Tag Archives: digital

Will Libraries Turn Into Digital Reading Rooms?

Photo via CCAC North Library We’re fans of e-readers. They’re a way to dramatically decrease how many trees are used in the production of reading materials, especially text books, magazines and newspapers. But they have their place. While we love e-readers, we love libraries even more. Paper books that are shared over and over again are far greener than an electronic gadget. But, as e-books take over and the e-reader market booms, will libraries start to follow suit? Sony hopes so, with a new program to promote digital reading in libraries…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Will Libraries Turn Into Digital Reading Rooms?

Eminem Notches Year’s Highest Debut With Recovery

According to preliminary numbers, album sold 741,000 copies in its first week. By Gil Kaufman Eminem’s Recovery Photo: Interscope The question this week wasn’t whether Eminem’s Recovery would debut at #1, but if it could reach the magical 1 million plateau, like two of his previous efforts. Well, Slim Shady fell a bit short, but his album is projected to be the year’s highest debut so far, selling 741,000 in its first week, according to preliminary figures from Nielsen SoundScan. Recovery beat the other two highest debuts of the year, from Sade and Lady Antebellum, by more than 200,000. It also easily beat the debut last year of his Relapse album , which hit #1 with 608,000. In fact, not only is Recovery, which leaked several weeks early, the year’s best debut, it had the biggest first week since AC/DC’s Black Ice bowed with 784,000 back in 2008. The strong debut also gave Em his sixth-consecutive #1 album. According to Billboard, Recovery also sold 225,000 downloads for the second-biggest digital week in history, behind Coldplay’s Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends, which clocked 288,000 downloads when it was released in the summer of 2008. The rapper’s collaboration with Rihanna on “Love the Way You Lie” also made a lot of noise on Billboard ‘s Digital Songs chart, debuting at #1 with 338,000 downloads. Em, who admits on Recovery that he didn’t bring his “A” game the last time around, was helped by a strong first single in “Not Afraid,” plus a bit more exposure than he had for Relapse, when he was still just coming out of a troubling time dealing with his addiction to prescription medications. In addition to a turn on a recent episode of the E! clip show “The Soup,” in which he mistook host Joel McHale for a room-service waiter, the typically media-shy Marshall Mathers also popped up to do the top 10 on “Late Show With David Letterman” last week, where he performed with Jay-Z. Does Eminem’s Recovery live up to your expectations? Share your reviews in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Eminem Eminem And Jay-Z Perform On The ‘Late Show With David Letterman’ Related Artists Eminem

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Eminem Notches Year’s Highest Debut With Recovery

Kim Kardashian Wins Website Award. Seriously.

Chris Brown may have pretended to cry hysterically over Michael Jackson at the BET Awards last night, but that despicable attempt at career revival was actually NOT the most absurd event to take take place over the weekend. Instead, that dishonor falls upon the entire concept of the Digital Supernova Award. The first of its kind was handed out to Kim Kardashian on Saturday night, as she was feted by Sony Ericsson and Buzzmedia for having the top celebrity website on the planet. (Tough break, Spencer Pratt. Better luck next tear!) Said Kim: “I’m so proud of my new site and it’s an honor to be recognized for doing something that I love.

ThePirateBay Founding Group Disbands Following Death of Co-Founder, Site Down Temporarily Due to Coincidental Power Outage

A power outage on ThePirateBay's servers was responsible for the coincidental temporary shut down of the website. The website is NOT permanently down as previous reported. In 2003 a group of friends from Sweden decided to found Piratbyr

ThePirateBay Permanently Shuts Down Website Following Death of Co-Founder

In 2003 a group of friends from Sweden decided to found Piratbyr

Viacom Loses To YouTube In Landmark Copyright Case

A federal judge in New York sided with Google Inc. in a $1 billion copyright lawsuit filed by media company Viacom Inc. over YouTube videos, saying the service promptly removed illegal materials as required under federal law. Wednesday's ruling by U.S. District Judge Louis Stanton in the closely watched case further affirmed the protections offered to online service providers under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The 1998 law offers immunity when service providers promptly remove illegal materials submitted… http://news.cnet.com/8301-31001_3-20008636-261.html added by: atomiclegion

On DVD: Cloudy With a Chance of Big, Fat, Scathing Satire

This week Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs emerges, like a flood of curdled cream from a giant mutant eclair, onto DVD, and you shouldn’t, if you skipped it, dismiss it as just another digital kids’ cartoon, the kind that usually features penguins or cows and has Patrick Warburton voicing a dim-witted lug character of some type (not that there’s anything wrong with Patrick Warburton or his voicing skills), and blah blah blah. It’s not Pixar, but its not Happy Feet , either. It is in fact a scalding, stomach-churning, essentially Swiftian mockery of Americans, American privilege, and American gluttony. It could not have been made in any other country in the world.

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On DVD: Cloudy With a Chance of Big, Fat, Scathing Satire

Tupac Was ‘Fearless,’ Mike Tyson Says

‘It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy,’ former heavyweight recalls on what would have been ‘Pac’s 39th birthday. By Shaheem Reid Tupac Shakur at the Paris Theater in New York City Photo: Ron Galella/ WireImage The last time Mike Tyson saw Tupac Shakur, it was September 7, 1996. ‘Pac, who had struck up a friendship with Tyson in the early 1990s, came to Las Vegas like thousands of others to watch “Iron Mike” clean the clock of fellow pugilist Bruce Seldon. That night, Tyson won the World Boxing Association’s heavyweight championship title via first-round TKO. After the bout, Mike, ‘Pac and Suge Knight headed to the locker room to celebrate. No one knew that prizefight night would also mark one of the greatest tragedies in hip-hop: Tupac was shot as he left the Tyson-Seldon matchup; he died from his injuries a few days later, on September 13. ” ‘Pac was just a ball of energy,” Tyson recalled of his friend, when MTV News called him up on Wednesday (June 16). The most prolific MC ever, ‘Pac would have celebrated his 39th birthday Wednesday. Instead, the hip-hop community honors Shakur’s life and legacy . Tyson remembered him as an individual who was unique, to say the least. The former heavyweight partied with the icon, but the two men also shared some insightful private conversations. “He was incredible. You knew he was a special person when he’s in your presence,” Tyson said on the phone from Las Vegas. “If you had any consciousness of the reality we live in, you could feel his energy. You knew he was a special individual. Mike described their talks as, “purely emotionally intimate talking; expression of feeling. He was very prolific in expressing himself. He had a lot of hostility. I think it was just misguided and misdirected. It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy. Whoa! He was just amazing as far as his energy was concerned. He was explosive — like a black panther ready to pounce.” In the ring, Tyson exhibited ‘Pac-like qualities himself. He intimidated the competition, but the people loved him. He was a warrior, the fiercest gladiator the sport has ever seen. “He looked very destructive. He came across as a world beater,” Tyson said. “As far as his music was concerned, his presence and his energy … the word I’m looking for is fearless. He came across as fearless. When you come across somebody that’s fearless, you’re a little bit in awe. You’re like. ‘Whoa!’ He’s ready to blow, too, at any moment; very volatile. He’s very focused. He can go from one second to the next and get very focused.” Tyson and Tupac met during a turning point in both their careers. Iron Mike was the biggest and baddest draw in boxing, but also a year removed from having lost his heavyweight championship. ‘Pac was still affiliated with Digital Underground and about a year from landing the star-making role that would launch him: the intriguing, if insane, Bishop in 1992’s crime saga “Juice.” “Magic Johnson had a party at the Palladium in Los Angeles,” Iron Mike said, jogging his memory. “What year was this? No, I wasn’t champion, it was ’91. I just fought [Donovan “Razor”] Ruddock … I believe I came outside. I was talking to the people running the door. They were friends of mine. They wouldn’t let these guys in, Tupac and them. I said, ‘Man, let these guys in. You remember how it was with us.’ “So they let him in. ‘Pac had said, ‘Hold up for one minute,’ and he brought back 200 more people. He had a gang of people with him. They said, ‘Listen, you can’t go through the front, you have to go through the back.’ Next thing I knew, it was over. I hear somebody on the mic — he took the mic. Him and his guys got the mic somehow and started rapping. The whole crowd started going crazy. They loved him. The guys from Digital Underground introduced him to me. They said, ‘This is Tupac.’ I met him, he was very young. He was very happy, vivacious. He just had energy. He was wild, an amazing individual.” More than three years would pass before Tyson and Tupac crossed paths again. In 1995, ‘Pac visited the Champ at the Plainfield Correctional Facility, in Plainfield, Indiana, where Tyson was serving his sentence for a rape conviction (a crime for which Tyson still maintains his innocence). “The next time I saw [Tupac] I didn’t even know who he was,” Tyson said. “I knew he was ‘2Pac.’ But his mother had wrote me a letter in prison … I remembered that night. He came to prison to see me. We spoke. He was so much more confident than when I had met him the other time, probably a year or two prior to that. He had gone from being shy guy to very strong-willed and confident and independent. He was tremendously feeling himself. He had so much confidence. He was bursting off the air. “He came to the prison. He was standing on the table, started talking. All the people in the prison started going crazy. I said, ‘Sit. Sit down. Sit brother, sit,’ ” Tyson recalled. “The white prisoners, the guards, everybody went crazy in this redneck prison. They went nuts when he came in there. I didn’t know he was [famous] like that. I didn’t know he was like that! I thought he was some young brother. But when he came in, I didn’t know people was feeling him like that too. I was like, ‘Yo man, chill brother.’ He was wilding, sweating, talking, being very gregarious. He was prolific. He was talking, having a ball. … He was very territorial. He was an interesting guy. He was different than any other rapper I had ever met from a philosophical perspective.” Tyson said all of the prisoners were trying to talk to ‘Pac and snap pictures with him. But the champ was concerned that all the hoopla might get him thrown out of the facility, which had happened before when other celebs had visited the boxing legend. “I didn’t know Tupac was that big then, because I was inside,” Tyson explained. “That’s when they had that [East Coast vs. West Coast] beef stuff [with Bad Boy]. I didn’t know Tupac was who he was. I had no idea.” Share your memories of Tupac in the comments. Related Artists Tupac

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Tupac Was ‘Fearless,’ Mike Tyson Says

Simon Dominic sees things differently–

—Amazing Concept Artworks by Simon Dominic ____Simon Dominic is a freelance illustrator and concept artist, living in the North of England. He has worked on book and magazine covers, story illustration, game and card art, workshops and magazine articles. Simon paints digitally using Corel Painter and Art Rage Studio Pro. He applies traditional techniques through use of digital tools, resulting in a more painterly look to the finished piece. Simon’s work portfolio tends to centre around fantasy and sci-fi illustration with emphasis on people and creature concepts, but he is not limited to these for future work, having worked with clients on many other genres including horror, landscape and contemporary. His work appears in over a dozen renowed publications, including the Expos

Vodafone Sarmady iPhone & iPad FIFA 2010 WorldCup South Africa App …

At the Begging this month Sarmady the digital arm of Vodfone Egypt released thier first Arabic iPhone, iPod and iPad app FilGoal South Africa offering.

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Vodafone Sarmady iPhone & iPad FIFA 2010 WorldCup South Africa App …