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“For the first time in my life I can download music off the internet legally using Amazon’s new MP3 service.” – is it possible Joe’s not familiar w/ eMusic?
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is it worth it to move my stuff out for the summer? hmmm
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more on the DNC rental opportunities
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still need to read the fine print, but very good to see. should open some doors for the AWS folks.
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sanity and common sense from someone in a position to do something about it: outstanding. Jeremy’s right, this is a ballsy presentation. the one point i’d emphasize to music execs: this isn’t about “preserving” control, b/c you never had it anyway
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“Gears In Motion is a user interface that allows you to manage easily your Google Gears databases for all your Google Gears projects.” – interesting
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“Sam could you add Jabber notifications to the email in the comment form when a new comment has been posted to entry? pleeeeeeeeeeaase.” – huge fan of this concept, and have actually seen it in action before
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“David Ortiz reached base in 11 of his 13 ALDS plate appearances. He batted .714 average with an .846 on-base percentage and 2.417 OPS.” – why we love Ortiz
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this is a shame. though i haven’t read it in a long time, as i spend very little time with magazines these days, Business 2.0 was once a favorite
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“People who use Red Hat, at least with respect to our intellectual property, in a sense have an obligation to compensate us” – here we go again
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2 Comments
re: Amazon MP3… I know you Redmonk guys are eMusic fans… but it’s a subscription model. Personally, I want to download and pay for music on a per-track basis. I understand that Rhapsody is subscription too. The reason I like the Amazon way of working is the fact that it’s like iTunes i.e. per track or album, but sans DRM. That would suit me better than the eMusic idea (which I’m currently trying, since Amazon MP3 downloads are unavailable to me as a UK consumer).
I preferr Amazon’s service to iTunes. iTunes is very intrusive on a computer system and I hate that I need to use a software that slows my system down when I use iTunes. Will be interesting to see how iTunes and the other competitors will react to the Amazon way of selling music.
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