The Zune - keep looking at the pictures, kids.
Microsoft is getting geared up to launch its iPod competitor, the Zune, in time for Christmas this year over in the US.
But music enthusiasts in Europe can relegate the Zune to the same list as the PS3 - the one marked "See it in 2007".
Microsoft has
told MCV that they have no content partnerships in place for Europe. This means that they are yet to go and license any music for distribution in the UK, meaning they can't sell it. Indeed, it hasn't even appointed a team to work on the Zune in the UK.
These factors mean that Brits are unlikely to see the Zune until Christmas 2007 at the earliest - and more likely early 2008. Those enterprising customers who import players from the States could find that the music service won't allow them to purchase content with a British credit card, as with the iTunes video store (although the iTunes music store has had a UK version for quite a while).
So, between the PS3, the closure of Lik-Sang and now this, it seems that we are in for a rather boring Christmas. On the bright side, Apple has told
bit-tech that it is getting ready to launch its TV and Movie stores here at the beginning of this year. At least one company wants our money!
Are you lusting after the Zune? Will you try and import one? Let us know
over in the forums.
/sigh
Not that I mind about Zune, wasn't gonna buy an MS DRM'd product anyway, but it does irk me somewhat that Europe is getting ripped off and treated like crap again and again. A market of this size should not get treated so poorly.
Mugs.
-P
Just as mclean007 said - it's not about the products per se, it's the principle of the matter.
The fact that it's a common practice to merely "skip" over Europe as tho we're just a small, incoherent mass of nobodys. And when they do decide to "grace" us with their products, their more often that not highly over priced -- as tho it's a special effort to make things available for us so let's charge them more. Especially the UK.
And if no one b1tches and instead stays quiet and compliant, then nothing ever changes.
i thought it was supposed to be xmas 2006. sod this im gonna import a us one, and i dont care if the music store doesnt work im hardly going to be buying microsoft music anyway
> that not highly over priced -- as tho it's a special effort to make things
> available for us so let's charge them more. Especially the UK.
So why bloody well buy them then? Is your life incomplete without a Microsoft branded MP3 player?
Buy some noname and have done with it.
-P
I guess its time to look for another player. :(
There isn't any reason that I can think of except that they can't be bothered with the EU until they've got Japan and the US sorted out. The fact that they haven't even got a team working on the licensing yet seems to confirm this.
:(
I'm thinking that:
Perhaps in order to get a product going in the EU, companies feel like they should put some effort into clever advertising, double-checking their quality control, etc. Here in the US, I think there's plenty of people who'll buy ANYTHING new just because it's sitting on a shelf at their local Best Buy -- doesn't matter what it does, how much it costs, or even if it works correctly.
I don't know how things are in the EU, but just about everybody in the US is 7-paychecks-deep in credit-card debt that keeps growing -- and it's not because food and gas cost so much, but because they just "have to have" every toy thats on a shelf somewhere or that one of their friends has or that their kid "really wants." Somewhere along the line, American's stopped teaching their children that "discretionary spending" is supposed to include some discretion.
Am I way off? Do any of you guys in the UK/EU feel the same way about folks around you?
A year delay is getting a bit silly.
Ice
And the only reason Im 5 paychecks deep in credit card is because they are small paychecks and tires were needed now. :D