Eat the press: AOL in Hollywood; Public domain texts in audiobooks; MySpace in paper; Train tickets in SMS; AllPeers in activity
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AOL goes Hollywood with video portal [Washington Post] “The AOL deals, terms for which were not disclosed, are with News Corp.’s 20th Century Fox, Sony Corp.’s Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, NBC Universal’s Universal Pictures, and Time Warner Inc.’s Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group.”
Public domain books, ready for your iPod [NY Times] “LibriVox is the largest of several emerging collectives that offer free or inexpensive audiobooks of works whose copyrights have expired.”
MySpace: The magazine [AdAge] “The editorial mix would likely cover standout MySpace members and their interests, from music to their social scenes.”
German railway offers cell-phone tickets [Associated Press] “Customers who use the service receive a multimedia message on their mobile phones that’s read by new scanners and serve as a ticket.”
AllPeers set to launch new “darknet” P2P application [Ars Technica] “AllPeers uses the BitTorrent protocol to share files, so there is no central server for the company to manage.”
Aug 25, 2006 | By Nuno
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