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Someone explain Napster to me

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Great King Bowser

Property of Kaz Harai
So I signed up to a 30 day free trial for Napster erm, 30 days ago. Forgot to cancel, so it would appear they've charged me £9.99 for a month. :lol

So what does that £9.99 get me? Will I be able to download tracks and put them on my mp3 player now?

Bah, I'll make sure I remember to cancel at the end of the month.
 

demon

I don't mean to alarm you but you have dogs on your face
Welcome to 1999...........

o, wait....

I laugh at you.
 
Napster sold out :(

Is nothing sacred in this world...

But Napster was the greatest thing since sliced bread when it came out
 

demon

I don't mean to alarm you but you have dogs on your face
BigJonsson said:
Napster sold out :(

Is nothing sacred in this world...

But Napster was the greatest thing since sliced bread when it came out
A-fuckin-men. It really opened a whole new world of music to me. I didn't even buy CDs until I started using Napster, ironically enough. The RIAA can suck each and every one of my nut hairs.
 

impirius

Member
Easy guide to using Napster

1. Travel back in time about 4 years
2. Use Napster to get the music you want without restrictions
 

Great King Bowser

Property of Kaz Harai
impirius said:
Easy guide to using Napster

1. Travel back in time about 4 years
2. Use Napster to get the music you want without restrictions

Pfft. I was using Napster back then, but I figured I'd try this new service for the 30 day trial. Downloaded two tracks and forgot about it. Consider me Napster0wned.
 

Great King Bowser

Property of Kaz Harai
jenov4 said:
Wait a minute, people actually pay to use Napster.. oh the irony.

It was an accident! *cries*

And yeah, I usually use bit torrent for albums and shit, but in a moment of insanity I decided to trial napster, then I got 0wned.
 

pestul

Member
Listen to over 750,000 tracks online and offline
Listen online at home or at work to an unlimited amount of tracks on-demand from the Napster music catalog. You can also collect as many tracks as you want on the hard drives of up to 3 PC computers to listen offline and save bandwidth while you surf the Web. Enjoy these tracks as long as you are a Napster subscriber. If you have a laptop, you can take these tracks wherever you go.
Sounds like you should have full access.. I dunno.
 

Jim Bowie

Member
demon said:
A-fuckin-men. It really opened a whole new world of music to me. I didn't even buy CDs until I started using Napster, ironically enough. The RIAA can suck each and every one of my nut hairs.

Exactly. The backwards-thinking RIAA can't seem to realize this. Napster was meant to be used, IMO, as a trial service. You download a bunch of their music, and if you like it, you go out and support the band. Whether it's a cd, a t-shirt, a poster, or seeing them live in concert, you go out and help the band earn a living. And this is a feasible idea- look at The Ataris. The Ataris released their first few albums on mp3.com and Napster, free of charge- now they're huge.
 

snaildog

Member
Jim Bowie said:
Exactly. The backwards-thinking RIAA can't seem to realize this. Napster was meant to be used, IMO, as a trial service. You download a bunch of their music, and if you like it, you go out and support the band. Whether it's a cd, a t-shirt, a poster, or seeing them live in concert, you go out and help the band earn a living. And this is a feasible idea- look at The Ataris. The Ataris released their first few albums on mp3.com and Napster, free of charge- now they're huge.
It just didn't work like that though. Most people I knew just used it to get all their music with and stopped buying CDs.
 
To actually answer your question, I believe that subscriptions to Napster only let you stream music, not download it. Downloaing is a pay-per-song thing.
 

Phoenix

Member
Jim Bowie said:
Exactly. The backwards-thinking RIAA can't seem to realize this. Napster was meant to be used, IMO, as a trial service. You download a bunch of their music, and if you like it, you go out and support the band. Whether it's a cd, a t-shirt, a poster, or seeing them live in concert, you go out and help the band earn a living. And this is a feasible idea- look at The Ataris. The Ataris released their first few albums on mp3.com and Napster, free of charge- now they're huge.

That's great, but that's not really what happened. There were scores of people who were downloading ALL of their music this way. If people really just want a music trial service I'm sure Microsoft's DRM formats support that - but they won't use it because people would just use the audio out cables in thier machines to capture the music on some other device/application. :)

I like the idea of giving some 'undesirable to keep' reallyt low bitrate versions of songs for the trial crowd.
 
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