Frankmusik has released his new single 'The Fear Inside'. The singer released the buzz track - which he premiered online last month, to iTunes yesterday. He wrote on his official Twitter page: "Just checked out my new Ep on iTunes! so happy its in the UK now! Some awesome remixes on there. Please support if you can (sic)." The Ep also contains four remixes, including (more)...
- 12/20/2010
- by By Robert Copsey
- Digital Spy
Frankmusik has unveiled his new single online. 'The Fear Inside' will trailer the singer's sophomore album, which has the working title Follow The Leader. Frankmusik - whose real name is Vincent Frank - also premiered the song on Us label station Cherrytree radio. Moments before playing the track, he wrote on Twitter: "I can't believe how excitied I am to drop my first new song so very very soon. The tides have changed. I feel it. (sic)" After the song had aired, he wrote: "I cannot believe the reactions people have been (more)...
- 11/22/2010
- by By Robert Copsey
- Digital Spy
Nokia's is on track to get an official license to offer online digital map services in China, according to some reports. It would become the first foreign company to win the right. Will this give Ovi maps a new lease on life? It just might--since Google won't be competing.
China's been dropping the ban-hammer on many online operations this year, in an attempt to control how the Web influences its culture and government control over the society. And back in May the government placed an embargo on every attempt to produce or distribute online maps of the country, unless the companies concerned were officially licensed (and presumably subject to a strict code of practice dictating what they can actually map). The fear inside China's corridors of power was that unlicensed, and thus illegal, mapping efforts could expose sensitive military secrets for everyone to see (everyone apart from China's political rivals,...
China's been dropping the ban-hammer on many online operations this year, in an attempt to control how the Web influences its culture and government control over the society. And back in May the government placed an embargo on every attempt to produce or distribute online maps of the country, unless the companies concerned were officially licensed (and presumably subject to a strict code of practice dictating what they can actually map). The fear inside China's corridors of power was that unlicensed, and thus illegal, mapping efforts could expose sensitive military secrets for everyone to see (everyone apart from China's political rivals,...
- 7/15/2010
- by Kit Eaton
- Fast Company
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