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...handle enclosures, or attached files, has led to "podcasting," a way to capture the latest audio Webcasts on an iPod or other MP3 player. Net-radio stations and traditional broadcasters have been streaming live and archived content for a while. But without the time and software to capture, compress and offload the stream, you're tied to a terminal. RSS software such as iPodder lets you subscribe to, say, a weekly jazz podcast, an MP3 of which is downloaded every seven days and then dumped on your player next time you sync it. Bloggers have been keen, but the appeal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How RSS Lets You Get Your Radio to Go | 11/17/2004 | See Source »

When Fox finished his research, he was faced with more data than he could possibly compress into a short pamphlet; he opted instead to dramatically expand the project’s scope...

Author: By Dominique M. Elie, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Rhodes Scholar Seals Publishing Deal | 12/5/2003 | See Source »

...have been a contradiction. There is a definite relationship between the brick of the surrounding buildings and the concrete and glass of the Carpenter Center. Unlike brick, the light-colored concrete reflects morning sun and captures afternoon shadows, from trees and other elements. The curved surfaces of the concrete compress or elongate these shadows, giving them visual life as the angle of the sun changes...

Author: By Zachary R. Heineman, | Title: Understanding the Carpenter Center | 4/7/2003 | See Source »

...would die at 89 in 1564) but still active: there are no fewer than 12 works by him in this show. Eccentric as this may sound, the most beautiful of them is the smallest, a tiny wooden carving--whittling, really--of the crucifixion torso, which manages to compress into its less than 1-ft.-high block the tragic pathos of his late, unfinished stone carvings, such as the Rondanini Pieta. (The catalog also compares the carving to late Titian, late Rembrandt and the late quartets of Beethoven, and not without reason...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mighty Medici | 12/9/2002 | See Source »

...would die at 89 in 1564) but still active: there are no fewer than 12 works by him in this show. Eccentric as this may sound, the most beautiful of them is the smallest, a tiny wooden carving - whittling, really - of the crucifixion torso, which manages to compress into its less than 30-cm-high block the tragic pathos of his late, unfinished stone carvings, such as the Rondanini Piet?. (The catalog also compares the carving to late Titian, late Rembrandt and the late quartets of Beethoven, and not without reason...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mighty Medici | 12/5/2002 | See Source »

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