Songbird the Open Source iTunes? 226
An anonymous reader writes "Cnet has an interesting story about a company about to release an open source alternative to iTunes. Apparently, the software can be used with a multitude of music services." From the article: "Apple's iTunes is 'like Internet Explorer, if Internet Explorer could only browse Microsoft.com,' Lord said. 'We love Apple, and appreciate and thank them for setting the bar in terms of user experience. But it's inevitable that the market architecture changes as it matures.'"
It's not the client, it's the store (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not the store, it's the licensing (Score:5, Interesting)
On to the article: So this is just a product announcement. Nothing to see here, move along....
Re:It's not the store, it's the licensing (Score:3, Informative)
True, but it's a product announcement from Rob Lord, one of the two guys who started IUMA way back near the beginning of the web age. A product announcement from somebody with a history of creating products that were ahead of their time is worth paying attention to. He was running a hugely successful online music site 5 years before most of the world had even considered the idea.
As a former competitor of Rob's, I'd take him seriously; he knows what he's doing,
Songsuck (Score:3, Insightful)
* - Well save for the oddball one that sells actual MP3s of some band that I've never heard of and doesn't sound that particularly good or a particular Russian one who gives no money to the artist at all.
Re:Songsuck (Score:4, Insightful)
They don't support FreeDOS, NeXT, QNX, WinCE, SkyOS, OS/2, OS/9, SGI, Sun, BeOS, AmigaDOS, or my old Commodore 64, either. What's your point? Apple went after two markets: It's own, and the largest one. When Linux becomes important to Apple and to consumers, iTunes will magically appear. Right now Linux is not a factor to either. It's the same chicken-and-egg situation that Linux people have been dealing with since its inception. If people suddenly started buying Amigas by the thousands, iTunes would become available. I hate to break it to you, but in spite of the Slashdot hype, Linux is still far from critical mass.
Re:Songsuck (Score:2)
NEXTSTEP is OSX so i guess apple supports it in that sense.
I guess its just a hope of mine that apple would create a linux version so i can get my mom off windows. iTunes is the only application stoping her and she can't afford a mac. I
Re:Songsuck (Score:2)
Re:Songsuck (Score:2)
Have a look for SharpMusique / pymusique. It has a glitch with purchasing entire albums (though I read that this has been fixed). but otherwise it works fine for purchasing music from iTunes on Linux. It's fairly easy to install and use. There are rpms and
Converting your old
Re:Songsuck (Score:2)
Re:It's not the client, it's the store (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm sure plenty of stores would love to sell songs to iTunes users using Apple's FairPlay DRM. But Apple won't license the DRM, effectively shutting them out. If they try reverse engineering the DRM, Apple will just shut them out (see: Real). So they mostly turn to Microsoft, who seems to be willing to license their DRM'd Windows Media formats to just about a
Re:It's not the client, it's the store (Score:2)
Re:It's not the client, it's the store (Score:2)
Re:It's not the client, it's the store (Score:2)
1) Quality. The files you can get from Allofmp3.com are significantly higher quality than I've ever gotten from P2P. There's also higher quality-of-service; you're probably not going to spend any time downloading a file halfway only to have it fail on you and waste your time. This alone might make it worthwhile to a lot of users. Plus, and this may not be as much of an issue now as it was previously, AoMP3 isn't vunerable to poisoning with dummy files.
2) Plausible deniab
Re:It's not the client, it's the store (Score:2, Informative)
From the article you cite: "AllofMP3.com cannot be charged for piracy, prosecutors ruled, under the current criminal law."
That's not a technicality, that means what they're doing is not illegal, unless some other definition of illegal is in force than "acts you can be prosecuted for."
If it's legal for allofmp3.com to sell digital goods in Russia, then it would appear to be legal to import those digital goods to many jurisdictions. Under what US legislation is it illegal to buy an mp3 file in Russia and
Amen (Score:5, Funny)
Praise the Lord!
It's official (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Amen (Score:2)
Re: title (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember Fairplay (or was it Playfair), the tool which allowed encoded Apple music files to be played on any MP3 playe
Re: title (Score:2)
Fairplay: Apple's DRM scheme
PlayFair: OSX tool to remove said DRM
Judging by their screenshots... (Score:4, Insightful)
I know that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but come on here. At least try to make your cut-and-paste jobs a bit less obvious.
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:1)
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Apple has contributed incremental improvements; all the big breakthroughs that have made their products successful (object oriented programming, WYSIWYG, MVC, OOP, page description languages, bitmap graphics, scalable vector graphics, metadata and search, direct manipulation, digital audio, video compression, transparency, etc.) were developed elsewhere. Double-click and pull-down menus just aren't at the
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:4, Insightful)
You do know that Apple bought NeXT, don't you?
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
It's what Jobs does best: he picks good technologies and assembles them into good products. There is nothing wrong with that. What is wrong is that Apple complains (and sues) when others try to do the same.
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Specifically, if you RTFA, you will see this:
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
First of all, this is not Apple's look and feel--Apple copied this browsing style from Smalltalk, they just happened to apply it to music collections. Why should they get any protection for a straightforward application of a known browsing style?
Second, Apple doesn't have a legal right to protect the "look and feel" of an application; if they threaten to sue over
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:3, Insightful)
oh, please (Score:5, Informative)
NeXT combines the Smalltalk programming model, the Stepstone Objective-C language, the GNU compiler, the CMU Mach kernel, and the Adobe Postscript language (not much original there, but at least NeXT paid for some of it). Jobs did a great job at putting together NeXT out of existing technologies, but he didn't exactly contribute a lot of technology.
Let me repeat: there is nothing wrong for Apple copying from other people, but Apple should stop complaining (and sueing) when people copy from them.
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
Apple uses open source software, within the terms of the licences. That's a good thing.
Apple also licence a lot of stuff (or cross-licence it) from companies like Adobe. That's also a good thing.
You're implying that they're just ripping stuff off, and that makes it okay for others to do that to Apple. Is that actually true?
Until it is, it's fine for Apple to get tough when people copy their stuff.
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
The iTunes layout is a pretty trivial UI design, and not a particularly novel one. It should be legal for people to build UIs that looks just like it. Yet, Apple will probably be able to stop clones simply through the threat of legal action.
Unfortunately, Apple has a 20 year history of such behavior; it started in the 1980's when they made the preposterous claim that they essentially owned the intellectual property t
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
Apple licenced a lot of stuff from Xerox PARC, but added a lot as well. The whole menubar concept is an Apple one, as well as most of the window concepts. They developed a lot of the GUI, and defended their development in courts but eventually settled with Microsoft.
You don't like their panel-view interface for music, and attack Apple for using the existing patent system to protect their competitive advantages. You should attack the right target - the system itself. An
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
I like the interface a lot--it's, after all, pretty much the same interface people have been using for browsing in Smalltalk since the 1970's.
As for not contributing to computer science - you're plain wrong there. A list off the top of my head in a few moments includes:
None of those are contributions to computer science. None of those were even original product ideas. What Apple did was good engineering and good marketing.
They spent $534M on research and
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
I don't dismiss them at all--they were great contributions to computer science, they just weren't made at Apple.
If you prefer fundamental changes to incremental changes, then you can dismiss a lot of what we count as science in every field.
I don't "dismiss" incremental changes, but Apple doesn't contribute either incremental or fundamental changes to computer science, they don't contribute
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
In other words, apple took the theory, polished it, and made it useable. You seem to be discrediting Apple because they don't blindly put out theory, instead they do reseach and then put a practical application to that research.
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
Apple is licensing these rights to code it uses, not simply wilful copying. Others aren't licensing rights from Apple for technologies it owns and so Apple sues.
Who isn't respecting whose rights?
Re:oh, please (Score:2)
A scientific field is defined by the published, peer-reviewed body of knowledge in that field; employees at Apple do not significantly contribute to the computer science literature.
Apple, at this point, is just a design and engineering shop (but a good one).
As opposed to what,
Microsoft, Xerox, and IBM have world-class research labs. AT&T and DEC used to. Apple and Dell do not.
Re: (Score:2)
He make a point of mentioning the skinability... (Score:2)
Give credit where its due (Score:2)
Re:Give credit where its due (Score:2)
Wrong. Version 1.0 of iTunes came out in January of 2001. Musicmatch Jukebox goes back far, far before that.
Now granted, iTunes is actually some jukebox program that does go back a while before Apple bought it and then turned the program into iTunes. But it wasn't Apple iTunes until 2001.
Re:Give credit where its due (Score:2)
Huh? Before 2001, it was neither called iTunes, or released by Apple. That makes it different enough to me - especially if you want to compare it to Musicmatch Jukebox, which has always been called Musicmatch Jukebox. Saying that iTunes dates back to 1996 would be like saying Firefox dates back to the early 1990's.
No one really wants an iTunes copy. (Score:4, Insightful)
iTunes is not similar to Internet Explorer what so ever, unless you're on a Macintosh, you need to download it or install iTunes manually, it's a choice you make.
You don't have to buy an iPod or use the iTunes Music Store. In fact you can happily go by using your computer and never have to know neither Apple nor iTunes.
Internet Explorer was the at the centre of a monopoly, it came preinstalled, full of bugs and consumers were crying for alternatives for almost 10 years before the Firefox project came and provided a reasonable "answer".
There are very few people out there crying for an iTunes alternative, the iTunes popularity is rather justly earnt and is only used by people who are interested in listening to music on an iPod or purchasing music from iTMS. Consumers aren't demanding that iPods or iTunes work with other online music stores or other music programs. In fact the only people I actually hear complaining are Real and Creative.
The other online stores are -amazingly- bad, poorly laid out, with pricing models that reflect one theme "greed", the model of "download as many or as few songs as you like, but pay for them until the day that you die otherwise we take them back from you" is ridiculous.
But not as ridiculous as the excessively under-designed garbage pieces of electronics they want you to play them on, where they franchise that a 64kbps Windows media file as a decent alternative to 128kbps AAC audio.
So if those are my "choices", I'm pretty pleased to be giving my attention to iTunes and Apple, as they certainly seem to have a much better clue about what they're doing and are satisfying what I'm asking for in technology vs. music and willing to upgrade their product regardless of what the competition is up to.
Re:Judging by their screenshots... (Score:2)
Look-and-feel in software UI doesn't give a copyrightable protection. Unless Apple has actual, patentable, patented innovations in their interface, they can't require anything but filing the names off.
amaroK with option to spend money (Score:1)
The downside to amaroK (Score:2, Interesting)
Hopefully it will one day work everywhere, since it is an awesome player. IMHO, amaroK could easily take over if it worked on more platforms.
Re:The downside to amaroK (Score:5, Interesting)
Easy fix (Score:3, Informative)
Lipstick [kde-look.org] is also quite nice.
Re:Easy fix (Score:2)
Re:The downside to amaroK (Score:2)
Also have a cookie for getting so many angry replies to a single throwaway comment...
Re:The downside to amaroK (Score:2)
Eh? What's stopping them then?
Its just an updated firefox... (Score:2, Interesting)
A Lesson For Everyone Who Claims Anyone Can... (Score:1, Insightful)
I really hope Apple drops their hardware and migrates Cocoa to Windows and Linux.
The Microsoft and Linux APIs are so jarringly hideous and clunky it is painful to have to use for anyone who has grown up on OS X.
If you are a Windows or Linux application developer, please, if you don't have a Mac or haven't really spent time with OS X. Pick something like a b
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you are a Windows or Linux application developer, please, if you don't have a Mac or haven't really spent time with OS X. Pick something like a button or text field AND STUDY IT. And I mean really look closely at it and nothing else. Note the timing, shading, feedback, action, EVERYTHING.
First, GUI != API.
API is the application programming interface; usually a collection of objects, which have propteries and methods you can use or extend or override. The API is the roadmap to these items.
As for the OS X button/text fields vs Linux & Windows button/text fields... are you serious? Study them? Timing, action? Let's get real here, it's a bitmap swap. The OS X versions have a pretty glass look to them, the Windows versions look like smooth beveled plastic, and Linux ones look however you want them to look.
I love my Mac, and I think it has the best looking operating system of the three mentioned, but I don't really see where the interface elements are better in any other regard than their outward appearance.
OpenStep (Score:3, Insightful)
A more realistic goal would be for Linux to drop KDE and GNOME and focus on GNUStep. That way you could have a free open source equivalent of Cocoa, with source code compatibility.
Of course, it'll never happen. Too many egos are invested in going in other directions.
Uh, wait a second.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Not quite (Score:2)
Neither amaroK nor Rhythmbox works in Windows.
I'm forced to use Windows for listening to music at work and also at home, because ALSA doesn't deem it important to properly support ALC850 in nforce 4. I'm looking forward to proper Open Source music player for windows.
News.Context (Score:5, Insightful)
Check his petigree.. (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Check his petigree.. (Score:2)
Re:Check his petigree.. (Score:2)
Why would you need to retire your iPod? iPods have played MP3s since day one. Sounds like you don't even own one and you're just another SlashTroll.
I'd call it.. (Score:2)
MusicKube (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess that MusikCube [musikcube.com] fits better in the description of an "open source iTunes" counterpart.
Re:MusicKube (Score:4, Informative)
Re:MusikCube (Score:2)
Anyone who is looking for a lightweight player for Windows should look no further. Simple, elegant, efficient.
Re:MusicKube (Score:2, Insightful)
Windows only? C'mon.
Re:MusicKube (Score:2)
Maybe some day when I'm bored I'll take a look at iTunes, but for now, I just need a fast, sleek player that lets me control my playlist. Winamp fits that for me.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:MusicKube (Score:2)
I bet the same can't be said for an iPod, am I right?
Re:MusicKube (Score:2)
I was just asking if anyone else is in the same boat. It's a discussion forum as well as a news site, you know.
(song)Birds of a Feather, Flock together. (Score:5, Interesting)
Or not. It's essentially Firefox plus some random blog-editing tools and a "pretty" interface. Songbird, IMHO, will be much the same. So far the only feature that people like is the "URL Slurper"... which basically amounts to wget recursively. Don't get me wrong... I'm all for competition, especially when it's Open-Source vs. Closed-Source. That said, I can't see much worth getting hyped up about: the interface is nothing new (but more cluttered than iTunes), the "URL Slurper" isn't anything the world hasn't seen with wget and curl, and I think the project might be at risk legally.
The optimist in me will make sure I download and try it the first day that it's available. The pessimist reminds me that getting hyped up will make me less receptive to a good product.
Re:(song)Birds of a Feather, Flock together. (Score:2, Interesting)
Looks top-notch.. (Score:2)
Your in luck them.. (Score:2)
That said, you can change your preferences: goto 'Your Account'>'Change Download Manager'>'Disable eMusic Download Manager'. Its still a good service.
If you've been using it as long as I have I'd guess the big deal you refer to was when they went from all you can download at a fixed (low) price to a allotment/subscription services (I think its 40/6
About that... (Score:2, Insightful)
Apple might want a little more than a simple "thank you"... money talks.
Skinnable baby.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Hey! Skins! What a cool idea! (Score:2)
HA! I fully support your proposed audio-cock technology. - jwz [livejournal.com]
Work with an existing excellent product. (Score:5, Interesting)
IMHO it is second to none when it come to managing your music collection. Imagine adding an optional Buy-Here tab with x+1 companies to buy your music from.
I have never bought music online, I never will. I would disable any tab that I saw like that in Amarok.
But my point is; Itunes is/was a good jukebox style player. iTunes has it's issues, alas it's not available natively for Linux.
Amarok excells as a music center, AND runs natively in Linux.
Take a hard look at those screenshots... (Score:5, Interesting)
The project is ambitious. But if it succeeds, it could change the face of the web, at least the music portion of it in a way that's really benificial to us all (musicians included).
Amarok is a great project, but its approach is a a single platform media player/manager. This is a media outlet/portal, with management thrown in for excellent measure.
Of course it may never happen, or it could flop. According to the website we'll all have at least a year to wait before we can declare it anything other then an interesting project. My hat's off to them.
Songbird? (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously, how many dead animals will we install linux on?
Re:Songbird? (Score:2)
oh no! hang on - thats a really bad idea!
Nick...
Re:Songbird? (Score:2)
NightOwl - an OS porn browser or TalkingHorse - an OS IM client [-p
there's still room in the OS Ark for plenty of animals...
Can't compare with FF (Score:2, Interesting)
It's not the same thing. Firefox was made by Mozilla, who made Netscape, IE's past only concurrent. "Firefox vs. IE" is the same "Mozilla vs. Microsoft" that's been on since the first release of Internet Explorer. here, MS's rival only re-bore from its hashes under a new name.
Why This Can't Work (Score:5, Informative)
When you purchase a song from the iTunes Music Store, the AAC file is downloaded without FairPlay DRM encryption. The iTunes software adds the FairPlay DRM while downloading, encrypting the file with your iTMS account ID. An open-source client wouldn't do this (or at least wouldn't have to, if it could). Apple would be in a heap of trouble with the record labels if they allowed this software to exist.
The only way to make it work is to move the encryption process from the client to the server, which would significantly increase Apple's costs (in addition to the huge CPU requirements of encrypting every song they sell, they probably wouldn't be able to use Akami's distribution network anymore).
What I see is (Score:2, Informative)
Apple actually bought the iTunes interface. Full details at http://www.panic.com/extras/audionstory/ [panic.com] . Good read for all developers.
Here is what Apple PAID FOR http://www.macupdate.com/screenshot.php?id=3714 [macupdate.com]
Re:What I see is (Score:2)
Not to mention that there's at least one bloke who claims he's got an earlier patent
Re:This won't last... (Score:2)
According to one of their pages: [songbirdnest.com]
We've taken xulrunner and sqlite and vlc and glued them together with some xml, javascript, and C++.
So
The browser restricts (Score:4, Interesting)
Having a music shopping app where you can (for example) "audition" a track at a streamable (but ugly) 32kbps then click a "buy" button and have it (and the artwork) automatically download to the proper folder and be available in your playlist immediately would be much easier than just using Firefox or IE to browse generic web pages.
Re:What? (Score:3, Interesting)
Does your web browser have an 8-band graphic EQ? What about full-screen movie playback? Visualizations? Library management? CD Burning? Audio file format conversion? CDDB lookup (sure, there are web frontends for that, but you'd have to manually input the cd's serial number)...
iTunes is a lot more than a "web browser".
Re:Hopefully its efficient (Score:2, Insightful)
At great risk to my Karma, I partially agree with that statement. Several years ago I worked for the Fink project (fink.sourceforge.net) porting OSS code to Mac OS X. There are some extremely well written open source applications, and they were a delight to port.
However, the bulk of applications available in OSS are indeed bloated and very difficult to port because the C code they were built on was
Re:Hopefully its efficient (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hopefully its efficient (Score:2, Insightful)
NB: I am not saying that efficiency isn't important, but in mos
Re:Anyone else notice... (Score:3, Funny)
I think it's a masturbation reference.
Re:Apple "setting the bar in user experience"? Er, (Score:2)
but if you read the history it has more to do with tradition than practicality or usefulness... which is where I'm going with th
Re:Apple "setting the bar in user experience"? Er, (Score:2)
How is "which music software I like" (repeat: ***I*** like) not a matter of opinion?!?
saying something is simply "a matter of opinion" is the way to avoid arguments, not find the truth.
If you really think there's an unarguable "truth" when it comes to preference in music software user interface, you're an even bigger retard than I thought.
You seem to be in the minority.
Hence, I'm obviously wrong, and my opinion is obviously worthless, and can be automatically discounte
Re:Mod Parent Up!!! (Score:2)
The long tail is the concept that if you can cater to all the niche products in music, books, etc. in an efficient way, you can make more money on the products that don't sell very well than you can on best sellers. Amazon thrives on the long tail.
But while there is value in offering every piece of music under the sun, where's the value in providing every DRM/payments scheme under the sun