Saturday, April 30, 2011

Beethoven: String Quartets Op 59, String Quintet Op 29; Kuijken Quartet ? review

(Challenge Classics)

This is a family affair: two generations of Kuijkens ? Veronica, Sigiswald, Sara and Wieland ? play Beethoven's three middle-period Opus 59 Quartets, the "Rasumovskys". The set may not replace existing favourites in a heavily populated field. There's none of the radiance and persuasion of the Emersons or the intimacy of the Tak�cs. Instead, their unadorned verve and clarity reflect a background in period performance, which has its own appeal. They use "modern" instruments but the bowing is light and the vibrato discreet, which exposes some slips in passagework. Sigiswald's wife, viola player Marleen Thiers, joins them for the less familiar Quintet Op 29, worth checking out for its beguiling and expressive adagio.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/may/01/beethoven-rasumovskys-kuijken-review

Raquel Alessi Marisa Coughlan Shanna Moakler Portia de Rossi Jolene Blalock

The Educational Caste System

A new study in the Journal of Human Capital learned that even though the "level of formal education has no correlation with a movie star?s success, either in terms of box office earnings or the likelihood of winning an Oscar,"...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/GmcGOxWjACk/the-educational-caste-system.html

Freida Pinto Eva Longoria Susan Ward Emmy Rossum Kim Yoon jin

The Resurrection of Johnny Cash

In the 1980s, Johnny Cash was languishing on the cabaret circuit, until a group of indie artists turned him from country star into cultural icon. By Graeme Thomson

Of all Johnny Cash's many and varied incarnations, that of 1980s indie connoisseur might just be the strangest. "Hearing Cash raving about Gaye Bykers on Acid was definitely one of the highlights of my life," says Marc Riley, laughing. "He was really on it, reeling off the names. I remember him talking about That Petrol Emotion. It was pretty incongruous."

Today, Riley is a pillar of BBC 6 Music. Twenty-odd years ago, he was a former member of the Fall, harbouring an urge to make the first Johnny Cash tribute album. With help from Jon Langford of country-punk trailblazers the Mekons, he succeeded. Released on Red Rhino in 1988 and long out of print, 'Til Things Are Brighter featured a who's who of 80s indie, punk and pop stalwarts. Marc Almond sang Man in Black; Pete Shelley yelped his way through Straight A's in Love; and yes, Mary Mary from psychedelic grebo rockers Gaye Bykers on Acid tore up A Boy Named Sue, adding a salty "motherfucker" where a "son of a bitch" used to be.

It's a raw, raucous, occasionally rather ropey tribute, yet also oddly auspicious. Incongruous though it seems for such a quintessentially American artist to find his oeuvre redefined in the studios and pubs of Leeds, Manchester and London, Cash's affiliation with this ragged group of British-based musicians was the first step on a long road back to critical and commercial relevance, following a decade in which he had slid into something close to cultural inconsequence.

Almost two decades after Rick Rubin delivered him to a new audience with the landmark American Recordings album, it's hard to imagine a time when Cash wasn't synonymous with cool ? yet in 1988, things looked very different. Dropped in 1986 by Columbia, his record company of 30 years, and without a hit single or album for a decade, Cash had not only been marginalised by the country music industry but, in his early 50s, was creatively stymied. Meanwhile, his core audience was verging on the prehistoric.

"I had grown up listening to him as a really young kid, and it stayed with me," Riley says. "But he wasn't on the radar for most people who grew up listening to Bowie and the Stooges. We'd go and see him through the 1980s at the Manchester Apollo or the Palace, or in Blackpool, and 95% of his audience was the purple-rinse brigade. It was close to cabaret. There was no credibility associated with it ? he was probably at his lowest point of cool." Langford recalls: "There were no youthful hipsters at his gigs. Me and Marc were definitely the youngest people there."

Yet Cash's aura remained powerful, with residual traces of the pill-popping menace that defined him in his heyday. As he found himself drifting beyond not only the attentions of the US country music establishment but almost everyone else in his homeland, it was overseas that he found a welcoming arm around his shoulder.

Nick Cave's music in particular often sounded like the final, brutal flurry of blows in a fight Cash had started back in the mid-1950s. On their 1986 covers album Kicking Against the Pricks, Cave and the Bad Seeds recorded The Singer, the little-known B-side of Cash's live version of Folsom Prison Blues, released in 1968. A year earlier, on The Firstborn Is Dead, Cave had recorded Wanted Man, the tongue-in-cheek travelogue of a ladykiller on the lam, written in 1969 by Cash and Bob Dylan and recorded days later on the live album At San Quentin.

Cave's endorsement not only joined the dots between Cash and more overtly cool cult artists such as Lee Hazlewood, Sanford Clark, the Velvet Underground and Duane Eddy. It also made explicit Cash's affiliation with a crop of indie artists who may not have been selling a bucketload of records but who were, at the time, bellwethers of the alternative music scene.

Among them was Cathal Coughlan, who covered Ring of Fire for 'Til Things Are Brighter. His former band Microdisney would often perform Cash's version of Cocaine Blues. "It wasn't ironic at all," he says. "It was straight-down-the-line rebellious. Someone had made me a mixtape in 1982 of the Sun Records stuff and it just blew me away. I knew him since as this kind of cabaret figure ? he had faded, definitely, but I still had a lot of regard for him, and that album seemed to get him into some interesting places."

'Til Things Are Brighter wasn't a lavish affair. Langford, Riley and their house band "bashed out" all 13 backing tracks in a single day at RikRak studio in Leeds; the vocalists added their contributions over the next few weeks at Berry Street studios in Clerkenwell. Michelle Shocked galloped through One Piece at a Time, and the Triffids' David McComb crooned Country Boy, a 1957 Cash original. Langford recalls that Marc Almond, the one "proper" pop star taking part, came in and "told me I'd cut Man in Black in the wrong key. He had a horrible fit in the studio. Sally [Timms, from the Mekons] talked him down and coaxed this fantastic performance out of him, but I think he was a bit nervous. It was maybe a bit odd for him to be doing Johnny Cash songs."

Cash thoroughly approved. He was thrilled at a new generation of musicians interpreting his songs, even if in reality that meant Cabaret Voltaire's Stephen Mallinder loping through a version of I Walk the Line which could charitably be described as pitchy. When he toured the UK in May 1988, he hooked up with Riley and Langford backstage at Manchester Apollo and posed for the photo that was used on the back of 'Til Things Are Brighter. In 1989, while being interviewed by the BBC, he held a copy of the album up for the camera, reeled off a few of the artists ? "Tracey and Melissa from Voice of the Beehive" ? and said how proud he was of the album these "young people" had made.

Cash, however, was genuinely peeved when he discovered that the album launch at the Old Pied Bull pub in Islington was going to be held just days after he was scheduled to leave the UK. "I wish I'd known," he said. "June and I would have stayed over." "He would have done it, too," says Langford. "Sharing a dressing room with Frank Sidebottom ?"

Aware that the idea of releasing a Cash tribute in 1988 seemed "a bit gratuitous", it was decided to make the album a benefit for the Terence Higgins Trust. At the time, HIV/Aids was still widely perceived as an issue that almost exclusively affected the gay community. "We didn't know what his reaction would be when we told him it was a benefit for Aids, but he was very cool about that," says Riley. "He said it was great that young people were doing his music for a cause that hadn't really been dealt with at that point."

The album's primary aim was to raise funds and awareness, but it also undoubtedly boosted Cash's confidence. It's easier now, almost 25 years later, to understand and see the wider significance of his enthusiastic engagement with 'Til Things Are Brighter. "He told us it was a morale booster," says Langford. "He was very flattered and supportive. I later learned from his guitarist, Marty Stuart, that he was really pissed off and apparently quite depressed around this time. He felt ignored and irrelevant, and when you hear Gaye Bykers on Acid covering your songs I guess you know you're not irrelevant."

"He felt a real connection with those musicians and very validated," says his daughter Rosanne Cash. "It was very good for him: he was in his element. He absolutely understood what they were tapping into, and loved it. That album was definitely re-energising for him."

The album also altered the context in which he was regarded by many critics and younger listeners. In the US, the Chicago Tribune ran a feature entitled Johnny Cash Meets the Hip Britons, while the album was discussed on college radio and reviewed in most alternative music magazines; much the same places, in fact, that later embraced American Recordings. In the UK, NME and Melody Maker sat up and took notice. "Some people didn't really get that Cash was a serious artist. They thought we were indulging a bit of kitsch," says Langford. "We just thought of it as showcasing these great songs."

"Its profile was quite high and it got good reviews," Riley says. "Cash hadn't yet been rediscovered as a cultural icon, but he still generated excitement. It was a good story: the Mekons, Marc Almond, elements of the Fall all choosing a country star with not very much credibility." This was precisely the marketing angle Rubin fully exploited a few years later when he set about rebranding Cash and encouraging him to cover songs by the likes of Cave, Soundgarden and Nine Inch Nails.

Perhaps the most significant consequence was less immediately visible. Hearing his songs shaken and stirred by a bunch of indie musicians engendered a subtle shift in the way Cash perceived himself as an artist. He had always been an honorary member of any musical constituency claiming a vaguely outsider status. After years of trying to conform to the Nashville establishment's rather orthodox notion of who he was and what he should do, 'Til Things Are Brighter informed his own sense of isolation and helped him re-engage with his core identity as a genuinely alternative artist. This realisation eventually led him to the breakthrough of American Recordings.

If meeting and recording with Rick Rubin was in many ways the final and most significant piece of the jigsaw, 'Til Things Are Brighter is at least part of the same picture. No one will ever mistake the plain-speaking, pretension-skewering Riley for Rubin, a self-styled guru-producer who contemplates music with his legs crossed and his eyes closed as though weighing up some great cosmic calculation rather than the latest Dixie Chicks album. Yet both men had a role in pointing Cash towards his extraordinary final decade of music-making.

"It was like a pre-echo of his stature, that he wasn't forgotten," says Riley of the album. "He wasn't Tom Jones, he hadn't gone off to Vegas ? there was an artist in there who was troubled by complacency. I'm not blowing our trumpet. What Rick Rubin achieved with him dwarfed what we did. But I'd like to think we played our part and were a bit ahead of our time."

The Resurrection of Johnny Cash: Hurt, Redemption and American Recordings, by Graeme Thomson, is published by Jawbone Press.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/apr/28/johnny-cash-indie-1980s-resurrection

Maggie Grace Luján Fernández Charli Baltimore Denise Richards Jennifer Sky

Pokot Girls of Kenya Refuse to Be Cut and Change a Community, Next World

Pokot, Kenya, FGM

The conversation is heated. There is no yelling or raising of the voice, but the exchange is intense:

"I will never be cut, over my dead body. For how long shall we remain desperate in this dry and barren village? It's a vicious cycle, I bury you, then you bury me with the same sorrows instead of forging ahead and helping those who are weak.

"How can you allow your child to die within like this as if you didn't give birth to me?"

It is a question that lingers, and the Mother barely has an answer:

"I'm defeated by all your stories. I am just confused."

In Central Pokot, Kenya, young girls are refusing to be cut. They would rather commit suicide than endure what their mothers and grandmothers underwent with female circumcision or female genital mutilation (FGM). When I used to hear about FGM, it seemed as though all who were involved -- girls who were ready to be initiated, their moms, the elders and the men -- were a monolithic front in refusing to change the centuries-old traditions of their forebears.

I saw photographs of young girls being held down by women they had known all their natural lives. These same women would usher them in to a life of communal pain and misery.

And there seemed to be no end.

But the girls of Pokot have had enough. They are verbally sparring with their mothers and resisting the steely stares of their fathers.

Nancy Tomee, who spoke in the beginning, is fierce as she continues to battle her mother:

"But I can see a flood coming and all you people just want to hold us back. I'm moving forward, moving forward. I'm heading to the land of milk and honey. My passion for education is driving me. Look hard for someone else to cut as long as it is not me."

After Nancy asks her mom one last time if she will still cut her, her mother is silent.

And Nancy is not alone.

A grassroots group called "Kepstono Rotwo" or Abandon the Knife, works hard to educate the rural village people of Pokot about why FGM is unnecessary. But as an African myself, I understand how culture and tradition is a sticky thing. Culture and tradition bind us. It gives us purpose and value -- but it can also senselessly harm and kill.

And the Kepstono organization totally get the intricacies of FGM in their society. In Pokot, FGM is the central part of the rites of passage ceremony for girls. Without the ceremony, there is no way to mark a girl's transformation from child to woman.

So they make a plan.

Why not create an alternative rites of passage ceremony that ushers their girls in to the world of womanhood without the cutting?

A part of Kepstono is Jane, who is a warrior.

She is relentless in speaking with the parents of girls who don't want to be cut and making them understand all of the many drawbacks of FGM. She, herself, has had the unfortunate experience of FGM and serves as the community's midwife. She explains why FGM has been able to continue for so long:

"Most of the people here, they just refuse to think. They choose not to see the consequences."

But these young girls can. They've seen their mothers suffer and they want no part of it, but it isn't just Kepstono and a few recalcitrant girls who are fighting against the cutting. There are some Mothers who are putting their marriages on the line in order to save their daughters.

Gertrude is another girl who doesn't want to get cut. She is the oldest child and only girl for her parents. While Gertrude is understandably scared and quiet, her mother stands up to her father and holds her ground. The father fleshes out many of the pressures and fears he faces not forcing Gertrude to be cut. As a matter of fact, a potential husband has been put forward and Gertrude's grandfather has already accepted the dowry:

Father: "My father asked me about Gertrude's suitor. I told him we were progressing ... now what can I say? You explain to my father."

Mother: "I'll go meet with that old man!"

Father: "You must be aware that once the Pokot take a person's goods, you are committed?"

Mother: "Taken goods? I didn't go through labor pains for my daughter to be sold like that! Are you crazy?"

Father: "Others are cutting their daughters. I will be the laughing stock when people are enjoying the beers they get for their daughters."

Mother: "I will not cut my daughter for that."

Father: "So you are the one who suggested my daughter run away?"

Gertrude's mom is quiet -- yes, she is the one who sent her daughter to her grandmother's house for safety.

At the end of the argument, Gertrude's father refuses to eat and tells his wife he wants a divorce if she insists on ruining their only daughter. Even though he physically pushes her away, Gertrude's mother remains steadfast:

"He's angry now, but when he calms down, hopefully he will think about what I have said."

Kepstono Rotwo have arranged their own rites of passage ceremony and 130 girls have pledged to attend. Nancy will attend the ceremony, and both of her parents will come. Gertrude also gets blessings from both of her parents to attend and take part in the sacred ceremony.
Pokot, Kenya, FGM
When the ceremony begins, 175 girls have showed up. The girls are educated about all of the health problems that exist with cutting off the clitoris and labia majora and then leaving a small hole to urinate. The photo they show to the girls leaves everyone speechless (pictured right).

Then they have a young woman who also hasn't been cut speak with them about self-empowerment, myths and having a better life with education. It is just the type of concrete model the girls need to stay strong and confident in their decision.

One of the best parts of the short film is watching the girls go through the actual ceremony. They are joyous and proud, and they dance through the streets so that everyone can know that they were initiated into womanhood without being cut -- something that has NEVER been done before.

Nancy holds no punches in her celebratory speech. Not suprisingly, she has become the leader and spokeswoman for her group:

"I tell you Mothers, I am truly sorry for this milk that has been spilled forever. We now know all the secrets and lies that you have been telling us. Now we know there is no shame in being uncut.

"I refuse to witness my mothers' suffering and then to repeat the cycle. I have decided to set an example. I am going to be a role model. I will be an example."

Indeed.

The work of Kepstono and the presence of these uncut women have sent shock waves through the community. In reaction, one young man said:

"My principle is, I'm going to marry an uncircumcised woman. Period."

It is wonderful that the progress of Pokot, Kenya, is now immortalized in film. Communities throughout the world can learn from these fearless girls -- now women -- of the village. They had an age-old problem, female circumcision, and community members were steadfast in finding a way to solve it.

They argued, reflected and considered until they came up with a solution that made sense. Then they took the time to visit as many households as they could and had full-blown ideological conversations to show people that what they thought didn't make sense.

That type of action doesn't need to just happen in villages or remote places. It needs to happen in Compton, California; Brooklyn; Newark, New Jersey; New Orleans; and Atlanta, Georgia. It needs to happen wherever black people are so that they can rethink and refocus their efforts on methods to supplant age-old problems with tangible solutions.

It can be done. It has been done.

The world needs to watch out for Nancy, Gertrude and all the other girls-turned-women who said no.

In the meantime, watch this community's journey here:




 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/04/20/pokot-girls-of-kenya-refuse-to-be-cut-and-change-a-community-wo/

Christina DaRe Malin Akerman Melissa Joan Hart Bianca Kajlich Giulianna Ramirez

PJ Harvey live session: How I wrote ... The Last Living Rose

Video: PJ Harvey visits our studio for an exclusive live performance of The Last Living Rose from her recent album, Let England Shake



Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/video/2011/apr/28/pj-harvey-live-session-last-living-rose

Jolene Blalock Nichole Robinson Monet Mazur Rozonda Thomas Rachel Weisz

Music Weekly: Beastie Boys special

This week's show sees Alexis Petridis getting "bad on yo ass" as he's joined by Rosie Swash and hip hop aficionado Angus Batey to discuss the Beastie Boys.

Twenty-five years on from their classic breakthrough Licensed to Ill, the rap brats (as they used to be) are back with new album Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 ? so can they still kick it? Plus the team reflect further on the golden age of hip hop, spinning the Ultramagnetic MCs and more, and with Alexis reflecting on his old haircuts.

Finally, there's new music from Tom Vek, Gang Gang Dance and Cosmo Jarvis, and pithy criticism thereof. Leave your reviews and comments below.

Follow us on Twitter and like our page on Facebook.



Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/audio/2011/apr/29/music-weekly-podcast-beastie-boys-special

Cindy Crawford Mariah OBrien Uma Thurman Alice Dodd Kate Walsh

6 High Schools Vie for President to Attend Commencement

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On Thursday, President Barack Obama opened his High School Commencement Challenge up to the masses: the public can help select which high school the President should visit for commencement.

In the running are Wayne Early/Middle College High School of Goldsboro, North Carolina; Pittsburgh CAPA 6-12, School for Creative and Performing Arts of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Science Park High (pictured) of Newark, New Jersey; Bridgeport High School of Bridgeport, Washington; High Tech High International of San Diego, California; and Booker T. Washington High School of Memphis, Tennessee.

On the White House's site, each school is profiled with an essay and a three-minute video that shows why they should be the school of choice for President Obama. In their video, Booker T. Washington High draws on inspirational quotes from their namesake and boasts a more than 22 percent increase in graduation rates for 2010.

Watch their moving pitch here:



High Tech High tauts diversity, project-based learning and a 99 percent higher-education attendance rate as the reason why the President should come to their school.

Take a glimpse here:





Viewers can vote on their favorite school by clicking a button that ranks the school from 1 to 5, with 5 being the highest. On April 29th, three of the top schools will be given to the President for consideration and then he'll make the final decision on where he goes on commencement day.

You can watch the other schools and vote here.

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/04/22/6-high-schools-vie-for-president-to-attend-commencement/

Danica Patrick Josie Maran Leighton Meester Dominique Swain Jamie Chung

Microsoft Office 2011 SP1 for Mac arriving next week with Outlook improvements

Microsoft Office 2011 for Mac SP1
Microsoft's Business Unit, the Mac software arm of the Redmond-based software giant, is set to release its first Service Pack for Office 2011 for Mac. Just like most updates of this nature, SP1 will address a myriad of bugs, and roll in most of the hotfixes that came before it into one, easy to install package.

SP1 will also address Outlook's syncing support, with the BU adding calendar support for Sync Services allowing you to finally sync Outlook calendars with iCal and other local calendars, as well as syncing iDevices hooked up through iTunes. For Office 2008 upgraders, this was one of the features removed in the Entourage to Outlook switch, so it's nice to see it finally make an appearance in Outlook. The irony here is that Outlook will no longer be able to sync with your MobileMe calendar when it's upgraded to the new version on the 5th of May, or before if you've jumped the gun early, as Apple has removed Sync Services support from MobileMe by turning to CalDAV. Nothing to do with Microsoft here of course, and it shouldn't be long before something gets worked out.

Outlook has also been bestowed with the ability to edit server-side Exchange rules, something our friends at TUAW pointed out, have been missing on the Mac since Office 2001 for Mac OS 9. The email Redirect and Resend buttons have also made an appearance, allowing you to send mail onto the intended recipient without being caught in the email chain for replies. Excel also gets some love from SP1 with improved Solver integration support, which should be handy for those attempting to use equations in Excel.

Look to Microsoft Autoupdate on your Mac starting next week, or visit the Microsoft Mac download center to update manually once it becomes available.

Microsoft Office 2011 SP1 for Mac arriving next week with Outlook improvements originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 03:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sara Spraker Alexis Bledel Kim Kardashian China Chow Alecia Elliott

Oh ITV, what made you think Mr Nice could be Mr Nasty?

Gary Barlow, lined up to be a judge on The X Factor, is no Simon Cowell

Gary Barlow is said to be in "advanced talks" to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on the next series of The X Factor. Mr Nice replaces Mr Nasty is how they're billing it. Of course, Cowell's real value to the show is not his nastiness, but the fact that he's the boss. Having the boss on camera is like having your headmaster inexplicably enter the classroom and stand cryptically in the corner, hands behind his back, wordlessly terrifying the bejeezus out of teacher and pupils alike. Cowell is not just judging the acts but the judges and the audience too (and perhaps, yes, humanity as a whole). Will we ever again witness that look of intense discomfort in Dannii Minogue's eyes once her T-shirted master has disappeared and taken his Sword Of Damocles with him? No. It will be a free-for-all, with Barlow cast as the hapless supply teacher. There is no hope for ITV now. Unless someone can dig out Peter Sisson's number and make him an offer he can't refuse, of course.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/lostinshowbiz/2011/apr/21/gary-barlow-no-simon-cowell

Desiree Dymond Teri Polo Summer Altice Rose McGowan Bar Refaeli

First Firefox 6 build next week, Firefox 7 by May, and aurora channel introduced

Firefox 5, 6, 7 and release channels
Mozilla's Engineering Project Manager, Christian Legnitto, has detailed the release schedule for Firefox 5, 6 and 7. If all goes to plan, Firefox 6.0a1 will be released next week, April 12, and Firefox 7.0a1 in the middle of May. The final build of Firefox 5 should be released on June 21, exactly three months after the release of Firefox 4.

Along with the faster 6-week release cadence, Firefox's new Chrome-like release channels have also been given names and anticipated update frequencies. The most notable change is the introduction of a new alpha channel -- which is analogous to Chrome Canary -- that will be called 'aurora' and will update nightly. Aurora will be where fixes and features are tested, and either approved for Beta, or backed out to Central. Aurora will have a new icon, too.

The Nightly (mozilla-central) channel will remain unchanged in name and frequency, but it will gain a new 'nightly icon.' The Beta (mozilla-beta) channel will remain as-is, with new builds rolling out weekly. The Release (mozilla-release) channel will also remain as-is, with security and stability updates coming every 6 to 12 weeks.

It should be noted that the names (including 'aurora') are not necessarily final, but it's unlikely that they'll change. We're also awaiting the arrival of the new 'channel switching' technology, which should arrive in the next few days -- in time for the release of Firefox 6 aurora!

First Firefox 6 build next week, Firefox 7 by May, and aurora channel introduced originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 05:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mena Suvari Georgina Grenville Michelle Trachtenberg Amanda Bynes Ana Ivanovi

YouTube Live now streaming select partners in real time

Not content with limiting its dominance in streaming uploaded videos, YouTube is now ready to take on competitors like Justin.TV and Ustream. The new YouTube Live service is being rolled out to select YouTube partners and will enable real-time broadcasting. In its official announcement, Google states that "The goal is to provide thousands of partners with the capability to live stream from their channels in the months ahead."

You can check out live broadcasts at http://www.youtube.com/live, where you'll also find a schedule of upcoming episodes from beta partners like Revision3 and Destructoid. You're also able to subscribe to YouTube Live broadcasts -- which will ensure you're notified when a new episode is coming up.

YouTube Live now streaming select partners in real time originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 08:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Anne Marie Kortright Paige Butcher Amanda Peet Xenia Seeberg The Avatars of Second Life

You can now rent Adobe Photoshop for $35 per month, CS 5.5 available soon

Rejoice! No longer will you have to fork over $700 for a Photoshop CS5 license! Adobe has unveiled a new subscription scheme where you can rent the entire Creative Suite, or individual packages, by the month, or for an entire year.

Adobe Photoshop can be yours for $35 per month if you agree to rent it for 12 months, or $49 per month if you require its services for a shorter period. Dreamweaver can be had for even cheaper, at just $19 per month. The entire Master Collection is still rather expensive, though, at $125 per month.

Today, Adobe also ushered in the release of Creative Suite 5.5, and simultaneously upped its release cycle from 18 months to 24 months. This means, if you rent Photoshop for two years, it's actually the same cost as buying it outright. There's no rent-to-own option, though -- so you wouldn't have access to the cheaper upgrade price once Creative Suite 6 rolls around next year. Still, if you need access to Photoshop, After Effects or Premiere for a one-time project, the new rental scheme could be exactly what you're looking for.

In other news, Adobe has announced that it will be launching three rather exciting iPad apps that work in conjunction with Photoshop: Eazel, Nav, and Color Lava. Eazel lets you five-finger paint on your iPad, and export the result into Photoshop; Nav acts as some kind of workspace, brush and menu extension, and the hopefully named Color Lava is a paint mixing palette. The apps are expected to appear in the App Store in the next 30 days.

You can now rent Adobe Photoshop for $35 per month, CS 5.5 available soon originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kate Bosworth Tamala Jones Yamila Diaz Alicia Keys Tyra Banks