Archive for January 30th, 2010

iTunes tagging offer to is Bauer

Bauer London has announced they will now offer iTunes tagging, as the Kiss Kube sails through a download landmark.

Kiss and Magic will be one of the first radio stations in Europe to offer the service on the iPod with built in FM radio.

The listeners in the capital will be able to see recieve ‘Now Playing’ information on compatible iPod screens. If they like what they hear and want to add it to your own music collection, the song can be “tagged” for download when the device is then connected to iTunes.

Absolute Radio was the first European radio to take iTunes tagging, Kiss and Magic Join now as the stations of the United Kingdom for providing the service.

The announcement has revealed that kissing Kube Bauer has topped 100,000 downloads. The free iPhone app allows you to listen live to your nearest station, reproduce other parts of the schedule, hear programming highlights and stay update with the latest news, offers and competitions.

The Kube also offers ‘background listening’, which allows listeners to use the iPhone’s other functions as you continue to listen.

Referring to both of the announcements, Steve Parkinson, MD of London Radio said the two stations have “evolved their listener offering to reflect the way music is consumed in 2010. The success of the KISS KUBE is a fantastic achievement for Kiss – both testament to the fantastic programming on offer and the loyalty for our listeners. We are proud to be at the forefront of developing iTagging which supports our strategy to keep our listeners tuned in London, listeners tuned-in wherever they are and whenever they want us.”

In Italy Mussolini iPhone app takes off

It is number two at the Italian Apples iTunes store, pushing a video game based on the blockbuster Avatar.

The creator calls it iMussolini, made by Fascist leader Benito Mussolini a collection of 100 speeches. In Italy, where mention of the country’s involvement in World War II atrocities still rankles, the application’s success has taken on a political dimension.

The iMussolini application is about 1,000 units per day at 0,79 euro ($1.17) a throw moving downloaded. The creator is Luigi Marino, a Naples 25-year-old programmer. He is making about $750 per day in sales.

Arguments for and against the application. are raging across Italy, offering a convenient opportunity to discuss the reconsideration of the legacy of the man Italians called “Duce:” Leader. Over the past two decades some Italians have softened their stance on Mussolini. Sixty years ago, Italians applauded when he was shot without trial and then hung on a meat hook. These days, his hometown Predappio has transformed into a sort of shrine to the man.

Marino wants to sidestep the dispute.“I want to say that this history related app does not celebrate fascism,” Marino writes in the introduction of ITunes to the app.

He said he created iMussolini for “nostalgic people or people who are fascinated by (Mussolini’s) historical figure.”For its part, Italy iPhone has tried to wash their hands of the dispute.

When commenters began display messages such as “Dux mea lux” (“Duce is my light”), they closed down the comments section. Next, they sent their own statement.

“The app isn’t a political item but one of history and concerns a person who wrote in our history an important page,” says iPhone Italy in part.



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