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August 14, 2007 12:28 PM PDT

PSP download store held up by DRM

Fans of the PlayStation Portable (PSP) media device must continue to wait for a download store, a feature that experts have said is a must if the player is ever to launch a significant challenge to the iPod.

Sony representatives, which have been holding press gatherings in major cities in preparation for the September launch of the upgraded PSP, refused on Tuesday to set a launch date for the download store.

They did reveal that the store will launch with "short-form" games. Whether music and movies will be available at rollout is "still unclear," said John Koller, a spokesman for the PSP.

What's the holdup?

Koller said that concerns about Digital Rights Management (DRM) are part of the problem. The company is trying to find the best way to protect movies from being pirated. Sony has always been big on DRM.

British business publication The Financial Times sparked expectations about the store when it reported late last year, citing unnamed sources, that a download service would arrive by spring. Sony refused to confirm that a store was on the way until recently.

Back in 2005, when the PSP debuted, some PSP fans clamored for a download store. Many rejected Universal Movie Discs (UMD), a miniature version of the DVD created for the PSP. The format has yet to catch on with the public.

Sony's delay at offering downloads has held the PSP back, say analysts like James McQuivey, with Forrester Research. The PSP, with its high-resolution 4.3-inch screen, ability to play videogames, movies and music, should already be challenging the iPod, McQuivey told me in April.

McQuivey assessed the PSP this way: "The Sony PSP is one of the best portable entertainment media devices that anyone has come up with in years. It has a relatively big screen, plays video beautifully, has good storage and audio. It could have been the first big mobile carrier for TV shows and movies."

Instead, iPod, and not the PSP, is one of the world's most popular multi-media devices. Still, Sony is at least headed in the right direction. Another smart addition to the new PSP is a video-out cable. One of the biggest complaints among PSP fans was that they couldn't watch PSP movies or games on their TVs.

A demonstration of the video-out feature was impressive. Watching the film House of Flying Daggers, there was little resolution loss. Koller promised that downloadable movies would offer the same high quality--just as soon as they arrive.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments
DRM support
by TaintDeli August 14, 2007 1:00 PM PDT
"Sony has always been big on DRM."

Yeah, no sh-t. Rootkit, anyone?
Reply to this comment
Open up the format already!
by Smegz August 14, 2007 4:19 PM PDT
When is Sony going to learn that most people don't want to buy multiple copies of their media. The UMD is a joke because Sony will not create the infrastructure to support it.

1. Recordable media
2. Recorders, entertainment and PC based.
3. Players, other than the PSP.

The third one is an option but is necessary if they want UMD music or videos to take off since the first rev of the PSP had not output for video and only the headphone jack for audio. If they made recorders and sold recordable media (like the Mini Disk) people would be more willing to shell out money for the disks. If they want pre-recorded stuff to sell make it so you can play it in more locations than on the go. Sony has to learn to let go and open this format up or continue to lose ground to Apple and anyone else that gets the point.
Reply to this comment
Not without a hard drive!
by DarkHawke August 15, 2007 4:20 AM PDT
Who cares about downloadable media if your storage medium is SD cards which max out at 8 Gig? Sure, that matches a Nano, but they're about $70 a pop, not including the cost of the PSP itself, all of which puts you price-wise into iPod Video territory, which sport minimum 30 Gig hard drives? Face it, what's holding the PSP back from being a kick-ass media player is the current hardware of the PSP, cutesy-pie re-do notwithstanding. It needs to have the UMD drive taken out, a 40 Gig hard drive put in, and an exchange program so folks can trade in their UMD media for either the same games/movies on memory sticks or download credits on this pie-in-the-sky download site! Nothing else will save the PSP from placing third in a two horse race.

P.S. A second analog stick for true PS2-emulation gameplay would also help!
Reply to this comment
The issue is not DRM...
by whizkid454 August 15, 2007 8:30 AM PDT
It's Sony's way of saying "Buy the PS3 so you can pay again to download movies and games for your PSP." A download store would mean one would not have to buy the PS3 for downloads.
Reply to this comment
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