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    音楽 ハードウェア 関連語 iPod Touch 着うた iPad
    • Ping. That is Apple social networking
      Apple has jumped into the social-networking business by introducing Ping, a service built into iTunes that is intended to help users discover new music and, presumably, buy more songs from Apple. アップルは、ソーシャルネットワーキング事業にPingを、サービスのユーザーが新しい音楽を発見すると、おそらく、アップルからより多くの曲を買うのを助けるためのものですiTunesに組み込ま導入することで増加している

    • Apple in push to lease TV series
      Apple, which is widely expected to announce a revamped product for television sets next month, is pressing the television networks to rent their TV series through its iTunes service for as little as 99 US cents (HK$7.70) an episode. アップルは、広くテレビの改良製品を発表する予定だ来月、そのiTunesのサービスを介して、わずか99米セント(香港7.70ドル)のエピソードのためにテレビシリーズを借りにテレビネットワークを押して設定します

    • Science Weekly podcast: Maggie Philbin on Tomorrow's World; plus, James Randi and PZ Myers
      Make sure you take advantage of our exclusive audio book offer. We have partnered with audible.co.uk to offer listeners one free audio book. There are 40-thousand titles to choose from including hundreds of science titles, including the winner of this year's Royal Society Prize for Science Books Life Ascending by Nick Lane. Here are all the details. A packed show this week with a science legend live in the studio. Former Tomorrow's World presenter Maggie Philbin explains why the judges plumped for Nick Lane's book about evolution's greatest inventions to win this year's Royal Society Prize for Science Books. At the end of the show we listen to some Tomorrow's World highlights and discuss what predictions the programme got right, and what it got wrong. Guardian science correspondent Ian Sample asks Maggie about the influence the programme had. Science Weekly has been nominated for this year's physics.org web awards. As well as a judges' award, there's a people's choice award for best podcast voted for by listeners. So why not help us out by registering, clicking on our podcast and adding your star rating at the top of the page. We grabbed James Randi, PZ Myers, Susan Blackmore and Tracey Brown at The Amazing Meeting, a celebration of critical thinking held in London recently. Martin Robbins live-blogged live-blogged the event for the Guardian. (Thanks to Mun Keat Looi for his help.)WARNING: contains a humorous reference to male genitalia.We hear from some famous geeks including Jonathan Ross, Brian Cox and Aleks Krotoski about their geek heroes. It's part of the Geek Calendar campaign for libel reform. Check out our gallery of geek pinups featured in the calendar, which is now on sale.Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non- あなたは私達の排他的なオーディオブックを提供を活用することを確認します

    • Apple secures deal with Beatles to sell British band's songs online
      The Beatles are finally coming to iTunes. Apple said yesterday its iTunes service will start selling music from the Fab Four, in an agreement with the Beatles' recording label, EMI, and its management company, Apple Corps. ビートルズが最終的にiTunesに来ている

    • Fraudsters make iTunes top of the crime pops
      The public sector now suffers more from fraud than financial services, one of the nation's leading firms of accountants says – while iTunes is proving a hit with white-collar criminals. 公共部門は現在、金融サービスよりも詐欺以上に苦しんで、会計士の国を代表する企業の一つは言う - iTunesがホワイトカラー犯罪者とヒットを証明している間

    • Apple's Subscription Policy Could Hurt ITunes Movie Competitors
      Today Apple announced that it is giving  publishers the ability to offer subscriptions on the iPad, iPods and iPhones. But as my colleague Jeff Bercovici points out, there's a pretty big catch. Publishers have to give subscribers the option to buy the subscription through iTunes or by leaving the app and buying it through a web browsers. 今日Appleは出版社に計算された、iPodやiPhoneのサブスクリプションを提供する能力を与えていることを発表しました

    • Science Weekly podcast: Ham the astrochimp and the LHC keeps going
      WARNING: podcast contains explicit references to anatomy and sexual acts between consenting animals. We celebrate the 50th anniversary of one of America's space milestones. His name was Ham and he came from French Cameroon. Henry Nicholls is back in the studio with us. He's unearthed some never before broadcast audio footage he recorded in 2007 when he went to visit the remains of this amazing chimpanzee. The Higgs Boson might be closer than ever. The decision has been made to keep the Large Hadron Collider up and running for another year before its scheduled maintenance. We cross live-ish to Paul Collier in the room at Cern where the beam is switched on and off. Paul's job title is possibly the greatest on the planet. He is Head of Beams at Cern. Our very own Alok Jha has his first book out. Despite his best efforts to avoid talking about it, we trick him into discussing How To Live Forever: And 34 Other Really Interesting Uses Of Science. Other books are available! We continue this programme's celebration of animals - by talking about green porn with a movie star. Isabella Rossillini tells us about her series of graphic short films called Green Porno and Seduce Me. Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Meet the Guardian's crack team of science bloggers:The Lay Scientist by Martin RobbinsLife and Physics by Jon ButterworthPunctuated Equilibrium by GrrlScientistPolitical Science by Evan Harris Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Guardian Science is now on Facebook. You can also join our Science Weekly Facebook group. We're always here when you need us, listen back throu 警告:Podcastが同意している動物の間の解剖学や性的な行為への明示的な参照が含まれています

    • Science Weekly podcast: Protecting the oceans; a space suit for dogs; and Tutankhamun goes online
      Jay Nelson, director of Global Ocean Legacy at the Pew Environment Group, joins us to consider how we can protect the world's oceans and whether islanders are willing to be subjected to tough restrictions. We also discuss the Chagos Archipelago, the UK's most important area of marine biodiversity.It's one small step for a mongrel ... We discover how stray dogs helped Yuri Gagarin make history. Space communications manager Kevin Yates takes us on a tour of the new Space Race exhibition at the National Space Centre in Leicester, which features a canine high-altitude suit designed by the Russians at the height of their battle with the Americans to control space. View our exclusive behind-the-scenes video of the exhibit as the suit is unpacked from its protective box and put on display. As the dust settles on the Climategate emails saga, the Guardian assembled an impressive line-up of experts to debate what the affair did - and did not - reveal about research into global warming. Listen to a small section of the 100-minute recording, or hear the debate in its entirety here. Eighty-eight years after Tutankhamun's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter, only a fraction of the 5,000 objects unearthed have been properly studied and published. Hopefully that's about to change thanks to the internet and 15 years of hard work as the excavation notes are published online. Jo Marchant went to the Griffith Institute in Oxford where the archive is now held. Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok ジェイネルソン氏は、ピュー環境グループのグローバルオーシャンLegacyのディレクター、私たちはどのようにかどうかを島民は喜んでいる世界の海を守ることができます厳しい制限を受けることを検討する結合します

    • The week in review podcast: Arizona shootings, undercover police, and James Bond
      Welcome to the Week in review, the Guardian's new podcast looking back on the biggest news stories of the past seven days.For this first show, Jonathan Freedland is joined in the studio by the writer and broadcaster Jon Ronson, comedian Josie Long and the Guardian's legal affairs correspondent Afua Hirsch. They begin by discussing the debate over extreme rhetoric in America, and ask, in the wake of the Arizona shootings, is the Tea Party now over for the likes of Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck as the nation searches for a kinder, gentler political conversation?Also in the podcast, the panel examines the case of Mark Kennedy, the secret policeman who apparently had a ball - working undercover as an eco-protester, and apparently regarding multiple affairs as part of the job description.Finally, with the new James Bond film at last given the green light, we look forward to the latest outing for 007, and wonder who would make a fitting adversary for Ian Fleming's super-spy.You can subscribe to us on iTunes and follow us on Twitter, and please let us know your feedback on the blog below.Jonathan FreedlandBen GreenAfua HirschJosie LongJon Ronson ようこそレビューの週には、ガーディアンの新しいポッドキャストには、過去7 days.Forこの最初のショーの最大のニュース記事を振り返って、ジョナサンFreedlandは、作家と放送して、Jonロンソン、コメディアン、ジョージーロングとガーディアンでスタジオで参加している法務通信員Afuaハーシュ

    • Science Weekly podcast: Monitoring climate change in the Antarctic; and The Edge Question 2011
      We speak to Professor Chris Turney on a satellite phone from Antarctica. He's out there monitoring climate change. Apparently cosmogenic dating is nothing like internet dating. Glad we cleared that one up.Follow his expedition on Twitter @ProfChrisTurney. Robin McKie and Nell Boase are in the studio to discuss this year's Edge Question: What scientific concept would improve everybody's cognitive toolkit? The founder of edge.org John Brockman tells us how they dreamed up the idea of picking the brains of the world's leading thinkers, and one of the brains, social media expert Clay Shirky, explains his answer to this year's question. Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Meet our crack team of science bloggers:The Lay Scientist by Martin RobbinsLife and Physics by Jon ButterworthPunctuated Equilibrium by GrrlScientistPolitical Science by Evan Harris Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Guardian Science is now on Facebook. You can also join our Science Weekly Facebook group. We're always here when you need us, listen back through our archive.Andy DuckworthAlok JhaNell BoaseRobin McKieClay Shirky 我々は、南極から衛星電話で教授クリスターニーと話す

    • Apple Strikes Deal to Sell Beatles Catalog Online
      Apple is expected to announce that it has struck a deal with the Beatles, the best-selling band of all time, and their record company, EMI, to sell their music on iTunes. Appleは、それがiTunesで楽曲を販売してビートルズ、すべての時間のベストセラーのバンド、およびそれらのレコード会社は、EMIとの契約を結んでいることを発表する予定だ

    • 沖縄旅行 5日目 牧志公設市場へベストな駐車場
      // <![cdata[ wni_blog('blog/forecast:centeredon=91',150,91,true);// ]]></script>

    • Science Weekly podcast: Saving giant pandas; tiger droppings; solar-power festivals; plus music from Cern
      WARNING: contains explicit language which may offend some listeners.Science writer Henry Nicholls tells us about the fascinating world of China's political animal, the giant panda. He also gives us an update on Lonesome George, the last of his species and the subject of his previous book. Henry's new book The Way of the Panda is out now. The Guardian's Steven Morris puts on his wellies to visit the UK's biggest private solar-power plant on the site of the Glastonbury music festival. We discuss why paw prints and faeces offer new hope for saving tigers. The Journal of Applied Ecology also goes into some graphic details concerning shapes and smells.Richard Holmes, biographer and author of the soon to be published The Lost Women of Victorian Science, tells us why women appear to have been written out of the history of science. The winners of the physics.org web awards have been announced. Alex Cheung from the Institute of Physics tells us why they stood out. There's a little mention for the best podcast. The Guardian's Science Weekly podcast. You may have heard of it. Thanks for voting for us. Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider have released an album! Resonance is a double CD with a variety of musical styles recorded by those at Cern in Geneva. Proceeds go to an orphanage in Nepal. At the end of the podcast we listen to the full version of a song written especially for the project. Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Meet our crack team of science bloggers:The Lay Scientist by Martin RobbinsLife and Physics by Jon ButterworthPunctuated Equilibrium by GrrlScientistPolitical Science by Evan Harris Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stor 警告は:ヘンリーNicholls氏は中国の政治的な動物、パンダの魅惑的な世界を物語っているいくつかのlisteners.Scienceライターを怒らせることが明示的な言語が含まれています

    • Science Weekly podcast: The Beagle Project; Hubble at 20; and Arabic science
      Nell Boase is Lady Science this week ...All the way from Maine, Dr Karen James joins us in the studio to tell us about The Beagle Project, which aims to recreate the ship in which Charles Darwin sailed on his world-changing voyage of discovery. Karen is also a huge space fan and will watch the penultimate shuttle launch as part of Nasa's tweetup. She also tells us about getting a call on her mobile phone from the space station. Best ever revellation on the podcast: Karen tells us the dialling code for space. Guardian science correspondent Ian Sample is in the studio to ask Karen about her thoughts on the future of Nasa. As the Hubble space telescope reaches the age of 20, we take a closer look at what it has achieved. Giles Sparrow runs us through some of its greatest hits in his book Hubble: Window on the Universe. We have prepared a beautiful audio slideshow to go with this interview. Despite Arabic science helping shape the scientific method, theoretical physicist Jim Al-Khalili discusses what's holding it back today. His new book is called Pathfinders: The Golden Age of Arabic Science. Prof Al-Khalili is also chairing a special lecture at London's Royal Albert Hall this week with Stephen Hawking. Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Meet our crack team of science bloggers:The Lay Scientist by Martin RobbinsLife and Physics by Jon ButterworthPunctuated Equilibrium by GrrlScientistPolitical Science by Evan Harris Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Guardian Science is now on Facebook. You can also join our Science Weekly Facebook group. Listen back through our archive ネルボースは今週...すべての方法がメインからの女性科学は、博士がして、Karen Jamesさんは、チャールズダーウィンは、彼の世界を変える旅に出航した船を再現することを目的とビーグルプロジェクトについて教えて、スタジオで私たちを結合する発見

    • Christine O'Donnell loses Delaware Senate bid
      Democrat Chris Coons easily beats the Catholic-turned-evangelical Tea Party favouriteChristine O'Donnell, the Tea Party-backed candidate who struggled to shake old television footage in which she spoke out against masturbation and talked about dabbling in witchcraft, has lost her bid for the Senate.An Associated Press analysis of exit polling data showed Democrat Chris Coons easily winning the race.O'Donnell's upset win in the Republican primary over moderate congressman Mike Castle may have cost Republicans the contest. Castle, a popular former governor, had been heavily favoured to win vice-president Joe Biden's old seat.Coons is a wealthy attorney and the stepson of the founder of the company that developed Gore-Tex fabrics. He is the executive of the state's largest county and mostly supports the Obama administration's agenda.Christine O'DonnellTea Party movementUS midterm elections 2010US politicsUnited Statesguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 民主党のクリスクーンズ簡単にカトリックになって、福音派コーヒー党favouriteChristine O。。u0026#39;Donnellさんは、彼女の入札を失っている彼女がマスターベーションに対して話した約魔術に手を出して話を古いテレビの映像を横に振るのに苦労コーヒー党が支援する候補ビート出口調査データのSenate.An Associated Pressの分析は、民主党のクリスクーンズ簡単に勝利を示したrace.O。。u0026#39;ドンネルのコスト共和党にコンテストがあるかもしれません中等度の下院議員マイク城の共和党の予備選挙で勝利

    • From Apple, a Step Into Social Media for Music
      Apple on Wednesday introduced a social media service geared to music lovers that is built into iTunes, revamped its lineup of iPods and unveiled an upgraded version of its set-top box. アップルは11日ソーシャルメディアサービスをiTunesに組み込まれている音楽愛好家、iPodのラインナップを刷新に連動紹介し、そのセットトップボックスのアップグレード版を発表した

    • Science Weekly podcast: The BBC's David Shukman and the dangers of patenting genes
      The BBC's science and environment correspondent David Shukman joins us in the studio to discuss the BP oil spill and the pitfalls of reporting on climate change. In David's new book, Reporting Live From the End of the World, he describes his adventures as a roving environment correspondent. A gaggle of geeks recently invaded the Guardian's London headquarters for a hack day. Their leader, Jeremy Keith, reveals the results of two days of brainstorming. As part of its Who Am I? exhibition, London's Science Museum has held an event to mark the tenth anniversary of the first draft sequence of the human genome. We spoke to Mike Stratton, director of the Wellcome Trust's Sanger Institute, and nobel prizewinning biologist John Sulston, who tells us human gene patents restrict access to treatments and inhibit research. We dissect the BMJ's cancer study on mobile phone masts using our story tracker. The Guardian's Nell Boase and Observer's science editor Robin McKie are in the studio. Listen to the annual Sense about Science lecture on conflicts of interest in drug trials. Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok JhaAndy DuckworthNell BoaseRobin McKie BBCの科学と環境特派員デビッドShukmanスタジオでのBPの石油流出事故と気候変動に関する報告の落とし穴を議論する私たちを結合します


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