Some more details of has yet to announce any compatible devices yet, reports
Engadget. This is unsurprising, although Nokia has copped a lot of flak over its decision to use DRM. Perhaps the problem is that people saw this as the announcement of a music store, and it wasn’t. This was Nokia saying “hey, if you buy our high-end device you won’t have to pay for music to listen on it"… the intention is to sell gadgets, not songs. To make another comparison with iTunes, Apple offered a gadget and a music store which were easy to use, compatible and cheaper than any legal thing out there—but you couldn’t play songs from iTunes elsewhere. Nokia is offering a gadget and a music store which are compatible and free—but you can’t play songs from there elsewhere.