> Isnt it amazing to witness the transformation of the retailing side of
> music.
>
> Not so long ago, we'd go to Tower records to look for music, now music is
> sold in Starbucks joints. My problem with starbucks or Walmart selling music
> is that music is an add-on to the shopping experience. Going to a music
> store is a more voluntary attitude: you want to buy music. At Wallmart, you
> walk by a CD stand and grab one because it's there, at the riht place at the
> right time. Likewise, I guess a lot of people go to Starbucks to relax and
> hear music (not "listen to") while they sip their latte. They are definitely
> great targets for merchants and I have a notion sales of CD's at Starbucks
> are doing just great, but the "old school whining music taliban" in me just
> feels like it's demeaning the music listening experience in a subtle way.
>
> GB
>
>
gmail.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
> 1180007174.176116.149...@g4g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
> ...