Come to think of it, it was iTunes that identified that classical piano fraud. In that case iTunes recognized one specific track as being from another album.
So I don't know what I'm talking about? Or do I?
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Come to think of it, it was iTunes that identified that classical piano fraud. In that case iTunes recognized one specific track as being from another album.
So I don't know what I'm talking about? Or do I?
What shiny new toys do I need to acquire to take advantage?
A friendly sound professional, say me perhaps, to come by and hook everything up for you.
In that case iTunes recognized one specific track as being from another album.
From looking at the oh-so-impartial Wikipedia article on Gracenote it looks like they can do that sort of thing too:
Gracenote operates a digital file identification service which allows digital music files (such as MP3s) to be identified
Freedom! (cue George Michael earworm)
As of July 1, cable providers are required to offer new digital subscribers equipment that works with what's known as a CableCARD, a wafer-thin card that tells your TV what programming you have purchased. It's revolutionary because it can be used with a variety of devices, not just the set-top boxes traditionally leased by cable operators such as Comcast and Time Warner.
Not actually sure how that'll affect my life in the short run if I don't get one of the new TiVos, but it's a start.
The more I read able CableCard, the more confused I get. I'm sure that's exactly how the cable companies want it.
Check out this article, for instance.
The FCC can set all the deadlines they want, but the cable companies and 3rd party manufacturers are just going to keep pointing fingers at each other.
Oy. My brain is broken.
Dear Treo,
Your repeated failure this morning to send picture text messages accompanied by your random restarting is really not helping your case for not being traded in for an iPhone. Don't push your luck.
Love,
Your human master
I'm pretty sure I signed a new contract with Sprint last fall, but according to Sprint's website, my contract expired in 2005.
Hmmm....
Strange thing here. I have an Access table that swears the column type is integer, but there are text values in it. But this means I can't use it in a WHERE clause of a SELECT statement.
On the one hand, I'm trying to work out how it got that way. In the meanwhile--anyone seen anything like that? I need that query, dammit.
eta: Never mind. Something's linked weird so that browsing the table doesn't show you the integer value--instead it shows you the text value cross-referenced from another table. Huh. I didn't know you could do that.
Just to help the case I'm loving my iPhone.