Author Archive

CD celebrates 25th birthday

CD celebrates 25th birthdayThe BBC reports that it was 25 years ago, to this day, that the world’s first compact disc was produced at a Philips factory in Germany. The rest, as they say, is history.

A joint project between Philips and Sony, designed to create a standard for an optical disc for storing and playing back music, the CD has since gone on to sell over 200 billion, and despite the rise of digital downloads, continues to dominate music sales.

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Skype outage makes for a quiet working day

Skype logoSkype has suffered an outage today, that still continues, meaning that web workers around the globe, like myself, have had an unusually quiet day — with far fewer IM interruptions but also a strange kind of isolation. What’s also made today standout is that in all the time that I’ve been a Skype user, I don’t remember it ever going down. Sure there has been poor connections and some odd behavior, where contacts disappear and reappear intermittently for no apparent reason, but never has the service been totally unavailable. As much as today’s outage has been an inconvenience, the fact that it’s been so noticeable is perhaps testament to Skype’s overall robustness.

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YouTubeDesktop.com – the slickest YouTube browser yet?

YouTubeDesktop.com - the slickest YouTube browser yet?A few minutes ago an email dropped into my in-box from YouTubeDesktop.com — a product that I’d never heard of before — inviting me to try out their private beta. Claiming to be “something special”, that many developers had said was “programmatically impossible”, I willingly put down my coffee and fired up Firefox.

The idea behind YouTube Desktop is to bring a desktop application experience to navigating and viewing YouTube videos through a web browser.

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Free Software Foundation protests against "corrupt" BBC

Free Software Foundation vs BBCThe planned protests against the BBC, which we reported on a few weeks back, took place today as supporters of the Free Software Foundation (FSC) — dressed in bright yellow Hazmat suits — gathered outside BBC Television Center in London and BBC headquarters in Manchester to demand that DRM be eliminated from the BBC’s iPlayer.

The FSC is accusing the BBC of “corruption” because of the iPlayer’s reliance on Microsoft’s technology and the fact that, prior to joining the public service broadcaster, the controller of the BBC’s Future Media and Technology Group worked for Microsoft as director of its Windows Digital Media division.

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iPlayer is getting a "free ride" say UK ISPs

BBC iPlayer download reviewA story doing the rounds in a number of UK newspapers and blogs (Independent, Financial Times, The Mail on Sunday) is that ISPs are increasingly worried about the BBC’s iPlayer, which, were it to catch on, could place an unacceptable strain on their networks. The solution, says Tiscali chief executive, Mary Turner, is for the BBC to contribute to bandwidth costs. While other ISPs are talking about implementing ‘packet shaping’ as a way of penalizing iPlayer traffic so as to maintain speeds across the rest of the network. The result would be that, during peak times at least, the iPlayer could become painfully slow.

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Read/WriteWeb Files: Online Music

Read/WriteWeb Files: Online MusicEvery week our sister blog, Read/WriteWeb, has a feature called Read/WriteWeb Files, in which they investigate a current hot topic or company in Web technology. This week they’re going to focus on Online Music, something that is becoming more and more prevelant as broadband speeds increase and social software functionality gets better. Here at last100, we’ll also be contributing to the Read/WriteWeb Files, with a series of posts on digital music services, devices and the state of the music industry. Our other sister blog, AltSearchEngines, will also be publishing a list of their Top 10 music search engines.

Google shows why DRM is evil

Google shows why DRM is evilWith Google’s decision to abandon paid-for video downloads — announced last Friday — the company also inadvertently delivered a “Sesame Street-style” lesson in why DRM is evil (notice the irony?). In an email sent out to Google Video customers, the company revealed that, as of August 15th, purchased videos will no longer playback, and instead users are being a given refund in the form of a Google Checkout “bonus”.

One of the inherit problems with DRM is that if a company goes bust or, presumably in Google’s case, decides to shut down the servers it uses to verify a legitimate purchase, then any DRM’d media is rendered useless.

You might be wondering how Google can get away with it, and I’ve been asking myself the same question. Two answers spring to mind. Firstly, the customer-base of Google Video paid-for downloads must be so small that the company doesn’t expect much of a backlash, which in-turn it hopes to have tempered through its offer of Google Checkout vouchers. Secondly, and more worryingly, it’s likely that the terms and conditions of Google Video already protected the company against such a scenario — where customers don’t actually “own” the media they pay for but instead license it in some way that allows for any future changes in service — including a DRM server blackout.

Whether or not this is legal — and I’m no lawyer — it’s a blatant abuse of trust, for which Google deserves to be held account.

(Also see Cory Doctorow’s take).

Weekly wrapup, 6 – 10 August 2007

Here’s a summary of the week’s digital lifestyle action on last100. Note that you can subscribe to the weekly wrapups, either via the special weekly wrapup RSS feed or by email.

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Top digital lifestyle news

Kicking off the week, we reported on Amazon’s investment in AmieStreet.com. The social music site has a unique business model where all songs start off free and rise in price — up to 98 cents — the more they are purchased.

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Blockbuster acquires movie download service Movielink

Blockbuster acquires movie download service MovielinkReuters reports that the U.S. movie rental chain Blockbuster has acquired the film download service, Movielink. While the terms of the deal are undisclosed, it’s thought that the purchase price is significantly less than the 50 million price tag that was banded about when negotiations began last March.

The U.S.-only movie download store was launched in 2002 as a joint venture between Paramount, Sony, Universal, Warner Bros. and MGM — giving it access to major Hollywood content. With the acquisition, Blockbuster is inheriting those licensing agreements and a back catalog of more than 3,300 downloads. According to the report, Blockbuster will continue to operate Movielink as a separate brand, but will eventually make elements of the service available through Blockbuster.com.

Movielink is a standard Windows DRM affair, with movie downloads offered for both rental and to-own. Rentals can be stored for up to 30 days and expire 24 hours after the first viewing. In some cases, downloads can be played back on up to three PCs — depending on the original content-owners’ wishes — while others are limited to one PC.

Spanish broadcasters not happy with Zattoo

Zattoo live TV on the InternetEarlier in the week NewTeeVee published a short post referencing a story being carried in a Spanish newspaper, which suggested that a number of local broadcasters were considering taking legal action against the Internet TV startup, Zattoo.

Zattoo, is a peer-to-peer application that provides live streaming of traditional TV channels (see our review). The service is ad-supported, where an advertisement is displayed for 5 seconds every time a user switches channel, and this appears to be the potential cause of dispute, with some of Spain’s television stations unhappy that Zattoo is profiting from their content.

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