Mon Sep 22, 2008 12:00AM EDT
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Buying music sans a physical backup (as in buying from iTunes) not your bag? Now you'll have an alternative to audio CDs. And no, I don't mean vinyl. SanDisk today is launching a brave new experiment in music sales: slotMusic, which puts audio tracks on a tiny microSD card and which will be sold, preloaded, at retail.
This isn't some podunk trial project: All four major music labels are onboard for the launch, as are Best Buy and Wal-Mart.
Why microSD? The format is being plugged as an alternative for users with music-capable mobile phones, many of which have microSD slots that go largely unused. A consumer can buy a card, pop it into his phone, and be immediately up and running, so there's no need to wait until you're back at your computer to purchase tracks online, and no need to rip a CD. (On the other hand, you will still have to actually physically purchase the music, but if you're out and about already...)
slotMusic will include DRM-free MP3 tracks, typically encoded at 320kbps, so users will get high fidelity music without having to worry about downgraded audio. Most slotMusic cards will be 1GB in capacity. Buyers will be free to back up the music to their hard drives at any time (each card will include a tiny USB adapter; an example—not slotMusic, but close enough—is pictured above), and of course they can overwrite a card later with other data when they're tired of listening to the music on it. Pricing will be dependent on retailers, but SanDisk tells me it will be competitive with CDs and "as expected."
Initially you can expect regular albums to be ported to the slotMusic format, but depending on its success, we might see labels making custom "mix cards" of popular tunes, which would seem to fit well with the grab-and-go consumer who's looking for something to listen to on his phone.
The million-dollar question, of course, is whether the market is big enough and interested enough for slotMusic. I'm a big fan of alternatives in the audio market, and slotMusic so far is hitting all the right notes—no DRM, high bitrate, ostensibly reasonable prices—but I wonder if consumers haven't moved past the "one piece of media, one album" mentality altogether. Also, swapping microSD cards on many phones can be a real pain (some have the card located underneath the battery, ugh), and the tiny cards will be incredibly easy to lose. No one will travel with more than one card in tow for fear of losing it along with his spare change. And even the cheapest MP3 player can crank out hundreds of songs instead of the mere dozen you'll get on a slotMusic card. If you meet a specific set of criteria—need music right away, have no MP3 player, and have a microSD slot on your phone—slotMusic will be a good solution for you. How many people that really comprises, I don't know.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Wow no more scratched discs probably great sound quality since it comes from Sandisk I think it will work. Just hope there is a broad range of music choices that will also help decide if the idea fails or not
I'd be interested in this. I've been wondering how long it would take before the idea was in the works. Hopefully they can make a Metal genre SD card. I'd pick one up in a heartbeat.
Wow no more scratched discs probably great sound quality since it comes from Sandisk I think it will work. Just hope there is a broad range of music choices that will also help decide if the idea fails or not
methinks its a great idea, just for one reason alone- my young son has scratched more cd's (and dvd's) then i care to count, this alternative to disks is a viable alternative, no surface to scratch-i likey. on the other hand, they are dinky, said child also has a ds and loses his games for it left and right, and they are about the same size, so thats a con right there. and i would have to agree with an earlier post, it does indeed smack of the minidisk, which died with barely anyone noticing, let alone living without anyone noticing! but for me at least, the pros outweigh the cons, i dig the whole idea. alas, in rebuttal to hgreerii- as the point is stated in the article, the target audience is for folks that dont own an mps player, or like me, do own one, but has no slot for this sd card. and yet, many electronics do, hence the point of this idea.
Looking through the comments I think people are not wanting to walk around with 50 sd cards and have to change them out. The idea is to purchase an "album" on sd then download it to the pc,mp3 player or larger card as you would a cd. I don't think the sd will replace the cd but if given the choice I will pick a sd over cd any day of the week. I will also download musik from the popular "napster" like pay sites. It's just giving the consumer another option I think it will sell enough to be worht Sandisk's time.
the same problem with securing the content exists even in the itunes store. Just burn music you bought to a cd and hand it to your friend, who can then download it to his pc.
nice $59.99 per sd card what a rip of when I can scoop a 8gb blank micro sd for under $50. also dont the phones/ hardware need to have a firmware upgrade to support this bull----- extension
Cool, I think this is a great idea.. I would totally buy them to listen in my car and maybe my phone to cause my phone actually has a slot on the side of it. Its cool cause you can copy the music to your computer and probably put it in your mp3 player if you like. Imagine buying a whole discography on a micro-SD card, sweeeeettt...
I Just hope the music comes in a compatible format..
I find a problem with the fact of price. A blank micro SD card costs between 20 to 40 dollars. Then you add a full set of songs to it? Doesnt sound like something I'd be able to afford even if for some reason I did want it.
CAN A BLANK MICRO SD DOWNLOAD MUSIC FROM MY COMPUTER
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46 Posted by n8vep on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:32PM EDT Report Abuse
I've been ripping cds to cards for several years now. I have a camera that plays these mp3s and two mp3 players that also take cards. What is the big deal supposed to be with this? In fact, why even write about it at all. I bet millions of people are already doing this.