Word: cd
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...certainly true that many of the perks simply come with the territory. Among members of the press, including those at this publication, few can say they have never attended a free movie screening, received a free book or CD that they had no intention of reviewing, or purchased discounted designer clothes at invitation-only "sample sales." The difference is the way the fashion press has come to take its often valuable spoils for granted, sometimes in spite of employers' explicit rules. "When I go to the shows in Paris and Milan, the number of shopping bags coming in is unbelievable...
...companies are also engaged in a fierce fight on the technological front. Sony and Sega are following 3DO's lead, using 32-bit processors and double-speed CD-ROM drives with sufficient capacity to store VHS-quality video images and CD-quality stereo sound. Nintendo, striking out on its own, is opting for a higher-powered, 64-bit chip, and will store its games on high-capacity, plug-in cartridges instead of CD-ROM discs. Nintendo says this will enable it to offer both a lower-cost system and the blistering speed demanded by its target market: adolescent boys...
...other hand, this year could end in what Tom Zito, president of Digital Pictures, calls "a PC Christmas," in which parents opt for CD-ROMS that play not on the new game systems but on their home computers. Already 10% of U.S. households have PCs or Macs equipped with CD-ROMS, and that figure is expected to double this year. (By comparison, 30% of U.S. homes own video-game players...
...Buruaga, the group's choirmaster, complains that the monks have earned a paltry $40,000 from it--hardly enough to patch the leaking roof over their medieval cloister. In response, the monks have followed the example of secular recording stars from time immemorial: they've switched labels. Their new CD, The Soul of Chant, was released last month by Milan Records, a smaller classical label...
According to Buruaga, Chant was a disenchanting experience for the monks even before it soared on the charts. First, EMI blundered by putting a painting of brown-robed Franciscan friars on the CD's cover instead of black-robed Benedictine monks-the ecclesiastical equivalent of putting a Yale man on the cover of the Harvard yearbook. Then, as Chant's sales took off, an overeager EMI executive flew to Silos to talk to the monks about a follow-up album. Suspicious of the machinery of stardom--and the private helicopter whirring overhead--the monks greeted the exec through a peephole...