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| Knowledge@Wharton |
Which Online Music Service Will Have the Longest Playing Time? Since May 2003, when Apple's online music service, iTunes, opened its digital doors, the drums announcing other online music services -- new enterprises as well as existing music services spruced up and recharged -- have been steadily beating. Which ones will have longevity?  |
The Motley Fool December 12, 2003 Seth Jayson |
Meta-Music for the Masses? Record and software industries take yet another swipe at file swapping.  |
The Motley Fool December 12, 2003 Jeff Hwang |
The Future Gamer AOL Ladders will allow PS2 owners to form online leagues.  |
InternetNews December 9, 2003 Robyn Greenspan |
Paid Music Downloading, MP3 Player Sales Double Research shows that there is a growing willingness to pay for tunes, and music fans are buying devices to store and play their downloaded files.  |
PC Magazine December 30, 2003 |
EZ Interaction If UR [you are] SITD [still in the dark] about the odd words and character combinations in today's electronic communications, you need to GWTP [get with the program]. HTH [hope this helps].  |
PC Magazine December 30, 2003 |
IM Spam, Spam I Am You don't have to put up with spam coming at you when you're iming. Here's what you need to know.  |
PC Magazine December 30, 2003 |
Play for the Green Why play just for fun when you can play for cold, hard cash? These sites let you compete with others to win money. You won't retire on your winnings -- prizes generally top out at around $10 -- but most games cost only a few dollars to play.  |
Wall Street & Technology November 17, 2003 Ivy Schmerken |
New Tool of the Trade Despite compliance scrutiny, instant messaging is a hot communications tool on trading floors.  |
Entrepreneur December 2003 Mike Hogan |
Let's Chat Instant messaging hits the road with the release of some new devices. For example, Cingular Wireless Interactive Messaging PLUS lets you text chat on RIM BlackBerry 950 and 957 handhelds and Good Technology's G100 for $20 to $50 per month, depending on usage.  |
PC Magazine November 19, 2003 |
MSN Goes Hollywood Want to catch a movie? MSN, Microsoft's online service, is offering a beta version of MSN Video -- its free, high-resolution broadband video service -- to a small group of MSN users for testing. The final version is due this winter.  |
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