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Microsoft Zune MP3 Player Interface Revealed

Posted by CmdrTaco on Fri Aug 18, 2006 12:01 AM
from the monkey-see-monkey-try dept.
bain writes to tell us that iLounge has put up details on the Zune, Microsoft's MP3 player. According to the article, "Zune is a bit bigger than a standard 30GB iPod, and apparently made entirely of plastic." Interestingly, Microsoft forgoes a touch-sensitive scrollwheel in favor of wheel-shaped buttons. Included are WiFi capabilities, an FM tuner, and (in stark contrast to the iPod) a white-on-black color scheme. The 30GB model is expected to sell for $300. This story selected and edited by LinuxWorld editor for the day Saied Pinto.

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[+] Ask Slashdot: Zune - Microsoft Killer or Next Apple Victim? 159 comments
prophet asks: "Now that we have all seen the new Microsoft 'Zune', and the suits over at Microsoft have seen fit to inform us of a whole line of 'Zune' related hardware and software products, my real question is, will Microsoft be able to de-throne the ever growing iPod phenom? With the current confirmed 'Zune' prototype photos dispersed throughout the net, it is hard to see how Microsoft has thought that the current design of the 'Zune' is in fact enough in its current form for users to be pleased aesthetically, and at the same time impressed by ease of use. At the current moment, rumors are circulating of a redesign of the controls on Microsoft's part before a complete release. With the current aesthetical design of the Zune, will it appeal to the masses in the way the iPod did? More importantly, does it appeal to you?
[+] Microsoft leaks Zune Details in FCC filing 274 comments
cnet-declan writes "One of my colleagues at CNET News.com has picked up on a filing that Microsoft made yesterday with the FCC. Our article reports that Microsoft's Zune media player (the iPod rival discussed before on Slashdot) is going to have features such as creating mobile social networks and streaming music to nearby friends or strangers. It's going to support the 802.11b and 802.11g wireless standards, have a 30GB hard drive, support music, movies, and photos, and have a 3-inch screen. Is this finally enough to unseat Apple?"
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  • The one thing missing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ackthpt (218170) * on Friday August 18 2006, @12:02AM (#15932294) Homepage Journal

    The one thing missing for Microsoft, is panache. There's nothing hip or cool aboug having some music device from a giant corporation. Without that certain cachet of having something from a company which makes very stylish computers and operating systems and got U2 on board.

    It could say Ronco on it for all the Microsoft connection will be good for. It'll sell to some who want to experiment beyond the bounds of iPodness, but with that plastic case and wheel-like buttons it says WalMart-chic all over it.

    Of course, we can't discount the notion that Microsoft might further piss-off the EU and risk a severe look from US trustbusters, by bundling some shit into Windows Vista which only works with the Zune and means you have to have one to get those Zune-casts...

    Smells like another waste of money from a company that just doesn't understand that they are only profitable at a few things and should stop this kind of nonsense. FFS, who are they trying to be, the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation? [wikipedia.org]

    • by Kadin2048 (468275) <slashdot,kadin&xoxy,net> on Friday August 18 2006, @12:25AM (#15932397) Homepage Journal
      Well, this has further cemented my opinion that while the Zune certainly would make me very, very afraid if I were the CEO of Creative, I'm not sure that it would have me shaking in my boots if I was in Steve Jobs' position.

      I think it stands a chance of being clearly superior to all the other iPod wannabes, and basically wipe up their market-share and send them into some other line of work, particularly because of the WiFi feature, but there's just nothing compelling about it that would displace the iPod.

      I have no doubt that Microsoft will capture close to 100% of the market: but the "market" for this device is "MP3 players other than iPods."
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:The one thing missing (Score:5, Funny)

      by arodland (127775) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:30AM (#15932408)
      There's nothing hip or cool aboug having some music device from a giant corporation.

      Some day we'll teach the Apple folks this lesson.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:The one thing missing (Score:5, Insightful)

        by monoqlith (610041) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:57AM (#15932629)
        I think he was more referring to the image of being a giant corporation.

        But you're right, Apple has perpretrated a pretty impressive deception. In fact, it is the ultimate marketing coup : a multi-billion dollar company masquerading as a marginalized, under-appreciated underdog. It works quite well - how else to get the too-cool-for-school, indie, emo, anti-conformist crowd to buy their mass-media-oriented, incredibly trendy device? I'm starting to think all those years of stagnant sales, bad management, and being tethered to a virtually ignored platform are paying off. That's what fostered this image. It's a text-book case study on how to form a brand.

        Moreover, this is a winning attitude that we see everywhere. After all, it's how people get elected, too. Make people think you are a little guy, fighting against a greater, unflagging, oppressive evil - even if you are the Man - and not only do they let their guard down, they're on your side almost immediately(witness: the bombastic "Star Wars" take-off the Republicans did at one of their conventions, framing the Democrats as the dark Imperial forces and themselves as the Rebel Alliance. Or the multi-millionaire cable executive Ned Lamont in the recent Democratic primary. )

        They won't be able to keep up this facade forever. For almost a year now, everywhere I turn I see an iPod. Even though I myself own one, it's starting to make me resentful. Do people have to be entertained every minute of the day? How much of our life are we willing to spend on distractions?

        Apple has to be weary of becoming disconnected - of pitching products *at* people rather than *to* people. Microsoft does the former, especially with Xbox and Zune. They are obviously grasping at markets they have no business being near. I think Apple is less evil, though - or maybe not, judging by the recent accounting scandal. Anyway, Apple doesn't want to go that route. Of course Jobs and his marketing department have mastered the art of the opposite - making people think that Apple furthers their individualism and self-expression, their person-hood. Apple's ads talk to you as people instead of as commodities. They've even gone so far as to anthropomorphize computers, as if to emphasize(or invent) the humanity sequestered in all this sterile circuitry. You're getting a friend, not just a tool. It's aesthetic genius - all geared towards delivering another channel for the mainstream recording industry to reach you with their over-produced crap. So I doubt Apple's music-player monopoly will go away unless some court or legislation tears down their partial vertical integration with ITMS.

        Have they sold out? Is this something we want to preserve even if it is deceptive? Maybe. I have no problem with big corporations as long as they don't start unduly influencing our public policies. I do however like it when gigantic corporations see the importance of talking to their customers as if they were human beings and not wallets - or at least pretending to. Google does this. Apple does this. It's great - but we mustn't let our guard down. If it's not too late.
        [ Parent ]
    • Re:The one thing missing (Score:5, Insightful)

      by snuf23 (182335) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:59AM (#15932634)
      "There's nothing hip or cool aboug having some music device from a giant corporation."

      I guess you don't remember when having a Sony walkman was a big thing. Sony being a giant corporation.
      It's all about how the brand is managed.
      [ Parent ]
  • Good to go (Score:5, Funny)

    by SuperKendall (25149) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:08AM (#15932316)
    * Wireless
    * More space than a Nomad

    Raging success I'd say!
  • UI pics (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ElitistWhiner (79961) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:08AM (#15932317)
    Don't believe anything you hear and only 1/2 of what you see.

    Those photos make for a good story but likely have very little to do with Zune.
    -r
  • Cheap bastards.... (Score:4, Funny)

    by 1053r (903458) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:11AM (#15932329)
    First, they rip off OS X and create Vista, now they rip off the iPod and create "zune".

    Steve: Well, Bill, what successful thing is there left in the market that we *HAVENT* ripped off?
    Bill: Umm... There's the PSP, and the DS...
    Steve: The team is way ahead of you bill, they've already got a Xbox360M in the works!

    (Just my speculation, of course)
  • Microsoft PR (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 18 2006, @12:14AM (#15932344)
    Just announced, Zune will only be available for corporate customers in November. Consumers can get it early in 2007.
  • I don't get it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 18 2006, @12:17AM (#15932359)
    Will someone PLEASE explain why a *software* company feels its necessary to enter markets in which it has a competitive disadvantage years after the competition? If I were a MS shareholder, I'd want the company to focus on improving its OS and other software products - ya know, the stuff that made all the money in the first place.

    I think Apple should develop a random product, say an iToaster Oven, just to see if MS will follow suit...
    • Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kfg (145172) * on Friday August 18 2006, @12:43AM (#15932440)
      Will someone PLEASE explain why a *software* company feels its necessary to enter markets in which it has a competitive disadvantage years after the competition?

      To sell DRM technology. ACC is the target, not the silly iPod thingy, but they've done ok with mice, keyboards, joysticks, etc.

      KFG
      [ Parent ]
    • Because they can... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by spagetti_code (773137) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:20AM (#15932538)
      Look, MS has $1,000,000,000 in profits every month to put in the bank.
      They can afford to take a few punts to see what works.

      If I was an investor, I'd be pretty pleased with this (well,
      actually I'd be more pleased if they paid some dividends or
      got their stock price up, but hey... this aint bad).

      All power to them - they want to create a complete
      home entertainment experience, and this is an essential part
      of the pie.

      Signed
      A happy iPod owner.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Funny)

      by Headcase88 (828620) on Friday August 18 2006, @08:04AM (#15933607) Journal
      "I think Apple should develop a random product, say an iToaster Oven, just to see if MS will follow suit"

      An MS Toaster Oven is the last thing the world needs. God knows how convoluted the process would be to toast a simple piece of bread.

      1. Welcome to the Microsoft (TM) Toasting Wizard. What are you toasting today?
      • Bread
      • Bagel
      • English Muffin
      • Other

      2. What type of bread?
      • Microsoft (TM) White Bread
      • Microsoft (TM) Whole Wheat HealthyChoice (TM) bread
      • Other [text field]

      3. Microsoft (TM) Toasting Wizard is searching for "Dempster's white bread"...

      (little animated magnifying glass on globe icon)

      4. Toasting Wizard could not find your bread. Please make sure you've typed the type of bread correctly and try again.

      5. Wizard Completed!

      Toasting Wizard was quit by user before toasting was complete.
      [ Parent ]
  • Now all they need is music (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pico303 (187769) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:22AM (#15932378)
    iPod isn't just popular 'cause it's cool. It's popular because it's really easy to get music onto the thing. Buy it, install iTunes, plug in the iPod, and start ripping or downloading music. I just don't see Windows Media Player as competing in that space, especially not without blowing Microsoft's whole market strategy of giving users choices when it comes to Windows audio players.

    I have a feeling they'll get thousands of people buying these things. They'll get them home, try to install them, not be able to get music to upload, or the thing will crash all the time, or their PCs won't be able to see it when it's plugged in. Pack it up, take it back, and just go spend the $300 on something that actually works.

    Nice thing about this is Apple will probably lower the price of the 30GB iPod to $250 just to stick it to MS. Then I'll dump my mini and finally get a video iPod.
    • Re:Now all they need is music (Score:4, Insightful)

      by arodland (127775) on Friday August 18 2006, @12:33AM (#15932414)
      People have been ripping and downloading music for a looooooooong time now without any help from iTunes, thank you. iTunes/iPod is not easy. Easy is showing up as a mass-storage device when plugged in, and playing every format I've already got without any conversion.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Now all they need is music (Score:5, Informative)

        by Firehed (942385) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:18AM (#15932533) Homepage
        Not only does my iPod show up as a mass storage device when I plug it in, it automatically copies over all of my music too. And as 99% of my music is in MP3 (the other 1% being Apple lossless, which is admittedly a minor niggle, though less so since there's no harm in transcoding between lossless formats), I'd say the latter is covered too. Sorry, but your argument flatly sucks. I can put a CD in the drive, iTunes automatically rips to MP3 and tags it, then ejects the CD (or at least I can configure it as such in about three seconds), then I plug in my iPod and the new music is automatically transferred to it. Without a single click. I tried the mass storage device approach - it's nothing short of abysmal compared to automatic syncing. Not to mention ripping CDs was usually a many-step process, and half the time required me to type in all the track listings. With iTunes, I put or plug it in, wait a few minutes, and remove or disconnect it. No work on my part, no thinking, and it even organizes the local files in a standard and logical manner.

        I don't quite know how you define 'easy', but it's certainly not how I do, and I'd imagine not very close to Webster, either. I hated iTunes for the longest time, too, but at least I was never in denial about how my old process sucked. I'm not meaning to flame you here, but iTunes has been the best thing to happen to my music library since the MP3 format. Videos are another story, but I can deal with that (or, rather, just avoid it)
        [ Parent ]
  • MS fanbois, are you out there? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Masa (74401) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:56AM (#15932627) Journal
    This made me wondering, if there is somewhere people wearing T-shirts with Microsoft (or Windows) logos and chanting the Microsoft name. Is there such fanboyism, which will guarantee the sale of this kind of device? Because, otherwise it could be quite difficult to penetrate the market with this new device. We already have Apple and Creative and they both provide well-known music players. And I have this feeling (so, no real knowledge) that the music player industry is like mobile phone industry. You have to be hip to be on the belt of a teenager. Right?

    So, the question is, is there such a movement - like behind Linux or other subcultures we are familiar with here in Slashdot - for Microsoft products? And now I'm not talking about business software. I'm talking about the passionate young people with ideologies and ideals.
        • Re:The other Scroll Wheel (Score:5, Interesting)

          by fbjon (692006) on Friday August 18 2006, @01:43AM (#15932599) Homepage Journal
          The problem is that a scroll-wheel takes up a lot of space
          No it doesn't. See, a scroll-wheel doesn't have to be a flat, round rubber disc, it can be a cylinder! I'm really, really dissappointed that so few are using this type, because it was positively awesome on a Sony-Ericsson I used to have in Japan.

          To be precise: the wheel was a cylinder right where the 4-way keys usually are (clamshell phone), about 1,5cm wide and maybe 8mm in diameter, in a horizontal direction. You could roll it and click it just like a mouse wheel, and had two extra buttons on either side for left-right clicking. It also had just the right feel, not too tight, but not too loose either, so you wouldn't accidentally misclick like you do with some cheap mice. Scrolling along lists was never easier.

          [ Parent ]
          • See, a scroll-wheel doesn't have to be a flat, round rubber disc, it can be a cylinder!

            Holy crap, you're right. But---get this----what if we mounted it upright on (i.e., normal to) the music player's surface? Then you could reach out, maybe with your thumb and forefinger, and ... I don't know, rotate the thing? Twist it? "Turn" it?

            I could totally imagine this on the front of music players everywhere for volume control and maybe to select between different wireless "channels" (TODO: figure out how to modulate multiple streams of music in a band of EM radiation).

            Actually, this could be even bigger! We could use these kinds of controls in any situation where fine-tuning and coarse-grained adjustment are necessary (say, on microscopes), or really on any kind of mechanism where the act of turning the control can be made to do useful mechanical work (TODO: maybe this can be used on water faucets? doors? something like that).

            I'm stuck on a name for this physical, continuously-variable, cylindrical widget. Any ideas?

            [ Parent ]