h a l f b a k e r yThe word "How?" springs to mind at this point.
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Problem with tapes: CHOMP
Problem with records and CDs: SCRATCH
Problem with CDs: SKIP
So why not just have a rom, like Game Boy games come on, that you play your music straight from?
This would be good, also, for movies (better than tapes or DVDs)
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If they make the HitClips player Hi-Fi then this would be baked. I remember, the first piece of Hi Fi equipment I ever owned was a Sega Genesis. |
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FYI, the HitClips units actually put all the electronics in the same chip as the ROM. The player just contains the batteries, buttons, speaker/earphone, and a resistor or two. |
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The answer to your dilemma: MP3 (and other digital media) players. They store all their music on ROM (or static RAM, I'm not 110% sure). Problem with these: expense and small memory space. I highly recommend MiniDiscs. |
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They use non-volitile RAM. |
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I much prefer mp3's on a cd. You get hundreds of them on. |
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MP3 players typically use Flash RAM, which is significantly more expensive than EPROM (erasable programmable ROM) or mask ROM (produced with fixed contents that cannot be altered). In terms of price, power consumption and access time, EPROM compares favorably to Flash, but it requires more complex technology to program. |
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Having looked (again and again) at buying a rom-based portable mp3 player, and deciding (again and again) that it still wasn't feasible in terms of expense of media, I now wonder why the music industry don't sell albums and singles etc on mask Rom to sell straight to those people who have these things. |
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Some time ago I had heard of plans by mp3 player manufacturers and record labels to preload the drives of players with tunes, but I don't know if this has ever been done. |
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The practicality of this boils down to the cost of producing ROM chips in the format accepable to MP3 players (SmartMedia, CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SecureDiigital/MultiMediaCard, Dataplay) . Does anybody have numbers? |
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I suppose on immediate disadvantage is the sheer quantity of standards. Most people can listen to CDs. If you released on only one memory format you'd hit only a small percentage of the market. |
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waugs: My MP3 player came with music pre-recored. Unfortunately, the music was of such obscurity and quality that I guess the manufacturer was paid by record promoters to put those tracks on there. |
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There's the piracy problem. The music industry doesn't like anything that is too easy to copy. 'Course, these days, that's everything. It wouldn't cost much to produce ROMs, especially after economies of scale kick in. Say, no more than 10 times the cost of an equivalanet amount of RAM? It's tough to beat the cost per MB of a CD. |
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The main root of the problems with the music industry is that it is an industry! |
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As opposed to what? A religion? An illness? |
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strong case for both, don't you think? |
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The thing about the music industry is that it can only get away with what we let it get away with. |
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//Play your music with no moving parts// |
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Hmmmmmm......ever heard of an MP3 player?! |
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