Month of July, 2006
Jamesland Studios was founded and built by a musician for musicians, artists, producers, and directors. The facility is designed to be a complete turnkey multimedia facility that is convenient and at your disposal, waiting to be of service to you.
From Concept to Completion
Jamesland Studios is a full service audio and video production facility with the resources to guide your project from concept to market.
With channel players clearing out their inventory, prices for 16x DVD burners have recently dropped 7-10% to below US $30 in Taiwan's retail market, and they are now only slightly more expensive than DVD-ROMs.
The channel has been aggressively clearing out inventory of DVD burners piled up during the low season in the second quarter, as 18x Super Multi DVD burners will be launched in the second half of the year, market sources explained.
Toshiba's hotly-awaited first HD-DVD recorder has had its launch date put back again, this time to " late July".
The world's first high-definition optical disc recorder, the RD-A1, was due to go on sale in Japan on 14 July, but it seems that there aren't enough recorders to go round.
Toshiba blames the slow delivery of components, le
Medea International have been awarded exclusive UK partner distribution of the an innovative new “Scratchless” disc from the USA. ScratchLess disc is a totally new patented innovation that virtually eliminates the problem of surface damage to discs. For professional photos, important video and critical data applications, demand is expected to be substantial. Demand is also expected from applications where discs are handled frequently, and where damage potential is therefore higher.
A federal judge in Colorado has handed the entertainment industry a big win in its protracted legal battle against a handful of small companies that offer sanitized versions of theatrical releases on DVD.
The case encompasses two of Hollywood's biggest headaches these days: the culture wars and the disruptive influence of digital technologies.
An Indian born scientist in the US is working on developing DVD's which can be coated with a light -sensitive protein and can store up to 50 terabytes (about 50,000 gigabytes) of data.
Professor V Renugopalakrishnan of the Harvard Medical School in Boston has claimed to have developed a layer of protein made from tiny genetically altered microbe proteins which could store enough data to make computer hard disks almost obsolete.
ABC has held discussions on the use of technology that would disable the fast-forward button on DVRs, according to ABC President of Advertising Sales Mike Shaw, with the primary goal to allow TV commercials to run as intended.
"I would love it if the MSOs, during the deployment of the new DVRs they're putting out there, would disable the fast-forward [button]," Shaw said.