Zstar Electronic Co.Ltd, we sell fire cards for DS/NDSL/NDSi, we also
have Wii, DSiLL, NDSi, NDSL, PSP2000, PSP3000, PS2, PS3, PSP go, PSP, X
360 accessories
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zstarsales04
zstarsales04's Profile:
For more detail,pls try www golden-seller com
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goldenseller01
goldenseller01's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=35910
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=65373
Many fees for use of copyrighted material, especially music, have been
too high for too long. Historically, owners of copyrighted material
could charge high fees because the distribution was tightly controlled.
This is called exclusivity. The revenue potential is so high that the
history of
Long live Pandora.
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rrgmrg
rrgmrg's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=10689
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=65373
___
I agree with you
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gbruzzo
http://www.last.fm/user/JackieBr/
http://www.last.fm/label/rarenoiserecords
http://www.rarenoiserecords.com
gbruzzo's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=3633
View this
i don't.
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MrSinatra
www.lion-radio.org
using:
sb2 sbc (my home) / sbr (parent's home) - w/sc 7.3.4b - win xp pro
sp3 ie8 - 3.2ghz / 2gig ram - 1tb wd usb2 raid1 - d-link dir-655
MrSinatra's Profile:
All these articles are all well and good from the end users perspective,
but copyright holders ARE getting shafted by the likes of iTunes who are
continually trying to devalue music.
Just because it isn't a physical product doesn't mean you shouldn't
have to pay for it.
If you can't afford the
http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=24470
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MrSinatra
www.lion-radio.org
using:
sb2 sbc (my home) / sbr (parent's home) - w/sc 7.3.4b - win xp pro
sp3 ie8 - 3.2ghz / 2gig ram - 1tb wd usb2 raid1 - d-link dir-655
MrSinatra's
http://government.zdnet.com/?p=5290
Follow the money: If LAUNCH is interactive, then Yahoo (and thus,
Pandora, and any damn webradio service in the world that lets you create
stations or channels) would have to pay individual performance
royalties for every song played. Big bucks for the
Internt stations will eventually end up paying the same kind of
royalties AM/FM stations are paying now.
And theses fees will be payed for by commercials or listeners fees.
At the latest when internet radio takes the place of traditional AM/FM
broadcast.
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Locuth
Use your PDA as SqueezeBox
NFLnut;442274 Wrote:
Wow! Do you mean that PRIVATE enterprises could POSSIBLY come together
and solve problems WITHOUT GOVERNMENT help?!! Say it isn't so! I
thought we were just too dumb to do things on our own!
Depends on how you look at it: the rates set originally were
impossible.
mortslim;438842 Wrote:
Lawmakers also praised the agreement. Congress has already passed
legislation making any deal reached between webcasters and SoundExchange
legally binding. Because Internet radio companies operate under a
government license, these deals need congressional
i think that article is factually incorrect.
over the air FM/AM stations are NOT exempt from royalties, (what
laughable hogwash!) they DO pay them, and pay them AGAIN if they stream,
albeit under different terms. one doesn't cover the other.
secondly, i know of NO gov't license for interent
Here is a view on the subject
http://www.michaelrobertson.com/
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Labarum
Brian
Squeezebox 3 Classic and Virgin Cable Box
Beresford DAC TC-7510 MK6/4 - Quad 405-2 refurbished by 405man
Quart 980s Speakers
Boom in kitchen.
Some recent good news from the UK too -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8068154.stm
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autopilot
Cheers, auto.
-don't call me Shirley.-
autopilot's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=1763
Thanks mortslim, I've been wondering where this situation was at.
What is not clear, and what I fear, is that this only resolves the
issue for the bigger streaming operators and the smaller operators may
still end up getting pushed out of the market. :(
I love the big boys in the market
Online radio stations strike big deal on royalties
By JOELLE TESSLER, AP Technology Writer - Tue Jul 7, 2009 2:41PM EDT
WASHINGTON - The future of Internet radio appears more secure after a
handful of online stations reached an agreement Tuesday to head off a
potentially crippling increase in
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