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PC World November 5, 2001 Tom Spring |
Music Labels Target CD Ripping Claiming to fight piracy, labels test copy protection to keep audio CDs from going digital... |
PC World April 11, 2002 Tom Spring |
Face the Music: Suits Pending Over Copy Controls Class action suits may spring from consumer complaints of surreptitious CD copy protection... |
PC World January 2002 Frank Thorsberg & Tom Spring |
New Shackles on Your CD, Video Copying In an effort to stem piracy, entertainment companies are placing new copy restrictions into their products... |
PC World March 2002 Kevin McKean |
Up Front: Why Your CD-RW May Be Obsolete Restrictive new copyright protections could lock you out of your own music CDs... |
PC World September 2005 Laurianne McLaughlin |
Copyright Crackdown New XCP2 technology on music CDs limits the number of copies you can make -- and gets in the way of putting tunes on an IPod. |
AskMen.com April 4, 2001 Justin Becker |
How To Burn CDs Learn what all the hype is about and find out how to burn CDs for your listening pleasure... |
PC World October 2001 Melissa J. Perenson |
Better Burning A CD-RW drive is only as good as its software. We take five feature-rich mastering packages for a spin... |
PC World May 2, 2001 Michael S. Lasky |
RioVolt Hits the High Notes Sonicblue's RioVolt player handles MP3 CDs and WMA files as well as standard audio discs... |
PC World July 2001 Eric Dahl |
SimpliCD: No-Hassle CD-Burning Software Creating CDs is easy and fast with inexpensive software that rivals Roxio's popular Easy CD Creator... |
PC World October 2001 Ramon G. McLeod |
Play CD-ROMs Without Using a Drive Farstone Technology's Virtual Drive 6.1 CD emulator speeds game play... |
PC World July 18, 2002 Michael Gowan |
How to Burn Without Getting Singed Burning a CD is easy. Just follow these steps to create a backup disc or copy an entire CD. |
PC Magazine February 16, 2005 Bill Machrone |
Unlock Protected Music When you buy music from an online service, you may want to move it to a different format. Here's how. |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Damien Cave |
Chained melodies Copyright-holding corporations are pushing new laws and computer-crippling technologies in their war on piracy. But can anything keep geeks from copying the music and movies they crave? |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 |
The Future of Music The desire of the recording industry to create louder albums could be responsible for halting technological advances in sound quality. |
PC Magazine January 18, 2006 Michael J. Miller |
Now Showing on Small Screens Technology is poised to change TV and movies in the same way as online music stores and digital music players have rewritten the rules for music distribution. |
The Motley Fool June 21, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Play It, Don't Burn It, Sam The controversy over music and copyright continue with word of a new copyright protection technology that severely limits what CD buyers can do with their music. Is the record industry going too far, and hurting its prospects in the process? |
The Motley Fool July 9, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
CD Is the New Vinyl As compact disc sales continue falling, the industry must take a stand. In the worst-case scenario for the labels, the distribution power will shift toward recording artists. In the best-case scenario, the exact same thing happens -- just a bit more slowly. Investors, take note. |
Salon.com July 31, 2000 Damien Cave |
Watermarks in music? Talal Shamoon, a key technologist for the Secure Digital Music Initiative, says that he's found the key to protecting copyrighted tunes. |
Salon.com May 23, 2002 Thomas Claburn |
Give it away now Music start-up FightCloud.com offers CDs free, but says it's making a profit. How can that be? |
PC World July 4, 2001 Steve Bass |
Burn CDs for Backups, Music, and Storage Our man recommends CD-R and CD-RW drives and tactics... |
PC World March 2006 Dan Tynan |
Hollywood vs.Your PC: Round 2 Legal options in digital entertainment are growing. But they come with restrictions that can hobble your ability to enjoy the content you've paid for and even threaten your control over your system. |
Salon.com December 18, 2001 Paul Boutin |
Don't steal music, pretty please Record companies will make big, big money online. They just need to learn to let go... |
PC World May 2001 Melissa J. Perenson |
Portable Personal CD Burner for Music, Data When you're on the road, an audio CD player helps kill time during flight delays. But you may also need a CD-RW drive for emergency backups and for passing data to colleagues. The $399 Sony Digital Relay CRX10U-A2 combines both devices... |
Technology Research News October 8, 2003 |
CD writer generates holograms Researchers from Cambridge University in England have found a way to turn an ordinary CD writer into a device that burns two-dimensional holograms onto CDs. |
Information Today October 2000 |
Hewlett-Packard Releases New CD-RW Drives The range features high speeds and additional user-friendly software to allow the conversion of MP3 files to audio CDs. In addition, users are able to upload their music CDs to the Web and listen to them on their computers as the software converts from audio to MP3... |
PC World March 2002 Melissa J. Perenson |
Buyer's Market: CD-RW Drives Tough market for vendors benefits users -- and other bonuses are ahead... |
PC World April 23, 2001 Kirk Steers |
Remove Your (CD) Writer's Block Prevent disc-burning flameouts; find Windows answers a whisker away... |
PC World March 2, 2001 Melissa J. Perenson |
A CD Burner for Music Lovers Play and record CD-RW anywhere, anytime with Sony's Digital Relay... |
PC World March 2003 Steve Fox |
Plugged In: Crackdown Coming on CD Copying Plus: Gadgets get tossed, small biz gets help, and Big Brother gets nosy. |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Vinyl In, Music Files Out New software lets you copy LPs into your PC. But it's no picnic. ADS Technologies Instant Music RDX150... Roxio Easy Media Creator... Nero 6 Ultra Edition... |
PC World March 1, 2000 Jon L. Jacobi |
"Hello, Get Me Rewrite!" You put all-weather tires on your car. You use all-temperature laundry soap. Why can't you find all-purpose storage for your PC? Floppy drives are painfully small and snail slow. Zip drives are faster but far from universal, and the media isn't cheap. Optical drives are even more rare and expensive. But now, new CD-Rewritable drives combine affordability with enough speed and flexibility to qualify as a first-rate storage option. |
Knowledge@Wharton July 2, 2003 |
Online Music Wings its Way to the Celestial Jukebox In a celestial jukebox, instead of downloading songs to a computer hard drive or burning them onto a CD, listeners log onto a site that streams the music directly to their computers for immediate listening. It's like having your own all-request FM channel. |
Reason October 2000 Jesse Walker |
Music for Nothing Why Napster isn't the end of the world. Or even the music industry... |
Salon.com June 10, 2002 Dan Levine |
Not the real Slim Shady Are the fake MP3s popping up on file-sharing networks part of the recording industry's war on piracy, or just the latest in music marketing? |
Audiophilia April 2000 Anthony Kershaw |
The Sony SCD-1 SACD Player The Super Audio Compact Disc (SACD) machine is here, and Sony and Philips are betting this new format will be as revolutionary as their earlier 16-bit, 44.1kHz digital CD. |
InternetNews November 2, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Digging Out Sony's DRM Rootkit Using a technique popularized by malware writers, Sony runs software behind the scenes of its copy-protected CDs. |
PC World November 2002 Dylan F. Tweney |
Hollywood vs. Your PC Movie and music moguls are hopping mad over the new technologies that are transforming digital entertainment. Washington is listening. what's at risk? Your ability to enjoy DVDs and CDs you've bought, your privacy -- even your control over your PC. |
PC World November 2002 Melissa J. Perenson |
Shattered: This CD's in Tatters? High-speed drives increase the chances that a defective CD will explode. |
PC World January 21, 2003 Joris Evers |
New Microsoft Tools Copy Protect CDs and DVDs Software will allow recording companies to restrict what you can do with CDs and DVDs on your computer. |
PC World March 2001 Jon L. Jacobi |
An Ambitious Audio/Video Digital Recorder Looking for an affordable, removable way to store and catalog home movies digitally? TeraOptix targets this growing market with its $599 Terapin CD Video Recorder... |
Salon.com July 30, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Sour notes The legal crackdown hasn't squelched MP3 trading -- it's just made it more of a pain. But the music industry would still rather fight than give its online customers what they want. |
Salon.com June 5, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
All over the MAP Why record execs are furious at the FTC and the press. |
Wired February 2003 Frank Rose |
The Civil War Inside Sony Sony Music wants to entertain you. Sony Electronics wants to equip you. The problem is that when it comes to digital media, their interests are diametrically opposed. |
The Motley Fool November 14, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
What Were You Thinking, Sony? Increasingly, music companies like Sony BMG are treating their customers like criminals who borrow, rather than purchase, their products. Sony's recent move goes way beyond that idea -- providing an intrusive technology that, in effect, hijacked its customers' computers. |
PC World March 2004 Melissa J. Perenson |
Optical Drives: Simplified DVD Labeling HP's invention, due in drives soon, lets users burn labels. It uses the same laser that already burned the data to make a label on the flip side of the disc. |
Wired February 2003 Charles C. Mann |
The Year The Music Dies Record labels are under attack from all sides -- file sharers and performers, even equipment manufacturers and good old-fashioned customers -- and it's killing them. A moment of silence, please. |
Macworld July 2001 Jonathan Seff |
CD-Burning Software Powerful program toasts the competition... |
PC Magazine November 30, 2005 Bill Machrone |
If I Told You, I'd Have to . . . It's illegal to talk about how to circumvent copy protection. In your home, in your car, anywhere. Get the picture? |
Salon.com June 13, 2002 Damien Cave |
File sharing: Innocent until proven guilty An economist says music piracy should be hurting the recording industry, but it isn't -- and he doesn't know why. |
PC Magazine March 14, 2007 Dan Costa |
DRM Is Dead Sure, the RIAA can sue a handful of students each year and shut down a P2P network every six months, but this is just legal Whac-A-Mole. It doesn't solve the problem. |