Archive for the 'Tech News' Category
Posted by T Rex on April 28, 2008
A recent Wired article points to the fact that over 14 million units of Guitar Hero have been sold in North America since the game’s release in 2005. Will we look back 10 years from now and be able to point to the current popularity of Guitar Hero and Rock Band for all the great new guitar rock we will be listening to in 2018?
“The wildfire success of music games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band is causing a subtle revolution in popular music — maybe not on the level of the British Invasion of the ’60s, but noticeable nonetheless. The games are bringing about renewed interest in the guitar, a music-making machine that’s been losing traction lately to turntables and laptops. Guitar Hero is like a gateway drug that’s getting a new wave of players hooked on guitar.”
“There’s even a videogame coming that promises to bridge the gap between game guitar and music lesson: Guitar Rising will purportedly let users play a Guitar Hero-type game using an actual guitar instead of a plastic controller.”
I can’t play a note a of music but have been to endless concerts and experienced the joys to truly love a band/artist or song so much you would do anything and travel anywhere to hear it performed live. I have felt those goose bumps and have had my eyes filled with tears when you know your in the presence of something magical happening on stage. When I was younger I pissed away my video game time on Space Invaders, Qbert, Mario Brothers and Zelda . Imagine where I’d be if I could have been rocking to Velvet Underground or crushing Metallica songs in my living room? These kids are being exposed to great music and if it leads to more guitar legends and gets kids out to concerts…..start cranking those games out monthly.
Check out the whole article over at Wired here.
Read my January post ‘Digital Jams’ here.
Will video games saves the music industry?
Posted in Live music, Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Guitar Hero, Guitar Legend, Listening Post, Rock Music, Wired | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on April 17, 2008

Rolling Stone wrote up these cool headphones today which are to be released soon by Skullcandy:
What It Is: A sweet looking pair of headphones that features an SD card slot that allows you to drag and drop music files directly onto the card for loading into the unit.
Who It’s For: People who want music on the go but would rather skip carrying around an MP3 player.
Why It’s Worthy: First of all, the headphones have a delightfully old-school look and feel, so they function as a throwback accessory as well as a music playing device. The speakers are dynamic and sharp, and the whole thing runs on a rechargeable lithium ion battery that only demands an hour of charge time.
Our Only Complaint: The unit only comes with a 512 MB SD card, which only translates to about 120 songs (and fewer if you prefer higher-quality files). Updgrade to at least a one or two gig card.
Cost/Where to Get It: $99.95; Skullcandy (Available June 1st)
Posted in Just Plain Cool, Tech News | Tagged: Rolling Stone, Skullcandy | 1 Comment »
Posted by jroxx on March 27, 2008
Instoremarketing.org ran a story this morning about how Borders Books & Music last month unveiled a new concept store highlighted by a multitude of digital experiences. The first store to feature the prototype opened on Feb. 22 in Borders’ hometown of Ann Arbor, MI. The company plans to open 13 more in 2008, including a Las Vegas unit debuting in April and seven others in May.
The digital center has usurped a majority of the former music department, carrying a downsized inventory of product and a large amount of technological services. (Borders alluded to the change in its year-end financial release, reporting a decline in music sales and a plan to “reallocate floor space” accordingly.)
One of the neat features of the new stores is:
Borders Digital Music, which enables shoppers to burn CDs and download music to digital music players from the chain’s music library.
I think Border’s may be onto a new business model, one that Tower Records sadly did not have the foresight to develop.
Posted in Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Borders, Burn CD's, Digital Center, Digital Media, In Store Marketing | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on March 26, 2008
Since many of us are bloggers, I thought that this information would of interest to everyone.

(Click logo for full story)
Top 10 Most Valuable Blogs
1. Gawker Media: $150 Million
2. MacRumors: $85 Million (Think this is ridiculous? Check out the traffic)
3. HuffingtonPost: $70 Million
4. PerezHilton: $48 Million
5. TechCrunch: $36 Million
6. ArsTechnica: $15 Million
7. SeekingAlpha: $15 Million
8. Drudge Report: $10 Million
9. Mashable: $10 Million
10. GigaOm: $8.4 Million
Full list & analysis here
We can all dream, strive and work ourselves onto that list somehow…

Posted in Tech News | Tagged: 24/7 Wall St, Gawker, Huffington Post, Perez Hilton, Twenty-Five Most Valuable Blogs | No Comments »
Posted by T Rex on March 25, 2008


Found this over on Wired’s Listening Post blog. Muxtape is the latest service that lets users assemble mixtape-like playlists online.
It doesn’t get any easier than this. Register with your email address (no confirmation required), upload up to twelve MP3s, and that’s it. An online mixtape containing your songs will appear at the URL “username.muxtape.com”
Posted in Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Listening Post, Muxtape | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on March 25, 2008
I am not a big gadget guy myself, but I saw this and said That is Cool!
Only $25
Ubergizmo
Posted in Tech News | Tagged: Dock, iPod, Lego, Ubergizmo | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on March 25, 2008
(more pix on the Supertouch Blog)
Engadget via Supertouch reported today:
Right now the enigma that is known only as SKULLPHONE is easily Clear Channel Communications‘ greatest enemy in SoCal since he hijacked 10 of the advertising giant’s most prominent digital billboards around LA in Hollywood, Westwood, and the art hotspot of Culver City. Hacking into the billboard’s computer network today, our boy positioned his trademark skullphone imagery in between the array of flashing movie, TV, and auto company ads that make up the normal paid advertising barrage on the giant illuminated monitors. Keep an eye out for more photos to come throughout the day…
WAY COOL!
Posted in Tech News | Tagged: Billboard, California, Clear Channel, Engadget, Skullphone, So Cal, Supertouch | No Comments »
Posted by T Rex on March 25, 2008

You know the labels are screwed when an country artist who hasn’t had a Gold selling record or even been on a label since the nineties can score the number 2 album on the Billboard Charts……all by themselves.
Dolly Parton has self-released her new CD “Backwoods Barbie” on her own label, Dolly Records, and hired a seven-member promotions team.
She has watched with interest as new technology has created opportunities without the big labels.
“Now the majors are what they used to think I was: history,” she said.
See our earlier post on Dolly who recently had to cancel her US tour due to “back problems”
Parton is now slated to appear on American Idol in early April.
Posted in Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Backwoods Barbie, Dolly Parton, Dolly Records, Radiohead, Rezner | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on March 24, 2008
Reporters Don Jeffrey and James Rowley announced at around 5 PM today that Sirius Satellite Radio Inc.’s proposed $4.59 billion acquisition of XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. won U.S. antitrust clearance to create a single U.S. satellite-radio provider. Shares of both companies surged.
The deal was opposed by the National Association of Broadcasters, the trade group that represents free radio stations and waged a lobbying campaign in Congress and at the FCC. The broadcasters’ spokesman, Dennis Wharton, said in a statement today the group is “astonished” by the Justice Department’s action “granting a monopoly” to the companies.
The combined company will eliminate programming that is duplicative, including some music channels.
Full article can be found here.
To contact the reporter on this story: Don Jeffrey in New York at djeffrey1@bloomberg.net
So to recap
- There is only 1 company that controls all of satellite radio, at least it’s not the Dolan’s.
- The broadcasters are saying astonished by the Justice Department’s action granting a monopoly to the companies.
- The combined company will eliminate programming that is duplicative, including some music channels.
Monopolies scare the living crap out of me and once again
big business wins and the working man loses.
Posted in Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Bloomberg, Merger. FCC, Satellite Radio, Sirius, XM | No Comments »
Posted by jroxx on March 23, 2008

As with many well written NY Times articles there is always someone who has a counterpoint to what the article says. Michael Arrington of the website TechCrunch.com offers his. There are also over 150 comments to what Arrington has to say include his rebuttals to several of the points that some of the commenters made.
Here is part of what he said, you can find the entire article here:
Bragg does attempt to argue his case, primarily by (1) saying that social networks are as much to blame for declining music sales as the people who are downloading songs in violation of copyrights, and (2) saying that arguments that social networks are doing musicians a favor by marketing their music are “disingenuous.”
Both arguments have holes in them so large you could drive a BitTorrent stream through them.
Social networks have absolutely nothing to do with the decline in music sales. The fact that recorded music can be reproduced at a zero marginal cost is why music sales are declining. You can hate that or love that, but it’s simple economics that drives it.
And in fact the argument that social networks actually provide free marketing to artists is not disingenuous. In fact, it’s quite correct. Bragg notes that radio stations pay royalties for playing songs, even though they also obviously provide free marketing for artists.
His argument isn’t quite factually correct - In the U.S. royalties are paid by radio stations to song writers but not artists (it comes to about $450 million per year). In most of the rest of the world, though, artists are paid royalties. But a much more interesting analysis of the radio industry is the very strong desire for labels and musicians to pay them to play songs. Payola is now illegal, but the practice almost certainly continues. As recently as 2005, former New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer prosecuted payola-related crimes in his jurisdiction.
Recorded music is nothing but marketing material to drive awareness of an artist. Websites that bring that music to listeners are doing artists a favor. In fact, they’re doing them a favor that they should (and will) be paid for. Young artists and songwriters in particular benefit from these services - Until a few years ago they had almost no way to break into the mainstream without getting a label to promote them. Now those walls are being torn down, and Bragg has the audacity to complain about it.
I think the main reason Bragg wrote this article is jealousy over the massive success of someone he once met - Bebo cofounder Michael Birch. The paragraphs quoted above where he takes credit for their business model reveal his angst in that regard. Bragg had absolutely nothing to do with Bebo’s $850 million payday. And everything else he wrote in that article is dead wrong, too.
Discuss amongst yourselves, feel free to add your side to this argument.
Posted in Music/Industry News, Tech News | Tagged: Artists, Billy Bragg, Michael Arrington, Royalties, Tech Crunch | No Comments »