Rogers Video Direct has closed and the mail rental service’s customers have been re-directed to Zip.ca.
The Rogers Video Direct site was operated by Zip anyway so there are only a few minor changes to the service.
Rogers Video Direct has closed and the mail rental service’s customers have been re-directed to Zip.ca.
The Rogers Video Direct site was operated by Zip anyway so there are only a few minor changes to the service.
Starting tomorrow the Supreme Court of Canada will hear appeals in regards to royalty payments for music previews and music in video games.
The Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada wants royalties every time someone clicks on one of those short previews when they Shop on iTunes, eMusic
, etc, and had appealed an October 18th, 2007 Copyright Board of Canada decision stating that these qualifies as “fair dealing”.
Unfortunately for the consumer many retailers have decided to drop previews because of this case, including Amazon.ca, and if the Supreme Court rules in their favor previews might be removed on most sites because the royalties would be quite prohibitive.
A ruling establishing royalties on previews could also set a precedent that could hinder film previews and trailers in Canada. But I am hoping the previous Copyright Board of Canada decision will stand.
Previews are not purchases but research to which the end result might be a legitimate purchase. And without previews, people will think twice about making a purchase, so it is counterproductive.
Then there’s the fact that this ruling would not apply to foreign sites, where previews are accessible by Canadians. And any attempt to collect royalties for previews from these foreign sites would be problematic because of their national “fair dealing” exemptions.
Apple and Canada’s largest telecom companies are of course fighting this appeal. The Canadian Recording Industry Association had also opposed royalties on previews so I am guessing that their modern counterpart, Music Canada, also oppose them.
Independent Canadian musician and composer Christopher William Cardno has passed away on November 29th, 2011 at the age of 28.
I will miss our humourous discussions about music and various other issues on Stickam, that we have had since 2007/08.
My condolences to his family, friends and fans in Vancouver and through-out the world.
Rob McIntyre (canucktunes/deathbypuppet)
It appears that some non-American cloud services are warning people to avoid US based cloud services because of the Patriot Act.
According to Politico.com, some companies have been claiming that this anti-terrorist legislation may enable the US government to access data stored on U.S. cloud computing providers like Google and Microsoft. And this is hindering the adoption of these services in some countries.
Whenever someone says they’re going to buy a new blu-ray player of HDTV, that is the first thing that I tell them.
In test after test, the more expensive HDMI cables failed to impress in comparison to their cheaper counterparts.
Reviewers and the technicians they consulted saw no difference when it comes to video and audio quality so why dish out hundreds of bucks on cables when you can use the money buying movies instead ?
All you need to do is buy the proper category of cable for your home theater system and you’re up and running :
Cable/Satellite boxes – (HDMI 1.3 or 1.4) Standard/Category 1
Upconverting DVD Player – (HDMI 1.3 or 1.4) Standard/Category 1
Blu-Ray at 720p resolution – (HDMI 1.3 or 1.4) Standard/Category 1
Blu-Ray at 1080p resolution – (HDMI 1.3 or 1.4) High Speed/Category 2
Blu-Ray 3D – (HDMI 1.4) High Speed/Category 2
Blu-Ray Deep Color – (HDMI 1.4) High Speed/Category 2
Blu-Ray 4K – (HDMI 1.4) High Speed/Category 2
(source – HDMI.org)
More Black Friday specials are up :