Capturing DV and Analog Sources from the Panasonic 3CCD Camcorder
http://www.pana3ccduser.com/article.php?filename=Capturing-DV-and-Analog-Sources-from-the-Panasonic
nice tutorial and photo shots of the process. While it focuses mostly on PC the method is similar for mac. If you don't have a panasonic it is pretty much the same if you are using firewire (many use Usb).
Dr. Eric Flescher, Olathe, KS(dreric1kansas@aol.com): DrEric1MacNews/Macsightings Blog : http://dreric1macnewsmacsightings.blogspot.com/ : editor MacsU.N.I.T.E. ( MacIntosh Users Network for Integrating Technology into Education):(Subscribe send email to :macsunitsubscribe@egroups.com)
Staff Writer at macCompanion Magazine (http://www.maccompanion.com/); moderator
macintoshvideo@yahoogroups.com- to subscribe
macintoshvideo-subscribe@yahoogroups.com; editor TechU.N.I.T.E. (Subscribe send email to PC version TechU.N.I.T.E.: to subscribe send email to techunite-subscribe@egroups.com
Showing posts with label Apple Macintosh Computer Internet Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple Macintosh Computer Internet Microsoft. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Friday, February 9, 2007
Does Apple wants locking in music or not?
I don't think that music, written by people's hard earned money, should be free. If Apple can distribute and make money for itself and also give earnings back to the song writers I think that is fine. I think it is also okay for Apple to lock in their music and out of of sources. Sort of like VHS and Beta battle or others. The European cartel should got after Microsoft and the cronies that continue to monolize the internet and operating systems.
from macworld@lm.macworld.com
Looking To a Post-DRM World
By Dan Moren mailto:macuser@macuser.com
For years people have argued about how much Apple has benefited from
locking people into an iPod/iTunes ecosystem, with iTunes Store
purchases only playing on iPods and no other portable devices. But now
Steve Jobs has published an open letter, in which he says Apple would
drop the FairPlay DRM system from iTunes songs if music companies gave
the OK. Goodbye, lock-in myth.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/06/jobsletter/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
How might a DRM-free world affect Apple? I suspect brand loyalty and
quality of service would keep iTunes popular. Apple seems to have no
fear of competing with other online music stores. And it should
continue to dominate the music player market as well: The iPod doesn't
have 70 percent of the digital music player market just because you
can buy tracks from the iTunes store. As Jobs himself points out, the
vast majority of the tracks stored on iPods are unencumbered by DRM.
Some of them are pirated, but lots of them are ripped directly from
CD.
The iPod is a success because of its design and its functionality.
Would some sales be lost if there was no iTunes/iPod tie-in? Probably,
but I'd be surprised if Apple somehow lost its dominant position:
people are not going to flock to the Zune just because DRM is
unlocked. It will certainly make competition in the MP3 player space
fiercer, but for the consumer, that's all to the good; they'd rather
competition was driven by technological innovation than by restrictive
lock-in.
What the music industry hasn't wanted to admit -- because it runs
counter to the record labels' established logic -- is that DRM-free
music could actually boost sales, by taking away the stigma of
second-class citizenship that haunts the download services in the eyes
of the digerati. At the moment, record companies are reacting out of
fear of the unknown, and that's something that doesn't traditionally
help businesses in the long run. Sooner or later, all of their
restrictive measures are going to fail, and they're either going to
have to adapt or be destroyed. And trust me on this: consumers aren't
going to be broken-hearted either way.
Jobs's letter goes a long way to answer questions that consumers and
governments have been asking about Apple and DRM practically since the
iTunes Store's debut almost four years ago. The big step still remains
for DRM to be actually abolished.
Your move, record labels.
* Apple News *
Partners, rivals react to Jobs' anti-DRM comments
In the aftermath of the open letter in which the Apple CEO said his
company would sell DRM-free music if the major record labels allowed
it, at least one of the four largest music companies noted it's been
experimenting with DRM-free songs.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/07/drm/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
Apple, Beatles reach new settlement
Apple and Apple Corps -- the Beatles' management company -- have
settled their legal differences, paving the way for the Fab Four's
music to potentially wind up on the iTunes Store.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/05/applecorps/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
Apple ribs Vista security in new ad
http://www.macworld.com/news/2007/02/06/vista/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
from macworld@lm.macworld.com
Looking To a Post-DRM World
By Dan Moren mailto:macuser@macuser.com
For years people have argued about how much Apple has benefited from
locking people into an iPod/iTunes ecosystem, with iTunes Store
purchases only playing on iPods and no other portable devices. But now
Steve Jobs has published an open letter, in which he says Apple would
drop the FairPlay DRM system from iTunes songs if music companies gave
the OK. Goodbye, lock-in myth.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/06/jobsletter/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
How might a DRM-free world affect Apple? I suspect brand loyalty and
quality of service would keep iTunes popular. Apple seems to have no
fear of competing with other online music stores. And it should
continue to dominate the music player market as well: The iPod doesn't
have 70 percent of the digital music player market just because you
can buy tracks from the iTunes store. As Jobs himself points out, the
vast majority of the tracks stored on iPods are unencumbered by DRM.
Some of them are pirated, but lots of them are ripped directly from
CD.
The iPod is a success because of its design and its functionality.
Would some sales be lost if there was no iTunes/iPod tie-in? Probably,
but I'd be surprised if Apple somehow lost its dominant position:
people are not going to flock to the Zune just because DRM is
unlocked. It will certainly make competition in the MP3 player space
fiercer, but for the consumer, that's all to the good; they'd rather
competition was driven by technological innovation than by restrictive
lock-in.
What the music industry hasn't wanted to admit -- because it runs
counter to the record labels' established logic -- is that DRM-free
music could actually boost sales, by taking away the stigma of
second-class citizenship that haunts the download services in the eyes
of the digerati. At the moment, record companies are reacting out of
fear of the unknown, and that's something that doesn't traditionally
help businesses in the long run. Sooner or later, all of their
restrictive measures are going to fail, and they're either going to
have to adapt or be destroyed. And trust me on this: consumers aren't
going to be broken-hearted either way.
Jobs's letter goes a long way to answer questions that consumers and
governments have been asking about Apple and DRM practically since the
iTunes Store's debut almost four years ago. The big step still remains
for DRM to be actually abolished.
Your move, record labels.
* Apple News *
Partners, rivals react to Jobs' anti-DRM comments
In the aftermath of the open letter in which the Apple CEO said his
company would sell DRM-free music if the major record labels allowed
it, at least one of the four largest music companies noted it's been
experimenting with DRM-free songs.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/07/drm/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
Apple, Beatles reach new settlement
Apple and Apple Corps -- the Beatles' management company -- have
settled their legal differences, paving the way for the Fab Four's
music to potentially wind up on the iTunes Store.
http://playlistmag.com/news/2007/02/05/applecorps/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
Apple ribs Vista security in new ad
http://www.macworld.com/news/2007/02/06/vista/index.php?lsrc=mcweek
Monday, December 25, 2006
What is a RSS feed?
If ain't broke don'needt fix it. But sometimes you have to do that to
(1) catch up with new technological advanced
(2) Learn new ways to enhance your websites, browswer, applications, computer etc
(3) need to update to make your life, computer and other things better
Well I think I finally know about RSS feeds and what they can do. I already have websites, blogs and more.
So check out what is a feed.
Dr.Eric
http://dreric1macnewsmacsightings.blogspot.com/
**
(from AOL area)
"What is a feed?
A "feed" is a summary of Web content that is updated on a regular basis. It allows users to keep informed of a Web site's latest changes. The feed format that eBay uses is Really Simple Syndication (RSS) 2.0.
Feeds help eBay make content more accessible, and they allow you to easily see new content. A summary or "headline" view lets you quickly scan recent content changes, and headlines are linked to their appropriate content.What does the RSS feed on this page contain?
The search results RSS feed contains items based on the search criteria that you’ve entered. This feed will be updated based on how often you have set your reader to retrieve data from eBay and any restrictions the reader may have on how often it retrieves information. Usually, you will get new listing information every 30 minutes.
Since many readers cache information and poll at most every 30 minutes, listings that appear on the RSS feed will not have an end time less than 15 minutes from the moment the feed was retrieved. Therefore, if your reader requests the feed now, the first item will end in at least 15 minutes.
Initially this feature will not support all search parameters available through Advanced Search pages. In the next few days we will include on this page a full list of unsupported filters. How to subscribe to this feed
Before you subscribe to this feed, you'll need an RSS reader or aggregator to view content in RSS. Several free and commercial RSS readers are available on the Internet. Once you have an RSS reader, right-click on an RSS link, copy the URL, and paste it into your reader to display the content in RSS.
Search Results, eBay Stores, eBay Discussion Boards, eBay General Announcement Board and System Announcement Board are places where content is changing on a regular basis. To make it easy for you to see recent changes and updates on your search criteria, Stores, and boards, consider using eBay's RSS feeds."
(1) catch up with new technological advanced
(2) Learn new ways to enhance your websites, browswer, applications, computer etc
(3) need to update to make your life, computer and other things better
Well I think I finally know about RSS feeds and what they can do. I already have websites, blogs and more.
So check out what is a feed.
Dr.Eric
http://dreric1macnewsmacsightings.blogspot.com/
**
(from AOL area)
"What is a feed?
A "feed" is a summary of Web content that is updated on a regular basis. It allows users to keep informed of a Web site's latest changes. The feed format that eBay uses is Really Simple Syndication (RSS) 2.0.
Feeds help eBay make content more accessible, and they allow you to easily see new content. A summary or "headline" view lets you quickly scan recent content changes, and headlines are linked to their appropriate content.What does the RSS feed on this page contain?
The search results RSS feed contains items based on the search criteria that you’ve entered. This feed will be updated based on how often you have set your reader to retrieve data from eBay and any restrictions the reader may have on how often it retrieves information. Usually, you will get new listing information every 30 minutes.
Since many readers cache information and poll at most every 30 minutes, listings that appear on the RSS feed will not have an end time less than 15 minutes from the moment the feed was retrieved. Therefore, if your reader requests the feed now, the first item will end in at least 15 minutes.
Initially this feature will not support all search parameters available through Advanced Search pages. In the next few days we will include on this page a full list of unsupported filters. How to subscribe to this feed
Before you subscribe to this feed, you'll need an RSS reader or aggregator to view content in RSS. Several free and commercial RSS readers are available on the Internet. Once you have an RSS reader, right-click on an RSS link, copy the URL, and paste it into your reader to display the content in RSS.
Search Results, eBay Stores, eBay Discussion Boards, eBay General Announcement Board and System Announcement Board are places where content is changing on a regular basis. To make it easy for you to see recent changes and updates on your search criteria, Stores, and boards, consider using eBay's RSS feeds."
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Internet Explorer 7 Proves Buggy Already: It's safer, but security holes still affect the new browser.
MSN still can't get it right but those who love Microsoft don't care. Or do they?
Try firefox, opera or another browser and you will be happier.
Plus, a worm in iPods.
(STUART J. JOHNSTON)
http://www2.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/23/AR2006112300014.html?referrer=email&referrer=email&referrer=email
Try firefox, opera or another browser and you will be happier.
Plus, a worm in iPods.
(STUART J. JOHNSTON)
http://www2.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/23/AR2006112300014.html?referrer=email&referrer=email&referrer=email
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