Sell Off Music

Music Sales by Way of Digital Distribution

Death and resurrection

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A quick tour around Real Groovy Records, Auckland

Record stores have interested me quite a lot recently.

My local independent record store here in Birmingham closed down last weekend while I was away in New Zealand, so to commemorate that fact, I visited a couple of Auckland record stores - Conch in Ponsonby, which is the spiritual equivalent of what Jibbering was (part cafe, part meeting spot, and a hub for local funk, hip hop and reggae DJs); and Real Groovy Records - a massive emporium of new and second hand vinyl and CDs, books, DVDs, computer games and so on.

Real Groovy is particularly interesting, because it went into liquidation last year and was closed down - but was rescued by an injection of capital (as I understand it) and was a thriving hive of activity when I visited.

It got me thinking about what music retailers can and should do to survive - and also about the extent to which the closure of record shops is quite the tragedy it’s generally portrayed as.

The guys at Jibbering love music, but were never really that excited about being in the retail sector. Closing the Jibbering store frees them up to concentrate on all of the other stuff they do brilliantly well - including music events, PA hire, art gallery stuff, duplication and festival organising.

Moseley village has lost a place to meet up and have a coffee (and I’ve talked elsewhere about what that means to me) - but I got the impression that not a lot of money was changing hands, and not a lot of units were being shifted of reggae 7″ vinyl, world music CDs and funk records. If I were to describe the mood of the Jibbering crew last time I spoke to them about this, there’s certainly a hint of nostalgia and sadness in there for the end of an era - but there’s a real buoyant, upbeat and optimistic undertone to the whole thing. It’s an excitement about what happens next.

Of course, not everyone’s in that position, and I know a number of people for whom music retail is their life. Scary times, then.

But there are plenty of things that can be done to reinvigorate local retail - even (and perhaps especially) in these tough economic times. The biggest stumbling block (as is so often the case) is a resistance to change and diversification.

Customer service is a biggie of course - but most importantly, making the most of new technologies to add efficiencies, promote, and build repeat business.

The solutions, as usual, need to be applied on a case by case basis, as appropriate - because each individual music retailer is entirely unique. It plays a different role in its local community, serves a different section of music fandom and has strengths and assets all of its own.

Sometimes the smart thing to do is close the doors and reinvent yourself. Sometimes, someone will come to the rescue, and sometimes you can be really, really clever - and imagine your way into a profitable and sustainable music retail operation.

I’d love to hear what challenges you’re facing and what you’re trying if you are running an independent record store. Any tales from your local music shop much appreciated too.

I’d be keen to work with an independent retailer to help develop solutions, invent strategies and brainstorm ideas. Let me know if you can think of any potential candidates.

______________________________

Death and resurrection

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Cloud file sharing on the iPhone, four ways

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Among the crowded field of cloud sharing and file synchronization services, there are plenty of interesting options (we've been partial to Dropbox around here, but check around for more), but when you add 'must work well with iPhone' to the requirements list, the choices narrow a bit. I've been testing out two business-focused options in Readdle Docs and box.net, and two other iPhone-friendly options (ZumoDrive and Drop.io) have just poked above the horizon.

Readdle Docs
may be on the pricey side for the App Store at $9.99US, but there's a lot of functionality bundled into that ten bucks. In addition to turning your iPhone or iPod touch into a WebDAV file server -- accessible easily and securely in the Finder, Windows Explorer, or via clients like Transmit -- Readdle lets you access hosted storage on your MobileMe account or other WebDAV services.

Once you get the files onto your device, it's easy to view all iPhone-friendly formats, or forward documents and images by email. I'm particularly fond of the full-screen PDF and PPT viewers in the app. Of course, it's no Documents to Go, but it's a good start (and for those waiting eagerly for D2G to arrive on the iPhone, word from DataViz is that the app is on track for a Q2 release).

Update: DistortedLoop points to veteran Palm developer QuickOffice and the $9.99 Mobile Files Pro product, which offers iDisk connectivity and also allows editing of Excel files. I hadn't heard of it before and we'll definitely be checking it out for a future review.

While you can use Readdle with iDisk or any WebDAV-enabled storage service, you also get a bonus account on the Readdle servers with 512 MB of storage (yes, not much, but it's handy). Upgrades to the Readdle storage start at $5/month for 2 GB. On the other hand, if you need the cloud access but not the onboard server, you can save $2 and get Readdle's OneDisk product for $7.99. Per Michael's question in the comments, the Readdle team does have OneDisk working with JungleDisk and Amazon S3, and it should work in the same fashion with Docs.

Though box.net is focused on enterprise users, it's plenty functional for personal use; with a free 1GB storage account that permits 5 collaboration folders and files up to 25 MB in size, you've got some room to maneuver (paid plans start at $7.95/mo). The companion iPhone app, also free, lets you upload images from your photo library or camera, view a list of recently modified files, and open up any of your files for viewing (unfortunately the new box.net webdoc format reads in as raw HTML, which is a drag). You can also forward sharing links to your colleagues directly from the iPhone app, which can be extremely helpful in the midst of a collaborative project.

The box.net app is more streamlined than Readdle Docs, but offers a lot less of the bidirectional functionality, and the viewer isn't fullscreen or landscape enabled; it also doesn't appear to cache large documents locally as Readdle does, and it's crashed on me once or twice while downloading large PDFs. Still, if you're already using box.net or you don't have a WebDAV-enabled storage option for use with Readdle, it's a fine app to try.

Details of the two new kids on the block, in the 2nd half of the post.

Continue reading Cloud file sharing on the iPhone, four ways

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Forum Review: School of Rock for iPhone

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School of Rock Forum Review by cjvitek For more Forum Reviews, see the TiPb iPhone App Store Forum Review Index!

School of Rock (hypothetically based on the movie of the same name) is an app that tries to teach you the ins and outs of music. You progress through a series of “schools” - school of drums, school of guitar, school of keyboard, etc.

Overview

Each of the schools tries to teach you about the specifics of that type of instrument. In each school you progress through a series of excercises, first testing you ability to recognize various cords or note combinations, then testing your ability to play back a series of notes or music (or timing of your playing). Eventually you move on to answer some trivia questions. Going through these trials, you gather points based on your performance. As you accumulate enough points, you unlock the various other schools (you starts with drums, school of bass is the most advanced).

The program also features a “jam” session in the playground, where you can play along with songs inlcluded in the app, or songs from your iTunes library. Unfortunately, you can only play percussion instruments in the jam session - I would have liked to see the ability to play strings, keyboard, or the bass with them. One cool feature is that you can record your jam session, and then listen to it in playback.

I really liked the tutorial features in this game. Rather than just giving you instructions, each help section (for each school and for the playground) provides a short video detailing how to play in each category. I like the video tutorials, it really helps to clarify some things. However, the game assumes a lot of knowledge already. It throws you in the deep in when it comes to trying to recognize cords, for example. There is no information on how to recognize cords or distinguish them from one another, so it was mostly guess work. The trivia also seems rather random, without some knowledge of music and the music industry, I found myself guessing at most of the trivia questions.

It would be nice if you could have difficulty settings, allowing you to choose what difficulty or background you have in music. That way, you could really tailor the program to your ability.

Pros:

Nice inclusion of the jam session, some of the instruments can be fun to play

Cons:

Doesn’t “teach” you enough, limited instruments in the jam session

Conclusion

All in all, I have mixed feelings about this app. I think it is well designed and can be fun, but it wasn’t really what I was looking for. I was looking for something that would both teach me about music as well as enable me to play along and “jam” to some music. The app offers a little of both of those, but not to the degree that I was looking for. In addition, it seems to assume that you have a lot of prior knowledge about music, instruments, and the music industry. It was fun, but the best feature was the jam session (playing percussion along with my iTunes songs). It is currently only $.99, so it could be worth picking up if it sounds interesting. I give it three and a half out of five stars, mostly because I felt it was a little too difficult for my music background and I was guessing a lot during the various schools.

TiPb Forum Review Rating:

TiPb Forums Review: 3.5 Star App

[School of Rock is available via the iTunes App Store]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Forum Review: School of Rock for iPhone

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smartRSS 2 = A Completely Unsupported iPhone App???

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Copyright © 2009 PatrickJ. Visit the original article at http://justanotheriphoneblog.com/wordpress/iphone-software/smartrss-2-a-completely-unsupported-iphone-app/ .

smartRSS 2

Here’s a simple thought for the day on iPhone apps: apps that are completely unsupported – especially paid ones – should be removed from the store. 

Paying for an app and discovering that it clearly does not live up to its App Store description is frustrating.  What is far beyond frustrating is discovering that there is no support at all when you ask for help / clarification / news on possible updates.  This is *far* more offensive than any ‘potentially offensive’ apps that are blocked from the store. 

Apps that are clearly not supported should be removed from the store – by the developers if they have any decency, and by Apple if they don’t.

What brought this on?  My experience with an app called smartRSS 2 – which appears to fall into the category of apps that are still in the App Store, still being charged for, but entirely unsupported.

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Featured iPhone Theme: iNinja

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Copyright © 2009 PatrickJ. Visit the original article at http://justanotheriphoneblog.com/wordpress/iphone-themes/featured-iphone-theme-ininja/ .

Ninja iPhone theme

Here’s a very complete iPhone Winterboard theme that caught my eye recently – especially because it claims to ‘completely theme the entire UI’.  This is the iNinja theme, from MMi forum member subywrex, in collaboration with Cricketlang.

The theme’s creator reckons it is ‘not a theme on ninjas’ – despite some of the imagery – and offers this reasoning behind the name:

The Name: What do you name a theme that takes over your entire phone, and keep the phone looking sleek? Thats how we came up with the name iNinja for this theme. Its for those who want to take back there iphone like a ninja  this is not a theme on ninja’s

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Advertising 2.0: Invent ideas to attract an audience

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Found this somewhere... hits the nail on the head, imho.Invent ideas to attract an audience Read more on my views on Advertising trends, here.

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Contest: 5 Free Copies of gCalWall To Win

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Copyright © 2009 PatrickJ. Visit the original article at http://justanotheriphoneblog.com/wordpress/iphone-contests/contest-5-free-copies-of-gcalwall-to-win/ .

gCalWall update

Contest Deadline: Monday March 2nd, 2009 at 12:00pm Central

We’ve got another great weekend contest / giveaway for you.  I did a post just a couple of days ago introducing gCalWall – which lets you view your upcoming Google Calendar appointments on your lock screen, and is Brandon’s first iPhone app. 

Brandon has generously offered up 5 promo codes for gCalWall to be won this weekend, to get this cool new app for free.

There’s already a 1.1 update submitted for gCalWall, with some nice enhancements to the app – including an updated user interface, faster performance, and one of my wish list items, the ability to choose where text is placed.

Read on for details on how to enter for a chance to win …

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Forget Zune Phone, its going to be Zune on TV

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Microsoft has been rather adamant about not making a Zune phone and here again we find more news that they will not be making a Zune phone but instead have much larger plans ot take Zune to every TV set in the world.

Forget Zune phone, we’re aiming for Zune (on) TVs, says Microsoft

Rather than building a Zune-branded smartphone, Microsoft Corp. plans to take the software and online store it built for its Zune media player and bring them to your television set in the hopes of emulating Apple Inc.’s phenomenally successful iTunes Store. But it still plans to deviate from iTunes in strategy.

The store, called the Zune Marketplace, offers millions of songs, podcasts, music videos and TV shows for purchase and download. It’s accessible to Zune users as well those who’ve downloaded the software onto their Windows PCs.

Discuss this in the Zune Message Boards.

Tags: Zune

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Ustream.com to Stream SXSW Concert Events

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    MUSIC NEWS -  Today Ustream announced their first-ever Ustream StudioLive from The Belmont” at SXSW interactive music festival. The Ustream Studio will combine the ideas and music at the heart of SXSWwith the interactive power of live streaming. A free high-profile event open to the public and produced by nicefishfilms, no wristband is required for entry.  The Ustream Studiowill showcase musicians, journalists, futurists, artists and thought leaders at The Belmont. Ustream will power all events live on Ustream.TV, an internet broadcasting platform that allows anyone with a camera and an internet connection to live stream.  

Some of the music guests on Ustream Studiofrom March 13 thru 21 will be; Grammy® Best New Artist of the Year Adele, Peter Himmelman, Indigo Girls, Manchester Orchestra, The Von Bondies and Glasvegas

For more information, visit ustream.tv/sxsw or the live stream at Ustream-Studio.

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Eyeball Webcam is a classy way to Skype

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Photo of the Blue Eyeball Webcam.

The Eyeball sounds great, but it looks more like a loose leaf tea strainer than a Webcam.

(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)

Webcams aren't the first product to spring to mind when you think of Blue Microphones. The company has a solid reputation in the pro audio world for making ...

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