Home Grown Music Tech.

The News Review:

- Home Grown Music Tech.
- America’s past on YouTube
- Telecom’s launches NZ’s largest mobile music store – but it’s …
- Best Sellers-Audio

Home Grown Music Tech.
Examiner.com
Telling me that he "couldn’t do a lick of this a month ago" and "playing sound engineer producer and artist in the same sitting all by your lonesome is definitely a challenge. " Like many artists learning quickly how to master their music he has found it pleasing and enjoys what he is doing. With home recording becoming more popular and the technology to build such becoming cheaper home grown music and.

America’s past on YouTube
San Francisco Chronicle
tmpl –> But the school year has ended and the kids are at loose ends. What’s a worried parent to do? At the risk of attracting the ire of those who justifiably want to pull their children away from computer screens send them to YouTube. Amid the trashy home videos and other uneven chronicles of pop culture is a memorable new look at America’s past that whets the appetite for more free fun. The National Archives in celebration of its 75th anniversary has posted 17 videos to YouTube from its audio-visual collection. Best known as a stop on the well-worn paths of Washington tourists and school field-trippers the archives are the keeper of such documents as the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution and the repository of immigration records for those seeking to research their family’s history. But the archival records are much broader and deeper encompassing every medium from parchment to photos and video. “We have tens of thousands of videos in our collection” says Susan Cooper a spokeswoman for the archives.

Telecom’s launches NZ’s largest mobile music store – but it’s …
National Business Review
ver that it’s then via wi-fi. Note – you can however stream podcasts and iTunes over 3G and as this is a steam it isn’t dependent on file size. "]Telecom today launched what is indisputably New Zealand’s largest home-grown mobile music store – but Vodafone has been quick to pick it apart. Telecom’s music store launched today offers customers of its new XT network 3. 2 million tracks downloadable to Nokia 3120 6120 6600 and E71; Samsung F480T S8300T and 5220; LG GM310; and Sony Ericsson W705 and C510a phones. A spokesman for Vodafone immediately criticised Telecom for wrapping its songs in copy-protection or DRM (digital rights management) preventing them from being copied to an MP3 player or other device (an exception is if you upgrade or change XT phones. If you do you can re-download each track).
Related from Guanxithebook: Guest column: China Telecom’s IM service part of wider strategy

Best Sellers-Audio
The Associated Press
“Whatever It Is” Zac Brown Band. “I Run to You” Lady Antebellum.

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