Dualdisc – Yet Another Disc Format

The big four record labels have decided that the way to sell more is to launch a new format – and here it comes, DualDisc. EMI, Song BMG, Universal Music and Warner Music have been quietly scheming away to produce the new format, which, as its name suggests, is a CD – DVD hybrid.

Playable on just about any drive that can play either CDs or DVDs, the DVD partition of the disk can contain extras like videos, interviews and photo galleries. How does it work? It’s really not that sophisticated – it’s just a double-sided disc with a CD substrate on one side and a DVD substrate on the other. As the format has been approved by the DVD forum, it will be allowed to carry the DVD logo.

DVD-Audio and SACD have not been very successful, and this is an attempt to recapture a lost market.

CDs are about 1.2mm thick – the new format can be about 1.5mm thick, which may cause it to jam in some players, though it is still within the upper limit for the CD standard.

The key advantage for audiophiles is that music quality is preserved. Extras on CDs tend to eat into the amount of space available for storing music, so bit rates can suffer on longer discs. Better still, listeners can enjoy DVD-A quality encoding on the DVD side at home whilst using the CD side in their cars and personal stereos. Perhaps it’s not so evil after all.

The first titles will include albums from Five for Fighting, Audioslave and Dave Brubeck. Sorry, who are these things aimed at again?

“We are delighted to be offering the first in a series of DualDisc titles,” stated Doug Morris, Chairman and CEO of Universal Music Group. “By combining music, video, interactivity and portability in a single disc, DualDisc will add an exciting new dimension to the consumer’s musical experience.”

“Dual Disc opens a new, exciting creative dimension for artists to express themselves and connect with fans. It’s an entertainment-packed product and is a big step in our effort to give fans music whenever, however and wherever they want it,” said David Munns, Chairman and CEO EMI Music North America.

DVD Plus International, a German company, is claiming ownership of a patent relating to a dual-format DVD, called, predictably, DVD Plus. Since Dualdisc is set for an October launch, they had better sort that one out pretty sharpish.

DualDisc – coming soon

RealNetworks Deliver iPod Compatibility Through Harmony

RealNetworks have unveiled Harmony – a DRM translation tool that now makes it possible to transfer and play Real music downloads to Apple’s iPod. This new development means that Real’s music service is compatible with virtually every music player in the market.

Harmony is obviously Real’s answer to the resounding silence they met with after Rob Glaser contacted Steve Jobs with about Real and Apple working together.

Apple’s response is sure to be interesting as it means that iPod owners now have a choice of digital music online stores to fill their players from, and so they might not be entirely happy.

Real’s developers worked out how to make their player FairPlay-compatible purely by analysing publicly available information. This could be seen by some against the DMCA which expressly forbids reverse engineering and tampering with content protection systems.

This shouldn’t cause a problem with the legislation, however: Real are not defeating the FairPlay copy protection system, rather they are wrapping their own files in the FairPlay DRM.

Although potentially bad news for Apple, Harmony is great news for digital music fans – they can now transfer music from their various music stores to any music devices they may have. Not only does Harmony work with the iPod, but users can now perform the same trick with their Windows Media Player hardware too.

Harmony is built in to RealPlayer 10.5, which is available for download now.

Real.com

UK Analogue Radio Switch-Off Date Announced This Year

UK Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell has said that she will be reviewing digital radio adoption with the view to switching off the analogue service. The date for the switch-off is expected to come later this year. The statement came in the foreword to new report published by the Digital Radio Development Bureau.

The analogue TV signal is due to be switched off in 2010, but the government is yet to give any indication of the date that it expects to switch off the analogue radio signal.

Digital radios have enjoyed a strong growth in the UK, with sales up 444% this year – 600,000 have been sold this year already, and prices are set to fall to around £50 for some sets, with the development of new chips.

Many listeners are also enjoying radio through their internet connections, and indeed some sources estimate that, rather than a dying past-time, radio listening is set to grow by 10% over the next five years.

The Independent on the analogue radio switch off

Sony Launches Three Linux-based Car Navigation/Infotainment Systems

Sony's 3D mapping displaySony’s new range of in-car navigation systems, the NV-XYZ 33, 55 and 77 feature remarkably advanced 3D mapping, media players, GPS, hard drives and based on the Linux kernel.

The 3D mapping interface is clear and brightly coloured, and features representations of the actual buildings that you’re driving past to find that little store in Akihabara that has some of those Tom Nook figurines left over. In fact, the 800 x 480 pixel touch screen display throws around so many pastel polygons it looks just like Crazy Taxi. Depending on your driving style, of course.

Advertising for petrol stations and fast food outlets are built into the maps, making the 3D world you’re driving through even more accurate/annoying.

As the systems are for the Japanese market exclusively, maps are only available for Tokyo and other locations in the country.

Other software supplied with the units include a web browser, an email client and a word processor (no doubt for filing out those insurance claims after being distracted by too many in-car gadgets).

The 200 x 104 x 49 mm units are based on a MontaVista Hard-Hat Linux distribution, all models have CF card sockets for wireless cards and a USB2.0 interface for connecting to your PC. DVDs can be downloaded to the unit’s hard drive for viewing on the road.

The units are priced at 155,400 (33), 176,000 (55) and 207,900 (77) yen respectively. (€1164, €1319 and €1558).

Sony

UK Digital Radio Market Set to Double by 2005

The Digital Radio Development Bureau (DRDB) has claimed that the UK’s £45 million (€67.75 million) market is going to double by the end of the year.

There are currently 547,000 digital radios in use in the UK, and this is hoped to expand to 1 million by 2005.

Why the sudden jump? One theory is that personal stereos and portable music systems equipped with digital radios are about to hit the market, rapidly increasing the installed base. As the cost of integrating a digital tuner into consumer electronics declines, many more audio devices that featured analogue only tuners will get digital ones by default.

The DRDB is a trade body funded and supported by the BB and commercial radio operators, with a remit to ensure the swift adoption of digital radio in the UK, so you can imagine that they’re pleased at this proposed sudden spike in uptake.

The Digital Radio Development Bureau

Apple’s AirPort Express Streams Music to Your Digital Home With AirTunes

Apple have just released AirPort Express – a wireless adapter that lets Mac and PC users set up an instant 802.11g network at home.

The seven ounce box fits into the palm of your hand and is essentially a 802.11g transceiver with an audio out connection on it – plug your stereo into it, and it’ll play music streamed to it from your iTunes-equipped PC or Macintosh. AirTunes even has a feature to select which AirPort Express adaptor receives music.

The unit also contains a mains adapter so it can be plugged directly into the mains without any further cables.

You can do all the usual things with AirPort Express too – share your internet connection and printers, and the unit has a built in USB port and network socket.

AirPort Express costs US$129 (€105), which might seem a little on the pricey side for a 802.11g transceiver with only one network port on it, but then this one is based around being easy to use, acts as a repeater, contains the AirTunes circuitry and has Apple’s usual lovely stylings. Home wireless kit is currently very ugly and is not as straightforward to set up as some manufacturers would have you believe. With AirPort’s design heritage and simplification of the wireless networking concept, if anyone can get 802.11g to go mainstream, it’s Apple. Promoting the unit to PCs users is a great idea, as Apple no doubt learned from making the iPod PC-compatible. Apple’s Airport Express

Creative Lab’s Portable Multimedia Centre

We can look forward to yet another entrant to the growing portable media jukebox market – this time from Creative. The Zen Portable Multimedia Centre has a 3.8” TFT screen, 20gb hard drive and Windows Portable Media Centre installed.

The Portable Multimedia centre is compatible with Windows Media versions 7 to 9, will also play MP3 files and display JPG and TIFF images.

The unit can record video directly from a television tuner, as well as import files from Windows XP. Using Microsoft’s implementation of MPEG4 means that content providers will have full control over how movies are watched and stored with the device.

Creative are being tight-lipped about the unit’s battery life and weight, instead concentrating on it’s media playback and synchronisation features.

Creative Labs on the Zen Portable Multimedia Centre

More on the specifications

Jens Nylander (Jens of Sweden) on the Future of Digital Music Devices: Digital Lifestyler interview

It has become something of a truism to say that modern companies need to approach today’s consumers with new attitudes and techniques. Digital lifestyles consumers are much more technologically and business savvy than any other generation of customers, and are certainly more demanding.

We have set out to speak to the best of the new thinkers in digital business, in whatever sector they operate. Today we have chosen digital music, as it affected by many of the problems facing other sectors and is and the source of some of the most exciting innovation (and harmful mistakes) in the business world at the moment.
Jens of Sweden are a young Scandinavian company that have produced three MP3 players – and have been enormously successful in their home market. In fact, the founder and MD of the company, 25 year old Jens Nylander, has become something of a celebrity in his home country, due to his refreshing take on consumer electronics and his approach to designing and marketing the devices his company produces. He has some very strong opinions about consumer electronics, and how to reach, and keep, his customers.

After only a year, Jens of Sweden have a turnover of SEK70 million (€7.68 million), and a loyal customer base across Scandinavia.

The public’s first point of contact with digital music tends to be when they finally spot a music player that they think is groovy and they want to buy. Acquisition of a gadget is often the first step into an new enthusiasm. The iPod is a good example: Apple knew that most of the people who would want one didn’t know or care about MP3s, AACs or DRM, but they did know that they’d like something shiny that they could brag about to friends.

There are a number of digital music players coming onto the market these days, and they take many forms. Portable CD players that play disks with MP3s on them have been out for a while, Sony’s NetMD expansion of the Minidisc format has seen some success and may expand further if Sony’s ATRAC-based music service takes off. Remember, NetMDs do not play MP3s – they play ATRAC-encoded music files and are quite closed systems when it comes to putting music on them and taking it back off again.

Of course, Flash memory and hard drive-based players are where the action is, and most consumer interest seems to be focussed there. New players based on these two hardware categories appear almost daily, and there is a broad range of players in each one. To get a consumer product like a digital music player noticed in the market these days, you need to offer something different, or the Sonys and Apples out there will beat you every time.

On top of this, we’ve discovered that not all MP3 players are equal – some are less than straightforward to use and there are disadvantages to each platform. For example, Flash memory players have sigificantly less storage than hard drive based players, but they’ll be playing your music long after your iPod’s battery has died for the day. However, on a long trip with a Flash memory player, you may well have grown tired of hearing the same six albums before the battery gives out.

I interviewed Jens Nylander to find out what his thinking was in introducing yet another range of MP3 players, when there were so many out there to chose from.

Jens Nylander from Jens of SwedenFirst off, I asked him what his motivation was in designing the players: “My motivation is based on design rather than technology. It seems that I have always loved design and things that work very easily, rather than complicated things, as most of the gadgets are on the market. Most of the technology is trying to put new things with new cool features on the market as soon as they have them available – it’s like a race. The newest, coolest gadget gets the most attention.”

“So what I’m trying to do with our company and our trademark is to change this: by making technology into design. But, [our products are] for the general public, not for a limited number of customers like Bang and Olufsen and similar brands.”

“We take technology that is already in the market and proven to work very well, put them together in products and make them look Scandinavian. We Scandinavians like devices that are easy to use and should not be complicated. It should have good dimensions, the weight should be low – we are trying fulfil all of these things with our product assortment.”

Jens is looking to produce devices that work more like appliances – appliances based on reliability and tested technology. He’s not just stopping with MP3 players though – next up could be PCs.

“Today we are working on digital music players, we have three different models. In the future, we’re going to do the same in other product areas.”

“Apple have a good business idea – they are designing computers that look amazing. If I were to put a computer in my living room, it would be an Apple, not a PC. Bill [Gates] is trying to put computers in the living room, but they don’t match the designs people have in there.”

“So we’re working in digital music, and bringing music into the living room by attaching small devices to home stereo systems. We’re also looking at PCs, a box that can be placed anywhere in the home and looks much better – one that doesn’t have a large chassis, and is made of better materials. Completely different from our competitors.”

I mentioned the Hoojum range of cases, with their attractive and wallet-threatening new Nanode, the nanoITX case coming out later this year.

“Hoojum are really good at developing these things, but they are not perfect. If you put something in a small cubic box it should be easy, but it’s not because you have to add a PC screen that looks similar. If you buy a Philips or a Viewsonic or other brand and try to put it with a Hoojum, it will look really strange.

“It’s also quite hard to get a Hoojum working on its own if you are not a technology enthusiast. We want to make something that is much, much easier.”

Cases and appearances are one thing, and I personally think they’re an easy fix: a new case can be designed by one person and be in fabrication in a couple of weeks. However, operating systems aren’t quite there yet, are they? Often appliance PCs are let down by something they have no control over: the operating system that ends up being installed on them. Even Windows XP Media Centre edition is complex and full of too many features for a simple living room PC. What does Jens intend to do about operating systems? Could they produce their own for their appliances?

It’s not an area they wish to get into: “You will only catch a small market if you make a special operating system, so we will be stuck with Windows, but you can cut out a lot of the functionality.”

Jens is unhappy with the constant revisions that hardware and software manufacturers make to their products, “Manufacturers are trying to put too many functions into one box – and that’s the problem, you get bugs. Manufacturers swap to new models every year – it’s going too fast for them. We would like to keep products simple, and keep them for a long time. Updating them with small modifications is reasonable.”

The company is pursing the mass market, not just the enthusiast – and the dreaded “Ikea” word came into the conversation.

“We are looking a supplying larger quantities than the exclusive brands,” said Jens, “We would like most people to have our products in their homes or when they are travelling. It’s like Ikea – you get a broad public, you get a price for a product that’s better value than your competitors.

“Our MP3 players are bought by everyone – and everyone is pleased with the quality, they have an identification with the product. They feel that it is great to have it, that it works, it doesn’t fail when you are [playing sports].”

The company’s currently largest MP3 players (512Mb) can hold about 150 tracks – tiny when compared to even the smallest hard drive music players available, although they are planning a 1Gb version. Would the company be moving away from Flash memory devices in favour of larger storage capacities? Jens has a number of very good reasons for steering clear of microdrives for the time being.

“It’s interesting to see that small hard drives are increasing in capacity, but there is a limited market for hard drive-based players. They have rotating mechanical parts that can fail, they take more battery, if you drop them on the floor they can break. They also have a higher failure rate during production. I don’t know why you should have a hard drive player. The only thing that is better is the capacity. So, what are we giving the consumer if it’s not this kind of capacity?

“We are producing an extremely small product that can be used every day. Storing 10,000 tracks on an iPod isn’t as good as having a product that only weighs 40 grams, compared to 200 grams.

“The success the iPod has had in the US is penetration – they have told everyone it is a lifestyle product.”

“We have been discussing this for a long time: should we switch over to a couple of hard drive product?. We will not do so. Memory chips will get smaller, they will cut down the voltage, they will get better battery life. Hard drive players will get more problems – like bad sectors.”

“In Scandinavia last year, the market for Flash-based MP3 players was about 150,000 units, and for hard drive players it was 20,000 units. In the US, the popularity is switched, but with different numbers of course.”

Jens current models have USB1.1 interfaces for uploading music and files from PCs. USB1.1 was superseded some time ago by the faster USB2.0 standard. Although some customers have asked about USB2.0 models, these will be a while yet in appearing: “There are problems with USB2.0 – [speed] bottlenecks with memory and stability issues. We need everyone to be pleased, and just putting USB2.0 on there would cause problems. We need to work on it for a couple of months to iron out problems, and we need faster memory with lower voltage and then we would do it.”

Simplicity and reliability is obviously important to Mr Nylander, and he has no wish to introduce superfluous features that may detract from his devices’ core functions, or cause problems.

“People are putting digital cameras in things – like the iRiver IP1000. It has a 0.3 megapixel camera. Why would you use that? I don’t understand that. It’s so limited, and makes the device more expensive to produce.”

“If you make a rule of bringing out new things every year, then the public will expect it, and people will wait for the new product. It’s better to wait, wait, wait, wait … then bring out a great product.

“I have been buying cell phones since the beginning, but somehow I have convinced myself that I don’t need everything – a long battery life and simple to use. They put so many things into mobile phones that the user interface is so slow now.”

Of course, it had to be asked: how long until their first video player?

“Video is for enthusiasts at the moment, it’s in too many different formats. The market for each is too limited. The broad public is ready for products with DVD slots – a device that just plays DVDs. The way to go today is to make cheaper products that play DVDs, but don’t have hard drives. I think we will wait until 2005 before releasing a product with a hard drive, because it is too early now.”

Jens is keen to build a bond with his customers, to attract the same kind of brand loyalty that Sony and Apple currently enjoy. However, once the company’s products enjoy international success, he’ll probably have to change his mobile phone number: “It’s important to give customers quality, support and service, to stay with them. We have sold almost 100,000 players, we have always been helpful.”

“I had a phone call two days ago from a customer. He rang my cellphone – he’d had a cycle accident, and had hurt himself, but wanted to tell me that his player still worked, though it didn’t look very nice any more.” Jens asked the customer to send in the player and it was restored to its old self. “That’s why customers pay a little more – but in return, you get more.”

So it’s not just about producing a device and getting mass market sales?

“It’s much more fun for me and my colleagues to build a brand, rather than just sell stuff.”

The company’s players are compatible with Microsoft’s Windows Media format files, but they do not incorporate Microsoft’s digital rights management. Jens believes that incorporating DRM into the player would be “too much work for not enough benefit. My general idea is to make everything as free as possible. If we make music easy to download cheaply then illegal downloads will drop off.”

A fair price for downloaded music is something that has been discussed ever since the first online music store – and we’ve yet to see the market settle down. The average price at the moment seems to be $0.99 (€0.83), but some labels would like to see it go higher.

“A reasonable cost for music is $0.50 (€0.42). A smaller fee means people will buy more music, rather buying a few songs and downloading the rest illegally. Subscriptions services are a good idea.”

Finally, I asked Jens what his advice to music publishers and stores would be to finally take digital music into the mass market:

“Get out there and sell music cheaply!”

 

We will be carrying a full review of the Jens MP-130 next week.

Jens of Sweden

Hoojum’s Nanode

MP3 discussion in the UK, with links to original music – Josaka

Nintendo DS and Sony PSP news hits mainstream

E3, the LA games show, is on the nearly upon us and it’s a reflection on the level of competition within the games industry these days that lots of news is coming out prior to the show. Yesterday we covered the pre-show news of EyeToy:Chat and today Reuters is covering the upcoming battle between Sony and Nintendo with their new handhelds.

To those who have been following the gaming market, the arrival of the Sony PSP and Nintendo DS are not news. What will be news is the exact specification and capabilities of them, as most discussion on the subject has been conjecture.

What is known is that the PSP will be more than a games machine, it will also play music and films. The DS will have two screens – DS stands for Dual Screen.

Nintendo has tempted furious discussion in how the DS will be operated, with some who may know more added to this. “This will not be a machine where you push the ‘A’ button or ‘B’ button and move the direction pad, but a completely different way to interact with the device,” said Hirokazu Hamamura, president of “Famitsu” game magazine publisher EnterBrain.

Nintendo has been very strong in the past in getting their gaming platforms working together. The portable GameBoy Advance (GBA) can connect to the GameCube games console, and in fact games such as Animal Crossing let the game characters pass between the two to ‘live’ between them. As we’ve previously covered, Sony is planning to mirror this with the PSP, PS2 and PSX connecting.

Before either the PSP or DS are released, Nokia will be releasing its new version of N-Gage, the QD. We will be testing and reviewing it at the end of May.

Reuters – Sony, Nintendo Aim to Wow Gamers with New Handhelds

Data-over-DAB: GWR/BT partnership announced

The widespread understanding of DAB is in its use to provide the next generation of radio and many have found the advantages that the CD-quality audio broadcast bring.

We at Digital-Lifestyles have been excited about using DAB to broadcast data efficiently to many devices since 2002 when it first came to our attention. DAB has a theoretical total output of up to 1.7 Mbits per second and has the major advantage that is broadcast. The costs of distribution of content is fixed, no matter how many people receive it, – the opposite to other data delivery channels such as GRPS or 3G.

Last year we saw a number of devices being demonstrated at IBC2003, some which used GSM and DAB, others combined GPRS and DAB, all featured the receipt of data over DAB and the provision of a back channel over the cellular services.

A number of trials have also been run. There was a six month trial in the UK which started in October 2003, run by Capital Radio PLC, NTL Broadcast and RadioScape Ltd which delivered Dolby 5.1 surround sound over live Internet Protocol (IP) datacasting using the Windows Media 9 Pro CoDec.

Today we are pleased to see that UK broadcaster GWR and BT wholesale have come together to create a new digital multi-media UK broadcast operation. The new entity will create mobile broadcast services to deliver multi-media content such as news, sports and entertainment. They plan to launch a London-wdie service during 2005, and expand across the Uk in 2006.

The new venture will utilise Digital One’s digital broadcasting capacity, running alongside eight national digital radio stations. Digital One is 63% owned by GWR. The rest of details for the deal are fairly complex and we would suggest reading the press release to get a full understanding, but GWR are confident of additonal earnings from it with an estimated £5m in the year ending March 2008.

Data over DAB sounds like a great idea – it is but sadly there are currently a couple of obstacles to everyone receiving broadband-type delivery speeds of content to portable handsets.

The most significant is that enshrined in UK law is a restriction on the balance between the bandwidth that must be used audio broadcast and that for data. The original 1996 Broadcasting Act specified that data must take up no more that 10% but in a 1998 review by the Secretary of State this was changed 20% of the multiplex over a 24 hours period. Glyn Jones, Operations Director of Digital One told Digital-Lifestyles that through negotiation with the UK regulator OFCOM they have agreed to alter their licence by changing two of the radio services original included Digital One’s licence – a rolling news service from ITN and a financial information service from Bloomberg – which were withdrawn in 2002. They will be replaced with the GWR/BT wholesale service and Digital One is confident that this will not exceed their 20% data allocation.

DAB receiver cards have been developed as add-ons for portable devices, but there will be a delay before it becomes mass market as the DAB chipsets need to be incorporated into mobile phones and devices before it can really fly.

Keep your eye on this one. We feel it is still a very exciting means of wide spread delivery of content.

 

Examples of possible services provided by GWR/BT:

News and sport: – There would be no need to dial-up to find out the news & sport. Every time the user picks up the device the very latest information will be available to browse. It is similar to having a news portal on the phone without the need to pay each time the user wants to look at it nor the wait to dial-up and down load information. It is already there and can be used 24/7 for a low fixed fee.

Traffic congestion: – Breaking traffic and travel updates would be always available on the phone or PDA, ready to be checked when the user is on the move. There would be no need to dial-up each time to discover delays, the information is constantly pushed onto the phone memory and can be accessed for a low fixed cost. The latest information replaces out of date information automatically making it very efficient and simple to use.

Live entertainment device – the mobile phone or PDA becomes a live entertainment device as it will automatically receive games downloads and movie previews to be played at any time. Games can be played at any time with others using the mobile phone connection as well as movie clips forwarded.

Stock market information – the PDA could have a stock market ticker and share updates constantly refreshing. There is no need to dial-up for the latest business and financial information as it is directly broadcast to the device.

GWR Press release – GWR and BT create mobile digital datacasting operation