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Political Play of the Day: Edwards enlists some star power in New ...

HAMPTON, N.H. -

John Edwards got some campaign help Monday from baseball groupie Annie Savoy and pitching phenom Ebby Calvin "Nuke" LaLoosh.

Better known as actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins, the couple who starred in the 1988 movie "Bull Durham" campaigned for the Democratic presidential candidate in New Hampshire.

Robbins offered the same rift that he delivered for Iowa voters, criticizing the saturation coverage of pop stars such as Britney Spears at the expense of real news. He urged people to imagine a world in which paparazzi ditch Hollywood and instead focus on working mothers, returning war veterans and construction workers.

"It's what the people that don't have microphones in front of them what they know, that's important," Robbins said as he paced a small stage surrounded by the crowd, which spilled up a staircase.


Giant TV a show stopper

Each year in January, the consumer electronics industry's big guns such as Pioneer, JVC, Microsoft, Sony and Samsung, gather in the city they call America's playground to show off their latest and greatest products.

So far, the prized bragging rights belongs to Panasonic, which showcased its massive 3.8m (yes . . . metres) plasma display at the annual trade fair.

Apart from revealing the show-stopping television, which features four times the definition of current high-def sets and lower power consumption, Panasonic displayed some of its other new gadgetry, which helped set the scene for what consumers can expect from the rest of the industry.

The buzz word in TVs will be "wireless".

Expect TVs in the not-too-distant future that can receive a video signal wirelessly from a device such as a computer or camcorder, along with the ability to include your TV in a wireless home network for easy internet browsing on your high-def plasma or LCD panel.


CondeNet Joins Facebook Ads Launch

NEW YORK, Nov. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- CondeNet today announced it is one of the first companies to participate in a new Facebook(R) launch program that allows Facebook users to learn about CondeNet's Web sites through trusted word of mouth referrals from their friends. CondeNet Web sites initially participating in this program include Epicurious.com and flip.com.

The launch program is called Facebook Ads, an ad system designed for businesses to connect with users and target the exact people they want to reach. The program allows CondeNet's Epicurious.com and flip.com to spread information virally through the social graph and to connect and communicate with their respective audiences in completely new ways. CondeNet Web sites can also build pages on Facebook to interact and cultivate a relationship directly with users.


Middlesex man still in good paws

Lloyd Sheaffer is still in good paws more than a year after a fire destroyed his mobile home.The Middlesex Township man may not have as many lives as his companion, but he has learned how to land on his feet again.Now 51, Sheaffer credits Momma Cat for saving his life and the generosity of friends and strangers for helping him recover."God bless you all and thank you. I appreciate it all," he says.Sheaffer only wishes he was younger and in better health to return the many favors afforded to him since the Nov. 24, 2006, fire.

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Blog Posts related to DRM

Life?s too short. I want to delight consumers, not bum them out.

The rest of the "legit" music industry is also moving away from DRM, and there are precious few examples of new models "enabled" by DRM (Apple's iTunes succeeds despite DRM, not because of it, as Steve Jobs made clear in his "Thoughts on Music").

The last frontier is subscription services. Many still argue that DRM is "necessary" for music subscription services like Rhapsody. It is high time someone start questioning this received wisdom, as well. If Rhapsody gave up its DRM tomorrow, how much of a difference would it make? After all, any minimally motivated subscriber can already turn their Rhapsody streams into downloads.

Rather than worrying so much about how to erase all the music when a subscriber stops paying, the music industry needs to worry more about giving music fans a reason to come in from the P2P/iPod swapping/CD burning cold (hint: threatening them with $222,000 verdicts isn't going to do the trick).


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