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 | The Royally Screwed Tenenbaum Found at 4/6/2011 via thephoenix.com Sharing is caring After more than seven years and dozens of petitions, motions, and court appearances, the title fight over the future of music washed up on the South Boston waterfront this week. After more than seven years and dozens of petitions, motions, and court appearances, the title fight over the future of music washed up on the South Boston waterfront this week. Attorneys representing ... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The comeback of vinyl Found at 4/6/2011 via www.ksl.com Music store owners are noticing a renaissance, of sorts. They say they're seeing a big comeback among a musical medium that many people thought was all but extinct. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The iPod Nano Could Be Getting Its Camera Back in September Found at 4/4/2011 via www.theatlantic.com In favor of a smaller design, Apple killed the Nano's built-in video camera in 2010, but it may have found a way to make both work More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | Technology ? Amazon launches online media storage service Found at 4/2/2011 via www.japantoday.com Amazon.com Inc wants to be more than a destination for shopping online: It also dreams of being a place where people can store their music,? More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | TRENDS: Riaa Declares: Being Signed to a Major Label Rocks! Found at 4/2/2011 via www.allaboutjazz.com It turns out that 3 out of 4 artists want to be signed to a label, according to a joint survey conducted by Digital Music News and ReverbNation. Most of the participants saying 'yes' wanted major label deals, but does that mean that major deals "rock"? Well, according to the RIAA, that's exactly the conclusion we should be making... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The Cloud that rains music Found at 3/31/2011 via www.goupstate.com Amazon has introduced the Cloud Player, a Web page that allows you listen to your music collection from any computer or Android phone. And it?s almost free. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The Cloud That Rains Music Found at 3/31/2011 via www.tuscaloosanews.com Amazon has introduced the Cloud Player, a Web page that allows you listen to your music collection from any computer or Android phone. And it's almost free. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The Cloud That Rains Music Found at 3/30/2011 via www.post-gazette.com For years now, the most popular music system -- Apple's -- has worked like this. You buy song files from the iTunes store. They download to your computer. If you want to listen to them on the road, you connect your iPod or iPhone to that computer and copy the files to it. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | TECHNOLOGY: Amazon Beats Apple, Google with Launch of Unlicensed Cloud Music Locker and Player Found at 3/30/2011 via www.allaboutjazz.com (UPDATED) Overnight Amazon beat both Google and Apple to market with the launch of a freemium cloud based digital media locker and robust integrated music player that accesses stored tracks across multiple computers and Android devices. The four major labels were informed late last week of the move which, Amazon insists, does not require them to ask licenses. Not every rights holder agreed ... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | TRENDS: Streaming May Topple Music Industry Iceberg Found at 3/30/2011 via www.allaboutjazz.com The IFPI reports that digital sale grew a meager 5.1% last year and that in the U.S., growth was almost flat at 1.2%. These numbers and chart that accompanies them aren't that shocking, but they do illustrate why the major labels are both excited for Google and Spotify to come to the market, yet terrified about what may happen if they really succeed. If and when Spotify does launch in the U.S ... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | The Cloud Will Be Your Hard Drive, Despite The Record Labels? Greed Found at 3/30/2011 via techcrunch.com Amazon's move into the cloud music storage and streaming game is nothing if not controversial. I love it. They've seemingly looked at what companies like Apple and Google have been dealing with for months, if not years, and just said "screw it, let's just do it." Ballsy. Brilliant. Wonderful. Of course, the service itself seems kind of "meh". But I'm more than happy to take "meh" over nothing at ... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | Tech Watch: Amazon Introduces A New Music Locker, Beating Apple And Google Found at 3/29/2011 via sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com Amazon.com Inc. wants to be more than a destination for shopping online: It also dreams of being a place where you can store your music, photos and videos and access them any time, from any computer. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | TECHNOLOGY: Amazon Launches Cloud Music Service Found at 3/29/2011 via www.allaboutjazz.com Retailer's Cloud Drive beats Apple, Google to the punch. The retail giant has launched a streaming service, allowing users to store their digital music (and other files) online and play them anywhere via the Web or an Android smartphone or tablet. Dubbed Cloud Drive, the service offers 5 GB of free storage to all users. That space is capable of holding up to 1,000 songs, 2,000 digital pictures ... More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | Tiny Electrical Generators Take a Giant Step Forward Found at 3/29/2011 via news.yahoo.com Tiny devices that turn bodily movements ? such as the snap of one's fingers into electricity ? into power for a cellphone or MP3 player are now much closer to making the leap from the laboratory into everyday life. More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |
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 | Tunebug Turns Tabletops Into Boom Boxes Found at 3/29/2011 via www.pcworld.com Tunebug turns pretty much any hard surface into a decent speaker for digital music More... 0 comments | blog this | email this |