So
“Fairplay Version 3” apparently has the ability to
handle expiring content. If I had to hazard a guess, I’d say
that Apple could, if they wanted, apply the same expiration logic
to music. Steve Jobs has repeatedly stated that customers
don’t like to rent their music, and the relative success of
online music sellers (e.g. iTunes, Amazon, eMusic) as
opposed to renters (Rhapsody, etc.) would seem to bear
that out.
Still, it’s an interesting new wrinkle.
:: Dave Walker 08:10 (EST/EDT) [+]
:: [/entertainment/music]
:: tags: music
:: Comments (1)
When I woke up, the rental I started last night had stalled at the 75% point. Clicking the little revolvo-reloado iconlet in the iTunes downloads list revived it, and it finished up in about 15 minutes. Considering that I lost my IP connection a dozen times earlier Tuesday evening (the hotel wifi went through a really crappy phase), I’m really not going to harp on the download performance too much.
I disagree a small bit with Sven
on the rentals being overpriced —
edit: I misread Sven a bit there
(see comments)
A new DVD release from
Blockbuster or Hollywood Video is going to be priced @ about $3 for
a rental, and I have to travel to the store both to pick it up and
to return it. I’m perfectly willing to kick in an extra buck
to avoid that trip, especially during a Michigan winter. I imagine
that price constitutes a decent margin both for Apple and the
studios, but I don’t really have a problem with that. One
could argue that library titles could be a little cheaper, but
whatever.

Some of the suckiest things about the rentals seem to be things the studios would have insisted on to keep cable, satellite, and physical rental outlets happy, namely:
It seems as though the content cartels are negotiating from a stronger postition than they were back when the iTunes store debuted — it seems like with every new media product added to the store, they get a few more concessions: TV shows were more restricted than songs (no burning of physical copies), movies for sale were more restricted than TV shows (much less desirable pricing), movie rentals expire aggressively on a 30-day/24 hour schedule.
As others have mentioned, a Netflix-like model where you’re able to keep a certain number of films rented for a fixed monthly fee would have been great, but it’s not to be, at least not for this go-around.
On my MacBook, the video and sound quality were completely acceptable. The horizontal resolution is 640 pixels, slightly less than a physical DVD, so zoomed up to 1280 pixels the picture quality was slightly “soft” but nothing too dramatic. I didn’t see any artifacts like macroblocking. Framerate was rock steady (I was running full-screen and not doing anything else, however.) Sound quality was fine through noise cancelling headphones. One thing worth noting is that my fans spun up from time to time — h.264 is a fairly demanding playback codec. I’m not sure how often the fans came up (yay for noise cancellation), but that might be an issue running from battery or in quiet surroundings.

Amusingly enough, the other bit visible in iTunes’ info window:
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As for the movie itself, er, I’ve seen better…
:: Dave Walker 07:26 (EST/EDT) [+]
:: [/entertainment/movies]
:: tags: movies
:: Comments (1)
Ken Thompson has an automobile which he helped design. Unlike most automobiles, it has neither speedometer, nor gas gauge, nor any of the numerous idiot lights which plague the modern driver. Rather, if the driver makes any mistake, a giant "?" lights up in the center of the dashboard. "The experienced driver", he says, "will usually know what's wrong."