About this Author
Sandy McMurray is a long-time technology journalist whose work has appeared in Time, the Globe & Mail, the Toronto Sun, Report on Business, Profit, and other sources. Between 1995 - 2002, Sandy wrote a weekly column about technology for the Toronto Sun, and served as Technology Editor for five Sun Media newspapers. He has been publishing on the Web since 1996.
Contact: readme@mac.com
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Monthly Archives
September 23, 2004
Posted by Sandy
Eliot Van Buskirk tells The Secret of the iPod's Scroll Wheel. The iPod's scroll wheel has been through three iterations. The first one actually rotated; then there was the touch-sensitive one; and finally there's the clickable one found on the iPod Mini and fourth-generation iPod. I'd always assumed that this bit of design genius sprang from Apple Computer's labs. But in fact, I discovered that a company called Synaptics, which primarily makes touchpads for laptops, actually perfected this little piece of navigational heaven, in accordance with Apple's stringent design requirements. Read the rest here.
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September 20, 2004
Posted by Sandy

Griffin Technology's RadioSHARK is an AM/FM radio receiver designed to plug into your computer via USB to enable radio recording and PVR-like "time-shifting" of programs.
Griffin won Best of Show at Macworld in 2003 for the RadioSHARK, but it's been a no-show ever since. Unfortunately, "available for pre-order" and "shipping soon" on the Web site does not equal product availability.
Update: Griffin began shipping its "long-awaited" RadioSHARK on September 29, 2004.
...continue reading.
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September 13, 2004
Posted by Sandy
How much is it worth for Apple Computer to have a clear right to use the name "Apple" in connection with music-related sales? We may soon know.
According to this story in Variety, the legal dispute between Apple Computer and Apple Corps (the Beatles' company) may soon be settled out of court.
Apple Computer shareholders no doubt hope that the settlement will include exclusive access to the Beatles music library as well as a perpetual right for the computer maker to sell music-related products in future.
Stay tuned...
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September 03, 2004
Posted by Sandy
Kudos to the unnamed reader who alerted columnist Bob Cringely to the immense implications of the new iTunes Affiliate program program. The power of the RIAA and its members has always lain in money and marketing. The big record companies were able to pay large advances to top acts, and their marketing organizations were able to make small bands into bigger bands by aggressively promoting them and supporting tours.
[iTunes Affiliates] is the end of the RIAA and the big recording industry. Apple in the last year has signed deals with more than 300 independent record labels, most of them not big enough to do much promotion. But now they don't have to because that promotion will be handled by mtv.com and every music web logger, now that they have a material incentive to make recommendations and print lists. If I recommend a song -- IF I JUST TYPE A FEW WORDS -- and a thousand people decide to download based on my recommendation, heck, I just made $50 bucks. This is like sending tens of thousands of record sales people out on the road except that they can sell anything THEY like -- any of the one million iTunes songs -- making them salespeople with real conviction and maybe even with good taste. Maybe.
The RIAA will love the added revenue from this program until it becomes clear that they've been supplanted, at which point, it will no longer matter.
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September 02, 2004
Posted by Sandy
At the end of this interview with Bill Gates, there's a question about Microsoft's music business. The answer is interesting. Apparently, MSN Music is about building relationships with a "critical mass" of consumers in order to be a player in future e-commerce of all kinds. We wouldn't do any one isolated category of sort of online digital buying by itself, because we believe in having essentially a digital payment system at critical mass that works in all the countries. We're investing in the platform to do that, and at some point, we'll apply that to things like music, and so it's part of a broader strategy. The MSN Music Store may be less about more music and more about promoting the .Net Passport as well as future versions of Microsoft Wallet.
(Off the top of my head, I think there's more money in music than in avatars or "the right to send SMS messages," but I guess that's why he gets the big bucks.)
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September 01, 2004
Posted by Sandy
If I had a nickel for every time someone bought a song a recommended...
What? I can get a nickel every time?
Apple is making it possible for qualified partner sites to earn 5% of all "qualifying revenue" generated by click-through from the new iTunes Affiliate Program. The affiliate program is a partnership with LinkShare.
I bet the phone is ringing today at Commission Junction...
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Posted by Sandy
You can see a preview of the MSN Music store right now at beta.music.msn.com. Follow this link for details.
First look: the site works in every browser I've tried, and does not require any special software to sign in. It's interesting (and a bit weird) that the site includes advertising for non-music products ("Sponsored Sites"), and the links for "TV" and "MOVIES" suggest a future strategy for "MSN Entertainment" (not just tunes).
Update: Still no luck for Canadians. MSN Music appears to be U.S. only.
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