Monday, July 27, 2009
iPod Classic Holds 120GB ($24K)
This has all been said before, I have the urge anyway (with the Hadopi Law looming large in the rearview mirror).
The biggest iPod music player, the “Classic” holds 120GB of files. A single song takes about 5MB, more if it’s of high quality and less if it’s of poor quality.
120GB is 120,000 megabytes. 120,000/5 = 24000 songs.
The official price for a song is one dollar. So, to legally fill a new iPod, it costs (would cost) approximately $24,000.
Where does Apple think that people get their music from? How many of their customers have spent $24K on iTunes? Might Apple subtly be encouraging filesharing via the P2P networks?
One could argue that they’re selling guns for which the ammunition is freely available online (that’s one point of view anyway).
Another thought: I’m a music lover. Before the internet, I probably spent about $50-100 every month on albums. That works out to about $1000 per year.
Basic economic theory says that productivity gains lead to windfall profits followed by low prices. Releasing music as MP3’s instead of physical CD’s is a massive productivity gain. Consequently, by artificially keeping prices high, the record companies are reaping windfall profits. Which will inevitably be followed by low prices. The battle against filesharing is really a struggle to prevent the market from becoming competitive.
Boy would I feel like a sucker if I gave my $1000 to a company making massive profits purely by artificially enforcing an anti-competitive market.
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 07:30 PM
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NSFW
If you’re bored. If you’re not easily offended (seriously). If you used to like Lolcats, FailBlog, and PictureIsUnrelated, but you’re over them.
You might like this.
If you don’t know what NSFW means, DO NOT click on the link.
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 06:31 PM
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Killer Putdown
You won’t be interested in this article, but I just about fell off my chair when I read:
“And to be clear, I mean ‘short bus special’, not ‘shiny unicorn special’.”
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 06:26 PM
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Living Abroad Increases Creativity
According to the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, “60% of students who were either living abroad or had spent some time doing so, solved the problem, whereas only 42% of those who had not lived abroad did so.”
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 06:18 PM
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Learn These Words, Make Money
I am so totally going to learn these words, just so that the next time I’m at a dinner party and some pretentious kid goes off I’ll be able to drown him in incomprehensible jargon. Or so that I can look smarter to my clients.
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 06:15 PM
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High Prices = Damage
I love this quote:
“You can also create artificial scarcity to keep prices high ... markets, like networks, interpret this kind of interference as damage, and usually find a route around it.”
Trying to curb sharing music that I love is creating artifical scarcity. I interpret that as damage and try to route around it.
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 06:08 PM
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AP Would Rather Fuss Than Do The Really Simple Thing That Would Totally Solve Its Problem
The AP has made a lot of noise recently about how “news articles should not turn up on search engines and Web (sic) sites without permission”. What any webmaster knows is that a simple robots.txt file in the root directory will eliminate all “article stealing” by search engines.
So, how does the AP handle this? Based on AP.org, all their stories seem to be hosted on “hosted.ap.org”.
Take a look at their robots.txt file.
Posted by
Andrew Swift on 07/27 at 05:41 PM
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