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RealPlayer Music Store announces iPod harmony

RealNetworks, Inc., the leading creator of digital media services and software, as stated in their press release, today announced Harmony Technology, the world’s first DRM translation system to enable consumers to securely transfer purchased music to every popular secure music device.

Harmony Technology frees consumers from the limitation of being locked into a specific portable device when they buy digital music. Now consumers can build their library of downloads secure in the knowledge that it will play on virtually whatever device they choose.

“Compatibility is key to bringing digital music to the masses,” said Rob Glaser, founder and CEO, RealNetworks, Inc. in the press release. “Before Harmony, consumers buying digital music got locked into a specific kind of portable player. Harmony changes all that. Thanks to Harmony, consumers don’t have to worry about technology when buying music. Now anyone can buy music, move it to their favorite portable device, and it will just work, just like the way DVD and CDs work.”

“Interoperability of devices and jukebox software is one of the biggest challenges for today’s music consumer,” said Thomas Hesse, Chief Strategic Officer and Head of Global Digital Business, BMG in the press release.. “RealNetworks’ Harmony Technology is the first to address this issue by giving the consumer flexibility and choice.”

“EMI’s goal is to allow consumers to access our music on as many legitimate platforms as possible, and seamlessly, across a range of devices. RealNetworks’ Harmony Technology will make it easier for consumers to enjoy their digital music in a truly flexible way,” said Ted Cohen, SVP Digital Development and Distribution, EMI Music in the press release.

“I’m excited about anything that means more flexibility and availability in terms of how people enjoy music. It’s great to see RealNetworks make this step so that people can stop worrying about whether the music they buy will work on their favorite device,” commented Stone Gossard of Pearl Jam in the press release.

“Artists are better served when the customer can focus on the music not technology. You should not need an engineering degree to enjoy music, and RealNetworks’ Harmony Technology offers the simplicity that music fans demand,” said Fred Davis, the founding partner of Davis, Shapiro, Lewit, Montone and Hayes in the press release. Davis Shapiro represents many of today’s most successful artists.

“Technology innovation and an ever-expanding wealth of digital media are profoundly changing how people live life and experience entertainment,” said Kevin M. Corbett, vice president of Intel’s Desktop Platforms Group in the press release. “By taking a standards-based approach in designing the Harmony Technology service, RealNetworks is taking the right first steps to make it easier for consumers to enjoy music on the playback device of their choice. Industry support for standards-based products and services is in concert with Intel’s vision of the emerging digital home where consumers will be able to enjoy music, movies, games, photos, communication and information at any time, anywhere and on any device.”

Harmony technology will be demonstrated for the first time on Tuesday July 27th at the Jupiter PlugIn conference in New York City. Beginning on Tuesday, a beta test version of RealPlayer 10.5, the first consumer product to use Harmony Technology, will be available at http://www.real.com/harmony. Harmony Technology will be available later this year in other music products from RealNetworks including Real’s market-leading Rhapsody subscription service.

With Harmony Technology, RealPlayer Music Store supports more than 70 secure portable media devices, including all 4 generations of the iPod and iPod mini, 14 products from Creative, 14 from Rio, 7 from RCA, 9 from palmOne, 18 from iRiver, and products from Dell, Gateway, and Samsung. Generally speaking, Harmony supports any device that uses the Apple FairPlay DRM, The Microsoft Windows Media Audio DRM, or the RealNetworks Helix DRM, giving RealPlayer Music Store support for more secure devices than any other music store on the Internet.

MacDailyNews Take: “Harmony” must be the name of the anchor that Real is desperately throwing out in a vain attempt to catch the side of the rim as they circle the bowl.

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Real CEO Glaser: Steve Jobs’ comments on Real ‘not succeeding’ are ‘ridiculously humorous’ – April 29, 2004
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Apple’s refusal to license Fairplay DRM has nothing to do with past ‘OS Wars’ – April 22, 2004
Real’s CEO Glaser: Apple’s iPod/iTunes combo ‘threatens to turn off consumers’ – April 20, 2004
Jobs to Glaser: go pound sand – April 16, 2004
Real: ‘We don’t understand why Steve Jobs just doesn’t want to open the iPod’ – April 15, 2004
Will Apple’s ‘go it alone’ strategy turn iPod into the next Mac? – April 15, 2004
RealNetworks urges Apple to license Fairplay DRM; wants to form ‘tactical alliance’ in online music biz – April 15, 2004
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Real CEO Glaser begs Apple to make iPod play nice with other music services – March 24, 2004
Real CEO Glaser: ‘iTunes is only going to be used for playing songs you bought using the iTunes store’ – January 16, 2004

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