Get Better Gear!
- Texas Tea for the iPhone and iPod touch from Snakehead Software, $1.99
- Tenqa SP-109 Stereo Wireless Bluetooth Speaker from Tenqa, US$39.99
- RedLaser from Occipital, LLC , US$1.99
- iSkin solo, solo FX, and solo FX SE iPhone cases from iSkin, US$29.99 (solo); $32.99 (solo FX); $34.99 (solo FX SE)
- MobiValet from MobiValet, US$24.99 - $49.99
Top 5 Free Apps
iTunes New Music Releases
Top 5 Paid Apps
Discover New Music
- Death Cab for Cutie
With the introduction of Plans, Death Cab for Cutie became a new addition to many user's Artist list after the single "Soul Meets Body" became a hit on iTunes. Offering a fresh alternativ
- Brother Love
- Killer grooves, catchy riffs, edgy vocals with oh-so-just-right layered harmonies, and a drive that will move even YOU out of your chair, Brother Love's initial release is what rock and roll should be
- Powderfinger
- Guitar-driven rock out of Australia, Powderfinger has not seen much exposure in the States, but should get a nod for their toe-tapping songs. Building off their previous release, "Internationalist" (
- Belle & Sebastian
The Life Pursuit is a sort of Reeses Peanut Butter Cup. You get Belle & Sebastian's peanut butter (its wistful, often irresistible pop) dipped in a 'Have A Nice Day!' and glam 70s chocol
- Ladytron
Reader Specials
Visit Deals On The Web for the best deals on all consumer electronics, iPods, and more!
News
BitTorrent Co-Founder: Ad-Supported Content Will Defeat DRM
Thursday, September 21st, 2006 at 3:00 PM - by Brad Cook
BitTorrent co-founder and president Ashwin Navin believes that ad-supported content is the future of Internet delivery, not downloads hobbled by DRM (digital rights management), even as his company gets ready to open an online movie store that will use DRM as it competes with Amazon's Unbox and Apple's iTunes. It will launch in the U.S. this year and then expand to other countries.
He explained to IDG News: "The bottom line is that DRM is bad for the content provider and it's bad for the consumer, and the reason it's being used today is because we're in the very early stages of a new product cycle for the entertainment industry and they want to walk before they run."
He added: "I think the future will not be marked by digital rights management. It will be marked by advertising-supported content that's clear of DRM, because the content publisher wants it to be as widely distributed as possible and consumed over as many platforms as possible. And we hope to be part of that evolution, and to drive that evolution wherever we can."
Mr. Navin explained that he thinks DRM is bad because it "ties a user to one hardware platform, so if I buy my all my music on iTunes, I can't take that content to another hardware environment or another operating platform."
Despite the fact that BitTorrent's store will also offer DRM, he expects it to differ from Amazon and Apple's offerings by "leveraging BitTorrent delivery to get people their content faster, particularly for files that are popular. And we want to aggregate content that no one else is aggregating as well ... [We want to] pull together a community at BitTorrent that is really depending on us for delivering content that's not easily available, stuff that's not at Wal-Mart and all the other retail locations."
On the hardware side, the company is working with manufacturers to embed compatibility with the BitTorrent store in their devices. Mr. Navin noted that owners of such devices will be able to "tap into [the BitTorrent store] even away from their PC," although he didn't say if that will come through built-in Wi-Fi or some other functionality.
Recent Headlines
- Gameloft’s GT Racing Motor Academy Arrives at App Store
- Apple Job Posting Hints at a Camera in Future iPads
- iPad: A Reason For Being
- Google Lowers Nexus One “Equipment Recovery Fee” to $150
- Texas Tea for the iPhone and iPod touch
- Notebook, iThoughts Add TextExpander touch Support
- Fixing iPhone and MobileMe Sync Headaches

















Post Your Comments