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 Topic: NewsThe new items published under this topic are as follows.
Press Release: PSP Movie Creator - Convert DVD movies and various video formats for optimized playback on PSP. Its ultra-fast DVD to PSP conversion speed plus advanced video editing features cannot be found anywhere else.
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Researchers at Microsoft's Cambridge labs are developing a file-sharing technology that they say could make it easier to distribute big files such as films, television programs and software applications to end users over the Internet.
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The PlayStation Portable (PSP) will soon be opened up to a new and potentially lucrative market - porn.
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Seizures of fake DVDs are dramatically higher than the same period last year. The Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT) confiscated 680,000 pirate DVDs between January and March - a 41% rise on the same period last year.
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Executives at EMI Group on Monday said they planned to begin rolling out CDs with technology designed to limit copying. The technology allows buyers to burn onto CDs only three full copies of a disc's songs, and the burned discs cannot be copied.
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Swedish wireless technology provider Ericsson inked a deal with Napster on Wednesday to supply music to cell phones.
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Recordable DVDs are likely to become more expensive in coming months as rising oil prices push up plastic costs.
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Japanese consumer electronics maker Sanyo has joined a group of companies led by Sony to develop Blu-ray DVD disks, but will also remain allied with the rival HD DVD group.
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In the UK, small businesses are calling on the government to change the law to stop the sale of VAT-free CDs from Jersey by major supermarket chains Asda and Tesco.
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Ridisc have launched several new consumable products onto the market including Compatible Ink Cartridges for the Epson, Canon and HP range of Printers. Ridisc inform us next month they plans to launch a range of Photo paper.
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Microsoft has announced that it is planning on offering a subscription download music service in an attempt to claw back some of the ground lost between it and Apple’s iTunes service.
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Taiwan currently prohibits local makers from undertaking OEM production of pornographic pre-recorded discs for exports, although some makers have illicitly done so in small volumes, according to local industry sources. However, the government is expected to lift the ban next quarter, rousing a large influx of OEM orders from abroad to major producers of pre-recorded discs in Taiwan because Taiwanese makers are more competitive in quality than fellow makers in China and Hong Kong, the source indicated. Such OEM orders are valued at an estimated NT$3.0-4.0 billion a year, the source said.
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In a groundbreaking response to movie piracy, Warner Bros. Entertainment has released its latest film on DVD in China the same day it debuted in U.S. theaters.
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Sony Computer Entertainment may be planning to bring print publications to the PSP. Sony has recently filed Japanese trademarks for "PSP Comics", "PSP Books", and "PSP Magazine".
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A group of four Japanese manufacturers said they have successfully developed a prototype HD DVD-R disc, a write-once next-generation DVD disc, that can be easily mass-produced on standard DVD production lines.
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iTunes is proving to be a formidable competitor against free peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing services, According to information from NPD's MusicWatch Digital service, Apple iTunes's industry-leading a-la-carte download store tied with LimeWire as the second-most-popular digital music service in March, 2005. WinMX was the most popular.
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A legal fight is brewing in Britain between Sony and the grey-market importers who are selling its highly sought-after PlayStation Portable (PSP) device ahead of the official Sept. 1 European launch date.
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The world premiere of the latest version of the HG Wells tale The War of the Worlds, was pulled at the last minute because of a fear of Internet pirates.
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Following Wal-Mart's recent introduction of an inexpensive DVD recorder, BenQ and Lite-On IT have introduced models priced at US$99-129 (£55-£70), and the companies plan to tout the new products to gain ODM/OEM orders as well as boost their orders for loaders (component kits) of DVD recorders, according to the two makers.
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US drugstore chain CVS is to launch the world's first-ever disposable video camera. It weighs under five ounces, holds 20 minutes of video and sound, features a 1.4-inch playback screen and is available for $29.99 (£16).
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