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May 8, 2008 11:23 AM PDT

Buzz Out Loud 720: Lovin' Out Loud

by Molly Wood
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Announcing the launch of our new dating podcast, Lovin' Out Loud! Also, Microsoft may or may not build content filtering into the Zune, by which we mean "probably will." Also, should judges decide the intent of technology in awarding boffo-size judgments against P2P search engines? And on that note, we're off to order some pizza online.
Listen now: Download today's podcast

EPISODE 720

Revoked NSL aimed at Internet Archive shows need for reform
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/ 20080508-revoked-nsl-aimed-at-internet-archive-shows-need-for-reform.html
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/05/07/211255

Zune to build copyright protection into the player (Thanks, Eric and Josh!)
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/07/ microsoft-may-build-a-copyright-cop-into-every-zune/
http://www.electronista.com/articles/08/05/07/ nbc.wants.zune.copy.filter/

Microsoft denies putting ‘copyright cop’ in Zune
http://www.news.com/8301-13860_3-9938650-56.html

TorrentSpy ordered to pay $110M
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7389485.stm

TorrentSpy to appeal whopper legal judgment
http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9939000-7.html

Report: PC gamers angry at EA DRM system
http://www.news.com/8301-13772_3-9939161-52.html

Casio suckers bloggers into writing about upcoming G-Shock event
http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9938492-7.html

In Australia, XP cheaper than Linux on Eee 900
\http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/05/08/1247238

Pranksters (?) hood a Google Street View cam with a plastic bag
http://www.boingboing.net/2008/05/08/pranksters-hood-a-go.html

Papa John’s surpasses $1 billion in online pizza sales
http://news.wired.com/dynamic/stories/O/ONLINE_PIZZA?SITE= WIRE&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME= 2008-05-08-00-17-06

NASA offers $5,000 a month for you to lie in bed
http://science.slashdot.org/science/08/05/08/0325252.shtml

VOICE MAIL

Tracy from Atlanta
A request for Comcast

Josh from Denver
Another request for Comcast (legislation-wise).

Tony from Florida
I have an MP3 question.

FORUMS

Silent Vista-loving majority?
http://forums.cnet.com/5208-6035_102-0.html? forumID=97&threadID=293271&start=0

E-MAIL

Hee hee, get off my cloud

Sorely wanted to find an MP3 of that song to attach, but that might be infringing…

Just had a discussion with a coworker about music, iPods, ISP caps etc. and we thought of something that I don’t know if you have covered. He is a photo enthusiast and has over 300GB of his photos stored locally, and was thinking of some online backup solutions in addition to his redundant local storage.

With the move to Cloud computing and online backup, users like him may potentially be moving lots of data (maybe even Yottabytes in aggregate) through the tubes. Could the advent of universal ISP caps (even as generous as 250GB/month) put a crimp in the utility of the ‘Cloud’ for backup and restore of large amounts of data (including things like purchased MP3 files which could look like infringing content to deep packet inspectors).

Just a thought..

Bob in New Jersey

******************

Portugese Lion King

Hi!
I just wanted to let you guys know that you have at least one Portuguese listener, me.
And by the way, the Lion King was pretty big in Portugal and it was the first Disney movie dubbed in Portuguese. Before that, the Disney movies were dubbed in Brazilian Portuguese which is quite different (like American English and United Kingdom English) (Wikipedia confirms this).
You guys make a great show.

Take care,

Clara F. (Portuguese-American Biology graduate student currently in Kentucky)

******************
Geopbytes and other obscenities

Dear Molly, Jason, and Tom,

Yottabytes < Brontobytes < Geobytes

Here is the breakdown:

A bit is a single binary digit, zero or one.
A byte is eight bits.
A kilobyte is 1024 bytes.
A megabyte is 1024 kilobytes which is 1048576 bytes.
A gigabyte is 1024 megabytes which is about 1.07 * 10^9 bytes.
A terabyte is 1024 gigabytes which is about 1.10 * 10^12 bytes.
A petabyte is 1024 terabytes which is about 1.13 * 10^15 bytes.
An exabyte is 1024 petabytes which is about 1.15 * 10^18 bytes.
A zettabyte is 1024 exabytes which is about 1.18 * 10^21 bytes.
A yottabyte is 1024 zettabytes which is about 1.21 * 10^24 bytes.
A brontobyte is 1024 yottabytes which is about 1.24 * 10^27 bytes.
A geobyte is 1024 brontobytes which is about 1.27 * 10^30 bytes.

Is that not obscene? How much storage do you need? It would be interesting to see how much 1080p video could fit on a “geopbyte” drive. I’m just saying.

Love the show. Keep up your good work,

John McKenna

**********************

Geek-Maps.com--even geeks have historic landmarks

Hey JaMoTo,

I was listening to episode 718 and you were talking about how there ought to be a tour guide site for geek-themed places. So I ran out and registered http://www.geek-maps.com and put up version 0.10. I'm hoping people will send in suggestions of locations and how to improve the site. My next goal is to add the ability to query by state, city, or other options that are relevant.

P.S. You ought to get a promo code for GoDaddy.com with all the domain registering you inspire.

Scott Gottreu

As host of the Buzz Report video series, Molly provides a fresh and funny perspective on the latest consumer electronic products to hit the market, as well as commentary on the stories and development that she thinks are truly buzz-worthy. She is also co-host of Buzz Out Loud, CNET's "podcast of indeterminate length," which entertains listeners with a funny and skeptical take on the day's technology news. Her other podcast, Gadgettes, is proof that girls can be geeks too.
Recent posts from Buzz Out Loud Blog
BOL 1106: A tall drink of moon water
BOL 1105: The New Testament of Torrents
BOL 1104: Microsoft hides its hot new TV service
BOL 1103: No cookies for you, Europe
BOL 1102: We're blocked in China! We made it!
BOL 1101: LHC-gull kills science with bread
BOL 1100: The Internet is a human right...in Europe
BOL 1099: Secret ACTA treaty could break the Internet
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by maceyr May 8, 2008 8:05 PM PDT
Regarding the checking of the game via internet. Okay, I can deal with the phoning home but what I really HATE is when some game insists that I must have the original CD in the drive to play the game, when the game is practically all installed on my hard drive. I wanted to make a copy of the CD for archiving purposes since they do scratch over time. I had a problem one time with Microsoft Train simulator and it got these tiny scratches and I can't install it anymore. I had to call up Microsoft and beg them for a replacement CD.

Lego Star Wars insists that I have to have the original CD in order to play it. I paid for my games so I'd think I should be allowed to create backup copies since we all know that CD won't last forever.
Reply to this comment
by VintageVirago May 9, 2008 1:37 PM PDT
With EA's new DRM how do I resell my game when I'm finished with it? I'm allowed to sell my books, my cds, my dvds, etc when I'm finished with them. But not my $50-60 game? Guess I won't be buying any EA games in the future.
Reply to this comment
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About Buzz Out Loud Blog

Buzz Out Loud features Tom Merritt, producer Jason Howell, and a rotating roundtable of CNET's top tech experts reviewing the day's tech news. Each episode, five times a week, the crew analyzes, interprets, and argues about what all this technology means and what it's doing to us. Fans can join in the show by calling 1-800-616-2638, e-mailing at buzz@cnet.com, or commenting on the blog.


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Tom Merritt Tom Merritt appears on CNET TV, specializing in help and how-to and the ever popular Top 5 lists. He also co-hosts CNET's The Real Deal podcast. See profile
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