Apple sells 25% of music in the US, none of which is AC/DC

According to the number crunchers at NPD Group, the trend that came to a head last year when Apple beat out Wal-Mart for the title of largest Stateside music retailer is continuing apace. That’s right — one in four songs sold in America is sold on iTunes, while Wal-Mart (including CD sales through retail stores, sales through their website, and Wal-Mart Music Downloads) holds the number two position at 14 percent. And number three, if you’re morbidly curious, is Best Buy. In addition, 69% of all digital music sold in the US comes from the iTunes store, with Amazon ranking second at 8 percent. When talking formats, the CD remains the most popular at 65 percent, but as some dude named Russ Crupnick (NPD’s vice president of entertainment industry analysis) notes, “with digital music sales growing at 15 to 20 percent, and CDs falling by an equal proportion, digital music sales will nearly equal CD sales by the end of 2010.” Which can only be a good thing, if it means that we’ll never have to step into a Wal-Mart again. Sales of ringtones and sales to consumers under 13 were not tabulated, which means the data may incorrectly skew away from purchases of The Wiggles’ Go Bananas! and that Crazy Frog song.

[Via TUAW]

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Apple sells 25% of music in the US, none of which is AC/DC originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 17:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Agrees to eBook Standard

Amazon is quickly becoming the Apple of the e-book world, and Sony seems to be quietly hatching plans from second place, in order to unseat the king. One option is freeing up e-book from the DRM they come saddled with. The company announced yesterday that it would be adopted ePub, a book publishing open-standard pushed by companies like Random House and HarperCollins.

“There is going to be a proliferation of different reading devices, with different features and capabilities and prices for a different set of consumer requirements,” Sony’s president of digital reading Steve Haber told The New York Times. “If people are going to this e-book shopping mall, they are going to want to shop at all the stores, and not just be required to shop at one store.”

Sony will adopt the standard by the end of the year. Amazon, for its part, is looking to take on the industry by itself, without any such standards. It’s good to be king.

Amazon Makes Zune HD Pricing Almost Official

Zune HD prices at Amazon.JPGAmazon has placed the Zune HD upon its Web pages, giving the MP3 player’s prices and capacity points the stamp of authenticity.

The Web page currently lists the Zune HD at $219.99 for a 16-Gbyte option and $289.99 for the 32-Gbyte “platinum” option. Clicking on the individual product pages, unfortunately, returns a “page not found” error message. However, most of the player’s details have already been disclosed.

An official launch date has not been set, although reports have speculated that the date will be somewhere between Sept. 5 and Sept. 8.

Best Buy lists Zune HD at $220 for 16GB, $290 for 32GB, coming September 8th

It hasn’t been long at all since we saw Zune HD make its FCC debut, and now Gizmodo’s gotten ahold of what looks to be screenshots from Best Buy’s inventory system listing 16GB and 32GB Zune HD models going on sale September 8th for $220 and $290, respectively. Retailers don’t necessarily have the best track record for release dates or pricing, and while Best Buy’s inventory pricing is in fact notoriously wrong prior to release, it’s usually way high. As for the date, it certainly falls within the Fall 2009 window we’ve heard before, but if it’s really less than a month away, rest assured Microsoft will be flexing some advertising muscle in the not-too-distant future.

Update: Looks like Amazon now has its listing up as well, albeit a non-functional one. [Via ZuneSpring]

Continue reading Best Buy lists Zune HD at $220 for 16GB, $290 for 32GB, coming September 8th

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Best Buy lists Zune HD at $220 for 16GB, $290 for 32GB, coming September 8th originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Aug 2009 18:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How would you change Amazon’s Kindle DX?

You didn’t have to read much of our recent Kindle DX review to get a handle on our opinions of the super-sized e-reader, but as you’ve likely gleaned from the headline, this one’s not about us. Instead, we’re asking you to chime in with your take on this here device during this week’s How Would You Change. Did you really gain anything from the larger screen? Have you found it useful in your line of work / education? Are you down on the keyboard? Given Amazon’s history, we can’t imagine that the DX will stay in this form forever, and listen, wouldn’t you want to have a say in what gets changed on Revision B? Drop your most intimate thoughts on the matter below — who knows, maybe Sir Bezos is tuning in just to cash in on your two pennies.

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How would you change Amazon’s Kindle DX? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Aug 2009 03:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Move Over Kindle: Sony Launching Cheap New eBook Readers

sonyreaderpocketedition.jpg

Sony is hitting back against the Kindle this week with the launch of two new eBook readers shipping at the end of the month. The most enticing part about the devices? The cheap price tag. The Reader Pocket Edition and Reader Touch Edition are priced at $199 and $299, respectively.

Both devices have 512MB of built-in memory, get roughly two weeks of battery life (roughly 7,500 page turns), and ship with a protective sleeve and USB. Neither are wireless, but both support the eBook Store from Sony, which has access to more than one million free public domain books courtesy of Google.

The Reader Pocket Edition has a 5-inch screen and comes in blue, rose, and silver. The Reader Touch Edition features a 6-inch touch screen and ports for Memory Stick PRO Duo and SD card media. It will come in red, black and silver.

Sony to Introduce $200 E-reader

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Amazon watch out as Sony is set to launch an all-out offensive against the Kindle.  Sony plans to introduce two new e-readers priced at $200 and $300, according to a release from Sony.

The two new models—PRS-300 branded as Sony Reader Pocket and PRS-600 called Sony Reader Touch–will be available at the end of the month.

The  aggressive pricing on the new devices puts Sony ahead of its rivals. Amazon’s Kindle 2 retails for $300, while the large screen Kindle DX costs $490.  Even the cheapest of e-book readers today such as the Cool-er cost $250.

Specifications of the two Sony e-reader devices had leaked late last week.  The $200 Pocket will have a 5-inch display and will be available in colors including blue, rose and silver. The device can store about 350 standard eBooks. The $300 Touch will have a 6-inch touch screen display. Users can take handwritten notes with the stylus pen or type with the virtual keyboard. All notes can be exported and printed. But unlike the Kindle, both models do not have wireless connectivity.

Sony is also likely to cut prices of e-books in its store to match that of Amazon and the newly launched Barnes & Noble e-book store. New releases and bestseller titles in the eBook Store will be available for $10, said Sony.

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Photo: Sony PRS-700 Reader (Eirik Newth/Flickr)


Sony PS3 Price Drop Becomes More Likely

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A few telltale signs have popped up in the news this morning that the PlayStation 3 may be dropping in price soon.

Amazon has cut the price of the 160GB Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune bundle from $499 to $449–a $50 price drop for US consumers buying from the online retailer. Perhaps this is a hasty move on Amazon’s part–assuming that Sony will decrease the retail price–or maybe the company got a tip from the inside.

Also fueling the rumors is the news that Sony has doubled PS3 production. This makes sense, as PlayStation 3 manufacturing costs have dropped 70 percent since the console’s launch.

News sources and industry watchers are speculating that the announcement will be made at GamesCom in Cologne.

[Sony & Amazon story via gamesindustry.biz]

Why 2010 Will Be the Year of the Tablet

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After years of enticing rumors, ambitious prognostications and flat-out blather, 2010 may finally be the year that the tablet PC evolves from being a niche device to becoming a mainstream portable computer.

The tipping point comes via word to Wired.com from a well-connected industry executive that mainstream heavyweights Dell and Intel are collaborating on a touchscreen tablet due for release next year. Though our source has learned little about specifications of the device, what’s apparent is that the tablet will serve as a subscription-based e-reader for displaying newspapers, magazines and other media, giving Amazon’s Kindle — particularly, the nearly $500 large-format DX model — a run for its money.

As notable as the format is the business model: The tablet will be free for consumers who opt into a contract subscribing to one or more digital media subscriptions, according to our source. That’s similar to how telecom companies currently subsidize cellphones when customers agree to two-year contracts.

Our source, who requested to remain anonymous due to a non-disclosure agreement, said the companies are aiming to launch this product in about six months.

Dell and Intel are just the latest examples of a growing trend. MKM Partners analyst Tero Kuittinen said he, too, has heard rumors about not just Dell, but also handset makers Nokia and HTC delivering tablets by end of first quarter 2010. Nearly everyone has now confidently reported that Apple is launching a tablet by early next year. Singapore start-up Fusion Garage and TechCrunch are rushing to release the CrunchPad touchscreen tablet by this November.

Market research firm Display Search now projects the touchscreen market will triple in the next few years, from $3.6 billion to $9 billion.

“The iPhone was a big catalyst for the whole touchscreen industry, even if it’s just from a 3.5-inch mobile phone,” said Jennifer Halgrove, an analyst and director of display technologies with Display Search. “It encouraged people’s imaginations, and now companies are saying, ‘Oh, I can make a bigger one, and I can also have this user friendly interface.’ That really opened this industry.”

The idea of the tablet computer is nothing new to the tech industry. The development of tablet PCs can be traced as far back as 1888, when the United States Patent office granted a patent to electrical engineer Elisha Gray for an electrical-stylus device for capturing handwriting. In more recent years, plenty of hardware companies, such as Hewlett-Packard and Acer, have presented tablets that have only succeeded to fulfill a niche. Controlled with a stylus on a touch-sensitive “digitizer” screen, tablet PCs have traditionally been tailored toward artists and designers, failing to break into the mainstream.

But in recent years, costs of touchscreen components and software have been declining, and new types of touchscreens are emerging in the display market, Colegrove said. After stylus-controlled digitizer touchscreens came resistive touchscreens, which were very cheap to produce but suffered from low durability and poor transmittance. Then, a newer technology called capacitive touch became available, in which electrodes sense a user’s fingers on the X and Y axes, negating the need for a stylus.

In 2007, Apple featured capacitive touch technology (which it marketed with the more friendly term “multitouch”) in its iPhone and iPod Touch, which have sold 40 million units worldwide to date. Clearly, there is a mainstream audience for these keyboard-less computers, and Apple opened the doors with a superior user interface.

“The touch-based user interface is something we got from the handset market,” Kuittinen said. “And now that you have this innovation, it’s easier to go back to the tablet concept, and say, ‘Wait a minute, let’s add this.’ All of a sudden the device is a lot more appealing and sexier, especially since you have multitouch.”

A $0.00, media-centric tablet from Dell and Intel would certainly be competitive against Amazon’s Kindle in terms of price. Who would buy an Amazon Kindle reader if a free tablet were made available? The Kindle 2 costs $300, and the large-format Kindle DX runs for $490 — and even after purchasing a Kindle, consumers must still pay for content.

At Amazon’s Kindle DX launch event in May, The New York Times teased the idea of subsidizing longer term subscription commitments, but only in areas where “home delivery is not available.” Still, no such subsidy model has yet come into fruition for Amazon’s Kindles.

The idea of opting into a contract might initially sound like a turn-off, but Kuittinen told Wired.com that for cellphones, carrier-subsidy has been an extremely successful method to reel in customers. He said he would expect similar results with a subsidized tablet.

Kuittinen added that he has heard the Dell tablet would measure 5 inches — slightly larger than an iPhone but smaller than a Kindle. However, he said he is skeptical about Intel’s involvement with the product. Given the nature of the company, Intel would provide the guts of the device — perhaps a low-powered processor such as the Atom, which is currently used in netbooks. Kuittinen said this processor is not adequately energy-efficient to power a tablet PC compared to the ARM-based chips used in iPhones and devices running Google Android.

“There’s really no other viable alternative,” he said. “Android has such a strong moment right now. It’s going to be so much easier to develop for it.”

The low cost of Intel’s Atom chips would help keep the a rumored device’s overall price down in order to make subsidy not too hefty for content providers involved. But the software would be the key ingredient to drive the success for this device, and an Intel-based machine would either have to run a Windows or Linux-based operating system.

A tablet produced by Dell and Intel would most likely run a mobile version of Windows 7. In presentations marketing Windows 7, Microsoft has been heavily promoting the upcoming operating system’s support for multitouch. Windows 7 is slated for an October 2009 release.

The challenge for Dell and Intel is unlikely to be the creation of the product, but rather cementing negotiations with content partners. The companies will find it difficult convincing large newspaper companies to convert from being an advertisement-based business to a fee-based business. However, they might be more open to the idea if Dell and Intel keep their tablet at a low cost.

Intel and Dell declined to comment on this story.

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A MacBook modified into a tablet:  Jim Merithew/Wired.com


Palm Pre sales go live at Amazon

If you love the Pre, but hate Best Buy or Sprint, now you’ve got the option of nabbing one through an online reseller you can live with: Amazon. The device has just popped up on the super-retailer’s site, and like the aforementioned blue and yellow reseller, you don’t have to worry about any pesky mail-in rebates — the phone is $199.99 out the virtual door. Also of note, you can nab the non-contract version for $499.99, which is a $50 savings over the Sprint pricing, and certainly a value compared to Best Buy’s $749.99 price tag. Only bummer note? Amazon says these babies won’t ship for 4 to 6 weeks… which basically sucks.

[Via PhoneNews]

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Palm Pre sales go live at Amazon originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 02 Aug 2009 22:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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