Post Eliot Spitzer affair, Ashley Alexandra Dupré's hookin' a whole lot more cash on MP3 site Amie Street

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So, I hear the hot news in New York at the moment is that their governor, Eliot Spitzer, resigned over ‘various reasons‘.

Turns out the prostitute he err, engaged in business relations with, Ashley Alexandra Dupré, is a bit of a pop strumpet, even more so since the news broke. Her song ‘What We Want’ is available on the MP3 store Amie Street, where prices are determined by popularity of the downloads.

Before news of the affair broke? Her track was 19 cents. After the affair? 98 cents…

Cor! Get a load of these snazzy limited edition mju µ 1020 digital cameras from Olympus

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It’s a very slooooow news day today, which is why I’m showing you these limited edition µ [mju:] 1020 digital cameras from Olympus, which is basically the 1010 with funky skins.

Wildly exciting news, obviously.

Designed by a Hungarian artist, Matei Apostolescu, they’re limited to just 5,000 units, and have 10.1-megapixel sensors, a very tidy 7x optical zoom,…

Shiny Video Preview: Samsung YP-S2 pebble MP3 players


Last night Zara and I went along to the Samsung 2008 product showcase, where we feasted our eyes on all the products…we’d already covered. Still, it was news to the print media journalists there, and there were even a couple of new toys we hadn’t seen nor heard of yet.

The YP-S2 MP3 players are bizarre little pebble-shaped devices, quite similar to the Creative Zen Stones, and will…

Opinion – Why the Observer's '50 most powerful blogs' feature proves print media knows nothing about new media

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Katherine Hannaford writes…

Last week, when reading the upcoming features for the next issue of the Observer Magazine, I was worried to see they promised an article entitled ‘The world’s 50 most powerful blogs’. Old media reporting on new media? It could only mean trouble, and stir a generous helping of some angry-sachet into the big online pot.

When having my weekly Sunday morning lie-in in bed with a copy of that day’s Observer, I realised I overestimated the knowledge of the journalists writing for that paper, and indeed, the magazine. Sure, I can’t tar them all with the same brush, considering the Observer and its brother-newspaper, the Guardian, have internet-savvy journalists like Bobbie Johnson and Jemima Kiss snuggled under their wings, amongst others. But what I saw before my eyes on the morning of the 9th of March angered me greatly.

It appears I wasn’t the only blogger infuriated over the dubiously-named list of ‘powerful blogs’ (available online here). The 26-odd commenters who’ve shared their opinions on the article online all agree, as do thousands more across the world, that the list is possibly the worst, most confusing collection of so-called blogs ever put together. Collaborators Jessica Aldred, Amanda Astell, Rafael Behr, Lauren Cochrane, John Hind, Anna Pickard, Laura Potter, Alice Wignall and Eva Wiseman, you should hang up your Bloglines accounts for good. Although I’m guessing one of them, if not all of them, doesn’t even know what an RSS Feed is, according to one of the many mistakes they made in the summary about Engadget…

Nokia N96 confirmed for August release date via Carphone Warehouse leak

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Confirmation has arrived! The N96 from Nokia will be swinging our way in August, according to the Carphone Warehouse by a sneaky little leak, no doubt propelling thousands of frantic customers towards their site in the hopes of securing their upgrade from the N95.

No pricing details, but as we already knew, the HSDPA and Wi-Fi enabled handset will have a five-megapixel camera, 16GB…

Michael Jackson's company squashes rumours regarding the Beatles' availability on iTunes

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Michael Jackson, aka, the world’s biggest spoil-sport, has apparently put his foot down over The Beatles’ music being made available on iTunes in the future, with a spokeswoman for Sony/AVT Music Publishing (the company that co-owns the publishing rights with Jackson) claiming yesterday’s rumours are “untrue”, reinforced by an Apple representative stating “this is not news nor is it a scoop”.

Claims regarding the payment Apple would shell out for the privilege of selling the British band’s tracks is in the region of $600 million, with speculators…