hmm.

----- Forwarded message from David Strom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -----

From: "David Strom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 07 Aug 2000 14:37:28 -0000
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Web Informant] # 210, 7 August 2000: The coming Microsoft music monopoly

Web Informant# 210, 7 August 2000: The coming Microsoft music monopoly

http://strom.com/awards/210.html

Anyone trying to understand the future of Microsoft in a post-
monopoly world should take a careful look at the latest Windows 
Media player and web site, windowsmedia.com. It will show you 
just how far Microsoft has come in terms of integrating the 
web into the Windows operating system, and how it will be 
impossible to disconnect the two, no matter what legal rulings 
may require or transpire.

Windows Media, for those of you who have been under a rock, 
is Microsoft's answer to Real's player to let you listen 
and view multimedia content. The latest version released 
last month does much more than play audio and video clips. 
It has become a way of life, a user interface, a web site, 
and a mechanism for searching for audio (and video) enter-
tainment. And, while it pains me to say this, I think the 
world is better off with it than without it. It does a 
better job integrating into my applications and my desktop, 
and has the best user interface of similar products. In short, 
it is a tour de force.

Microsoft has taken the simple media player and transformed 
it into a 20 megabyte applications colossus. It reaches 
deeply into the Windows operating system and out into the web, 
bringing you a very simple but powerful means to search for 
your favorite artist and recording. If you can't or don't 
want to download the player, you can get an idea of the user 
interface by going to the windowsmedia web site in an ordinary 
browser. You can quickly search on songs from your favorite 
artist, bring up a discography and listen to short 30-second 
clips from numerous albums. 

Forget about Napster and its various offspring. This is 
the way we all will be finding our music from here on out. 
Granted, we'll have to pay for songs (versus sharing and 
stealing them), but eventually the music companies will 
figure this out and attach a low-ehough price tag on per-song 
downloads. With WindowsMedia, you can search for streaming 
audio from your favorite radio stations, although the soft-
ware isn't quite as wonderful as I'd like here: it couldn't 
find my wife's favorite WFUV station and once I did locate 
its stream it wasn't easy to add it to my favorites list.

You can see why I like the windowsmedia site and software so 
much by comparing it to its competitors. Take for example the 
latest music search tool from Altavista: it is dog-ugly, 
disorganized, and difficult. You get, instead of a nicely 
formatted page showing you a picture of the album and a song 
list and brief bio, the usual spew from a search engine with 
hundreds of irrelevant hits and barely enough information to 
figure out whether the link is worthy of your clickstream. 

This is why Microsoft ultimately wins: it makes better, more 
attractive, and more useful software. Again, it is hard for 
me to type this -- I have plenty to argue with Microsoft on 
other matters. But when it comes to user interface design, 
they (eventually) get it right, and Windows Media is spot-on 
target.

There is more to the Windows Media story than nice searches, 
too. The latest Nomad MP3 player from Creative Labs can play 
.WMF sound files in addition to MP3s. (You first have to 
update its firmware, a process that wasn't completely effort-
less.) And you can use the Windows Media player to organize 
your music and download it to the Nomad quite nicely (altho 
it isn't possible to transfer any of those 30 second clips 
from the net -- I believe this is because of the copy 
protection scheme employed by Microsoft). Of course, the 
number of WMF music files is a mere trifle when compared 
to MP3s, but so what.  

The more time you spend with Windows Media software and web 
site, the more you can see that Microsoft is waging war on 
many fronts: 

-- With Netscape/AOL, over which browser will be used to 
first access any web content (some will claim this war has 
long been over, what with the market shares being what they 
are and with Netscape doing everything in their power to 
convince users to go elsewhere for their browsing business),

-- with Real, Liquid Audio, MusicMatch and others over the 
use of the media player and how the user interface is presented,

-- with codec developers (the software automatically downloads 
what it thinks is the appropriate coding/decoding device for 
the media you want to play, although I couldn't get a QuickTime 
movie to play properly),

-- with the software that rips CD audio and stores it on your 
hard disk (Real Jukebox and MusicMatch again),

-- with the choice of the particular file format that music 
is recorded on the web (of course, Microsoft will make the 
claim that WMF is smaller, more efficient compression, better 
sounding than your average MP3s),

-- with search sites such as Altavista and others that try to 
catalog the music that is available at various places around 
the Internet,

-- and finally, a way once you find a song to be able to easily 
purchase the recording, using digital rights management tools 
and eCommerce links to a place to buy the CD and eventually 
individual songs.

Granted, Microsoft isn't going at this alone. Windows Media 
makes use of technologies from various other parties, but does 
so in a well-integrated way. All of this really started back 
when IE was brought into the operating system for Windows 95.5 
(the updates issued after 1997): now Windows Media player can 
make use of this technology to present the appropriate web pages 
"inside" its player interface, the same look and feel that anyone 
using IE would get if they connected to the windowsmedia.com 
web site. It is a very ingenious plan, and one that any lawyer 
involved in the antitrust case will have a fine time racking up 
billable hours trying to figure out. In the meantime, the rest 
of us can enjoy searching for our favorite songs.



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