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Feed Arctic Monkeys Apparently Forget What Made The Band Successful In The First Plac (techdirt.com)

When people talk about how file sharing and giving away music for free can help promote a small time band into the big time, a common example is the band The Arctic Monkeys. The band was a true internet wonder, using file sharing to help boost attention and making the band a huge success. That's why it's quite surprising to hear that the band and its backers are now doing everything possible to prevent file sharing for its latest album. Reader Sal points us to an article saying that they're so afraid of songs being released early that music writers have to go to the band's "headquarters" to hear a preview of the album, rather than sending out copies. The article, from the Times Online, is a bit strange. It basically reads like a press release for some company that tries to monitor and stop online file sharing -- though, it's not clear if the Arctic Monkeys are using that particular service (it's implied, but the wording is written in a way that suggest they may not be). Either way, it may be a bit surprising that a band like the Arctic Monkeys would suddenly be against file sharing -- but as some have pointed out, rather than encouraging new and innovative works, intellectual property protection often comes after some have had some successes, as a way of protecting that success, rather than working hard on new efforts.
User Journal

Journal Journal: [Sophie Says] It's Halloween... Stupid 10

ellem Sophie are you excited about Christmas and Santa?

Sophie It's Halloween.

ellem No, baby it's Christmas-time.

Sophie No, it's dark. It's Halloween.

ellem Just because it's dark doesn't mean it's Halloween.

Sophie It's Halloween, Stupid!

ellem OK then, Happy Halloween.

Sophie Thank you Daddy.

Games

Submission + - Detailed Dissection of the Wii-mote

capedgirardeau writes: I noticed that SparkFun has a very detailed dissection of the Wii remote with a description of all the ICs on the internal board. They even went so far as to remove the main EEPROM and squeeze out the binary information from the thing, the first step to effective hacking on the Wii-mote. This is for the serious geek who has a little electrical engineering experience or interest.

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