iDon't and ipods
from
JoeUser Forums
I don't know if you've seen it, but there's an ad campaign coming out of the US based on this concept: Link
It's a good idea, but it's basically flawed. You see, I'm a bit of an ipod junkie. I think they look cool, they work well and I don't really give a shit about their price when they work so seemlessly with the iTunes store (at the moment the best music store on the Australian market).
I like the i'don't campaign. It's cheeky, it's got some cool designs, some good ideas. But in typical pretentious apple-junkie fashion I think there's nothing better than the irony of wearing conflicting messages. So I'm going to get their ape design printed on a t-shirt, because it rocks, but I'm not about to go to some dubious brand with a completely different (and hard to play on a Mac) format just because the campaign is good.
If other manufacturers really want to grab some market share, they need to get formats worked out and slap some heads in the record industry to get the music supply worked out. Because there's no way I'm switching to another brand when I'll have to burn 6 gigs of itunes protected music to cd first before I can use the new player.
Which is a shame really, because it is a good campaign, and although the advertised player looks like shit, there are some very cool looking WMA players out there. Just a shame it'd be a pain in the arse to use them.
It's a good idea, but it's basically flawed. You see, I'm a bit of an ipod junkie. I think they look cool, they work well and I don't really give a shit about their price when they work so seemlessly with the iTunes store (at the moment the best music store on the Australian market).
I like the i'don't campaign. It's cheeky, it's got some cool designs, some good ideas. But in typical pretentious apple-junkie fashion I think there's nothing better than the irony of wearing conflicting messages. So I'm going to get their ape design printed on a t-shirt, because it rocks, but I'm not about to go to some dubious brand with a completely different (and hard to play on a Mac) format just because the campaign is good.
If other manufacturers really want to grab some market share, they need to get formats worked out and slap some heads in the record industry to get the music supply worked out. Because there's no way I'm switching to another brand when I'll have to burn 6 gigs of itunes protected music to cd first before I can use the new player.
Which is a shame really, because it is a good campaign, and although the advertised player looks like shit, there are some very cool looking WMA players out there. Just a shame it'd be a pain in the arse to use them.