Thu 01 May
2003
Having now actually made two purchases at Apple’s iTunes Music Store, I can report that the service, once you get it running, is frighteningly easy to use. It took me a day or two to register with the store because the initial frenzy of its debut had Apple’s servers tied up in knots. But once I did, I found that downloading a song was really as simple as clicking on a single button. Dangerously simple.
My first purchase was an old LL Cool J track for 99¢. With a single click (or two), the track downloaded and added itself to my local iTunes library without a hitch. Emboldened, I decided to try and buy Dexy’s Midnight Runners’ entire “Too-Rye-Ay” album for ten bucks. It downloaded in about five minutes, after which I popped in a blank CD-R and within a few minutes I had a newly minted physical copy, playable on virtually any CD player in the world.
I could get used to this. In fact, I could feel myself getting used to the almost absurdly instantaneous gratification of the whole process. Which is why I’m actually thankful that the iTunes Music Store’s catalog of truly interesting music is very, very paltry. If they ever manage to overcome that deficiency, then it’d be a good idea for music fans everywhere to ask the bank to lower the limit on their credit cards.

So Apple got the download part right and the overall software experience right. Leaving aside even the shallow variety of their catalog offering, there’s still lots more that they can do to polish up iTunes and its music store. Here are just a few ideas.
While I’m at it, I may as well throw in some minor interface quibbles.
I went and faithfully bought my new iPod on Friday night at the Apple store. Very nice. I had the original iPod with the scrollwheel. It seemed a little bit easy to work with -- felt more accurate. But the drawback was that gunk got in the wheel and would made some harsh sounding noises. And now that iPod's been dead for a while now which is probably no coincidence.
My one problem with the whole new iTunes 4/iTune Story. I now get asked to type in my admin password quite a lot when inserting or removing CDs. I'm doing maintance on my machine now and hope it's something I can correct. I know it's some sort of copy protection thing gone wrong. It only started happening after I burned my first audio CD of tracks purchased at the iTunes store.
Actually, there is a shoppingcart option, if you rather shop that way, just go into the preferences in iTunes - under the "store" button :) easy peasy...
Let's call this newfagled "music store" what it is. It's a crack den. Up late, can't sleep, jittery, writing code, need music. K-Marts all shut down because they use the same bad marketing department Apple does? No problem. Head over to the crack den. We dare you to buy just one...
I need an intervention. Quick.
I want to say some thing about pricing.
Why should i buy albums if i don't get any discount. Also, in albums, many songs i may not like.
I don't understand the logic why Apple doesn't provide incentive to us for buying albums.