makes a lot of sense, just not for me. 😛
edit: I probably would save money, it varies but on average I probably purchase at least a few albums per month. I just prefer to buy my music in CD format for a number of reasons.
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
True, for some it makes a lot of sense, just not for me. 😛
edit: I probably would save money, it varies but on average I probably purchase at least a few albums per month. I just prefer to buy my music in CD format for a number of reasons.
I thought I wouldn't like it, but so far I have.
Some Downsides :
- It sucks when I don't sync my zune for awhile and have to sync before I can play my tunes.
- I sometimes forget about the ten free songs.
Is there a way to buy a song in your collection without going to the marketplace and researching it? I am not at home, but I remember there not being an option from the collection window?
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
I use Napster, which did this first. Rhapsody is also similar. Both work with non-zune/non-iPod players like Sandisk Sansa
All 3 let you play from a PC not just download, so I have it installed on my music server. I can listen to new CDs to decide whether to buy them, and keep listening to CDs I don't like well enough to buy.
If you have a Zune, zune pass makes sense. If you have a PlaysForSure player that's compatible then Napster and Rhapsody are better.