advertisement
 Print    Email     Bookmark     Share

RIP: PlaysForSure 2004-2007

By Ina Fried, CNET News.com

Microsoft has reached a turning point in its music strategy: Admitting it has a problem.

When it first announced its Zune plans last year, the company denied that it would mark an end to its PlaysForSure program, an effort that aimed to unite various compatible devices and services using Microsoft's Windows Media technology.

Others, though, saw the writing clearly on the wall.

Microsoft was in a precarious place, though. It had lined up MTV Networks as a partner for its Urge service, which was to be part of Windows Vista. That service had not even formally launched yet, so it was tough to fully back away from its partnerships, even though the company was clearly planning to go it alone.

This week, Microsoft confirmed, though, that it is no longer planning to fly the PlaysForSure banner. Instead, services and devices can seek the far more generic "Certified for Windows Vista" logo.

Conceived in 2004, PlaysForSure was aimed at helping consumers understand that a wide range of devices and digital music services could be used with one another, boosting a strategy of "choice" as compared with the tight link between iTunes and iPod. With Zune, though, Microsoft decided that Apple was right.

The funny thing is, I think there was--and probably still is--merit to Microsoft's original argument. The problem wasn't the notion of PlaysForSure, it was the fact that the logo often overstated things. Not all PlaysForSure players could support subscription music, for example.

Apple's challenges with the labels, Hollywood studios, and NBC show some reasons why consumers might not want their device to work with only one service. I'd be much more likely to go with a device that could work with many good services than I am to choose Microsoft's lock-in over Apple's.

Is there anyone else who wishes that it was PlaysForSure that had survived the battle of competing music strategies?

Via CNET News.com

 

 

    Talkback
edvarcl says...
Me!

Major pity that PlaysForSure died, though it was expected with all the conflicts between suscription music services and hardware manufactuers.

but it makes sense for a narrowband solution like apple's to work. a huge open alliance is always tough to mandate and since the "combined" vision is open to interpretation by its players, it's hard to concieve it being successful.

 
 
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.
advertisement