P.M.!! Once again, how is the little one? I have seen recent pictures of her, Sumi sends me links. She's too cute for words.
I'm ok with September, other than the fact that its three months more of waiting. We are, in fact, getting married on the five year anniversary of the day we met. Five years. Yikes.
So I'm working, kinda, in between posting here. But I keep getting distracted by fantasies of other jobs I could be doing. I've decided that my dream job would be to be one of the people that chooses new names for OPI nail polish. I have mad ideas.
Thanks Miracleman, you made me giggle. I needed that!
P.M.!! Once again, how is the little one? I have seen recent pictures of her, Sumi sends me links. She's too cute for words.
She's good! She's at home with Paul today, as they both have mild colds. She's very chatty. She declared the drivers "chair" of the car "too big" this morning.
Man, I want babies. You can't possibly stay depressed for long when there is an ever present adorable chatterbox in your life. Kids always have such interesting ways of seeing things.
CV - both of my brothers got married in September and they had really lovely weddings. It's a good month for a wedding.
My one concern about September is that I already bought my dress, and it is very much a summer dress, not a fall dress. But whatever, I don't know why I care. I'm not following tradition in many other aspects of the wedding, so I don't know why I care about the dress. Like people are going to be whispering, "Sleeveless? In September? What WAS she thinking???"
Huh.
Hallelujah! Apple and EMI just announced that they will be selling DRM-free Apple songs through the iTunes Music Store. The songs will cost 130 percent of the price of the existing crippled songs, and you'll get to choose. Weirdly, Apple seems to have sold this move to EMI by saying that the DRM-free version will be a "premium" offering for audiophiles who want higher-quality music.
...
Jobs, who stressed the need for higher-quality music with the rise of high-fidelity home speaker systems, called EMI's move "the next big step forward in the digital-music revolution--the movement to completely interoperable DRM-free music." He added that "Apple will reach out to all the major and independent labels to give them the same opportunity" and suggested that half of iTunes' music tracks will be available in both DRM-loaded and DRM-free form by the end of 2007.
"EMI is pioneering something that I think is going to become very popular," Jobs said when asked if other music labels would likely add DRM-free music to their iTunes catalog.
"What we're adding is a choice--a new choice--and people can choose whichever one they want," Jobs said regarding Apple's decision to make available two levels of sound quality and DRM restriction. Nicoli cited internal EMI tests in which higher-quality, DRM-free songs outsold its lower-quality, copy-protected counterparts 10 to 1.
[link]
For me, paying extra would be worth it just for the better sound quality....
eta:
In iTunes, music will be sold in a 256 kilobit-per-second AAC format.
Awesome!
Why do life-sucking clouds always come from the west?
Err, whoops. Sorry, that was probably me.
Unless you're in California. Or, you know, Vancouver. But for everyone else, it was probably me.
That is Liese taking up Nilly's refrain.