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It certainly makes you wonder what will happen if a big consumer web email service ever goes down! That would be bad news.
- I wish all of it were. And it definitely is a big advantage to Amazon's
DRM free music. Now in terms of videos I want to own (as opposed to rentals)
even DVDs are preferable than the iTunes downloads since I can "work around"
the limitations on those.
I'd rather run my own server at home, with my personal data - it guarantees the privacy of my stuff, allows me to store things in any format that I choose, and allows me to have as much space as I want.
Until I can figure out Mac OS X Server though, am proceeding cautiously.
a few years from now. I'd guess both plans would be shifting what with the
market turmoil. http://mashable.com/2008/02/14/facebook-valuati...
You're suggesting that it's good advice to "get out of hock" and invest in good old assets. Apple did that over the past few years already, perhaps anticipating just this kind of event.
Another thing to keep in mind; in times of economic downturns, entertainment usually experiences heightened profits, not losses. The film industry was at its best during the Great Depression. As people need to escape the reality of their crappy financial situations, they flock to movies, music, and other forms of entertainment. All the better, then, that Apple has become the number one seller of music on earth (not just online) and one of the top video sellers online. The move into consumer entertainment, in retrospect, was even more brilliant than anything else Jobs has done over the past six years.
There is virtually no chance that Apple will be closing its iTunes doors anytime soon. If anything, they are the JP Morgan to Walmart's WaMu in this industry. They will sit on their war chest as the competition dies, or they will just buy competitors who have something to offer.
The real companies to worry about are companies like Google, who are essentially one-trick ponies dependant on advertising dollars, which will certainly dry up as companies tighten their budgets across the board. Microsoft, too, has wasted a lot of money trying to jump on the 2.0 bandwagon. Maybe Apple's small efforts in "the cloud", which seemed short-sighted a year ago, aren't such a bad thing, after all. Even MobileMe, Apple's only real 2.0 venture, is driven by subscription dollars, not ad revenue. And it's highly profitable.
So I wouldn't worry about stripping all that Apple Fairplay DRM just yet. With any luck, as Apple's competitors get washed away by the downturn, Apple will finally be able to negotiate to rid its files of DRM once and for all anyway.
stronger than the other companies that haven't suffered through a punishing
downturn. That huge cash horde will come in handy. Then there's Jobs'
comment to "innovate out of the downturn" that I remember during the dark
days post 2001.
http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2008/fortune/080...
@ Mike I think facebook, orkut type of sites are earning a hell lot of money but i am sure that they wont earn it for long. Because trend changes with the passage of time. Like first Orkut was introduced and every one started using it and then Facebook was introduced with more enhanced features. So many orkut people shifted to Facebook. So i think it all depends upon the trends and the utilization of that website.
Rest this article is great :)