Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Click to Download: Imogen Heap v Maroon 5

Chris Salmon follows two crowd-sourced music projects in which bands write songs with the help of their fans

They may not even have realised it, but last week, Imogen Heap and Maroon 5 (pictured) were engaged in a modern-day equivalent of Scott and Amundsen's race to the South Pole, both striving to record a new song with the help of contributions from fans, who could follow their progress online. But it's not entirely clear who thrust their flag into the ground first.

Heap began working on her song sooner, on 14 March, when she asked fans to upload sound clips. Hundreds did, with Heap choosing such sounds as "water in pan" and "tube setting off" for the song. She then asked them to suggest words, using a wordcloud (bit.ly/cloudheap). Teaspoon cropped up a lot, so that features, as did words related to the Japanese earthquake, which gave the song its loose theme. Throughout the song's two-week genesis, Heap tweeted and live-streamed extensively, giving a genuine sense of this being a shared process. Then, on Monday, she debuted the finished product, Lifeline, with another live stream (bit.ly/heapsong). The response to the effervescent electropop tune was overwhelmingly positive. The song was then offered for download from iTunes on Tuesday.

Maroon 5's 24-hour recording session took place in a London studio on 22 March, and was streamed live at cocacola.com/music. This was very much a corporate exercise, with updates and fan input coming via Coke's official Twitter account, bottles scattered around the studio and the song itself "inspired by Coke". As you'll see from the highlights at the website, Maroon 5 perhaps didn't work quite as hard as Heap ? they found time for table tennis and yoga sessions ? nor were the levels of interaction as high, with fans mainly being asked to vote between two creative options. Still, the band did finish a typically peppy song, premiering their track five days earlier than Heap. However, the song will only be made available, for free, from Coke's website today (Friday), so Heap's song was downloadable first. It might not be clear who won the race, then, but Heap's was certainly a far more rewarding journey.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/30/click-to-download-imogen-heap

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Internet Entrepreneur Bypasses High-Tech for Low-Priced With FreePhone2Phone



The numbers that fill Warner Johnson's head shake him from sleep most nights.

There are phone numbers and area codes and long-distance calling rates to far-flung places like India, Slovenia and Hong Kong. Phantom phone calls to Mexico or Martinique ring in his dreams.

"I just can't help it," Johnson said. "It's my passion."

Johnson, 48, is a Harlem-based Internet entrepreneur whose model relies less on high-tech gadgetry and more on old-school simplicity and ingenuity.


His most recent creation is FreePhone2Phone, a telephone service that offers free 10-minute phone calls to any city in the United States and to more than 50 countries around the world on the condition that the user listens to a short advertisement.

Here's how it works: You dial a local access number that you can locate at FreePhone2Phone.com, you listen to a couple 10- or 12-second advertisements and then you dial the number you'd like to call.

At a time when unlimited cell phone calling plans can easily eclipse the $125 mark, and smartphones and the latest tablets require costly data plans for optimized use, FreePhone2Phone is somewhat of a technological throwback.

Its use and appeal hearkens back to the days when a few quarters and a phone book were all you needed to reach out and touch someone. And with the cost of gas prices, airline tickets and perishable goods rising for any number of reasons, millions of Americans concerned with everyday expenses can save anywhere from 10 cents to a $1 a minute off their long-distance charges.

At a time when unlimited cell phone calling plans can easily eclipse the $125 mark, and smartphones and the latest tablets require costly data plans for optimized use, FreePhone2Phone is somewhat of a technological throwback. Its use and appeal harkens back to the days when a few quarters and a phonebook were all you needed to reach out and touch someone. And with the cost of gas prices, airline tickets and perishable goods rising for any number of reasons, millions of Americans concerned with everyday expenses can save anywhere from 10 cents to a $1 a minute off their long-distance charges.

Johnson said the target audience for his service is broader than those with family or friends abroad, and includes anyone who wants to save money in these tough economic times.

"Imagine you could save money at the gas pump by simply watching a few advertisements. Who wouldn't do that?" he asked. "This is no different."

While the service is free, there are a few catches. Most overseas calls are limited to landline numbers. Each call is limited to 10 minutes, and if you try to call the same number a second time in the same day, the call is limited to five minutes.

But the number of free calls you can make in a single day is unrestricted.

Since the launch of FreePhone2Phone seven months ago, Johnson said users have made "millions" of calls and saved "hundreds of thousands of dollars." (He admits to using the service himself at least three to four times a day to call business partners in Latin America.)

His story is the stuff of pure Americana: boy with humble, middle-class roots follows his dreams, takes a few risks and finds himself along the way.

And that journey has led Johnson to where he is today -- a man on a mission. That singular mission has been to spread the word about FreePhone2Phone. Think an African-American Billy Mays, Tony Little or Ron Popeil in a pair of perfectly pressed slacks and a sport coat.

He tells the delivery guys schlepping packages up and down his block in Harlem about it. He tells the Indian and Greek waiters at his favorite restaurants. And he can't take a bag of peanuts from a flight attendant or tip a skycap without at least a mention of FreePhone2Phone.

"In the middle of the night, I'll check the iPad to see how many people on the West Coast are making calls to Asia or Europe," Johnson admitted. "India is really big. Mexico is huge, and people are calling Europe like crazy."

FreePhone2Phone is just the latest venture for Johnson, who spent much of the mid-1980s and early '90s working on Wall Street as an investment banker with Payne Webber. He is also the creator of the Website fabsearch.com, which aggregates travel articles from luxury fashion and travel magazines to help people plan where to eat, stay and play while on vacation.

His entrepreneurial impulses were nurtured at an early age, when he said his schoolteacher mother, keen to her son's motivations, offered some sage advice.

"Don't become a doctor," he recalled her saying. "You care too much about money to be a doctor."

So began his journey from a middle-class black neighborhood in Raleigh, N.C., where he was bused to integrated schools, to summer classes at the prestigious Phillips Academy, the elite prep school in Andover, Mass., and then to the Ivy halls of Brown University, where he studied history.

While at Brown, a friend introduced him to a program designed to give minority students access to Wall Street. Johnson said he took to that world naturally and, after graduating from Brown with a degree in history, went on to work as an investment banker. But after years of the stress and grind of working in finance, he felt stymied.

"I realized that working on Wall Street just wasn't for me," Johnson said. "I was following the book and I could imagine my life with success, but I just said, 'Why do it if my heart's not into it?' "

He recalled wanting to experience life beyond the tacky wood-paneled offices that he so often found himself in, where he consulted for many deep-pocketed businessmen with even deeper financial troubles.

"I looked at Ted Turner and he was a rock star to me," Johnson said. "Guys like that go out there and risk it." So he quit his job and moved to France.

"I learned French and partied my butt off," he said, with a bit of boyish mischief in his voice. "I decided to eat pizza and be an entrepreneur."

After living in France for a year and a half, Johnson decided to move back to the States, first to New York City's West Village neighborhood and then to Harlem. It was 1993 and Harlem had yet to gentrify.

"Police helicopters were still flying outside of my window," he recalled.

But he said moving to Harlem, the "mecca of black America," fueled his social and entrepreneurial juices. He was awed by the architecture and cultural richness of the place.

"It has made me so proud to be a black American. And you realize the strength, the commitment, the dignity and the patience of my people," he said. "But it also energized me to go out there and do things. I felt Harlem provided an open canvas for me to be able to pursue my dreams, and I knew that I wouldn't be judged one way or the other."

There were ups and down along the way, Johnson said. Companies he founded have both flourished and floundered. But the last few years with fabsearch.com have been profitable and full of successes, he said.

And word of FreePhone2Phone has been spreading quickly, he said, mostly by word of mouth. (Surely, much of it his own.) There are plans to extend the service to more countries and investors, and advertisers have been extremely supportive, given the tough lending and investing environment, he said.

Meanwhile, Johnson remains his company's best pitchman.

"Your grandmother doesn't know how to use Skype or Google Voice," he said. "But this is simple -- easy as using a prepaid calling card."

And he allowed that he is consumed by the need to spread the word about what he believes his product can offer money-conscious callers.

"This is my passion and joy," Johnson said. "I can barely go to sleep without telling people about this service."

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/03/25/internet-entrepreneur-bypasses-high-tech-for-low-priced-with-fre/

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SugarSync for iOS adds remote PC file management, background music streaming

SugarSync 2.2 for iOSSugarSync, the online backup and file sync service, has just announced the availability of SugarSync 2.2 for iOS, a version that represents the biggest ever update to SugarSync's iOS app. It adds many new features, most of them inspired by user feedback.

First of all, SugarSync for iOS now lets you remotely manage files on your computer. Be it copying, moving, or deleting, you can now do all of that from your iDevice, for files and folders, both for individual items and multiple selections -- as seen in the image to the right.

Another important new feature is the ability to publicly share any file that's available to you in SugarSync, with just a couple of taps (see image after the break). You basically navigate to the file you want to share, tap on the blue arrow next to it, then select Copy Link to Clipboard, and from then on you can paste that link into any text box (say, in your email client). The link isn't a short one, so for use on Twitter you'll probably want to feed it to a URL shortener before posting. This is an interesting feature, but can also turn into a security issue if people don't exercise caution using it and end up publicly sharing files that aren't supposed to be public.

The SugarSync music player now (finally) works in the background, allowing you to use your iDevice for other stuff while listening to your music collection stored on SugarSync's servers. Also new is the ability to import photos from SugarSync into your device's Camera Roll, and a list of frequently asked questions is now built into the app. You can even refer friends to SugarSync straight from within the app. For each referral that joins SugarSync, you'll receive 500MB of additional storage if you use the free service, and 10GB if you have a paid account.

Download SugarSync 2.2 for iOS for free from the iTunes App Store

Continue reading SugarSync for iOS adds remote PC file management, background music streaming

SugarSync for iOS adds remote PC file management, background music streaming originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 28 Mar 2011 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Quickoffice Pro for Android gets cloud storage, improved document editing

Quickoffice Pro 4.0 for Android

Quickoffice
has updated its paid Pro app for Android yesterday, bringing it to version 4.0. The company says this is the biggest update of its Android application yet, and many new features have been added. Perhaps the most notable is the added ability to save files in the cloud. This works Box.net, Google Docs, DropBox, Huddle, SugarSync, and MobileMe accounts.

Additionally, Quickoffice Pro now has better editing features, it loads files faster, and scrolling and zooming have been made seamless. Contextual search has been integrated throughout the app, and the overall performance of Quickoffice has been improved. You can also easily share files via email or Bluetooth now. All three of the app's integrated editors -- Quickword for text documents, Quicksheet for spreadsheets, and Quickpoint for presentations -- have received support for text cut/copy/paste and undo/redo actions.

Quickword has also gotten a floating contextual toolbar, the ability to insert images into documents directly from the camera or from the gallery, paragraph alignment, and a find and replace feature.

Continue reading Quickoffice Pro for Android gets cloud storage, improved document editing

Quickoffice Pro for Android gets cloud storage, improved document editing originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 25 Mar 2011 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Statement by National Security Advisor Tom Donilon on Special Rapporteur on Iran Human Rights

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The United States welcomes the resolution adopted today by the United Nations Human Rights Council appointing a Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran.  The decision by the Council represents a historic milestone that reaffirms the global consensus and alarm about the dismal state of human rights in Iran. Iranian authorities are perpetrating a wide variety of abuses against a broad spectrum of Iranians, irrespective of age, gender, faith, or profession. The Special Rapporteur created by the Council provides the international community with a mandate to monitor and call attention to such abuses.  The Iranian Government has a responsibility to protect its citizens and allow its people’s voices to be heard.  The United States will continue to speak out on behalf of all those brave Iranians struggling for their universal rights.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/03/24/statement-national-security-advisor-tom-donilon-special-rapporteur-iran-

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Regime Change, On Sale

Douthat remains a skeptic, as I do, of the Libyan war. This is dead-on: Obama?s ?false choice? was actually a real choice. And by choosing war in Libya, he probably committed America far more completely than last night?s speech was...


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The Revolutions' Soundtrack

Nick Kimbrell compiles it: Many of the most inspiring songs are far from new. The Egyptian national anthem, "Biladi, Biladi, Biladi," composed by Sayed Darwish after the First World War?another revolutionary period in Egypt?s history?has taken on an entirely new...


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