Judge rules Pandora has to increase royalty payouts to BMI

Pandora’s propensity for litigation is pretty storied by this point, but it seems like the internet-radio outfit’s luck has run out. A New York judge has ruled that Pandora must raise its payout rates to Taylor Swift’s music publishing house BMI , from 1.75 percent of its revenue to 2.5 percent, according to The New York Times . The full ruling is still being kept under wraps at the moment, but naturally, Pandora says it’s going to appeal the decision. Given that an appeals judge recently ruled in the outfit’s favor to keep royalty payout rates from rising, it isn’t clear what could happen in this instance. For artists’ sakes , let’s hope that history doesn’t repeat itself here. [Image credit: Getty Images for TS] Filed under: Home Entertainment Comments Via: The Register Source: The New York Times

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Judge rules Pandora has to increase royalty payouts to BMI

Shipments of ‘white box’ tablets overtake iPads

The hottest-selling tablets aren’t likely to be iPads or Galaxy Tabs these days — if anything, they’re the cut-rate slabs you see in the back of the drug store . Strategy Analytics estimates that shipments of generic “white box” tablets (which typically run Android) overtook iPads in the first quarter of this year, claiming 28.4 percent of the market versus Apple’s 24.3. The analysts largely chalk this up to consistently tepid iPad sales , but they also suggest that small, budget-minded tablet makers are having a field day. That’s not totally surprising. Low-cost Android gear also dominates the smartphone market , and a lot of these tiny outfits operate in China, where price is more of a concern. You don’t need a $500 slate just to watch video in bed, after all. That shift is partly borne out by what’s happening with other big-name competitors. Cost-conscious Chinese brands like Huawei and Lenovo are thriving, while higher-end rivals that don’t do so well in China (such as ASUS and Samsung) are struggling. If these relative outsiders are going to come back, they may need to either compete more on price or give buyers a reason to pony up. There are signs that this is happening (see Samsung’s Galaxy Tab A and rumors of a giant iPad ), but you may not see the results of these efforts until later in the year. [Image credit: AP Photo/Koji Sasahara] Filed under: Tablets , Apple , Samsung , ASUS , Lenovo Comments Source: Strategy Analytics

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Shipments of ‘white box’ tablets overtake iPads

Watch gravity waves ripple through Earth’s atmosphere

You might think of gravity as an invisible force here on Earth, but that’s not entirely true… if you have the right computer simulation, that is. Researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research have developed a climate model that shows the gravity waves in the upper atmosphere, where their amplitude is strong enough to create huge ripples. The trick is a higher-resolution model that replicates the waves at their source, and follows them on their way up. As you can see here, the results are dramatic — gravity is virtually invisible near the surface, but it’s impossible to miss when you’re 60 miles up. The model isn’t just for show, of course. NCAR’s discovery will help it understand how gravity affects atmospheric behavior on a global scale, and how it messes with radios and satellite communications. And since the Sun isn’t producing many solar storms at the moment, the modelling gives scientists a good sense of how Earth affects its own skies. Scientists will have to study this data to known what it ultimately means, but you should soon have a good idea of what space weather really does to the planet. Filed under: Science Comments Via: Phys.org Source: NCAR/UCAR

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Watch gravity waves ripple through Earth’s atmosphere

Facebook ‘Instant Articles’ plug in content from NYT and Buzzfeed

Facebook wants to do for news content what it’s done with native video , and the first bit of self-hosted editorial content (“Instant Articles”) could go live tomorrow. It’s starting with The New York Times and will include Buzzfeed , NBC News and National Geographic if unnamed sources speaking to New York Magazine are to be believed. Apparently NYT ‘s business side is why a deal that surfaced in late March is only coming to fruition now, with CEO Mark Thompson’s push for “the most favorable” terms causing delays. A Wall Street Journal report says The Social Network is offering to let publishers keep 100 percent of the money from ads they sell against an article, or 70 percent if Facebook sells the ad. That bit is incredibly important because without traffic going to, say, nytimes.com , and staying on Facebook instead, a publication could lose its ability to pay the bills and its employees. The big argument seems to be that NYT is working to insulate its million-plus digital subscribers from free content hosted on Zuckerberg’s baby, thus rendering a subscription kind of pointless. Regardless of if this is happening tomorrow or not, we won’t have to wait too long before we find out. Update: That didn’t take long. Facebook’s officially unveiled Instant articles, crowing that the reason for the move is, as rumored, to do with page loads. Publishers have access to traffic and data analytics too, and can tailor articles to use the platform’s features which include tilt-to-zoom high-res images. For now, Instant Articles is exclusive to iPhone users. And the full slate of content partners ( NYT , NatGeo , BuzzFeed , NBC News , The Atlantic , The Guardian , BBC News , Spiegel and Bild ) isn’t available yet, with only the first four on offer at the moment. Two of those, Buzzfeed and NYT , have explanations regarding the hows and whys of the partnerships. The ad and analytics are perhaps the most important news for publishers because they offer similar tools to what they likely already have in place internally. It’s worth noting, however, that when something doesn’t pan out Facebook has a habit of killing it off. Remember Home and Paper ? Yeah, we barely can either. Filed under: Internet , Facebook Comments Via: Poynter Source: Facebook

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Facebook ‘Instant Articles’ plug in content from NYT and Buzzfeed

New York’s getting 500 solar-powered food carts this summer

Street food is an celebrated (and inescapable) facet of New York City culture but many of those gas-fired mobile food stalls aren’t exactly environmentally friendly. “I breathe it in, I get the fumes, I get the smell of the food, ” Don Ward, a Manhattan shoe shiner who works next to a cart, told the Wall Street Journal . “I get home and my clothing smells like gas.” So to help combat air and noise pollution this summer, Queens-based MOVE Systems plans to distribute 500 “green” vendor carts. They’ll be outfitted with solar panels and rechargeable batteries in addition to sinks, refrigerators and grills. The carts, dubbed MRV100 Hybrids, measure roughly 5 feet wide by 10 feet long and reportedly can be adapted to serve a wide variety of cuisine. The program is funded entirely through donations and private partnerships and, as such, MOVE is offering the carts free of charge. 100 of the carts are already earmarked for disabled veterans. There’s no immediate word, however, on how the 400 remaining carts will be distributed among the 3, 000-plus permitted vendors operating in NYC. Either way, Meeks expects the carts to start rolling out by Memorial Day. Filed under: Misc , Transportation Comments Via: Eater NY Source: Wall Street Journal

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New York’s getting 500 solar-powered food carts this summer

Ultra HD Blu-ray is bringing high-res movies home soon

After Blu-ray and HD DVD ushered in the age of HD and 1080p movies for the masses, discs were beaten to 4K by streaming services like Netflix , YouTube and Amazon. While the internet is still doing most of the heavy lifting for 4K, the Ultra HD Blu-ray specification is finally complete which means we should see movies and players arriving later this year. Besides being compatible with the 10, 000~ Blu-ray discs already out, Ultra HD Blu-ray players will be ready for high-res 3, 840 x 2, 160 video, “next generation object-based sound formats” (think DTS: X and Dolby Atmos ), more colors, high dynamic range (HDR) and even high frame rate video. That’s a lot of buzzwords to say movies will have the capability to look and sound better at your home than they ever have before. The BDA also made vague reference to a “digital bridge” setup for extending your movie purchased on a disc to other devices like phones and tablets, but didn’t say exactly how that will work, or if it’s going to be any better than Ultraviolet. The discs themselves are upgraded too, ready to hold 66GB or 100GB of data, up from the 25GB/50GB size of the current Blu-ray spec. According to the association licensing is expected to start this summer, and Samsung already announced it plans to release a player later this year. Hopefully, whatever it produces is better (and cheaper) than the slow, glitchy $1, 000 BD-P1000 that kicked off the Blu-ray era years ago. Panasonic showed off a demo player at CES this year, and we’re sure other manufacturers will follow suit. For people looking to future proof their setup, the new crop of Ultra HD TVs hitting shelves this year have support for the high-res video, plus HDR color, but they may need to support a new HDMI 2.0a standard to get the most out of new discs. There’s still a few more questions than answers about the rollout of 4K content, but as the picture clears up over the summer and into the holidays, we should have more information. Filed under: Home Entertainment , HD , Samsung , Sony Comments Source: Blu-ray Disc Association (Businesswire)

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Ultra HD Blu-ray is bringing high-res movies home soon

Yes, 10-core smartphones will be a thing in 2016

When MediaTek first launched an octa-core mobile processor back in late 2013, many folks — including Qualcomm — called it a gimmick , but said feature has since become quite popular amongst device manufacturers, to the point where Qualcomm eventually had to come up with its very own octa-core offerings. Just to stay one step ahead of others, MediaTek is now prepping the launch of a deca-core aka 10-core chip dubbed the Helio X20, which will succeed the octa-core Helio X10 (MT6795) that’s already powering HTC’s Asia-only One M9+ plus several upcoming Chinese flagship phones. MediaTek is sampling its new chip in Q3, and the first commercial devices to use it will arrive as early as end of this year. While ten cores may seem an overkill, the 20nm Helio X20 is actually more about its “Tri-Cluster” architecture that consists of two 2.5GHz Cortex-A72 cores, four 2GHz Cortex-A53 cores and four 1.4GHz Cortex-A53 cores. So basically, on the CPU side the Helio X20 is very much a Helio X10 with two more Cortex-A72 cores, but with the original eight Cortex-A53 cores running on slightly lower speeds. Finbarr Moynihan, MediaTek’s General Manager of International Corporate Sales, analogized the addition of a third CPU cluster to having an extra gear in a car, in order to improve its fuel efficiency across different terrains. In other words, there’s no longer a sudden jump from the low-power cluster to its high-power counterpart, so you get a better overall curve across the power-performance spectrum. This also allows the low-power cluster to go even lower in terms of power required, and the high-power one to be even more powerful — hence the use of Cortex-A72 instead of yet more Cortex-A53 cores. So here comes the classic question: Can all ten cores run simultaneously? Moynihan says while that’s allowed, the chip’s software will always pick the ideal clusters to handle different threads. For instance, mail apps and simple messaging apps can run on the low-power cluster, whereas casual games and multimedia apps can make do with the middle cluster, thus leaving high-power cluster to heavy games and other heavy duty apps. Statistically speaking, you won’t often see all ten cores operating at the same time. “I think it’s much more likely that it will be a subset of the ten cores but in different configurations, depending on the load that might be on at the same time, ” the exec added. “In theory, the scheduler can turn on all ten [cores] if necessary; of course, subject to any thermal constraints that the device may have.” Compared to its predecessor, the more premium Helio X20 also benefits from the additional integrated Cortex-M4 hub (for low-power sensors and low-power MP3 playback), dual 12-bit camera processors, improved graphics performance yet lower power requirement on that plus the modem, as well as Carrier Aggregation for the faster Cat 6 LTE — a feature that Moynihan admitted the Helio X10 often gets criticized for excluding. “Adding the next-generation modem and the Carrier Aggregation feature specifically, I think, makes this platform relevant on a much more global scale for higher tier and even flagship devices.” Ultimately, we’ll need to see how well can the Helio X20 handle its clusters, as well as how efficient the new integrated modem is in real life. The bad news is we won’t get to do so until early 2016 the soonest, but the good news is MediaTek and device manufacturers have almost half a year to fine tune the chip’s performance, so time will tell. Filed under: Cellphones , Wireless , Mobile Comments

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Yes, 10-core smartphones will be a thing in 2016

NYT Now news app goes free, ending a subscription experiment

Say goodbye to the $8 a month curated news app NYT Now , and say hello to the free, ad-supported news app of the same name. More than a year after launching NYT Now , which was basically a way for the New York Times to test out an inexpensive subscription offering, the paper is changing course. The basic gist of the app is the same: It serves up a hand-picked selection of NYT stories, which are continuously refreshed throughout the day. The paper’s editors are also highlighting even more stories from around the web, which makes NYT Now feel more like a social news app like Feedly or Flipboard. The revamped app is yet another sign that the NYT is trying to be nimble in a time where major newspapers are struggling to hold onto subscribers and stay relevant. While we never got official stats on how many people subscribed to NYT Now, reports pegged the number around 200, 000 — not exactly a success. It’s also unclear how many of those people were existing New York Times subscribers. So what went wrong? At $8 a month, NYT Now was only slightly cheaper than the paper’s other digital offerings, which range from $15 to $35 a month. Sure, it was fairly inexpensive, but it’s tough to get consumers to cough up anything for content these days. By going free, the Times opens up Now to a far larger audience, and it may even end up making more from advertising than it would from a handful of subscriptions. Unfortunately, there’s still no Android version of NYT Now. Bt now that that the paper is no longer relying on subscriptions, there’s a better chance we’ll see the app on other platforms. Filed under: Mobile Comments Source: NYT , NYT Now (iTunes Store)

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NYT Now news app goes free, ending a subscription experiment

CHIP is a $9 Raspberry Pi killer

The Raspberry Pi was definitely a game changer when it hit shelves at only $35. But CHIP is hoping to make the Pi look positively pricey by comparison. The Kickstarter campaign has already blown way past its $50, 000 goal. In fact, at the time of this writing its approaching $500, 000. Like the Pi, CHIP is a fully functional computer. The tiny board is home to a 1GHz CPU, 512MB of RAM and 4GB of storage, all of which power a full-fledged (if light-weight) Linux desktop. Even more impressive is that there’s both WiFi and Bluetooth on board. It’s mostly aimed at tinkerers and DIYers , hence the I/O pins waiting for your attention, but you could certainly use it as an inexpensive general purpose computer… so long as you’re not particularly demanding. Now, to be fair, if you want a VGA adaptor or HDMI adaptor you’ll have to shell out a little more ($19 and $24 respectively), but you could hook it up to most TVs with the built-in composite video port. The $50 PocketCHIP, however, is truly impressive. It’s the same versatile board, but it comes with a case that’s home to a battery, a keyboard and 4.3-inch touchscreen. Yes, your smartphone is definitely more powerful, but for $50, this is incredibly impressive for something no bigger than an OG GameBoy. Filed under: Misc Comments Via: TechCrunch Source: CHIP (Kickstarter)

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CHIP is a $9 Raspberry Pi killer

Recode: Apple to offer free music with its upcoming streaming service

It’s no secret that Apple plans on revealing a new streaming music service — thanks to its Beats Music acquisition — some time this year, supposedly at its annual developer conference in June. What has so far been a secret, however, is whether or not that service will be free or paid. While it’s been widely reported that Apple plans on charging $8 a month for a subscription, it now appears that the folks in Cupertino could be planning on integrating a free option or two as well. According to ReCode ‘s industry sources, those options include a free trial period of one to three months, a SoundCloud-type service where artists could upload free tunes for non-subscribers, and a new version of iTunes Radio that would feature human-curated playlists similar to, of course, Beats Music . Yet, ReCode also reports that Apple doesn’t plan on going up against other unlimited free streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora. Apparently the company thinks that ad-supported free streaming won’t make enough money, plus it’ll prevent users from ponying up for the paid version. At the same time, Apple has been under investigation by the FTC for supposedly striking up exclusive streaming deals with artists and labels — this, the FTC posits, could be seen as an unfair advantage due to Apple’s dominance in music downloads thanks to iTunes. Tidal , on the other hand, can get away with exclusives due to its relatively small size. So it still remains to be seen what exactly Apple plans to offer with its streaming service, be it free or paid. Fortunately we only have a month or so to find out. Filed under: Apple Comments Source: Re/Code

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Recode: Apple to offer free music with its upcoming streaming service