Tag Archives: wired

Wired 25: Hip-Hop’s 25 Favorite Dominican Women [Photos]

On Hip-Hop Wired, we usually use our Wired 25 countdowns to show love to Hip-Hop culture. Today, however is Dominican Independence Day, so we’re going to do something different… Continue

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Wired 25: Hip-Hop’s 25 Favorite Dominican Women [Photos]

Far East Movement Feel ‘Free To Geek Out’ On New Album

The Los Angeles group is climbing the charts with ‘Like a G6.’ By Evan Leong Far East Movement Photo: MTV News Far East Movement ‘s newest single, “Like a G6,” which climbed to #11 on the iTunes charts this week, is a far cry from the underground lyrical rap they first began recording as childhood friends in Los Angeles’ K-Town. But it seems that the four-man group has found its niche in the dance music world, leading to gigs opening for powerhouses like Lady Gaga, LMFAO and Kelis in the last six months, and their upcoming Up in the Air Tour with Mike Posner. “For us, as artists, finding our new sound, you got to experiment, you got to try on new shoes till you find the one that fits and looks fly,” Kev Nish told MTV News. “We’re such big fans of music and hip-hop, so we said let’s try doing something different, let’s take something we’re a fan of and creating something new. That led us up to what we’re doing now. It’s us wilding out and feeling comfortable about ourselves in the studio.” Far East Movement’s new album, Free Wired, is due out on October 12 and features collaborations with Snoop, Lil Jon and OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder. “It’s [collaborations] all over the place in a good way, if you were to listen to our iPods right now, that’s what on our album,” Kev explained. ” Free Wired is a CD that you can put in at 6 p.m., right before dinner, till 6 a.m., right before breakfast. “People ask, ‘What genre is your music?’ ” he continued. “We like to say it’s our lifestyle, it’s our culture, it’s our fashion. Free Wired means you’re free to geek out, you stay wired all night, you stay connected. We’ll hit up a club, then after the club we’ll hit up the chatroom. It’s a free-wired lifestyle, fashion, sound.” And just as they don’t want to stick to one genre, they also don’t want to be labeled according to their ethnicity, despite what their name might imply. “We live a new world,” Kev asserted. “We live in a world where you live by your screen name. I might know more about the music you listen to, the sites you go to, before I know your last name or your heritage. We’re not out to represent any race, political thought, any religion, its just about making music and having fun doing it.” Related Artists Far East Movement

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Far East Movement Feel ‘Free To Geek Out’ On New Album

Wired Says ‘The Web is Dead’ — On Its Increasingly Profitable Website [The Future]

Chris Anderson will generate plenty of chatter with his “The Web is Dead” Wired cover, foretold here previously . Fair enough; that’s what a smart magazine editor does. But all the more reason to note the rich ironies in his eulogy. More

How To Say Eyjafjallajokull

A crash course in saying the name of the world's least pronounceable natural disaster. Complete with a song. Amazing that anyone would go to such lengths just to say “island mountain glacier.” Watch

No Strings Attached

Link: http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/8b2e… Should puppets like Lt Snazzy be allowed in the military? The debate rages on. Read

Know Your LOST Characters

With the much anticipated series finale approaching, Wired Magazine dissects the compounding mystery that is Lost in numbers, charts, and infographics. [Only click through if you're fully prepared to seriously geek out on LOST right now.] View

The Dark Side of Steve Jobs [Media Wars]

Steve Jobs seduced New York’s media moguls all too easily, convincing them his iPad would magically keep them in business — and in chauffeured limos. But nothing easy comes free, and the publishers’ digital debt is now due. More

Will Condé Nast Feed the iPad At the Expense of the Web? [Apple]

The iPad looks futuristic, but in some ways it keeps old media rooted the past. Condé Nast, for example, will offer some magazine content on the Apple tablet before its release on the open Web. We hear the luxe magazine group plans to release articles first on the iPad, at titles with an iPad edition, and then at least several days later on the Web. While Condé Nast magazines already delay the publication of some articles on the Web, and withhold others altogether, the iPad could exacerbate the situation by adding an additional tier of access and putting the Web further downstream, or, most ominously for Web readers, leading Condé Nast to an “iPad first” policy. Wired editor Chris Anderson told us his Condé title is trying to experiment in a nuanced manner: We’ve always sequenced magazine content so that it comes out at different times in print and on the web, with web delays that have typically ranged from days to weeks. I can’t speak for the rest of CN or any other title, but at Wired we intend to do the same thing with tablets. I can’t yet say what the range of delays will be for various parts of the magazine, but we’ll experiment with different options, ranging from short delays to long ones. The iPad Wired is the most interactive tablet edition within Condé Nast and, last we heard, isn’t expected to launch until ” midsummer .” A simpler iPad port of GQ had been submitted to Apple, and iPad editions of Vanity Fair , Glamour and the New Yorker are also planned. None are expected to be as ambitious as Wired , and will thus be more dependent on exclusive content for promotion. We’re still waiting for an official response from Condé on whether just some content, or all, will be released on iPad before the Web — we were led to believe the latter is the case — and whether the practice is planned for one issue or as a regular thing. But any Web delay is unfortunate, because iPad content should be compelling enough on its own to draw readers, without the need for artificial scarcity. After all, this is supposed to be a technologically wondrous device, almost magical for users. We’d download Wired’s app, for example, on the strength of the sexy demo alone . And Condé should be trying to make its websites more lively and timely, not less so; even with the iPad, the magazine group will need to greatly improve its Web business as lucrative print operations deteriorate. Condé Nast’s web operations have suffered enough abuse without being further bled at the altar of the iPad.

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Will Condé Nast Feed the iPad At the Expense of the Web? [Apple]

A Day of Reckoning at Conde Nast

We hear Wired had its own round of editorial layoffs today. What’s going on at Conde Nast ? A very bad Monday

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A Day of Reckoning at Conde Nast

Kids Have The Greatest Imagination

This is why you never leave children unattended — wait, this IS why you leave children unattended…too cute! Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment