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Audio/Video, iPod

Radio and CDs Still More Popular than MP3s, Finds Study

Believe it or not, digital media and iPods aren't the most popular way to consume audio entertainment. In fact, it's not even close. The most popular source of audio media, according to the Council for Research Excellence (PDF), is good ol' broadcast radio.

According to the study, which followed around 300 adults in five U.S. cities, some 77-percent of Americans listen to some broadcast radio on any given day. Compare that with the second place source, CD and cassettes, which only 37-percent listen to on a daily basis, and you've got an utter dominance of the market. Portable media devices like the iPod didn't even come in third. Despite garnering most of the media attention, MP3s were beaten out by radio, CD, and even satellite radio.

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Web

Conceptual 'Story' Takes 1,000 Years to Read

He's already tried to enact the Law of Identity and genetically engineer God, but now conceptual artist Jonathon Keats has created a story that will take 1,000 years to read.

Thanks to clever, layered printing, his story is printed on the cover of Opium Magazine's current, appropriately dubbed 'Infinity' issue. The story being a mere nine words long (come on, is that really a story?), each word is concealed under a different layer of ink. Each layer, Keats told Wired Magazine, will fade incrementally over the next millennium when exposed to ultraviolet light. Keats intends for the piece to investigate the way that digital media has increased the rate at which we consume text.

So, go ahead; get a copy, set it outside, and hope that your future progeny will still know how to read. [From: Wired]

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Audio/Video, Computers

91% of Americans Want the Ability to Copy DVDs Onto Their PCs, Study Finds


This morning, the National Consumers League released a statement claiming that 90-percent of PC-owning, U.S. consumers want the ability to save DVDs, as they would CDs, on their computers. The study was conducted by the Opinion Research Corporation, and drawn from a survey of 1,000 consumers of varying ages.

This should come as no surprise to those who have witnessed the gradual digitalization (moving away from physical products and towards computer files) of music, songs and albums. Just as many music fans now use their computers as their primary sound systems, 69-percent of those surveyed attested to watching DVDs on their computers. Is it any surprise, then, that they'd want the ability to save the disc on their video player of choice? It shouldn't be, particularly when you consider that nearly 40-percent of the respondents claimed to have, at some point, repurchased a DVD due to loss or damage.

For the most part, folks in the "biz" aren't too fond of this trend, since importing media onto a computer renders computer files that are more easily pirated than are physical discs. That being said, with the economy in such dire straits, and folks' once disposable income becoming increasingly indispensable, DVD sales have suffered (55-percent are purchasing fewer DVDs than they were last year). That being said, 40-percent of the respondents said that the ability to import DVDs onto their computers would stimulate their purchasing of the discs.

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Audio/Video, iPod, CES 2008

Asus Internet Radios Also Give You the Weather, Stock Updates

ASUS's New Internet Radios
Asus isn't just in the market of making laptops and computer parts. Asus also makes an award winning line of Internet radios. At this year's CES, the company is showing off two new members of its AIR (Asus Internet Radio) family.

The AIR 3 allows you to pull in radio streams over Wi-Fi from all around the globe, without a computer. The internal database of over 10,000 streams is updated regularly, weeding out those that have fallen silent and adding new ones as they go live. The AIR 3 also has a built in iPod dock, a USB port for playing tracks off of a Flash drive, as well as weather forecasting and stock tracking widgets.
ASUS's New Internet Radios

The AIR 5 is meant for a component stereo system. The screen-less Wi-Fi device has the same USB and Internet radio capabilities as the AIR 3, but also includes a hard drive for storing music locally. The included remote allows you to navigate your media and Internet streams via the LCD display.

Prices were not available, but expect to see the AIR 3 in May, and the AIR 5 in July.

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Audio/Video, Top Lists

Fortune Puts Radiohead's Name-Your-Price Album on List of Dumbest Ideas


Fortune magazine, like everyone else under the sun, is getting in on the year-end list making fun with The '101 Dumbest Moments in Business'.

Of interest to us is number 58. "Radiohead - Can't wait for the follow-up album, 'In Debt.'" Apparently circumventing the record labels to collect all revenues directly as a band and treating your fans as something other than just consumers is bad business. Who knew?

We wonder if Fortune is just part of the old guard, terrified to see the end of the traditional record label dominance. Lets break down the numbers for the guys at Fortune. In its first week, Radiohead's 'In Rainbows' was downloaded 1.2 million time legitimately and over 500,000 times illegally. This means that the number of legitimate copies of the album far out-strips pirated copies, something no other popular album seems to be able to accomplish anymore. According ComScore's questionable reports only 38 percent of those who downloaded 'In Rainbows' actually paid for it, and those people only paid an average of $6 a pop. So that means 456,000 people (making it one of the fastest-selling albums of the year, by the way) paid a little shy of $3 million directly to the band, as opposed to almost $7 million to a record label who would have funneled much less than $3 million to the band.

This entry on their list makes sure Fortune will be on our list of 'out of touch companies, publications, and people who will desperately cling to relevance in the coming years.'

From Fortune

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Latest Reviews from CNET.com

CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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