Hot Topic launches AIR-based, DRM-free MP3 store

By Tim Conneally | Published October 30, 2008, 9:59 AM

Shockhound.com MP3 storeThis week, mall-goth retailer Hot Topic opened ShockHound.com, a lifestyle portal that features music-related editorial content, merchandise, and its own little venue for music downloads on the side.

Much like Hot Topic's physical stores, the target demographic is young and unlikely to have their own credit cards. Therefore, to purchase MP3s from ShockHound's online store, users must create a "piggy bank" for their account. Rather than saving credit card information that is retrieved on a per-purchase basis like Amazon and iTunes, user accounts are allotted a certain amount of money from either gift cards, or a one-time debit from a credit card.

Purchases are obtained through an Adobe AIR-based desktop download manager, and the system currently utilizes Amazon's Simple Storage Service. ShockHound launched this week with content from all of the "big four" major labels (UMG, SMEI, WMG, and EMI), and their related indie subsidiaries.

ShockHound's MP3 store catalog is focused on that which falls within the interests of the Hot Topic audience (punk, metal, indie) but includes Rock, Country, Electronic/Dance, Hip Hop, Jazz, Pop, R&B/Soul, and Reggae. Because of the additional social nature of the site, recommendations are made based upon buying habits as well as profile keywords.

Shockhound desktop download manager

View comments by with a score of at least

The new face of Android: No face

With Sony Ericsson's new Xperia X10, the focus is less on Android and more on a unique experience.

With beefed up 3G, more networks to get 'Droid'

Telefonica's O2 may be in fourth place in Germany, but it's ramped up its UMTS networks and is getting the Motorola Milestone, also known as Droid.

Must Microsoft Store copy Apple Store to succeed?

They say imitation is the finest form of flattery, With Apple, many competitors have done many bad imitations, including Microsoft. Is Microsoft Store yet another bad Apple knock-off? Does Microsoft even need retail stores?

Antisocial media: Lack of safeguards is killing the experience

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Step one was to gather the audience, and social media has done that. Step two now is to keep them safe.

Apple's App Store hits 100K apps: News or rhetoric?

The iPhone private market now has a catalog of over 100,000 downloadable apps, but it's not an achievement that Apple earned.

Performance drain: The first public perception test of the Windows 7 era

Scott Fulton On Point: The opinion that regular users out there won't care about the changes happening in software even as we speak, is flat wrong.

On the eve of a new EU constitution, Poland suggests distance from 'open source'

A curious document purporting to be an important EU regulatory framework draft proposes that openness, including in terms of software, is relative.

For those who missed Google Voice beta, Ribbit Mobile opens in beta

British Telecom-owned company Ribbit today opened its own "single number" calling solution.

CinemaNow streaming movies coming to Best Buy

First it partnered with Netflix, now CinemaNow. Best Buy has fully embraced streaming video.

Internet Explorer slows down again: Is Microsoft messing up IE's JavaScript?

Almost the entire speed gap between IE7 and IE8 has been erased in just the last two months, most recently by a bug fix Microsoft started distributing today.

A taste of Android's freshly baked Eclair

Android version 2.0 brings a set of new features to the table, including native support for Microsoft Exchange.