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| Sony has always had a love for specific formats, particularly ones cooked up by its developers. Can we say Betamax? Now it looks like another Sony-backed format is taking a long ride into the sunset and it will certainly be of no loss to most techies. Sony, in unveiling a bunch of new digital Walkmans today which can play video files, mentioned it was time to bury its long hated ATRAC format in favor of a more "open digital music environment." While this may get open source fans buzzing don't quite party yet - Sony is only moving its players over to support the Windows Media Audio (WMA) format, including the DRM darling known as PlaysForSure. Why is Sony killing ATRAC you ask? Part of it involves history in which Sony forced its digital Walkman users for too long to only be able to listen to ATRAC songs on the players. Apple came along and users found in the iPod a device which could support the widely used MP3 format in addition to its AAC format. That was obviously a bad move on Sony's part and it did eventually correct the problem, though it was by that point far too late. Sony did not comment directly on this movement in its press release, instead letting a Microsoft director explain the rationale in this fashion: Quote:
It's a sign of the ever changing times of the digital revolution to see Sony sunk to this level. Once the mighty force of the portable entertainment market beaten down by a computer company on the hardware side, now providing integration with some of its products to the iPod. Also forced to move to Microsoft's side in choosing to throw in with the WMA format. I'm sure many in the company's Japan headquarters are hanging their heads low in defeat today. |