Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Apple Trying to Offer More DRM-Free Music on iTunes?

Author: Khate // Category: , , , ,

.

iPhone vs. Big Media

According to CNet (via Apple Insider), Apple is in talks with the remaining 3 out of the Big 4 record labels who still refuse to allow iTunes to sell DRM-free music.

Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group, and Sony BMG currently provide DRM-free music to rival services like Amazon MP3 as a way to promote competition to iTunes, though the lack of availability of these services outside the US, along with iTunes continued (and growing) dominance in digital music, may be causing them to rethink that position.

EMI, of course, has been offering DRM-free music via Apple’s iTunes Plus service since it launched, and at double the bit rate (quality) of the regular music.

Hopefully we’ll soon see the day that big music decides to stop treating their customers as de facto thieves and realizes offering quality goods at fair market prizes is the only real way to stop piracy. Or am I the crazy one?

Article by TheiPhoneBlog.


Read more...

iPhone Real Musical App, the Ocarina

Author: Khate // Category: , ,

.

Ocarina

The ocarina is an ancient family of instrument (believed to date some 12,000 years), and one of the easiest instruments to learn. The Smule Ocarina both preserves this instrument and extends/transforms it for your iPhone. Blow into the phone/instrument. Control pitch with different fingerings. Learn to play countless melodies. Find out more about the history of the ocarina at Wikipedia

Caring for your Ocarina

  • For best results, make sure your iPhone screen is clean. If you can see a build-up of smudges, clean the iPhone screen gently to improve performance. Take care of your Ocarina, and it will take good care of you!

Holding your Ocarina

  • Rest the iPhone on your ring fingers and thumbs with the headphone jack facing away from you. Use your index and middle fingers to cover the four holes.
  • To play the highest note, you will need uncover all four holes, but don't drop the iPhone! It may take some time to learn how to balance it, so be patient and remember to play over a cushioned surface.

Creating sound

  • In order to play your Ocarina, you will need to blow into the microphone (you will see a small gold arrow where to blow). The mic is sensitive, so try not to blow very hard (if you are puffing your cheeks, you are blowing too hard).
  • For best results, blow softly, as if you're blowing kisses.
  • To make a clear separation between the notes, say the word "tu" or "du". This technique is called "tonguing".

Playing your Ocarina

  • Although the ocarina is a very simple instrument to learn, don't expect to be an ocarina virtuoso after five minutes. Start slow, Take your time learning the instrument, and have fun!
  • It's cliché, but true: practice makes perfect (or at least something close to it).
  • What's great about the iPhone Ocarina is that you can play it anywhere! If you are afraid that the sound may bother people around you, just lower the volume or pop in some earbuds.
  • Sometimes it's encouraging to hear what other people are playing. Check out the world map to listen to other people practicing.
  • To change the timbre of your Ocarina and add vibrato to the tone, try tilting the Ocarina down, as if bowing to someone.

Check this video.



Check out at Apple Store.


Read more...

iPhone i.TV app provides TV, Movie listings and Netflix management on the go

Author: Khate // Category: , , ,

.
iPhone i.TV app provides TV, Movie listings and Netflix management on the goIf you can’t get enough of your favorite TV shoes and movies, and you’ve got an iPhone or iPod Touch, then you might want to check out the i.TV app. It’s free to download and no jailbreak is required. It allows you to view TV and movie schedules, and if you’ve got a Netflix account, also gives you the ability to view detailed information about shows such ratings, cast credits, recommendations and you can likewise manage your queue list. Of course, these services will only come in handy for those residing in the US, but among the other free Netflix management apps available today, the i.TV app is the most diverse one in the bunch as it provides more than just Netflix services. I wonder though when a free global movie listing app will become available. Now that’s one app I sure wouldn’t hesitate to download.

Article by PMPToday.


Read more...

Some Free Application for iPhone from Apple

Author: Khate // Category: , , , , , ,

.
May be you just want to try some free Applications first before spending some of your money with the paid program.

Here are some free program for you:

1. The Background: Find new wallpaper for your iPhone with Backgrounds.- Browse over 1000 unique backgrounds from many different sources

Backgrounds

2. The Weather Channel: Leave it to The Weather Channel, the most trusted brand in weather, to deliver the perfect weather application for you.

.The Weather Channel®

3.DigiDrummer Lite: Enjoy fun with music.

DigiDrummer Lite

4. Urbanspoon: Can't decide where to eat? Urbanspoon can help. Shake your iPhone and the Urbanspoon slot machine will pick a good place.

Urbanspoon

5. Google Earth: Hold the world in the palm of your hand. With Google Earth for iPhone and iPod touch, you can fly to far corners of world.

Google Earth


6. Shazam: When you hear a song and wonder what it is, Shazam is there with the answer.

Shazam

7. ZooZBeat Lite: Unlock your musical expression and creative potential with ZooZBeat™!ZooZBeat is a gesture-based musical studio, simp.

ZooZBeat Lite

8. PAC-MAN Lite: Available on all iPhone and iPod Touch devices!Take a chomp of the arcade classic, right on your iPhone / iPod Touch!

PAC-MAN Lite

9. Black Mamba Lite: Black Mamba Lite is a FREE, cut-down version of StarByte's Black Mamba Racer.

Black Mamba Lite

10. Say Who: Now make calls by speaking any CONTACT NAME or PHONE NUMBER - accurately and quickly. Why dial when you can speak?

Say Who


Read more...

Google Is Taking Questions (Spoken, via iPhone)

Author: Khate // Category: , , , ,

.


SAN FRANCISCO — Pushing ahead in the decades-long effort to get computers to understand human speech, Google researchers have added sophisticated voice recognition technology to the company’s search software for the Apple iPhone.

Users of the free application, which Apple is expected to make available as soon as Friday through its iTunes store, can place the phone to their ear and ask virtually any question, like “Where’s the nearest Starbucks?” or “How tall is Mount Everest?” The sound is converted to a digital file and sent to Google’s servers, which try to determine the words spoken and pass them along to the Google search engine.

The search results, which may be displayed in just seconds on a fast wireless network, will at times include local information, taking advantage of iPhone features that let it determine its location.

The ability to recognize just about any phrase from any person has long been the supreme goal of artificial intelligence researchers looking for ways to make man-machine interactions more natural. Systems that can do this have recently started making their way into commercial products.

Both Yahoo and Microsoft already offer voice services for cellphones. The Microsoft Tell me service returns information in specific categories like directions, maps and movies. Yahoo’s oneSearch with Voice is more flexible but does not appear to be as accurate as Google’s offering. The Google system is far from perfect, and it can return queries that appear as gibberish. Google executives declined to estimate how often the service gets it right, but they said they believed it was easily accurate enough to be useful to people who wanted to avoid tapping out their queries on the iPhone’s touch-screen keyboard.

The service can be used to get restaurant recommendations and driving directions, look up contacts in the iPhone’s address book or just settle arguments in bars. The query “What is the best pizza restaurant in Noe Valley?” returns a list of three restaurants in that San Francisco neighborhood, each with starred reviews from Google users and links to click for phone numbers and directions.

Raj Reddy, an artificial intelligence researcher at Carnegie Mellon University who has done pioneering work in voice recognition, said Google’s advantage in this field was the ability to store and analyze vast amounts of data. “Whatever they introduce now, it will greatly increase in accuracy in three or six months,” he said.

“It’s important to understand that machine recognition will never be perfect,” Mr. Reddy added. “The question is, How close can they come to human performance?” For Google the technology is critical to its next assault on the world of advertising. Google executives said location-based queries would make it possible to charge higher rates for advertisements from nearby businesses, for example, although it is not selling such ads now.

As with other Google products the service is freely available to consumers, and the company plans to eventually make it available for phones other than the iPhone.

“We are dramatically increasing value to the advertiser through location and voice,” said Vic Gundotra, a former Microsoft executive who now heads Google’s mobile businesses.

Google is by no means the only company working toward more advanced speech recognition capabilities. So-called voice response technology is now routinely used in telephone answering systems and in other consumer services and products. These systems, however, often have trouble with the complexities of free-form language and usually offer only a limited range of responses to queries.

Several weeks ago Adobe added voice recognition technology developed by Autonomy, a British firm, to its Creative Suite software, allowing it to generate transcripts of video and audio recordings with a high degree of accuracy.

Mr. Gundotra said Google had been tackling the twin problems of entering and retrieving information with hand-held wireless devices.

“Solving those two problems in a world-class way is our goal,” he said.

The new iPhone search capability is not the first speech offering from Google. In March, it announced that GOOG-411, an experimental directory information service, had turned into a real product. The service allows users to ask for business phone and address information. The company said it had built on its experience and the data it collected through GOOG-411 in developing the iPhone service.

The new service is an example of the way Google tries to blend basic computer science research with product engineering. The company has hired many of the best speech recognition researchers in the world and now has teams working on different aspects of the problem in New York, London and its headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.

An intriguing part of the overall design of the service was contributed by a Google researcher in London, who found a way to use the iPhone accelerometer — the device that senses how the phone is held — to set the software to “listen” mode when the phone is raised to the user’s ear.

Google researchers said that another of its advantages over competitors was the billions of queries its users have made over the years.

“One thing that has changed is the amount of computation and the amount of data that is available,” said Mike Cohen, a speech research who was co-founder of Nuance Communications before coming to Google.

Past queries can be used to build a statistical model of the way words are frequently strung together, Mr. Cohen said. This is just one of the components of the speech recognition system, which also includes a sound analysis model and a mechanism for linking the basic components of language to actual words.

Google recently published a technical paper on building large models for machine translation of language. The researchers wrote that they had trained the system on two trillion “tokens,” or words.

By NyTimes


Read more...