Archive for February 15th, 2006

Slim Devices to put Pandora in its network music box

Slim Devices, maker of the Squeezebox family of network music players, will next month link its web-based internet radio service, Squeeze Network, to the Pandora music discovery service, the company said today. From March 1, Squeezebox will provide customers old and new with three months’ free access to Pandora.
Pandora’s team of music analysts spend their days determining key characteristics - melody, harmony, instrumentation, rhythm, vocals, lyrics and so on - of songs they listen to. The results go into a database they’ve been building up for the past six years. Pandora generates a personalised internet station that streams out tracks from its 300,000-title library that match your nominated song or band according to its attributes.
The company pitches the service as a way to discover new music, especially artists and songs you might otherwise assume were too different from your favourite genres or bands to warrant further investigation. You can fine-tune the service by registering your approval or disapproval of the tracks it selects.
Squeeze Network sends internet radio stations direct to a user’s Squeezebox 2 or 3 without the need for a computer to act as an intermediary. From next month, they access their Pandora stations - you can have up to 100 on the go at any one time - the same way. Pandora usually charges $12 for three months’ usage, but the deal with Slim Devices will see Squeeze Network users getting that period for free. Afterwards, they’ll need to pay the $12 fee or sign up for year’s access at $36.

Squeezebox

Add comment February 15th, 2006

Seagate to spin a 12GB 1in HDD in Q3

Seagate yesterday not only pledged to ship a 12GB 1in hard disk drive in Q3, it also promised the drive would ship in a much smaller casing than its current 1in HDD line-up does and consume two-thirds of the power. What’s more, the drive incorporates perpendicular recording technology, the company said.
Seagate’s 14g ST1.3 is pitched at phones and media players. No wonder, then, it’s got a sudden acceleration sensor to detect when the host device is dropped and park the read/write heads to protect the disk from damage. This increases operational shock resistance by up to 33 per cent, Seagate said, allowing the device to survive a 1.5m fall onto a hard concrete surface.
That said, gadget makers unwilling to pay for the security system can buy a version without it, so not all ST1.3-based devices will be created equal, it seems.
Seagate-Q3
The drive unit measures 4 x 3 x 0.5cm, for a footprint that’s 23 per cent smaller than Seagate’s previous 1in drives, the 4.3 x 3.6 x 0.5cm ST1 series, which already stretches to 8GB. The new drives have an average seek time of 20ms.
Seagate said the two ST1.3 SKUs - one with the drop sensor, the other without - will ship in Q3. It didn’t disclose pricing.

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