Machine Shop: Hype Machine Team Blog

Digital Music Forum East – Day 2

The second day of DMFE was indeed more fun.

The DRM argument continued in the morning on the “Device & Format Wars” panel. Tim Bucher (CEO of Zing) and Robert Khedouri (Co-Founder MusicGremlin) discussed the idea of transparent DRM where the music purchased or shared goes from the service provider straight to an audio device (portable player, networked jukebox, etc) without ever spending any time on a PC. This would increase security and provide a hugely better user experience, they said.

This is a great idea, but yet the interoperability issue still doesn’t have me sold. If I got tired of my Zing-powered device, onto which I’ve already loaded 500 purchased tracks (let’s assume $500), and decided to pick up something new from new manufacturer or someone not using compliant technology; I would be screwed. So ultimately, this isn’t the solution either, though a good effort.

The panel also had David Pakman (CEO of eMusic) and Jason Reindorp (Director at Microsoft Zune), which left me waiting for interesting comments to fly between the two. I was not disappointed when Jason opened a comment with:

“There are a lot of business models, like selling open MP3 files, that are not proven yet …”

David didn’t respond, but he may disagree. At the end, the panel was asked to vote on whether selling unprotected MP3s would create a boom in digital music sales, with a nearly unanimous Yes.

At an interview that followed, Marty Diamond (Founder of Little Big Man Booking) spoke about live events and what the Internet has and hasn’t done for him in practice of organizing shows (he found some real limits in the digital world – there’s just no substitute for relationships, a good reminder). He also relayed a conversation with someone from a secondary ticketing service, where the ticketing rep wanted to explain the service and why it exists:

“Didn’t you ever deal drugs while you were in college? … Sell part of your stash so that you can get the rest for free?”

There were two more interviews: one with Thomas Hesse (President of Global Digital Business at Sony BMG) and another with Bruce Warren (Asst. GM of Programming at WXPN). Thomas touched upon the need for encouraging “editorial environments”, which let people “find music they wouldn’t have otherwise found” . Bruce expanded on this further by talking about “music discovery communities”, and how participating in one such community (music blogs) was a huge help in developing better programming at WXPN. Turns out, Bruce even has a music blog: Some Velvet Blog.

This is precisely why I’ve built The Hype Machine – it was thrilling to hear these guys’ take on it too. I love it!
The social discovery panel turned out to be disappointing, with questions like “Does social discovery drive sales of music?” from the moderator. Or maybe, having Ali Partovi (iLike), Tim Westergren (Pandora) and Martin Kay (Finetune) in the same room left me with big expectations.

Digital Music Forum East – Day 1

Thanks to Dan Porter and Ned Sherman, Taylor and I are at the Digital Music Forum in New York. The event consists of panels on all things digital music for two days, along with networking breaks and all the usual conference goodness.

The first panel of the day, “The State of the Digital Union”, was easily the best one. There was some healthy debate on DRM and discussion of Steve Jobs’ recent Thoughts on Music.

A quote from Thomas Gewecke (President of Global & US Sales of Sony BMG) sums it up well:

“DRM is all about letting the user do things”

Thomas and a few other panelists argued that DRM would work well, if the technology vendors cooperated and created inter-operable systems, so that the resulting DRM-protected audio files would work on all devices.

I wholeheartedly agree – it’s likely DRM would work great if that condition was met. Consumers would even embrace this technology, if it was properly implemented and presented. Though, assuming that hell has no intention of freezing over, I am not holding my breath for the iTMS-Zune-Rhapsody open-standard DRM system.

A neat addition to the panels was a Mozes.com live SMS message board where attendees could post real-time commentary on the panels by sending a SMS. A good source of spicy questions from the audience and great comments:

“Problems in music will definitely be solved by 50 year olds in suits in this room”

This one appeared just as the first panel was wrapping up. Enough said.

The other panels were fairly predictable. A panel on branding touched upon the difficulties in working in the experimental user-contributed content space for brands. Another panel on mobile content revealed that, well… people buy a lot of ringtones and would buy even more if it was easier.

And that’s all for today, tomorrow’s lineup looks more promising.

The Hype Machine is now at hypem.com

That’s much less typing for everyone, all fingers celebrate!

hypem.com

Had this for a while, but now the switch is official!

Craigslist as a Mobile Entertainment Platform

The other week I picked up a Blackberry and in addition to the fine e-mail device that it is, it also turned out to be a killer mobile entertainment gadget.

After all, if I can read Craigslist on the subway, bus or during uneventful lecture moments, do I really need fancy overproduced mobile video?

Craigslist on blackberry

Craigslist beats crappy video anytime.

Frank Zappa on CNN Crossfire in 1986

Stumbled into interesting, and at times surreal, footage of Frank Zappa on CNN Crossfire where he debates free speech & censorship as it applies to music lyrics.

Wikipedia has more to say on the subject, indicating that these appearances were part of a larger debate started by the Parents Music Resource Center in their campaign to create a rating system for music similar to that used by the MPAA. The result was a little different than they hoped, but now CDs with explicit lyrics do carry a relevant generic label we’ve all seen.

Check the two appearances out below – well worth watching if only for Zappa’s arguments:

March 28th, 1986 (Click to watch at Google Video)

June 13th, 1987 (Click to watch at iFilm)

WHAT IS HYPE MACHINE?

Hype Machine indexes hundreds of music sites and collects their latest posts for easy streaming and discovery. We're here to help you find the best new music first.

Read more about the projectContact us






SEARCH MACHINE SHOP



META

Archives