Skins Series 3 On DVD 06/04/2009

March 25th, 2009 Leave your comment »

We all loved the first two series of skins but the Class of 2009 is headed up by the beautiful and mysterious Effy (Kaya Scodelario), returning as the new queen bee; her best friend Pandora (Lisa Backwell) is sweet and kooky and keeps the new gang together.

Twins Katie (Megan Prescott) and Emily (Kathryn Prescott) are pulling in different directions. One wants to shed her identity as a twin and gain social status while the other hangs on, crippled by shyness. Naomi, (Lily Loveless) a beautiful idealist who is passionate, political and principled completes the girls.

This dvd is a must have but just a small tip, check out 4oD!

Apple hit with lawsuit over iPhone as e-book reader

March 24th, 2009 Leave your comment »

Earlier this month Apple got hit with a lawsuit over an “exploding” iPod Touch. Now it appears to be getting hit with a suit over the exploding e-book market.

A couple of blogs, including Apple Insider, are reporting that a Swiss communications firm, Monec Holding, has filed suit in a Virginia district court. Monec accuses the iPhone maker of “patent infringement, unfair trade practices, monopolization, and tortious interference for allegedly treading on its January 2002 patent No. 6,335,678 titled ‘Electronic device, preferably an electronic book.’”

We’ve never heard of Monec, but the mission statement on its rather austere Web site claims it’s “a leading innovator for mobile, globally usable communication solutions…with user-friendly products and pioneering solutions, Monec provides companies and users with secure, wireless access solutions which offer highest degree of flexibility, functionality, speed and independence.”

Apparently, last year Monec also sued HP for patent infringement.

Apple Insider says Monec’s beef centers on “Apple’s move to distribute digital book reading applications through the App Store, which it subsequently sees as an endorsement by the Cupertino-based company that its touch-screen handset can serve as a capable eBook reader.”

According to Monec, that violates a patent it filed for a “lightweight” electronic device with a “touch-screen” LCD display having the “dimensions such that (…) approximately one page of a book can be illustrated at normal size, this display being integrated in a flat, frame-like housing.”

It’s unclear what exactly set off the lawsuit but there’s some speculation that it may have been prompted by Amazon’s Kindle for iPhone e-book reader software appearing in Apple’s App Store–even though Apple has had other e-book reader applications in the App Store for a while.

Apple had no comment about the lawsuit. How about you?

Source: David Carnoy on CNET News

Book: Microsoft promised Toshiba HD DVD support

March 24th, 2009 Leave your comment »

Even after it was clear that Blu-ray would win the DVD format race, Microsoft continued to stand behind the rival HD DVD.

The software maker may have had many reasons, including the fact that its technology was used by HD DVD, but another reason was that Microsoft had promised HD DVD format backer Toshiba that it would do so as part of its effort to win a patent cross-license deal with the Japanese electronics giant.

(Credit: Amazon.com)That’s among the interesting tidbits tucked away in Marshall Phelps’ new book, “Burning the Ships,” which I wrote about earlier Tuesday. Phelps, a top Microsoft lawyer, and co-author David Kline suggest that Microsoft had already decided to back HD DVD, but that the company redoubled its support as part of its effort to woo Toshiba to become the first big Japanese firm to take a cross-license to Microsoft’s patents.

Microsoft lawyer Anne Kelley and her team were trying to get Toshiba to sign a deal in a matter of weeks as opposed to the year or so such an agreement would normally take to hammer out. The HD DVD pledge was only part of Microsoft’s effort, which also included sharing some of the future things it was working on that might interest Toshiba.

“Kelley’s team also reaffirmed its support for Toshiba in its battle with Sony over DVD formats,” Phelps and Kline wrote. “As she put it, ‘we let them know that Microsoft would stick with them till the end.’”

The battle between the formats was a high-stakes affair, with Toshiba and Blu-ray proponent Sony each trying to line up backers for their formats. In the computer world, Intel and Microsoft backed HD DVD, while Dell and HP aligned with Blu-ray.

At the same time, winning the deal with Toshiba was key for Microsoft in its efforts to convince large companies, even those with broader patent portfolios, to cross-license Microsoft’s technology.

In the second half of 2004, Microsoft struck roughly 20 new deals, including with some big names such as Cisco and Samsung, but the company was having a tough time striking deals with Japanese PC makers.

In February 2005, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith held a mid-year review meeting in Building 43 on Microsoft’s campus, stressing the importance of cracking that market. “I conveyed my concern in the meeting about the lack of progress in Japan,” Smith is quoted in the book as saying, “and I started to push Anne and the team pretty hard on how and when we might improve this.”

The company decided to focus on winning a deal with one company: Toshiba.

“We did everything we knew how to do to show them that this was a new Microsoft they were dealing with,” Kelley says in the book. “We studied Japanese, we went to cultural training and we constantly reminded ourselves that we needed to create a relationship, not just get a deal done.”

The strategy ultimately paid off, as Microsoft went on to sign a host of such deals, including with other Japanese firms such as Fuji Xerox, Seiko Epson, and NEC.

Source: Ina Fried on CNET News

Nintendo DS: Packing camera and music playback?

March 24th, 2009 Leave your comment »

Japanese business news outlet Nikkei Net is reporting that Nintendo will release an update to the phenomenally successful DS Lite by the end of this calendar year. Highlights of the handheld console’s new features include improved wireless functionality (probably for extra-curricular use — not necessary for gaming), an onboard camera and music playback.

The report goes on to suggest that the internal camera could be used by certain titles, with pictures taken with it somehow incorporated into gameplay. While there are no specifics on pricing, Nikkei Net says the new handheld should go for less than ¥20,000 (£105).

As with the DS Lite, the new DS will see a Japanese-only release to start, with a worldwide release soon after. We’ll have more information on the new handheld as it develops. -Jeff Bakalar

Source: Kotaku on CNET News

Yes - Pet Shop Boys - Music CD

March 23rd, 2009 Leave your comment »

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The new music CD from the Pet shop boys is out now!

Track List

  • Love Etc
  • All Over The World
  • Beautiful People
  • Did You See Me Coming
  • Vulnerable
  • More Than A Dream
  • Building A Wall
  • King Of Rome
  • Pandemonium
  • The Way It Used To Be
  • Legacy
  • MadWorld - Nintendo Wii Games

    March 20th, 2009 1 Comment »
    • Killer looks: Unique and stunning black and white stylised graphics based upon comic book graphic novels.
    • Exciting, instinctual gameplay: Fast, visceral, arcade-style gameplay with brutal finishing moves delivered by the Wii Remote and Nunchuk.
    • Over-the-top violence: Vast array of murderous moves, exaggerated characters and monstrous bosses presented in an irreverent style.
    • Multiplayer minigames: Variety of Wii party-games presented with an ultra-violent twist that can be played hotseat against friends.

    New Software Brings New Features to iPhone

    March 20th, 2009 Leave your comment »
    iPhone

    iPhone

    March 17, 2009 | by Chuck McKenney

    Apple debuted on Tuesday the new operating system for its iPhone and Touch.

    The iPhone OS 3.0 includes several features such as the ability to cut-and-paste text, send emails with attached voice recordings, photos or other files.

    Other features include:

    • Use Apple’s “Spotlight” function to search contents on phone
    • Play video games against other iPhone users via Bluetooth connection
    • Provide Internet connection for notebook computers and other devices

    The new operating system will be available sometime this summer. There will be no charge for iPhone users, but it will cost iPod Touch owners $9.95.

    Many suspect Apple will launch the next version of the iPhone when the software becomes available.

    According to Apple - iPhone apps have been downloaded 800 million times, and there are now more than 25,000 apps in the iTunes store.

    Via: CNNMoney.com