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Hal David dies at 91
Hal David's life was the spectacle of a hard thing done well, with grace.
David completed his song in Los Angeles on Sept. 1, at 91. As a musician and lyric-writer, I grew up with his words, especially his celebrated work with Burt Bacharach. How easy the words rode - how twisty the musical rails.
I asked a very accomplished songman, Paul Williams ("We've Only Just Begun" and much else), who is president and chairman of the board of the music company ASCAP, what he valued about his friend's lyrics. In an e-mail, Williams nailed it.
"Part of the magic and beauty of the Bacharach-David collaboration," he wrote, "was that Hal was able to fashion such simple, direct, and poignant lyrics to Bacharach's melodically and rhythmically sophisticated music. It takes a master lyricist to be able to do that so artfully. Hal was the perfect wordsmith for Burt's musical flights of fancy. The combination of their two sensibilities gave their songs a freshness and immediacy that still endures today."
Let's think about his words and what he did well.
Williams has already captured David's knack - natural words for tough music. But he also told great stories, stories of his moment, and created engaging characters and situations.
He managed to make something memorable out of many everyday scenarios. Eric Bazilian, singer-songwriter of the hallowed Philly band the Hooters, and a huge fan of David's work, says his "genius lay in his ability to transform the mundane into the sublime."
Case study? Sure: The magnificent "Are You There With Another Girl?" on Dionne Warwick's 1965 album Here I Am.
A woman stands outside her man's door. In a cliche too intense to be hackneyed, she agonizes between desire to believe in her mate and the evidence of her senses:
I hear the music coming out of your radio . . .
I hear your laughter . . .
I see two silhouettes in back of your window shade . . .
What an amazing recording - and a study of songwriter and lyricist.
The superlative Warwick, then a mezzo-soprano, is the only pop singer of any color or gender in that era who would even have attempted such an ordeal of the throat. The very first note - the I in "I hear the music coming out of your radio" - is bold, low. She hits it every time and vaults. Wonderfully.
But to return to the poor woman of the song, standing there: Should she ring the doorbell? Walk away?
Love requires faith, I've got a lot of faith, but
I hear the music coming out of your radio . . .
www.HyperSmash.comMobile Impressions 2 - 3 Reviews
I’m now also exposed to more mobile advertising. One question that’s being asked by a few people: Is an impression on my iPad connected to my home WiFi a mobile impression? It may be a mobile device, but I am not mobile.
The industry is currently neglecting to acknowledge the difference between a mobile impression and a mobile device. At the recent Borrell Hyper-local conference in New York, Gordon Borrell used both terms in the same sentence. We simply cannot apply the term “mobile” to all impressions from a mobile device. A recent U.S. Wireless Market Update for 2011 found that 90% of all tablets use WiFi only. I’ve seen estimates that well over 50% of Web browsing on smart phones are also over WiFi. While billions of impressions may be generated over mobile devices, most are not all mobile.
Much of the mobile advertising talk centers around location-based services (LBS). LBS services are useful for some functions, but the number of users is incredibly limited. In May of 2011, the Pew Research Center found that only 4% of American adults use such services to share their location. Even then, I suspect that most only do it for certain applications like mapping or Foursquare check-ins. After Apple and others were exposed for collecting location data from iPhones, users became increasingly more cautious. I personally think LBS utilities on my phone are useful at times, but there simply isn’t enough scale to impact mobile advertising.
To further confuse the mobile ecosystem, cookies are ineffective. For the past decade, the display advertising ecosystem has rallied around the cookie as the sole container for all online – and now even offline – marketing data. Dozens of dotcom start-ups in the ad space have built the foundation of their business models on cookies. Many users hate them, and the government is increasingly suspect over user privacy issues. If your business model is predicated on cookies, you are in jeopardy. More importantly, almost none of the cookie-based targeting in display applies to mobile devices. This leaves an ever-increasing blind spot for mobile marketers.
Without cookies and any kind of scale in LBS usage, mobile marketers are beginning to rally around IP data as a useful proxy for targeting across mobile devices. If a mobile device is tethered to a WiFi connection, all of the valuable IP targeting parameters apply. We have been helping company’s utilize IP intelligence for well over a decade. The recent launch of Neustar’s IP Intelligence ad network allows marketers to target users based on their connection type, not their personal behavioral data. Things like device location for college students, small businesses, banks, travelers in airport WiFi, etc., can be useful when targeting certain market segments. When a device is connected over WiFi, all of the same IP Intelligence from the display world can be applied to mobile without the use of cookies or tracking individual users.
For mobile advertising to reach its true potential, the industry needs to start looking more closely at the nature of mobile impressions. The current “one-size-fits-all” approach is simply not going to work as more users cut the cord and rely entirely on their tablets or phones.
source :
http://www.quova.com/blog-2/mobile-vs-mobile/
Kindle Fire 2 HD Tablet

Kindle Fire HD and Kindle Paperwhite release date, news and features - All the details on the Kindle Fire 2 and the rest
Kindle Paperwhite - Up to Date
Physical buttons have been dropped altogether here (which is either a curse or a blessing, depending on who you ask) and the reader is a bit shorter and thinner than its predecessor. In place of the menu button is a white Kindle logo along the bottom bezel. The silver of the last version has been dropped for a matte black, which is really just nicer to look at, with a rubberized back that makes it harder for it to slip from your hands. Weight-wise, we're talking roughly the same ballpark as the Kindle Touch.
M.I.A. middle finger Madonna's Super Bowl
The Super Bowl is such a mainstream event, "things that at a typical performance would not make anybody bat an eye become the subject of a very intense focus," says Rolling Stone contributing editor Anthony DeCurtis.
The rapper — who was one of Google's most-searched subjects Monday — isn't commenting on the incident, but such rude moments aren't out of the norm for the music industry.
A shot of Johnny Cash giving the middle finger to photographer Jim Marshall during a 1969 performance at San Quentin Prison added to the Man in Black's mystique. But when Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift as she accepted a trophy during the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, his image wasn't helped at all. "That made him look like a twit," DeCurtis says.
Usually in the world of hip-hop, foul language and gestures can be a boon for artists (see: 2 Live Crew).
"She's supposed to be controversial," DeCurtis says. "M.I.A. is certainly not on the scale of Madonna or Nicki Minaj, and it might help (her career) now that people know who she is."
Marks isn't sure whether the Paper Planes performer's errant appendage — a switch from the handgun motion she uses in the video for the new Madonna single — will help or hinder sales for her upcoming new album. (The first single was released Friday. The title? Bad Girls.)
But Chris Willman of Yahoo Music definitely sees it as a plus for M.I.A. "I don't think she's ever gotten this much attention before," he says. "That's the kind of publicity you can't buy when you have an album coming out.
"Who would have guessed that Madonna would be an afterthought in what people are talking about after the show? Madonna might be more mad than any conservative groups."
In the long run, the incident won't be as infamous as Janet Jackson's, when the singer's breast was exposed for about a second while performing with Justin Timberlake during the 2004 Super Bowl. The FCC fined CBS $550,000, but that was fine overturned by a federal appeals court.
M.I.A., known for her rebellious, brash persona and music, performed in a cheerleader outfit for a performance of Madonna's latest single, "Give Me All Your Luvin,'" on which she and Minaj -- also onstage in a pom-pom girl uniform -- are featured rappers.
Her bratty gesture recalled another malfunction of the wardrobe variety in 2004, when Janet Jackson famously flashed a nipple while performing with Justin Timberlake in the halftime show, sending the FCC and viewers into a frenzy.
BlackBerry Empathy Plain Concept Phone
While the Blackberry Empathy does look like the type of phone that would put Blackberry back in the game its highly unlikely that we will ever seen this type of phone released.