LATEST ADDITIONS

Cablevision Dumping Wiz Stores

<A HREF="http://www.thewiz.com/wiz/app/CeMain">The Wiz</A> may not be long for this world. On Monday, February 10, <A HREF="http://www.cablevision.com">Cablevision Systems Corporation</A> announced that it would sell or close its remaining 17 consumer electronics stores, all in the New York metro area, New Jersey, and Connecticut. The announcement came only a few days after Circuit City announced major <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/11569/">cutbacks</A&gt; of its workforce and the elimination of sales commissions.

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Industry News Roundup

One might assume that the mutually dependent businesses of electronics manufacturing and retailing would track each other in perfect unison. That's often true, but they can sometimes get wildly out of sync with each other. It's one of the great economic mysteries.

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The Corporate Music Threat

Start policing your employees' use of file sharing networks or we sue you. That was the threat from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) to Fortune 1000 companies last week as the organizations announced the publication and distribution of a guide "to assist US companies in preventing copyright abuse on their computers and networks."

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KEF Reference 207 loudspeaker

The very last review I wrote for <I>Hi-Fi News & Record Review</I> (these days just plain <I>Hi-Fi News</I>)&mdash;before <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//asweseeit/352/">crossing the Atlantic</A> to take up the reins at <I>Stereophile</I> in May 1986&mdash;was of KEF's then-new flagship speaker, the Reference 107. That rave review appeared in the English magazine's July 1986 issue, and was followed by <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//loudspeakerreviews/550/">equally positive reports</A> from <I>Stereophile</I>'s writers.

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Listening #2

Consider the coelacanth. In 1938, a healthy specimen of this Paul Simon-sized fish was pulled from the Indian Ocean, not far from the mouth of South Africa's Chalumna River. But prior to that happy event (depending on your perspective, of course: the sight of the coelacanth's long, fleshy fins probably made for some very <I>un</I>happy creationists), the scientific community believed the animal in question was extinct, and had been for 65 million years.

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