Archive for 2007

The “Regime” at the RIAA tells Nine Inch Nails they can’t market their own music THEY CREATED their way.

Monday, April 9th, 2007

The “Regime” over at the RIAA have stooped to a completely new LOW.

RIAA chases down promotional tracksNine Inch Nails, trying to promote their new album “Year Zero” have hit a roadblock. That roadblock is the RIAA.

In trying to promote their album, NIN released an internet scavenger hunt that led to a website where you can download singles from the new album. The band also dropped USB flash drives in the bathrooms of their concert venues, with each drive containing a song from the new album.

The idea was to get fans to swap the music and start talking about the new CD which is exactly what happened.

The whole plan backfired when the RIAA began to send out emails demanding the fans to remove the music from their sites and threatening to sue them for every single shared.

Why the RIAA is going against a decision that was signed off by the label they are trying to protect is anyones guess

123 Copy DVD Gold is the BEST DVD Copy Software I have ever seen.

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Hello everyone, I wanted to drop a few lines about my favorite new software.  123 Copy DVD Gold.  This product is easy to sum up in 2 words, easy and quality.

I spent the past few days making copies of my favorite DVD movies to take on my cross country trip next week.  I plan on being in some pretty remote areas and while I love a good book, I will have my laptop and 3 extra batteries so why not? LOL.

123 Copy DVD Gold worked flawlessly, the copies were as good as the originals and most importantly, this app was easy to use.

So, take the time to visit my new friends at 123 Copy DVD

EMI will sell DRM-free music on iTunes

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

2 April 2007 10:58 by DVDBack23

EMI will sell DRM-free music on iTunesIn a huge announcement, Apple and EMI have announced that all of EMI’s catalogue will be sold through the iTunes music store without DRM. EMI said in the announcements that all the songs will be available for $1.29 and users can upgrade their DRM locked songs to the DRM-free versions for 30 cents if they wish.

The bitrate of all of EMI’s tracks will also jump from the now available 128kpbs to excellent quality 256kbps AAC files.
“We believe that offering consumers the opportunity to buy higher quality tracks and listen to them on the device or platform of their choice will boost sales of digital music,” said EMI CEO Eric Nicoli during this morning’s press conference.

Customers can still choose to buy the DRM locked, low bitrate tracks for 99 cents.

EMI also said that they would be selling unprotected music videos and albums at the existing prices through iTunes.

We can only hope that the rest of the Big Four labels will watch this revolution closel

iFrogz new Tadpole protects your childs iPod from the occasional “oops”

Monday, April 2nd, 2007


Tadpole, by ifrogz quickly converts your iPod™ into a portable entertainment device for your child. A rugged case and clear protective screen cover offer unmatched protection and style.

Comfort grip handles make viewing easy and fun! Download movies, cartoons and educational videos, then take them anywhere!

boy watching an ipod with a tadpole case

Case Design

The tadpole ($ 19.99 without screen protection) takes key design elements and features from the original ifrogz concept and expands them into kid proofing your iPod. The tadpole case engulfs the whole iPod while leaving open areas for the click wheel, iPod view screen, hold button, and headphones. The bottom port is not accessible with a tadpole case. In addition to these design elements the Tadpole has added the comfort grip handles for kid friendly and iPod safe viewing. Just as with the entire product line of silicone ifrogz cases, the tadpole is made from 100% silicone that is coated to repel dust and lint. The silicone tadpole case also ensures extra shock absorption to protect your iPod from everyday drops and bumps!

screenz description and outline on an iPod

boy watching an ipod with a tadpole case

Screen Protection

The Tadpole comes with an optional ifrogz Screenz ($24.99 with screen protection). ifrogz™ Screenz are a protective sheet of transparent plastic that lays over the whole front of the iPod, protecting the iPod from scratching and wear and tear. Screenz also include stock or custom decals that cover and protect the click-wheel, allowing the user to style their Tadpole with an image of their choice. With hundreds of stock decal selections plus the ability to create your own custom screen decal you’re bound to find a tadpole style that fits you.

The click-wheel’s easy navigation is not hampered by these thin, yet strong and protective Screenz. With an ifrogz™ Screen placed on your iPod first and then secured by the tadpole, your iPod is kid proof in style!

Podmaxx pick of the week: “The Lift” is definitley required listening!!!

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

iDan Say’s:

“NEW CD to be released May 2007″ LOS ANGELES, California
United States

Profile Views: 111865

Last Login: 4/2/2007

“This weeks weeks featured band on MySpace Music, The Lift , is without question the Podmaxx “Pick of the Week” and maybe the Month. If you don’t have these guys in your player, get it loaded now! These guys have put together an excellent sound that is actually unique in this age of no originality and “cookie cutter bands”.

The Lift http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=music

Remember, it’s gotta rock if you wanna dance with me. iDan

Top Ten Reasons You Don’t Need Apple TV (Yet)

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

By Jeremy Horwitz

Editor-in-Chief, iLounge
Published: Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Last Update: Wednesday, March 21, 2007

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Today, Apple officially kicked off its Apple TV publicity campaign, providing review hardware to friendly members of the press and enabling selected journalists to publish early reviews. The goal: to try and build enough positive buzz to sustain the newest member of the Apple family despite some mainstream skepticism about its prospects for success.To provide a bit of balance for all the hype you’re likely to hear over the next several days, we bring you this: a list of the top ten reasons you might not need Apple TV, at least yet. Some are obvious, others aren’t, and all are counterpointed to present both sides of the debate. We’ll leave it for you to decide which side you’re on: will you line up for Apple TV, or sit this one out?

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(10) You have a fifth-generation iPod with video and a $20 bill in your pocket. If you have a full-sized iPod with a video screen, you’re in luck: a lot of Apple TV’s functionality is already sitting inside your iPod, just waiting to be used with literally any TV you own. All you need is a $15-20 iPod AV Cable from one of more than ten vendors, and you can play music, photos, and videos directly from your iPod, with up to 80 Gigs of storage space. Counterpoint: You’ll have to give up Apple TV’s on-TV menuing and use the iPod’s screen to select content, but a DLO HomeDock Deluxe or a Griffin TuneCenter will get you most of the way there for $150 or less.

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(9) You don’t have a high-definition TV, or don’t use one as your primary set. Apple mandates that you have a widescreen television capable of at least 480P resolution, which means that you’ll almost certainly need to have a high-definition set in order to even use Apple TV. If you don’t have one of these TVs, or don’t keep it in a room where you most often watch videos, Apple TV might not be right for you. Counterpoint: Like it or not, HDTV’s the future. If you don’t have one (or more) yet, you will. But until then, perhaps Apple TV can wait.

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(8) You have a large movie collection that isn’t in one of Apple TV’s two supported formats. For years, video files have been popularized in all sorts of file formats - DiVX, MPEG-2, WMV, and various types of AVIs. Apple TV won’t play most of them, and it won’t play your DVDs, either. Assuming you live in a country where DVD ripping is legal - take one step back, American readers - you’ll most likely need to use special conversion tools and spend a couple of hours per DVD you want to convert into an Apple TV-optimized file. Do you really want to invest that time in this format? Counterpoint: The latest Apple TV variant on Apple’s H.264 video format offers nice, high resolutions, so maybe it’s the right time to start converting your movies - unless you need 5.1-channel surround sound.

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(7) The iTunes Store doesn’t sell movies or TV shows in your country, or there’s nothing you want to buy. A year and a half have passed since Apple introduced fifth-generation iPods, and yet there are no movies or real TV shows available in the international iTunes Stores for purchase. While American customers now have an outstanding variety of iTunes-ready TV shows to choose from, most movie studios have failed - at least, thus far - to join with Apple for digital distribution of their new releases. Buying into Apple TV right now is a leap of faith that Apple will continue to win new partners, and most international customers have only music videos or video podcasts to download. Counterpoint: Anyone who bet against Apple’s growth in music would have been wrong in a huge way - there’s a reason Apple’s faithful remain faithful.

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(6) You want to protest Apple’s pricing and bundling policies. When Apple announced its wireless AirPort Express device with AirTunes (remember that?), many people thought that $129 was a stretch for wireless audio streaming. At $299 - two and a half years later - Apple TV may strike you as a big stretch for wireless video, photo, and audio streaming, especially if you think you’ll need more than one for your house. Plus, you have to buy the video and audio cables yourself, since Apple doesn’t toss them in like most companies. Would holding back your $299 teach Apple a lesson about pricing all of its products so that average people can afford them? Counterpoint: Probably not. Apple always tries to skim the market, and they’re counting on early adopters to cough up the extra cash that mainstream buyers won’t. If you’re not buying today, Apple probably doesn’t care too much.

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(5) Apple TV doesn’t have a DVR - or you already have one. TiVo - and other digital video recorders - enable you to record everything from TV shows to movies directly off of your existing cable or satellite TV service, at a single monthly price that lets you record as much as you want. Some, like TiVo, even let you export recordings directly to the iPod, and none require you to wait until the next morning to watch yesterday’s shows. Minus a DVR, Apple TV is little more than a box you have to pay per episode or movie to fill, unless you’re buying it for the photo and music features. Counterpoint: Point to a DVR where you can buy an entire season’s worth of episodes to watch before they’ve aired - Apple’s just signed up at least two shows, albeit small ones, to make that happen. And if you’re willing to pay for them, you can be guaranteed to get the entire season at close to DVD-quality resolution - without waiting for the DVDs to be released. Apple TV might be the wave of the future.

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(4) It doesn’t have a DVD or other hi-def disc player. All of the major studios support DVD for TV and movie releases, and either HD-DVD or Blu-ray Disc for high-definition video releases, but Apple TV doesn’t - it’s made solely for digital downloads, which are currently lower-resolution than even an old-fashioned DVD. For that reason, it won’t replace anything in your existing home AV setup - it sits alongside your current gear. Counterpoint: HD-DVD and Blu-ray Disc haven’t taken off, and if fast DVD hardware converters appear (and/or video disc ripping laws change), there may be no need for discs at all.

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(3) You’re budgeting for another Apple purchase, like a Mac mini. With the $499 iPhone, new iPods, and full-fledged computers like the $599 Mac mini out there, you have plenty of other ways to spend your cash on Apple products, and probably more compelling ones. Many readers think the similarly wireless-ready, more powerful Mac mini offers a much better value for home AV users - it certainly offers more hard drive space and the ability to play back any video you may have, including digital files in any format, as well as DVDs. Counterpoint: Unless you’re planning to buy a 30GB iPod, nothing Apple’s releasing is going to be much less than a $299 Apple TV, and you’ll have to shell out a lot more for one of those fancy Mac minis.

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(2) You want to hold out for a version with higher resolution or more hard disk space. If it’s a good Apple product, the company always releases a better one later, and if it’s a bad product, it quietly disappears from store shelves. Even if you don’t like the current Apple TV, you’ll have to concede that an updated version is likely to eventually follow, with enough horsepower to support even better video quality, and/or store more content. As nice as the first-generation iPod was, most people would laugh at paying $399 today for its 5GB disk drive. Counterpoint: Apple could update some of Apple TV’s features in firmware, or release inexpensive add-ons to enhance its capabilities. Who’d be laughing then?

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(1) You want to wait until the reality distortion field dies down. It’s a common occurrence: Apple has the amazing ability to get people really excited for a new product release, compile positive quotes from its favorite journalists, and inspire lots of impulse - but luxury - purchases. Waiting a little while for a more balanced perspective may help you make a smarter purchasing decision. Counterpoint: Part of the fun of being an Apple fan is getting caught up in the hype and lining up for something that, only yesterday, you didn’t know you needed. Like a new Apple Store 15 minutes from your house. Or maybe an Apple TV.

Readers, what do you think?