Is the music industry finally getting the Apple Music Store message?

Is the music industry finally getting the Apple Music Store message?

Could it be that the music industry has finally got the message about online distribution? See this report that Sony Music Entertainment and Universal Music Group are to sell their brain-dead online service, Pressplay, to Roxio. “The marketplace has changed,” Sony Music executive VP Robert Bowlin says. “We are in the content business. We don’t have to own the highway necessarily unless it is strategic to do so.”

Well, well… And isn’t it ironic that Roxio owns the Napster brand name?

WiFi users reduced to the status of ‘trailer trash’

WiFi users reduced to the status of ‘trailer trash’

Wired reports:

“In a move to generate extra cash and attract new patrons, a growing number of upscale RV parks are rolling out networks that allow users to connect throughout their facilities using Wi-Fi technology.

“A lot of parks are realizing that Wi-Fi is not only a luxury, it’s also a necessity,” said Randy Hendrickson, general manager of Destiny RV Resorts, which operates parks in Dallas, Phoenix, Las Vegas and Blythe, California. He said he believes offering Wi-Fi will help the parks draw a younger and more tech-oriented set of patrons.

“We have people who are actually working full time from their computer on the road,” he said. “And we need to offer a service that’s attractive to them.”

AOL Time Warner: the perpetual motion machine

AOL Time Warner: the perpetual motion machine

Guess what? Steve Case — architect of the AOL Time Warner merger — is talking about undoing the marriage and spinning off AOL. Or so the NYT claims: “Stephen M. Case, mastermind of America Online’s record-breaking acquisition of Time Warner, has begun to talk favorably of undoing the deal by spinning off AOL, according to two senior company officials who have spoken with him”.

Wireless broadband via barrage balloons. Eh?

Wireless broadband via barrage balloons. Eh?

A BBC report claims that a Yorkshire company is proposing to offer broadband via a set of balloons tethered 1.5km above the earth’s surface. And it would only require 18 balloons to cover the entire UK. And in case you think this is just hot air, you’re wrong. The balloons are filled with Helium.

How to build a supercomputer for less than $50k

How to build a supercomputer for less than $50k

Answer: buy 70 PlayStation 2s and hook them up via a Hewlett-Packard switch. NCSA engineers have just done it, and it works. “It took a lot of time because you have to cut all of these things out of the plastic packaging,” said Craig Steffen, a senior research scientist at the center, who is one of four scientists working part time on the project. According to the Times report, the NCSA scientists “are taking advantage of a standard component of the Sony video-game console that was originally intended to move and transform pixels rapidly on a television screen to produce lifelike graphics. The chip is not the PlayStation 2’s MIPS microprocessor, but rather a graphics co-processor known as the Emotion Engine. That custom designed silicon chip is capable of producing up to 6.5 billion mathematical operations a second.”

But now comes the really interesting bit. Why did they choose the Playstation? Answer: “The supercomputing center scientists said they had chosen the PlayStation 2 because Sony sells a special Linux module that includes a high-speed network connection and a disk drive.

By contrast, it is almost impossible for researchers to install the Linux system on Microsoft’s Xbox game console.

Using a network of machines is not a new concept in the supercomputing world. Linux, which plays a major role in that world, has been used to assemble high-performance parallel computers built largely out of commodity hardware components. These machines are generally called Beowulf clusters.”

Modern Manners: No. 428

Modern Manners: No. 428

Overheard by a colleague in a Cambridge supermarket the other day. A mother admonishing her young son for swearing said:

“You don’t say ‘Jesus Christ’, you say ‘Cor blimey’ ” !!

Next target for Microsoft’s strategic largesse: the non-profit sector

Next target for Microsoft’s strategic largesse: the non-profit sector

According to the NYT , Redmond is significantly increasing its donation of software to the nation’s nonprofit organizations, to a level that may approach $1 billion annually in the next three to four years. Why the sudden outbreak of generosity on the company‘s part (remember it’s Gates as an individual who gives to the wholly-excellent Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)? Answer: “critics say they believe Microsoft is using a giveaway strategy to undercut the so-called free software movement in the potentially promising nonprofit market”. Well, I never….

US legislators to get serious about spam?

US legislators to get serious about spam?

Register report.

The US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation held hearings on the problem last week. According to the Register report, “The hearing … heard that spam costs US businesses $10 billion each year in lost productivity. According to Enrique Salem, president of spam blocking company Brightmail, nearly half of all e-mails sent are spam. This compared, he said, with just seven percent in 2001. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has also seen an explosion in the number of complaints it receives from consumers about spam. In 2001, around 10,000 junk e-mails were forwarded to it each day from Internet users. That daily figure now stands closer to 130,000. Such evidence seems to be having the desired effect on American lawmakers. Although Congress has failed to crackdown on spam in the past, following pressure from some retailers, marketing firms and business users of e-mail, it appears that tighter regulation will be introduced some time this year. Two Senators, one Republican and one Democrat, have proposed a bill that would ban deceptive subject lines, require valid return addresses and order spammers to obey requests by e-mail users to stop sending them e-mail. In addition, Senator Schumer from New York wants an international anti-spam treaty. For its part, Microsoft is seeking increased penalties for fraudulent practices by spammers. It is also pushing for an electronic seal-of-approval system for legitimate marketers and for unsolicited mails to be labelled as such so that e-mail users could delete them without having to open them.”