Friday 29 February 2008

Timeline: iPodding through the years

The iPod began life modestly, getting trotted out before the press in a small theater at Apple's headquarters. These days, it's a major attraction, drawing hundreds of reporters to a media event last month in San Francisco that featured appearances by the CEO of Disney and R&B singer John Legend. Here's what happened in between to make the iPod the rock star it is today.

October: At a press-only event at Apple's Cupertino, Calif., campus, Apple unveils the iPod, a 5GB hard-drive-based music player that will sell for $399. "To have your whole CD library with you at all times is a quantum leap when it comes to music," Steve Jobs tells the press. "You can fit your whole music library in your pocket."

November: The iPod officially hits retail shelves on November 10.

SanDisk's patent complaint will get U.S. trade agency review

SanDisk, the world's largest maker of cards that store digital photos and other data, persuaded a U.S. trade agency to look into whether 25 companies are violating its flash-memory chip patents. The U.S. International Trade Commission said Thursday that it will investigate SanDisk's complaint, filed in October. Milpitas-based SanDisk wants the agency to block imports of products found to infringe its patents. Flash-memory chips are used to store data in digital cameras, cell phones and MP3 players.

- Bloomberg News .

Top the Holiday Charts with Speakers for the Digital Music Devotee

MILFORD, Pa., Dec. 4 /PRNewswire/ -- It's the classic holiday dilemma: what to get for the person who has everything? Since the introduction of the iPod(R) in 2001, millions of digital music players have been sold in the U.S. So with the likelihood that your "giftee" already has an iPod or other MP3 player loaded with their favorite tunes, what's a holiday shopper to do?

The solution: Accessorize their digital music player with a gift from Altec Lansing's (www.alteclansing.com) expansive line of speaker systems for MP3 players, Bluetooth(R) music-enabled phones and PCs.

Speakers are always a popular holiday gift and this year will be no exception. Since developing some of the first speaker docks for the iPod, Altec Lansing has made great strides in quality, design and acoustic performance.

Saturday 23 February 2008

Yahoo MP3 Service

Yahoo said to be in talks to offer music

Yahoo is in early discussions with major record labels over offering unprotected MP3s either for sale or for free as part of an ad-supported service, two record company executives familiar with the talks said Wednesday.

The talks, held as recently as last month, were preliminary because Yahoo is still working out the details, said the executives, who requested anonymity because of the discussions were confidential.

Yahoo hopes to launch the service this year, they said.

Universal Music Group, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group Corp., and EMI Group PLC have in recent months begun licensing their music for sale as MP3 files online through retailers like Amazon.com.

Representatives for the labels declined to comment.

Amazon signs Sony download deal

The deal means Amazon is now the only company offering tracks from all four big music companies free of DRM.

This makes the Amazon store a more significant rival for Apple iTunes which has long had a commanding lead over rivals in the downloadable music market.

All the 3.1 million tracks in the Amazon store are free of DRM software. In contrast, only songs from EMI and some independent labels are available via Apple's iTunes without copy controls.

In February 2007, Apple boss Steve Jobs called on record labels to stop using DRM in a bid to boost the popularity of downloadable music.

The Amazon MP3 store, which launched in September 2007, is only available in the US. There have been no announcements about when or whether the service will be expanded overseas.

Songs prepared in the MP3 format can be played on any portable music player.

CES: HD-AAC codec 'makes CDs obsolete'

Fraunhofer IIS, inventor of the ubiquitous MP3 music format, on Monday made a pitch to audio and computer makers to use its HD-AAC format. HD-AAC is a new digital music encoding format that Fraunhofer says is actually better than audio CDs. What's more, it's already iPod-compatible - well, sort of.

HD-AAC is based on the MPEG-4 SLS (Scalable to Lossless) standard, an extension to the MPEG-4 audio standard jointly developed by Fraunhofer and Infocomm Research. The encoding process HD-AAC preserves every bit of information in the uncompressed original music track, providing lossless compression of 24-bit music content. That's compared to the 16-bit, 44.1 kHz quality found on CDs - hence, Fraunhofer's "better than CD" claim.

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Sunday 17 February 2008

Video MP3 player loaded with porn given to 10-yr old girl

The dangers of returned gifts being resold. At a Wal-Mart in Cookeville, TN, an MP3 player had been previously purchased and returned to the store for a refund. Later, it was resold to an unsuspecting father as a Christmas present for his daughter. When the ten-year old girl opened the present and plugged it in, she received a slew of pornographic images as well as explicit lyrics songs, leaving her in tears. The man, Daryl Hill, confronted Wal-Mart with the device. A spokesperson said that Wal-Mart is not supposed to return previously opened products to the sales floor and that the matter was under investigation.Read more ... WTVF, Channel 5 in Nashville, TN. .

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Top the Holiday Charts with Speakers for the Digital Music Devotee

MILFORD, Pa., Dec. 4 /PRNewswire/ -- It's the classic holiday dilemma: what to get for the person who has everything? Since the introduction of the iPod(R) in 2001, millions of digital music players have been sold in the U.S. So with the likelihood that your "giftee" already has an iPod or other MP3 player loaded with their favorite tunes, what's a holiday shopper to do?

The solution: Accessorize their digital music player with a gift from Altec Lansing's (www.alteclansing.com) expansive line of speaker systems for MP3 players, Bluetooth(R) music-enabled phones and PCs.

Speakers are always a popular holiday gift and this year will be no exception. Since developing some of the first speaker docks for the iPod, Altec Lansing has made great strides in quality, design and acoustic performance.

Thursday 14 February 2008

Winamp 5.52

Winamp has always prided itself on being free and it has a steady, loyal following as a result. Version 5 is sure to please its current users, and to win it some converts.

It looks good with a completely new interface, and comes with fairly comprehensive file support. Audio support includes CDA, MIDI, MP1/2/3/4, AAC, OGG, WAV, AIF, WMA and more.

Support for video is added in version 5.52, and currently this stretches to MPG, M2V, AVI and ASF formats.

It packs a good deal into a fairly slim package, with the player incorporating everything you would expect and more: loop, repeat, ID3 tag support, cross-fading between tracks, 2x CD burning/ripping, internet TV and radio support etc.

It has a media manager, 10-band graphic equaliser, visualisations and a playlist editor.

iPod update shuts out RealNetworks

Apple has quietly updated its iPod software so that songs purchased from RealNetworks' online music store will no longer play on some of the Mac maker's popular MP3 players.

The move could render tunes purchased by many iPod owners unplayable on their music players. For the last four months, RealNetworks has marketed its music store as the only Apple rival compatible with the iPod, following the company's discovery of a way to let its customers play their downloaded tunes on Apple's MP3 player.

Apple criticised RealNetworks' workaround, dubbed Harmony, as the "tactics... of a hacker", and warned in July that RealNetworks-purchased songs would probably "cease to work with current and future iPods". Apple offered no further statement on Tuesday, but confirmed that the software released with its iPod Photo will not play music purchased from RealNetworks' music store.

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