Loaded: Toshiba joins the Blu-ray camp Video
Loaded: Toshiba joins the Blu-ray camp Video Transcript
TOSHIBA IS GOING TO START MAKING BLU-RAY PLAYERS, AMAZON GETS IN TROUBLE FOR PULLING BOOKS OFF OF KINDLES, AND YOU MIGHT WANT TO UPDATE YOUR BROWSER BEFORE YOU START YOUR WORKDAY TODAY. ITS MONDAY, JULY 20TH. I'M NATALI DEL CONTE, BACK IN NEW YORK THIS WEEK. IT'S TIME TO GET LOADED. [*] IF YOU'RE USING CHROME OR FIREFOX, YOU'RE GOING TO WANT TO UPDATE YOUR BROWSER SOFTWARE BEFORE YOU GET TOO FAR INTO YOUR WORKWEEK. GOOGLE RELEASED A NEW VERSION WITH BUG FIXES AND SECURITY PATCHES LATE LAST WEEK. A FULL LIST OF FIXES CAN BE FOUND AT GOOGLECHROMERELEASES.BLOGSPOT.COM. FIREFOX RELEASED 3.5.1 BUT REPORTS ARE SURFACING THAT THERE IS A VULNERABILITY THERE AS WELL. AS FAR AS WE KNOW, MOZILLA HASN'T RELEASED ANOTHER PATCH BUT BE ON THE LOOKOUT. WE'LL LET YOU KNOW WHEN WE FIND ONE. [*] IT LOOKS LIKE TOSHIBA IS GOING TO MAKE BLU-RAY PLAYERS. YOU MAY REMEMBER THAT TOSHIBA WAS THE DRIVING FORCE AROUND HD DVD, THE LOST HD DISC FORMAT. TOSHIBA PULLED OUT OF THE HD-DVD FORMAT IN EARLY 2008 AND WE SUSPECTED THAT THEY WOULD JOIN THE WINNING TEAM BUT NOW WE KNOW FOR SURE. THE QUESTION REMAINS WHETHER OR NOT BLU-RAY IS THE WINNING TEAM THOUGH. EVEN AT $99, THE PLAYERS DON'T SEEM TO BE FLYING OFF THE SHELVES. SO IS TOSHIBA RIGHT TO DO THIS OR ARE THEY BOARDING A SINKING SHIP? RING IN AT LOADED@CNET.COM. [*] AMAZON CAME UNDER FIRE OVER THE WEEKEND FOR DELETING TWO GEORGE ORWELL NOVELS FROM THE KINDLE STORE. THE COMPANY NOTICED THAT IT DID NOT HAVE PROPER RIGHTS TO THOSE BOOKS SO THEY YANKED THEM AND REFUNDED THE MONEY OF USERS WHO HAD PURCHASED THEM. USERS WERE NOT HAPPY AND AMAZON ADMITTED, IT MAY HAVE ACTED SLIGHTLY HASTILY. A COMPANY SPOKESPERSON WROTE: "We are changing our systems so that in the future we will not remove books from customers' devices in these circumstances." THE PROBLEM IS THAT AMAZON CAN JUST DO THIS. THIS IS THE FIRST TIME THAT AMAZON HAS EXERCISED THIS KIND OF CONTROL OVER WISPER SYNC. I DON'T THINK THIS IS THE WAY THAT THE COMPANY WANTED US TO FIND OUT ABOUT THIS CAPABILITY. [*] IN OTHER AMAZON NEWS, THE COMPANY HAS DECIDED TO REPLACE CRACKED COVERS FOR KINDLE 2 USERS. LAST WEEK WE REPORTED THAT THE COMPANY WAS FACING A CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT OVER THIS PROBLEM. THE COMPANY WAS TRYING TO CHARGE $200 TO FIX THIS FAIRLY COMMON PROBLEM. IT ISN'T TRYING TO DO THAT ANYMORE. SO IF THIS HAPPENS TO YOUR KINDLE 2, YOU CAN GET A REPLACEMENT FOR FREE. [*] THE BLACKBERRY STORM IS NOW ONLY $99 ON VERIZON. THIS IS RESEARCH IN MOTION'S ALL TOUCHSCREEN PHONE. WE MIGHT AS WELL ADMIT THAT IT WAS NOT THE SUCCESS THAT RIM WANTED IT TO BE. SO DOES THE PRICE DROP MEAN THAT THEY'LL RELEASE A NEW VERSION? LETS HOPE. [*] A NEW STUDY SHOWS THAT MUSIC LOVERS WILL STREAM OR DOWNLOAD MUSIC LEGALLY WHEN THE OPTIONS GET BETTER. TWO RESEARCH FIRMS, MUSIC ALLY AND LEADING QUESTION, SHOW THAT USERS IN THE UK CHOOSE TO SUBSCRIBE TO OR PAY FOR STREAMING SERVICE RATHER THAN PIRATE ILLEGALLY SHARED TUNES. IT ALSO SHOWS A DECLINE IN THE NUMBER OF TEENS WHO WERE DOWNLOADING ILLEGALLY: ONLY 28 PERCENT SAID THAT THEY HAD DONE THIS, DOWN FROM 42 PERCENT IN DECEMBER OF 2007. THE INCREASE IN STREAMING DIDN'T NECESSARILY MEAN LEGAL STREAMING THOUGH. STREAMING HITS OVER YOUTUBE IS NOT NECESSARILY LEGAL IF THE VIDEO HAS BEEN PUBLISHED BY ANYONE WHO DOES NOT HAVE COPYRIGHT RIGHTS TO THE SONG. STILL, THE MUSIC INDUSTRY IS HOPEFUL THAT THIS BEHAVIOR WILL HELP THEM STOP SPINNING THEIR WHEELS TRYING TO STOP PIRACY. [*] SPEAKING OF LEGAL MUSIC SERVICES, KAZAA IS COMING BACK. KAZAA WAS ONE OF THE MOST RECOGNIZED MUSIC PIRACY SOFTWARE. OF COURSE IT HAD A LEGAL COMPONENT BUT NO ONE USED IT THAT WAY. WE USED IT TO RIP TRACKS. AND BY WE, I MEAN USERS IN GENERAL OF COURSE. I NEVER USED KAZAA. OF COURSE I DIDN'T. KAZAA WILL NOW BE A SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE, OFFERING SONGS FROM THE BIG FOUR MUSIC LABELS. USERS WILL GAIN ACCESS TO OVER 1 MILLION SONGS FOR $20 PER MONTH. [*] THOSE ARE ALL OF YOUR HEADLINES FOR TODAY. I'LL SEE YOU TOMORROW WITH MORE. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING. I'M NATALI DEL CONTE WITH CNETTV AND YOU JUST BEEN LOADED.
Related Videos
Loaded: Google's power struggle
We were right about Amazon's new Kindle, Microsoft wants to start its own App Store, and Google hopes to monitor your house to find out how much energy you're wasting.
We compare Amazon's Kindle 2 to other book readers on the market, there's plenty of news about online video, and how to get Rotten Tomatoes on your TV.
We take a First Look at the new BlackBerry Tour, the Kindle may soon get in-books ads, and it could become illegal to plant a tracking chip in your girlfriend.
Time Warner wants you to pay for your broadband by the gig rather than in one flat monthly fee. The PS3 is the least environmentally friendly game console. There's a new Flip video camera on the market. And a software engineer creates a browser for his Autistic grandson.
Gmail wants everyone to know where you are, the Authors Guild is up in arms about Kindle's speech-to-text feature, and you can now travel the Oregon Trail on your iPhone.
We have news on the Amazon Kindle DX, Sony sneaks in an e-reader of its own, and Digg gets Facebook Connect.
YouTube pulls music videos in the U.K., the Venezuelan government wants to be a cell phone carrier, and earbuds in Japan let you control an MP3 player with your facial expressions.
Sony is expected to standardize e-book formats, Google's home page and Reader get more social networking features, and how to survive a camping trip...with Wi-Fi of course!
We have a lot of video game news today about Microsoft's Xbox and Nintendo's Wii. Also, Guns N' Roses comes to Rock Band, and Blu-ray Disc technology is about to get a whole lot cheaper.
Nokia buys Plazes, a mobile social network. Wimbledon starts streaming online today, but only for Windows users. Plus, the AARP wants to help you keep your mind sharp with online checkers.
