Sailing the sea of pennies: Sub Pop’s digital salvation

Sailing the sea of pennies Sub Pop's digital salvation

“You can’t deny the math,” Tony Kiewel says, with the slightest hint of defeat in his voice. “The math is bad and continues to get worse for the whole pie.” Sub Pop’s head of A&R’s not particularly bullish when asked about the state of the music industry. It’s been a rough couple of years — decades, really — and the idea of the record label going the way of its brick-and-mortar counterpart doesn’t seem like some far off prediction, as the majors continue to implode under their own unwieldy weight at an impressive clip. But Kiewel’s pessimism is tempered with a note of enthusiasm. All said, things could have been much worse for the legendary Seattle label, which has managed to weather the technological storm largely unscathed. “Our piece of the pie is so much bigger than it was two years ago,” the bespectacled executive adds.

A dozen years ago, around the same time the first iPods, now big, boxy anachronisms, began to find their way into the hands of early adopters, Sub Pop experienced a renaissance, after years spent wandering forests of obscurity. In the ’90s, the label was the epicenter of one of the most important music movements in recent memory, coming a long way from its humble beginnings as a zine published a few hours south of Seattle in Olympia, Wash. For a few heady years, it seemed that every record of note sported the label’s iconic two-tone block label on its rear — but Sub Pop’s reign, like the grunge music it championed, wasn’t long for the charted world.

By the time the early 21st century rolled around, however, something happened. “We didn’t know what the hell was going on,” Kiewel recalls, with audible excitement. “At one point, there was so much [traffic] that it was breaking everything. It was people downloading ‘Such Great Heights,’ the Postal Service song. There were thousands and thousands of kids that had soundtracked their MySpace page with the MP3. It became a debate for years — maybe we should take down that free MP3. We left everything alone and backed away slowly.” Between the Death Cab for Cutie mail-order side project and the haunting indie-pop of Albuquerque’s The Shins, Sub Pop was relevant again — thanks in large part to the magic of social networking.

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Good God, They’ve Perfected the Peanut Butter Jar

Good God, They've Perfected the Peanut Butter Jar

Peanut butter, Nutella, salsa, you name it—if it’s a condiment and moderately delicious, there’s a good chance you’ll be lapping it up out of a jar. Still, reliable and resealable though they may be, there’s also a dark side to America’s favorite container: how to get the last bits of goodness out while keeping your hands clean in the process. Jar-with-a-Twist solves that sticky little problem with a patented, twistable jar that (supposedly) makes every spoonful feel just like the first.

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Purported iPhone 5S Motherboard Leaks

It is not unusual to see purported parts of an upcoming device to leak on the internet. This sort of thing now happens with almost every major vendor, Apple is certainly no exception. Today we are treated to pictures of […]

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Canary Shatters Its Indiegogo Funding Goal For Its Smart, Dead-Simple Home Monitors

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There are some 90 million homes in the U.S. without any security system whatsoever. Many of them are renters who don’t want to invest heavily in a place they don’t own, among hundreds of thousands of home owners who are simply priced out. There has never been a convenient, all-in-one system that could offer home security at an affordable rate, much less one you could pick up at the local Best Buy.

But that all changes with Canary, the latest crowd-funding sensation to hit Indiegogo. We caught up with NYC-based founder Adam Sager to discuss the project.

Canary is a little console, slightly smaller than the size of a paper towel roll, that’s packed with a host of sensors, a mic, and an HD camera.

For $200 down, this little guy will connect to the Wifi, sync with your phone, and constantly watch your home. I say watch, and not monitor, because Canary can only see as far as its sensors will allow, whereas most home security systems are wired in to monitor every crack and crevice of a home. Canary can only hear as far as the mic allows, or the camera sees, or the sensors can sense.

However, Sager believes that when you place the Canary in the central part of your home, near the front door perhaps or watching over the living room, that a real threat, like a burglar, will likely set off the Canary no matter where it enters from.

Plus, if you have a larger space or want added security, you can always link more than one Canary (up to four, Sager tells me).

Canary’s sensors include night vision, motion detection, temperature, air quality and humidity, along with a live feed to the HD camera at any given time. The phone will instantly alert the user whenever the home experiences a random change, like a temperature fluctuation or sudden movement.

But Canary is also smart enough to learn your home, sensing the difference between a burglary and a pet. It even understands when regularly scheduled events occur, like the arrival of a nanny or a dog walker at the same time each day, so that you don’t have a panic attack each time Rover needs to take a wizz.

Canary’s distribution model is different from any other home security system in that you will eventually be able to go pick one up at a local electronics store on the cheap. This has never really been available before, and the potential market is huge with 90 million homes completely unprotected and priced out of the alternatives.

Sager admits that margins on the hardware itself won’t be that high, but the plan is to offer value-added services like monitoring (delivered by a TBD third-party) for $10/month.

Canary has been on Indiegogo for four days, and has blown far beyond its $100k goal to be at $550k at the time of writing. It only took a few hours to reach $100k, according to Sager.

If you’d like to back the project, head on over to the Canary website or check out the Indiegogo campaign.

Arcade text adventure game prints out your story

(Credit: Video screenshot by Michelle Starr/CNET Australia)

Is there anything more nostalgic than a text adventure? Whether it’s a Steve Livingston gamebook or the old Zork games from the early ’80s, many of us whiled away happy hours collecting treasure, battling monsters, and being eaten by grues — all using just the power of words.

Software developer Jerry Belich loves text adventures, too, and has found a way to give them a new and exciting life. He has created the Choosatron, a little text adventure machine that lets users dictate the path of the story and prints out a receipt-like scroll for you to take home and keep.

The system consists of a box housing a thermal printer and paper reel, an Arduino Uno R3 board, an SD car breakout module and SD card, and a 12V 2A power supply and barrel jack. On the outside is a coin acceptor that takes quarters, plus a 12-button keypad, printer output, and on-off switch. Stories are written using open-source software Twine.

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Dongle Style: What We Learned After Our One-Night Stand With Chromecast

Dongle Style: What We Learned After Our One-Night Stand With Chromecast

Google’s Chromecast, a little gadget that plugs into an HDMI port on the back of your TV to let you watch Internet or browser-based video, just launched yesterday. We haven’t had time to fully process it for a review yet, …

    

SIGGRAPH 2013 wrap-up

SIGGRAPH 2013 wrapup

As we noted at the the end of the show last year, SIGGRAPH certainly delivers on the eye candy. From graphics demos to display tech and both 3D printing and motion capture, this is one trade show that offers a glimpse into the present and future of the industry when it comes to visual goods. Highlights include major component news from NVIDIA and Samsung while Dell’s 32-inch 4K display and the latest Disney Research project certainly nabbed our attention. The show ends today until we descend upon Vancouver next summer, but a gallery chock full of sights from the show floor and a roundup of the past few days should tide you over until then.

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Report: Feds Are Demanding User Passwords from Web Companies

Report: Feds Are Demanding User Passwords from Web Companies

Just when you thought the government’s prying eye could pry no further, CNET is reporting that the feds are telling web companies to turn over account passwords, presumably so that they can break in and look at everything these users are doing online. Bummer, huh?

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FEAR Online official, beta sign-ups happening now

The popular horror-themed first-person shooter series FEAR is back, and this time it’s going free-to-play. Aeria Games has announced FEAR Online, an online, free-to-play approach of Monolith’s horror FPS series. FEAR Online will take the singleplayer aspect of the game and turn it into an online multiplayer experience.

fear-online

The game will be developed by Inplay Interactive and will be available for Windows. The game will feature multiple team-based combat modes with ten different maps to choose from. Teams will consist of up to four players and will take on different kinds of enemies. The game will also bring back Soul King mode found in FEAR 3. This will get players “to possess enemies for new abilities and collect more fallen souls than their opponents.”

The game will continue off from the storyline following Alma Wade (the creepy ghost child), as well as focus on the FEAR elite team and the Armacham Technology Corporation. The game will follow a storyline parallel to that of FEAR 2: Project Origin. FEAR Online should be a nice transition from where gamers left off with the last title.

FEAR was first released back in 2005, and has since seen several expansion packs and sequels, including the Extraction Point and Perseus Mandate expansions, and then the FEAR 2: Project Origin sequel. An expansion of that game was later released, called FEAR 2: Reborn, before FEAR 3 was released in 2011. FEAR Online will reboot the series and bring back up to speed in today’s gaming market. Those interested can sign up for the beta now.


FEAR Online official, beta sign-ups happening now is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Inside the US Nuclear Stockpile’s Top Secret First Home

At first glance, this could be any huge, Cold War-era facility. The gray and green of poured concrete might remind you of a public school or a hospital. But this is no run-of-the-mill building. It’s the original home of the US’s nuclear arsenal, and it’s been top secret for over 60 years.

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