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For our readers in the Big Apple, beware. According to Reuters, “Starting this week in New York City, the retailer will put up a temporary store in Times Square and have a truck roving around the city to celebrate the launch of AC/DC’s new album.”

NYC has of course, always firmly rejected the idea of Wal-Mart in the city. Last year, Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott famously told N.Y. Times “I don’t care if we are ever here.”

But over the past year, Wal-Mart seems to have gotten little bored with the country life and is jonesin’ again for some city kicks. It didn’t go very well in Chicago, but they’re still at it in D.C. - and it looks like they’re getting their wish in New York - if for only a bit.

(That is, unless loyal Gotham City Wal-Mart fighters make it...uncomfortable)

But the NYC stunt isn’t the only interesting angle to the AC/DC story. Remember that AC/DC signed the exlusive Wal-Mart deal as a way of bypassing iTunes. Check out this gem from lead singer Brian Roberts:

“Maybe I’m just being old-fashioned, but this itunes, God bless ‘em, it’s going to kill music if they’re not careful,” going on to add: “It’s a...monster, this thing,” he said. “It just worries me. And I’m sure they’re just doing it all in the interest of making as much...cash as possible.”

Which store is he talking about again? If a slew of censored and exclusive Garth Brooks and Eagles albums is the way to save the music industry...maybe we’ll just all need to start listening to more books on tapes instead.

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SANTA TO WORK LONGER HOURS WITHOUT OVERTIME THIS YEAR
Wal-Mart announced this week that it will start cutting toy prices almost three months before Christmas. To which Santa Claus replied, “Seriously?”

Wal-Mart starts the discounting early this year [BloggingStocks]

According to The Wall Street Journal, “Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. said it will cut prices on some of the most popular toys and speed up the opening of Christmas shops in its stores nationwide as it tries to lure budget-conscious shoppers and jump start its biggest selling season.”

Wal-Mart: Coal In The Retail Industry’s Stocking [24/7 Wall St.]

Wal-Mart’s action is a typical method for burying the competition. It can afford almost endless inventory build-ups for the busy shopping season. It can pull in the very modest amount that the consumer has to spend and leave other retailers with scraps off the table.

In which Walmart explains why we’re all doomed. [Writing on the Wal]

Obviously, I’m a masochist. I actually read Walmart’s press release on its early rollback of toy prices. While the Play-Doh Ice Cream Shop would be tempting if it weren’t Walmart we’re talking about here, I was much more struck by the survey results at the bottom of the document. Most notably:

Sixty-one percent of Americans do not plan on making cut-backs on how much they spend this Christmas season.

*Those who do plan on making cut-backs, plan on cutting back $50 or less.

Don’t you think that result seems just a tad self-interested? Why is that stat there if not to convince people to spend more whether they can afford to or not? I suspect Walmart has declared Christmas early because they’re afraid nobody will have any money left in December.

After the jump, Wal-Mart shuts down DRM music downloads, managers make up their own rules and 210,000 toasters get recalled.

Read the rest of this story ...

Posted by Alex Goldschmidt | Permalink

Tags: products, toys, recalls, prices, consumerist, christmas, music, downloads, tech

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One of the unique drawbacks of offering poor digital download services is that digital downloaders are, by definition, computer savvy and will not hesitate to lay the smack down about you on the internets. Case in point: Wal-Mart’s digital rights managed (DRM) music service. The retailer will be shutting down its servers sometime next week, leaving many who downloaded music from the site in the lurch. To say the least, Wal-Mart hasn’t won any fans in the process.

On the other hand, all of Wal-Mart’s other products fall apart eventually. We guess its digital downloads aren’t any different.

Wal*Mart shutting down DRM server, nuking your music collection—only people who pay for music risk losing it to DRM shenanigans [BoingBoing]

Hey suckers! Did you buy DRM music from Wal*Mart instead of downloading MP3s for free from the P2P networks? Well, they’re repaying your honesty by taking away your music. Unless you go through a bunch of hoops (that you may never find out about, if you’ve changed email addresses or if you’re not a very technical person), your music will no longer be playable after October 9th...Boy, the entertainment industry sure makes a good case for ripping them off, huh? Buy your media and risk having it confiscated by a DRM-server shutdown. Take it for free and keep it forever.

Walmart Shutting Down Music Store DRM Servers, Umpteenth Reminder to Not Buy DRM’d Content [Gizmodo]

Like Yahoo and MSN before them, Walmart is turning off its DRM servers on Oct. 9, effectively putting any DRM’d songs you bought from them into a cold stasis they’ll never wake up from, since they’ll become totally unmovable unless you circumvent the DRM.

Wal-Mart Pushes Customers Off DRM Fence [Wired Blog]

In other words, if you are going to spend money, please do not spend it at Wal-Mart’s music store, or any other whose backwards DRM policies may one day wipe out your money’s value by pulling the plug on its servers.

Posted by Alex Goldschmidt | Permalink

Tags: customer service, music, downloads, drm, user feedback