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Tag: structure


Confirmed: Apple Dropping DRM Across iTunes, New Pricing Structure, 3G Downloads

2009-01-06 23:19:36| paidContent.org

Just before Tony Bennett sang goodbye to the Moscone Center faithful with "I Left My Heart In San Francisco," Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) confirmed at its final Macworld Expo that it will drop DRM copy protection across 10 million iTunes Store songs from all majors, as per CNET's earlier report. The move will apply to eight million tracks as of today and will extend to a further two million by the end of the quarter. Bringing to a close what have sometimes been fractious label negotiations, Apple is also introducing three new pricing tiers for iTunes tracks$0.69 for older tracks, $0.99 for recent tracks and $1.29 for new hits. Marketing VP Phil Schiller, taking Steve Jobs' traditional keynote spot, also said Apple is extending the ability to buy iTunes songs wirelessly via iPhone from merely WiFi to 3G mobile networks; also from today, tracks will be priced the same and have the same bitrate as desktop iTunes downloads. EMI already began offering higher-fidelity, DRM-free AAC files back in May 2007, after Steve Jobs said Apple would "embrace (DRM-free) in a heartbeat if the big four would license their music (that way) ... because DRMs haven't worked, and may never work, to halt music piracy." Dropping DRM on Apple's favored AAC file format will not be as significant as switching to MP3, which is more commonly associated with DRM-free and compatible with more devices. Forrester Research music analyst Mark Mulligan told me: "DRM is dead, long live DRM!  This is overdue and needed to differentiate premium from subsidized services like Nokia's Comes With Music. The more you pay, the less DRM you get." Other Macworld news Artist Lessons: An update to the Garage Band music software adds a video feature, Learn To Play, including Artist Lessons from Sting, Norah Jones and others. Tapping a new ongoing revenue stream for Apple, more artists' lessons will be added later, for $4.99 a lesson - it's like a Guitar Hero tutorial, without the game. iWork.com A new cloud computing feature that's going head-to-head with Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Docs, iWork.com comes alongside a revamp for the iWork suite - and is another subscription-revenue service. Schiller: "In the end it will be a fee-based service, but it's a free beta for now." New iLife '09 suite: iPhoto is getting face recognition, Facebook-style face tagging and geolocation. Plus, tags on Facebook and Flickr will sync with those for pictures on iPhoto, and iPhoto slideshows can be synced to iPhone and iPod touch. iMovie gets slick new editing tools. New 17-inch MacBook Pro: As expected, a refresh of the largest laptop in the line introduces an 0.98-inch thin machine with a unremovable battery. Eight hours battery life and 1,000 charges, but not good news for those who know how a laptop battery can age and whither. Glass trackpad. Related Steve Jobs Admits New Illness But Stays As CEO; Says Treatment Is Simple, Underway EMI Drops DRM For New Premium Line-Up, Higher Price; Apple First Steve Jobs To Music DRM: Drop Dead

Tags downloads structure apple pricing

 
Lib Dems propose new banking structure

2009-01-03 01:03:35| Guardian Unlimited Business - more business news

Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, has proposed a long-term reform of British banking so that a firewall is built between domestic banking and riskier internationally traded services. In an interview with the Fabian Review Cable says: "In the longer term the banking sector is going to have to be reconstructed on very different lines. I don't think it's going to be possible to have high street banks that are simultaneously operating like casino-type investment banks."He argues that British banking has been operating a form of pyramid selling. "If it wasn't fraud, it was certainly sophisticated pyramid selling: people making fortunes through bonuses which were not in any meaningful sense earned. The anger is because the taxpayer is having to pick up the bills. It is not so much that the rich got richer, which may be understandable in a successful capitalist system, but that the losses have been effectively socialised."He accuses the government of a lack of clarity over what it wants the banks - particularly the part-nationalised banks - to do. "Though I am in advance of the pack when it comes to kicking the banks, they have a genuine point that the government is setting them very confused and contradictory objectives. They are being told to lend more to keep the economy going, which is right and should be top priority. But then they are also being told to hold more liquidity and to repay public loans as quickly as possible." He says it is a "particularly serious crisis for the UK because we have big structural problems which this government chose to overlook, exposing the economy to bigger shocks than would otherwise have been the case." BankingVincent CableCredit crunchLiberal Democratsguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Tags structure banking propose lib

 
 
Atos Origin to Change to Single Board Structure

2009-01-02 17:18:07| Lipper HedgeWorld News

Tags change board single structure

 

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