"I was not at all surprised to find that experts are predicting the death of the compact disc in as little as 5 years. This article over at Ananova suggests the next format of music will be little fingernail-sized cards. As cool as these sound, is anyone else worried that sneaky industry folks might try to distribute all new music in DRM'ed WMA files?" Yeah, this description sounds basically like bigger Magic Gate, that wonderful situation where you can pay more than normal to get DRM.
Update: 11/13 16:45 GMT by H: As Robert Brooks pointed, this is sort of a dupe -see our previous article.
Forget the sneaky industry... What about the people that will steal those ultra small pieces of media? Also have you ever missplaced your keys... It's because their small...
I don't really think it's a issue even if it goes WMA. You can still convert them to MP3 and throw them on a CD-ROM.
PhaseDMA wrote:Forget the sneaky industry... What about the people that will steal those ultra small pieces of media? Also have you ever missplaced your keys... It's because their small...
I don't really think it's a issue even if it goes WMA. You can still convert them to MP3 and throw them on a CD-ROM.
And how exactly would you plug this chip into your computer to convert them to mp3 ??
Um the same way you would plug any other type of media into your computer? With a piece of hardware such as a CD-ROM drive type thing or card reader type thing.
PhaseDMA wrote:Forget the sneaky industry... What about the people that will steal those ultra small pieces of media? Also have you ever missplaced your keys... It's because their small...
I don't really think it's a issue even if it goes WMA. You can still convert them to MP3 and throw them on a CD-ROM.
And how exactly would you plug this chip into your computer to convert them to mp3 ??
Do you really think they'll make it so you can't read/make them with a computer? And even if they do, how long do you think it'll be before someone figures a way around it?
Master Jedi wrote:Do you really think they'll make it so you can't read/make them with a computer? And even if they do, how long do you think it'll be before someone figures a way around it?
uhh... the companies dont have to do this...
theres the Adaptoid (n64 controller to usb for emus), theres hardware so u can reconfig illegal directv cards, theres adapters to burn gameboy roms onto cartridges. companies arnt the only ones that make hardware... anyone w/ knowledge can create a cable/adapter to transfer data from that media to your computer.