Under The Microscope

The Rumble In The Virtual Jungle

This post was written by Rogue Amoeba alumnus Mike Ash.
In this corner, weighing in at over half a billion downloads, the iTunes Music Store. The iTunes Music Store will be represented by Mr. Steven P. Jobs, CEO of Apple Computer, Inc., wearing the black turtleneck and black trunks.  
  And in this corner, wearing the red tie and matching trunks, Mr. Edgar J. Bronfman. Mr. Bronfman is CEO of Warner Music Group, and today represents the recording industry.
Let’s Get Ready To Ruuummmmble!

For a couple of weeks now, there’s been a battle growing in the public eye between Apple and CEO Steve Jobs and various music companies about prices in the iTunes Music Store. The iTMS’s pricing model has no doubt been debated since before it even opened its doors, but until recently the argument was mostly private.

Now the debate is becoming increasingly public, as Apple and various members of the music industry duke it out in the media. Steve Jobs has called the music companies “greedy” for wanting to raise prices. Warner Music Group thinks Apple’s pricing policy is “unfair”. They both make good arguments. Apple says that any increase will drive users back to piracy. The RIAA says that other products get varying prices, and music should too.

Really, it feels like I’m watching my parents argue about me while I’m standing right there in the room. Not only have Apple and the music industry ceased to make any effort to hide their internal dispute, if they had ever tried in the first place, but they seem to be actively enjoying their publicized debate. And yet, despite strongly pushing their arguments before the public eye, they barely acknowledge that the public even exists. Warner Music Group’s CEO said:

“That’s not to say we want to raise prices across the board or that we don’t believe in a 99-cent price point for most music. But there are some songs for which consumers would be willing to pay more. And some we’d be willing to sell for less.” (Source)

This is about as close as they come to acknowledging that customers matter at all. And the only way he considers that they matter is in determining just how much cash they can be convinced to hand over for the latest Britney Spears track. He then later says, seemingly ending the idea of less expensive songs:

“Some songs should be $0.99 and some songs should be more. I don’t want to give anyone the impression that $0.99 is a thing of the past.” (Source)

However, Apple isn’t doing much better. While stating that the buying process should be simple and declaring that raising prices will drive customers away, Jobs is still happily talking about us but never to us, despite the fact that millions of customers will read every word of it.

“We’re trying to compete with piracy, we’re trying to pull people away from piracy and say, ‘You can buy these songs legally for a fair price,'” he said during a press conference in Paris ahead of the opening of Apple Expo. “But if the price goes up a lot, they’ll go back to piracy. Then everybody loses.” (Source)

So why doesn’t anybody ask us what we want? While our dysfunctional, acronymic parents iTMS and RIAA are busy arguing about our fate, you’d think they’d at least find out what we think about the whole thing. Of course, we all know what customers really want, “What they want is better products for free.” (Thanks, Dilbert.) Maybe that’s not the best idea, but at the very least they could acknowledge that their customers exist and it is they who will ultimately determine the success or failure of whatever pricing structure they decide on.

Hide & Seek With Audio Hijack Pro 2.6.1

We released Audio Hijack Pro 2.6 on Monday, but a small bug affecting some users on OS X 10.4 Tiger slipped through. If Schedule Helper is appearing in your Dock, you’ve been bitten by this bug. With this update (and the included Schedule Helper update which needs to be installed), Schedule Helper should be invisible to you. For more information on our tool designed to facilitate any audio recording you want to do on your Mac, check out the Audio Hijack Pro information page.

Hide & Seek With Audio Hijack Pro 2.6.1

We released Audio Hijack Pro 2.6 on Monday, but a small bug affecting some users on OS X 10.4 Tiger slipped through. If Schedule Helper is appearing in your Dock, you’ve been bitten by this bug. With this update (and the included Schedule Helper update which needs to be installed), Schedule Helper should be invisible to you. For more information on our tool designed to facilitate any audio recording you want to do on your Mac, check out the Audio Hijack Pro information page.

Now With Smart Crash Reports

Starting with Audio Hijack Pro 2.6, and expanding to the rest our products as they are updated, we will be supporting Unsanity’s Smart Crash Reports:

Smart Crash Reports (SCR) is an enhancement for the Apple's CrashReporter application introduced in Mac OS X 10.4. It allows 3rd party developers to register their own match specifiers, and if the crash log the user is about to submit contains the match specifier, the crash log will be sent to the developer as well as Apple.

Many people think Apple provides developers with the crash reports that they collect, which would be a logical thing to assume. But to date, only the largest of commercial developers (whose names might rhyme with Nairobi and Nicrosoft) are rumored to have any kind of access. Developers both large and small have asked Apple for some kind of mechanism for getting crashlogs out of the Crash Reporter, but response from Apple has always been a vague shrug.

Luckily Unsanity took some initiative, and come up with a wonderful solution to solve the problem: Just make CrashReporter.app send its reports to all interested parties.

To enable Smart Crash Reports, you can download an installer off of Unsanity’s website, or even easier, use the the installer that’s built into Audio Hijack Pro 2.6 (Audio Hijack Pro > Install Extras… > Smart Crash Reports).

Once Smart Crash Reports is installed, and a Smart Crash Report enabled application crashes (because of cosmic rays perhaps?), you’ll see something like this:

Problem Report

It’s the (sadly) familiar Crash Reporter, but now with the option to send the report to both the developer and Apple.

For fellow developers, we highly recommend SCR. Adding support for it really was as simple as adding the following 4 lines to Audio Hijack’s Info.plist file:

<key>SmartCrashReports_CompanyName</key>
<string>Rogue Amoeba</string>
<key>SmartCrashReports_URL</key>
<string>https://rogueamoeba.com/cgi-bin/crashReporter.cgi</string&gt;

After that, Smart Crash Reports is intelligent enough to handle the rest.

Audio Hijack Pro 2.6: The Best Part Of Waking Up

It’s been a little over two months since we last updated Audio Hijack Pro, and we’ve got a fairly major new version today. Audio Hijack Pro 2.6 has an all new method for running timers using our new Schedule Helper, whose icon can be seen to the right. Schedule Helper should make timers reliable for all users, a problem we’ve fought with in the past.

We’ve also added support for bookmarkable MP3 files and adjusting the MP3 sample rate, as well as many other small updates and fixes. This is a free update for previously registered users of version 2, and all users of Audio Hijack Pro should update now. If you haven’t used our top-notch audio recording tool, click to get more information on Audio Hijack Pro today.