Data Can Now Be Stored on Paper!
Despite the <I>Oh, really?</I> hed, this is kind of a fascinating article.
Despite the <I>Oh, really?</I> hed, this is kind of a fascinating article.
John Marks sends along this link to an Orthodox web radio station, which, as Monseigneur Marks points out, offers "more varieties of Chant than thou canst a stick shake at!"
Waaay before it becomes audiophilia. A documentary about the Audiophile Club of Athens.
Microsoft's Zune, that is. Andy Ihnatko's <I>Chicago Sun-Times</I> review is pretty much perfect. Don't write him off as an Apple cultist, however. He gives props to the PDDs that get it right.
Quarks, photons, and space-time foam—oh my!
Or maybe they're the larval form of some other proliferating common household object—Maya Kessler makes the case.
We received an interesting email from engineer Richard Burwen just before the Thanksgiving business break:
On November 22, the Librarian of Congress issued a—take a deep breath— <A HREF="http://www.copyright.gov/1201/">declaration of exemption</A> from the prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. In other words, the LOC decreed that six classes of "non-infringing rights" were exempt from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which criminalized "production and dissemination of technology whose primary purpose is to circumvent measures taken to protect copyright."
The Consumer Electronics Show is the most significant high-end audio industry event each year, attended by manufacturers, distributors, and retailers from all over the world. What are you most interested in seeing in our live online CES 2007 coverage?