Did Ke$ha Steal ‘Tik Tok’?

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Well, isn’t this just blatant stealing? Here’s some interesting facts… Note that the overall performance is the same — the inflections, the attitudes, and more importantly, the NOTES — you could place Chrissy’s original vocal into this new song and most people might not notice right away. Special notes: – Music producers who have worked with Chrissy are also friends with Kesha’s producer — and those same producers have worked up a remix of Ke$ha’s song. – Chrissy’s “My Slushy” has been prominently featured on Redbana’s “Dance Audition” site for over a year. Ke$ha’s song appeared on the same site this past June. – Chrissy’s songs have also been featured on Clear Channel’s “Discover New Music” site, and Ke$ha’s work also appeared on that site after Chrissy’s. – Many of Chrissy’s fans, upon first hearing the Ke$ha song, at first thought it was Chrissy they were hearing. (See blog comments from above link.) – “TiK ToK” also seems to have been influenced by other Chrissy songs, “Strut” and “Diddy Do Da” (both can be heard on Chrissy’s MySpace .

UPDATED: ARCHOS 3 Vision: iPod Touch Rival (Where Is Android?)

Monday, March 1st, 2010

UPDATE: Realized after posting this it actually DOESN’T have Android. I jumped the gun. I guess my thought is that it – and everything else – SHOULD have Android and I just assumed. Tisk tisk. So instead how about we discuss the lack of Android Media Players – maybe someone will contribute some awesome media player software that, through the glory of MODDING,  rooted users can eventually hack onto our Android Phones. ARCHOS keeps churning out more goodies: after announcing the ARCHOS 7 & 8 Home Tablets the company has also made official the ARCHOS 3 Vision, a small non-phone touch device that should directly compete with the iPod Touch. The ARCHOS 3 Touch has a 3-inch screen, 8GB flash memory, ability to play a wide variety of video/audio formats, 14 hours of audio playback in one charge, FM Radio, FM transmitter and a bunch more. It sounds like it could really be a winner, of course depending on price, but check out the details from the ARCHOS Site : Stand out from the crowd with the ARCHOS 3 Vision, with its sophisticated and minimalist design. The choice of red or chocolate casing further enhances the clean and modern look of the player, bought to life by the projection of the vibrant 3” colour display. With looks to match its performance, the ARCHOS 3 comes fully loaded with the latest multimedia functions. Experience your movies and pictures in finer detail with richer colours on the bright and sharp 3” touch screen and tune into your favourite FM radio stations. With the voice and FM radio recording function you can seize those important moments and relive them anytime you want without limitations. With room to store up to 4000 songs and dozens of your favourite movies, the ARCHOS 3 Vision is a product you’ll want to keep with you for your everyday digital lifestyle. Raise your viewing standards The ARCHOS 3 Vision’s vibrant 3” screen delivers the clearest possible colours for your visual enjoyment, allowing you to view your photos and videos in amazing quality. The simple and easy to use interface has been designed with the consideration of the movement of your finger, with a virtual scroll dial that allows you to effortlessly navigate through your files. The power of video in your pocket Play almost any type of video thanks to the ARCHOS 3 Visions’ vast format compatibility, removing the hassle of having to convert your video files. The 8GB* flash drive provides outstanding mobility and stability with space to store dozens of films and videos, so your favourite movies are never more than a touch away. If you’re travelling or want to enjoy a film in your downtime the ARCHOS 3 Vision will be your perfect companion. Simply drop and drag the video file you want onto your ARCHOS and enjoy it back in stunning quality on the brilliant 3” touch screen. Your audio enjoyment The ARCHOS 3 Vision boasts crisp sound so you can enjoy your favourite songs and podcasts in great quality. With space for over 4000 songs1 and boasting 14 hours of playback2 on a single charge, the ARCHOS 3 Vision brings sound to your ears all day long. With the text lyrics function you can interact with your music, and for budding pop stars why not sing along as lyrics are displayed across the screen! Re-live those special occasions Re-live those special occasions and share memories with family and friends with photos displayed on the ARCHOS 3 Vision. Photos look crisp and vivid, on the vibrant 3” screen. Why not add a touch of atmosphere with the ability to play music while viewing slideshows. Jam to FM radio The ARCHOS 3 Vision FM radio brings together the fun of analogue with the accuracy and convenience of digital, with 30 preset FM radio stations. Easy to set up, the FM radio offers plenty of worthwhile content for your listening pleasure. Tune in and listen to live stories; you can never get from music files and enjoy your favourite radio programs anytime and anywhere without restriction. Plus, it’s a great extra to have when you’re on the go and want to catch up on the local news or catch the sports results. The FM radio guarantees high quality sound and reception to keep you entertained without limitations. Broadcast your favourite tunes Want to share the latest tune with friends and family? The FM transmitter allows you to wirelessly stream music from your ARCHOS 3 Vision to an FM radio sources, such as your car radio or home HiFi. A great way to share your music collection during car journeys, rather than having to bring lots of CD’s with you. For a true cinematic experience why not transmit audio from a movie to your car radio or home HiFi, so you can enjoy your videos with family and friends. Seize those important moments Need to record an important lecture? A meeting? Or remember that special occasion? With the ARCHOS 3 Vision you can record it all. You can also record direct from the FM radio, and enjoy that live DJ set or great mix time and time again. Record any moment and store it on your ARCHOS 3 Vision, so you can relive it anytime you want. I’m guessing we’ll see a bunch more of these Android MP3/Media players over the next 10 months.

Mr. Bjarnfredarson dominates the Eddas.

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Last saturday night the annual Edda Awards were handed out here in Iceland. These are our “Oscars” if you will and like the Oscars it’s usually one project that has the most nominations. This year it was the box office behemoth

Apple announces winner of the 10 billion songs promotion

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Filed under: Apple Corporate , iTS , Apple Financial , iTunes Just yesterday Apple’s iTunes store reached a huge milestone — 10 billion songs sold. That’s an incredible number. In fact, it’s almost as incredible as the prize that Mr. Louie Sulcer of Woodstock, Georgia received for buying the magic song. As his reward, he received a $10,000 iTunes gift card, which he may use towards any of the music, TV shows, movies, apps, books, etc. in the store. What was the 10 billionth song downloaded? “Guess Things Happen That Way” by Johnny Cash. Apple’s vice president of Internet Services Eddy Cue remarked on the milestone in a recent press release . “We’re proud that iTunes has become the number one music retailer in the world, and selling 10 billion songs is truly staggering.” Congratulations to Mr. Sulcer! Enjoy that hefty gift card. Might we suggest a little Battlestar Galactica [ iTunes link ]? [Via MacDailyNews ] TUAW Apple announces winner of the 10 billion songs promotion originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read

Happy Birthday, Steve [Steve Jobs]

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Here’s to the crazy one . The mercurial. The rebel. The market maker. The lucky guy with the new liver. The one who sees things differently. He’s not fond of rules and bad typography. And he has no respect for mediocrity. You can praise him, disagree with him, quote him, disbelieve him, glorify or vilify him. About the only thing you can’t do is ignore him. Because this guy created the personal computer market, he introduced the first commercial computer with a graphic user interface , was booted from his own company, then came back, saved it from death, reinvented one of the best operating systems on the planet, reinvented the music player , kicked the record companies on the balls, failed to reinvent TV , reinvented the cellphone OS as we know it, got a cancer that means almost-certain death , recovered, and he’s back in business , hopefully for a long time, and trying to change the computing world once again. He invents. He sometimes has a very bad temper. He healed. He came back. He created again. And he keeps inspiring. Or at least, he inspires me. Happy 55th birthday, Steve.

MySpace Launches An Activity And Content Stream

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

MySpace has launched an activity and content stream, which they are calling simply the “Stream.” Previously they showed a feed of status updates from friends, but the new feature shows a lot more content, including things like music your friends are listening to on MySpace Music, video they’re watching, links they are adding, etc. The company hasn’t formally announced the product, which sort of makes sense since they’re still playing catch up with similar features on Facebook. But it’s an important beachhead in their go-forward strategy, we’ve learned. More on that in our next post. CrunchBase Information MySpace Information provided by CrunchBase

SXSW Film 2010 Announces Four Lions, Additional Titles

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

SXSW Film has announced more titles for its 2010 program. Chris Morris’ Four Lions will now close the festival. New features, shorts, and documentaries have also been added, including American Grindhouse,

TUAW Smackdown: iPhone time management games

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Filed under: Gaming , iPhone , App Review Time Management games challenge you to run some kind of business operation while balancing your resources against the demands of customers. In the following write-up, I tested five popular time management App Store games to see how well they delivered the fun and strategy of challenging yourself against time. As you’ll see, not every game delivered the same level of fun and overall gameplay. Here’s how they stacked up. At $2.99, Sally’s Spa is our absolute favorite of the time management games we tested for this write-up. In this game, you run a virtual spa, providing steam baths, massages, manicures, pedicures, and more. You aim to keep your customers happy and radiant (literally) by dragging them from one station to the next, applying spa services, and balancing their needs against your limited resources of time and equipment. As your salon earns money, you re-invest into improvements such as hiring employees to automate some of the stations and upgraded equipment to provide higher levels of satisfaction. The challenges grow more sophisticated over time (although I could have done without the whole eyebrow tweezing service that appears late in the game), as you attempt to perfect your spa-fu. The game is addicting, well designed, and the small details have all been very well thought out. It’s charming, engaging, and a great deal of fun to play. Are You Alright is currently on sale for just $1.99 and offers you a near equivalent to Sally’s Spa. It offers essentially the same game except not quite as refined or polished. Are You Alright plays out as an earlier version of Sally’s, with less editorial oversight because it fails to match the fine detail execution of Sally. Clearly the same development hands programmed both applications. In Are You Alright, you run a medical clinic instead of a spa. Exams take the place of beauty treatments and you put together skeletons, remove shards of glass, and scan for bacterial infections rather than offer massages and facials. Some of the actions you need to perform in your daily tasks are morbidly hilarious ,and yet AYA is simply not as fun a game to play as Sally’s Salon is. It’s missing a great deal of refinement. Polish and attention to details can really make or break an iPhone game app, and Sally’s tiny nuances are missing from this near-clone. If you’ve played Sally’s to the end, you might still want to pick up Are You Alright to keep going with the same kind of gameplay, but I think you’ll find it a bit of a letdown from the real thing. Turbo Subs costs just $1.99. In it, you run a sandwich shop, providing subs, sodas, cookies, and chips to your customers. The graphics are acceptable, the music is awful, and the gameplay tends toward the simple side. It’s very, very easy to perform extremely well to the point that you can buy up all the improvements for each level long before each level is finished, leaving you with “nothing left to buy” for round after round. There’s really not a lot of planning you can do with Turbo Subs. Each time you empty coffee, you can remember to start a new batch and you can pre-make your cotton candy, but beyond that it’s simply a matter of speed to serve each customer, making sure to group all your actions to get the highest number of points. For early levels, just leave all your tips out until you’ve served all six customers and then collect them at once to earn insanely easy multiplier bonuses. The thing is, though, that despite the bad music, the cheesy graphics, and the lack of planning, Turbo Subs is pretty darn addictive. Because it doesn’t take a lot of brain power, it lends itself well to use on the go as you play a level or three while waiting at the bus stop. Like Sally’s, I found myself returning to Turbo Subs quite a lot. It would be nice if the designers added more interesting interactions to the game and would get rid of that stupid little petty thief (at least let us call the cops), but even as it stands, Turbo Subs is a fun game and a great time waster. Jane’s Hotel arrived with high praise and personal recommendations, so I was so disappointed to find that its game play didn’t really live up to the hype. In this game, you run a hotel, and like the other games of this kind, you need to wait on customers. Here, you fetch newspapers and coffee, distribute room keys, and instruct the maid to clean up rooms and water plants. I found the menus and tutorial text hard to read, with poor font choices that upped the froufrou and decreased legibility. Like Are You Alright, Jane’s Hotel could have done with a better UI supervisor to finish tweaking fine details. Most frustratingly, Jane’s Hotel doesn’t really provide very good feedback about how well you’re doing and how happy your customers are. After a few levels, the goals just get harder and harder and each level soon ends with “YOU LOSE” or something like that. I forget exactly what it said, and I certainly wasn’t willing to play yet another tedious round to find out the exact wording for this write-up. That’s because after a while playing this game, I seriously wanted to slap the customers. Jane’s Hotel feels a lot less like playing a time management game and a lot more like being a mommy to a bunch of whiny kids. “Where’s my TV?” “Where’s my Newspaper and Coffee?” “Why haven’t you cleaned my room?” Like other games of this type, you can upgrade equipment after each round but in Jane’s you don’t really get much of a choice. Not only do you more or less have to buy plants, then you have to start looking after them and watering them or you’ll get in trouble with your customers. To sum it all up Jane’s Hotel is dreary, joyless, and a chore to play. It feels poorly tested, and it’s missing an elegant GUI as well as captivating gameplay. Diner Dash was also a big let-down. For $4.99, you can run a virtual restaurant, serving customers as a waitress. You seat them, take their orders, deliver food, and bus the tables after. That’s pretty much it. Oh yeah, you can also serve drinks. There’s almost no planning possible in Diner Dash. It’s just the same actions, over, and over, and over, with some weird rules about bonuses for seating people in seats that match their clothing colors. (As if any woman alive would pick a seat because it matched her dress? I mean, really?) There’s a lot of down-time in Diner Dash, most of which involves you standing at the manager’s podium while insanely long lines of people listen to you explain why this early in the game there are only 4 or 6 tables and that they have to wait for seats. This apparently mollifies them and increases their patience levels and eventual tips. Diner Dash just doesn’t have the kind of thinking element that would make it fun to play. There’s no real strategy component and since you are graded on doing the same kind of thing all at once (bonuses for serving each table one after the other, bonuses for then cleaning up those tables one after another), things quickly blur into a kind of tedious sameness that repeats over and over again. Serving people, waiting for them to eat, and then cleaning up after them over and over again may be your kind of fun, but it wasn’t mine. Like Jane’s Hotel, Diner Dash was a chore rather than a game. TUAW TUAW Smackdown: iPhone time management games originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

TUAW Smackdown: iPhone time management games

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Filed under: Gaming , iPhone , App Review Time Management games challenge you to run some kind of business operation while balancing your resources against the demands of customers. In the following write-up, I tested five popular time management App Store games to see how well they delivered the fun and strategy of challenging yourself against time. As you’ll see, not every game delivered the same level of fun and overall gameplay. Here’s how they stacked up. At $2.99, Sally’s Spa is our absolute favorite of the time management games we tested for this write-up. In this game, you run a virtual spa, providing steam baths, massages, manicures, pedicures, and more. You aim to keep your customers happy and radiant (literally) by dragging them from one station to the next, applying spa services, and balancing their needs against your limited resources of time and equipment. As your salon earns money, you re-invest into improvements such as hiring employees to automate some of the stations and upgraded equipment to provide higher levels of satisfaction. The challenges grow more sophisticated over time (although I could have done without the whole eyebrow tweezing service that appears late in the game), as you attempt to perfect your spa-fu. The game is addicting, well designed, and the small details have all been very well thought out. It’s charming, engaging, and a great deal of fun to play. Are You Alright is currently on sale for just $1.99 and offers you a near equivalent to Sally’s Spa. It offers essentially the same game except not quite as refined or polished. Are You Alright plays out as an earlier version of Sally’s, with less editorial oversight because it fails to match the fine detail execution of Sally. Clearly the same development hands programmed both applications. In Are You Alright, you run a medical clinic instead of a spa. Exams take the place of beauty treatments and you put together skeletons, remove shards of glass, and scan for bacterial infections rather than offer massages and facials. Some of the actions you need to perform in your daily tasks are morbidly hilarious ,and yet AYA is simply not as fun a game to play as Sally’s Salon is. It’s missing a great deal of refinement. Polish and attention to details can really make or break an iPhone game app, and Sally’s tiny nuances are missing from this near-clone. If you’ve played Sally’s to the end, you might still want to pick up Are You Alright to keep going with the same kind of gameplay, but I think you’ll find it a bit of a letdown from the real thing. Turbo Subs costs just $1.99. In it, you run a sandwich shop, providing subs, sodas, cookies, and chips to your customers. The graphics are acceptable, the music is awful, and the gameplay tends toward the simple side. It’s very, very easy to perform extremely well to the point that you can buy up all the improvements for each level long before each level is finished, leaving you with “nothing left to buy” for round after round. There’s really not a lot of planning you can do with Turbo Subs. Each time you empty coffee, you can remember to start a new batch and you can pre-make your cotton candy, but beyond that it’s simply a matter of speed to serve each customer, making sure to group all your actions to get the highest number of points. For early levels, just leave all your tips out until you’ve served all six customers and then collect them at once to earn insanely easy multiplier bonuses. The thing is, though, that despite the bad music, the cheesy graphics, and the lack of planning, Turbo Subs is pretty darn addictive. Because it doesn’t take a lot of brain power, it lends itself well to use on the go as you play a level or three while waiting at the bus stop. Like Sally’s, I found myself returning to Turbo Subs quite a lot. It would be nice if the designers added more interesting interactions to the game and would get rid of that stupid little petty thief (at least let us call the cops), but even as it stands, Turbo Subs is a fun game and a great time waster. Jane’s Hotel arrived with high praise and personal recommendations, so I was so disappointed to find that its game play didn’t really live up to the hype. In this game, you run a hotel, and like the other games of this kind, you need to wait on customers. Here, you fetch newspapers and coffee, distribute room keys, and instruct the maid to clean up rooms and water plants. I found the menus and tutorial text hard to read, with poor font choices that upped the froufrou and decreased legibility. Like Are You Alright, Jane’s Hotel could have done with a better UI supervisor to finish tweaking fine details. Most frustratingly, Jane’s Hotel doesn’t really provide very good feedback about how well you’re doing and how happy your customers are. After a few levels, the goals just get harder and harder and each level soon ends with “YOU LOSE” or something like that. I forget exactly what it said, and I certainly wasn’t willing to play yet another tedious round to find out the exact wording for this write-up. That’s because after a while playing this game, I seriously wanted to slap the customers. Jane’s Hotel feels a lot less like playing a time management game and a lot more like being a mommy to a bunch of whiny kids. “Where’s my TV?” “Where’s my Newspaper and Coffee?” “Why haven’t you cleaned my room?” Like other games of this type, you can upgrade equipment after each round but in Jane’s you don’t really get much of a choice. Not only do you more or less have to buy plants, then you have to start looking after them and watering them or you’ll get in trouble with your customers. To sum it all up Jane’s Hotel is dreary, joyless, and a chore to play. It feels poorly tested, and it’s missing an elegant GUI as well as captivating gameplay. Diner Dash was also a big let-down. For $4.99, you can run a virtual restaurant, serving customers as a waitress. You seat them, take their orders, deliver food, and bus the tables after. That’s pretty much it. Oh yeah, you can also serve drinks. There’s almost no planning possible in Diner Dash. It’s just the same actions, over, and over, and over, with some weird rules about bonuses for seating people in seats that match their clothing colors. (As if any woman alive would pick a seat because it matched her dress? I mean, really?) There’s a lot of down-time in Diner Dash, most of which involves you standing at the manager’s podium while insanely long lines of people listen to you explain why this early in the game there are only 4 or 6 tables and that they have to wait for seats. This apparently mollifies them and increases their patience levels and eventual tips. Diner Dash just doesn’t have the kind of thinking element that would make it fun to play. There’s no real strategy component and since you are graded on doing the same kind of thing all at once (bonuses for serving each table one after the other, bonuses for then cleaning up those tables one after another), things quickly blur into a kind of tedious sameness that repeats over and over again. Serving people, waiting for them to eat, and then cleaning up after them over and over again may be your kind of fun, but it wasn’t mine. Like Jane’s Hotel, Diner Dash was a chore rather than a game. TUAW TUAW Smackdown: iPhone time management games originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Shazam adds Last.FM integration to iPhone apps

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Filed under: iPhone Shazam is one of my favorite iPhone apps, and it was one of the first I downloaded from the App Store. Every time I’m in a store or listening to the radio and hear a song I like but don’t know, I let Shazam listen. The free version is still in the store, but just recently they’ve also released Shazam Encore and (Shazam)RED , two paid versions of the app that offer up more functionality (the RED version gives part of the purchase price to charity). Among that new functionality is Last.FM integration : now, you can apparently send any songs you “tag” straight over to the Last.FM app (assuming you have it installed), and make up a radio station directly from there. Pretty slick, and the iTunes description for both apps says that Pandora works as well. Unfortunately, reviews for the paid version say that the app still includes ads (a weird choice for a paid app), and there are a few reviews that even say the app crashes occasionally (though I’ve never experienced the problem of it not finding a song for me — even with rarities and b-sides, it’s always come through). But it’s a real shame that reviewers are having problems — while Shazam definitely needs to find a way to monetize its service, failing to provide a premium experience on a premium app obviously isn’t the way to do it. Still, if you made the jump to the paid app already, or use Last.FM and/or Pandora often, it might be worth a look. TUAW Shazam adds Last.FM integration to iPhone apps originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read