iTunes hits 2 million sales

iTunes hits 2 million sales
Who ever said you can't sell music on-line and make a profit obviously forgot to mention that to Steve Jobs. Apple's iTunes on-line music store has sold over 2 million songs after its launch only 16 days ago.

Internet.com writes:
"At 99-cents a song or between $4 and $18 for an album, Apple is beginning to see a hefty profit. The company has yet to disclose how much its profit is being offset by the hosting costs or the reported 60 percent cut that goes to the labels. Still using rough estimates, Apple just made an estimated $2.3 million in a week and upwards of $5 million in the last two weeks based solely on its iTunes service."



Well done, Apple! Maybe RIAA, and music labels should learn from them and focus their efforts on bringing similar music services to PC-users as well, instead of wasting their money on trying to force people out of the habit of sharing their music. Is there an alternative for us, the PC-users, if we want to listen to MP3s? I'd say: no, we don't. If I can't rip my CD to MP3 format due to a copy protection scheme, I turn to one of the numerous peer-to-peer networks that are at my disposal. Given the choice, I'd rather purchase and download albums in MP3 format, and burn an audio CD should I need one.

Apple will be releasing a PC-version of iTunes by the end of 2003.

Source:
Internet.com


Written by: Jari Ketola @ 14 May 2003 17:26
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  • 6 comments
  • csayers

    iTunes will be launching for the PC. Apple have already announced it.

    15.5.2003 01:32 #1

  • Dela

    WOW 2 million sales!! and its not even avai;lible for pc users! thats amazing!! Well i hope the riaa realise it!

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    15.5.2003 08:02 #2

  • tribal-t

    I'm not with many people on this subject. I believe all music should be free. Well for me anyway, Unless all the P2P sites disappear, I'm not ever going to buy a CD.

    Tribal-T

    15.5.2003 12:45 #3

  • TeddyKGB

    Being a die hard capitalist, I have to applaud Apple's efforts on this one. However I have to agree with Tribal's viewpoint as well. I could potentially see myself paying $.99 for a good track though. That is if they ever make them avaiable for real computers!

    Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men's blood...Make big plans,
    aim high in hope and work.
    -- Daniel H. Burnham

    15.5.2003 15:07 #4

  • Azra_B

    Id pay 99c a song. Not bad deal. Apple
    has really come through on this one. This
    is gonna kick the crap out of Rhapsody
    and the other ones.

    16.5.2003 04:25 #5

  • maryjayne

    I'd pay $0.99 for a CD. Shipping costs on a buy it used, burn it, and resell it approach. With only having a 56k modem and no interest in upgrading, it takes almost a hour per mp3 download from a p2p network. Can apple guarantee me that if my ISP decides to disconnect me during the download that I will get another chance to download or a refund? When I download non-mp3 files I sometimes have to start from scratch b/c of my ISP. I have not gone to iTunes' website, but I hope they have good software or excellent customer service for peeps like me.

    This service should kick off very well when it finally hits PC. Bravo for the sales numbers!

    Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
    - Benjamin Franklin

    Time is never wasted when you are wasted all the time.

    16.5.2003 14:17 #6

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