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RealNetworks opens its DRM-free music store with a bang

Heads up to all the music lovers out there: RealNetworks’ Rhapsody online music service opened up a new, DRM-free MP3 store, and it's giving away a free download of any $10 album to the first 100,000 people that sign up.

It’s important to note that at the time of this writing, it appears that the site is buckling under what I would hope to be a surge in traffic – most of my activities on the site  generally result in a lengthy timeout followed by a black-text-on-white-background “Proxy Error”.

Earlier this afternoon – when Rhapsody was responding to requests in a timely manner – I used the free album opportunity to consult my Amazon wishlist and pick up Venetian Snares’ “My Downfall (Original Soundtrack). The experience was unexpectedly pleasant.

Why unexpected? RealNetworks has something of a reputation; its infamous RealPlayer is one of the most annoying applications ever to grace the world’s PCs. The company's streaming codec is long dead; RealVideo may have seen use in the days of dial-up but nowadays anything encoded with it nowadays tends to look and sound bad. With Rhapsody’s MP3 store, my expectations were low: would I have to jump through hoops with a custom client to download my music? Would my downloads be unacceptably slow? Would I have to put up with nag offers or other assorted crud just to get to my files?

The answer, on all fronts, is a satisfied “no”. While you certainly can download Rhapsody’s music client, if you don’t want to then you are free to receive your music in a ZIP file and then dump its contents wherever – drag the files from Explorer into your music player of choice (mine’s Winamp) and go. Easy as pie! The MP3 files I downloaded were appropriately tagged – though they classify Venetian Snares as “Electronica/Dance” where a more specific tag such as “IDM,” “glitchcore” or “drill’n’bass” might be appropriate – and included a small, if serviceable, 170x170 JPEG of the album’s cover art. Downloads are also tagged with text detailing a purchase date and transaction ID, which is stored in each MP3’s comment field.

Unfortunately I can’t really compare my experience with Rhapsody to other, more popular music stores. When I’m not buying CDs or vinyl records, I usually purchase music online at specialty shops like Beatport or Digital-Tunes.net. I have a personal boycott of iTunes – don’t even have it installed, even though I use an iPod – and I usually buy used CDs from Amazon partners or local record stores as opposed to MP3 downloads. Rhapsody MP3’s experience was comparable to the other stores I do have experience with, and offering me a ZIP file was a nice touch. The quality of my music was what one might expect for a 256 kilobit MP3, which is to say excellent for all but the most trained of ears.

If I had any complaints – aside from its website being down as I write this – I would have preferred MP3s encoded at 320 kilobits, which is the maximum quality setting for standard MP3 compression. Even better: an option to download files in a lossless format such as FLAC, which would give discerning customers such as myself files that are equivalent to a CD. After loading my downloads into a sound editor and creating a spectrogram (visual analysis of a sound file) I noticed what appears to be a hard low-pass filter that cuts off all sound above the 19-to-19.5khz range – just under the upper limit for human hearing – but that is a minor complaint most likely having something to do with the MP3 process itself, and irrelevant to all but the snobbiest of music purists.

Overall, I would consider Rhapsody’s MP3 store a worthy contender in the growing arena of DRM-free music stores. I certainly can’t recommend against buying music at Rhapsody, especially since you get a no-strings-attached free album for your troubles.



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IT'S JUST B.S.!
By josh562 on 7/1/2008 4:25:26 AM , Rating: 2
The album offer is vaporware! I tried and all I got was a 404 page! Then I clicked a different link and got a pop-up saying "We've detected you're not in the United States", which I am temporarily, "Rhapsody MP3 store is only available in the U.S.", although my account is all U.S. based.

For iTunes MS it doesn't matter where you are, as long as you can establish a billing presence in that store's country. I have accounts in iTMS in two different countries. Plus, iTunes has a way around DRM and also sells plenty of music with the plus DRM free format in better quality already anyway.

And lastly, No other store will be able to integrate the FREE distribution of podcasts along with the music like iTMS has. Rhapsody and Real can bite me. They're no major player, if they can't play on the WORLD wide web (emphasis intended)!




RE: IT'S JUST B.S.!
By Kefner on 7/1/2008 11:30:37 AM , Rating: 1
Sucks you had a problem, I went there, created an account and downloaded my album in like 10 mins.


By hellokeith on 7/1/2008 12:27:20 PM , Rating: 2
Well I already had an account with Best Buy Digital Music Store and its accompanying software, which were partners with or taken over by Rhapsody sometime in the past. So I didn't have to create a new account, but I did have to put a credit card on file (I'd preferred not to), though it's no biggie since I've already bought MP3's from Amazon and Napster. You get 20 free streaming plays (high quality) per month for free whether or not you buy anything, which is very good since you can listen to songs all the way through to see if you like them before buying.

Thanx for the head's up on this free offer! $10 was immediately credited to my account.. bonus!




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