Google rolled out a preview SDK for Android 3.0, offering developers the chance to write software on an OS intended for tablets such as Motorola’s Xoom. – Google Jan. 26 released a preview version of the software-development kit for Android 3.0, a new version of the company’s operating system that is intended for tablet computers and other devices with larger screens.
Android 3.0, code-named Honeycomb, offers users a new holographic user interface th…
Posts Tagged ‘preview’
Google Android 3.0 Preview SDK Ships for Tablets
Opera to Preview Touch Browser for Tablets at CES 2011
Opera Software will demonstrate the first public preview of its touch browser for tablets and netbooks at CES 2011. –
Opera Software plans to show off the first public preview
of its touch browser for tablet and netbook computers at the Consumer
Electronics Show 2011.
In a press advisory, Opera said its specialized browser
for tablets quot;provides users with the smoothest tablet and netbook
experience on t…
Google gives sneak preview of tablet running ‘Honeycomb Posted By : contador wanarua
Google is going to bring surprise for the gadget fans in coming 2011 and which has been a nicknamed as Honeycomb. Its all about an android platform based tablet build by Motorola which is supposed to compete with Apples ipad and others.
Microsoft Releases IE9 Platform Preview 7
Microsoft launches the seventh platform preview of its Internet Explorer 9 browser, which boasts a 345 percent improvement in JavaScript performance. – Exactly one year since it was first introduced at the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference 2009 (PDC), the software giant has announced the seventh Internet Explorer 9 Platform Preview.
With the new IE9 Platform Preview, Microsoft has
increased the JavaScript performance of the browser by…
Drive-By Truckers: Album Preview & 12/30 Show
GO-GO BOOTS OUT FEBRUARY 11
Drive-By Truckers have
unveiled a preview installment of “The Go- Go Boots Episodes”, a series of short films about the upcoming album
Go-Go Boots produced and directed by Jason Thrasher and Patterson
Hood.
The band has also announced a December 30 show at Brooklyn Bowl in Brooklyn NY. Tickets go on sale Wednesday,
November 17 and are only available to Terminal 5 NYE ticket holders. Buy your NYE tickets here. Tickets will go on sale to the public on Wednesday December 1 but
due to the small capacity at this intimate venue tickets are expected to go fast.
Drive-By Truckers
Tour Dates
::
Drive-By Truckers News
::
Drive-By Truckers
Concert
Reviews
Apple Plans iTunes Music Preview Increase
Apple plans to increase the length of iTunes music previews in the United States from 30 to 90 seconds. Apple is battling fiercely against Google Android, RIM and others. – Apple plans to increase the length of its iTunes music previews from 30 to
90 seconds for songs longer than 2 minutes 30 seconds, according to a new
online report.
quot;We are pleased to let you know we are preparing to increase the length
of music previews from 30 seconds to 90 seconds on the …
Voodoo Experience Preview
By: Wesley Hodges
Voodoo Experience :: 10.29.10-10.31.10 :: City Park :: New Orleans, LA
Check out the 2009 JamBase review of Voodoo here.
The calendar is aligned in rare form in 2010, giving weekend warriors five full weekends to fully enjoy the month of October, and with Voodoo fast approaching, there’s a supernatural mystic blowing through the air this week in the Big Easy. The Voodoo Experience, in its 12th year as JazzFest’s darker, funkier stepchild, will close down the month in grand fashion on Halloween night with MGMT, Deadmau5 and My Morning Jacket lighting up the City Park skies and leading a lively rousing of the spirits in New Orleans. With round-the-clock music on-site and around the city (Voodoo After Dark and Tipitina’s Uptown), there will be plenty of opportunities for fans to get their fill, starting with Friday’s dizzying array of artists slated to kick things off on the generally less crowded opening day.
As always, this year’s event offers an abundance of local fare (artists, performers and vendors dot the festival grounds) to compliment the Voodoo Eats area emanating olfactory goodness of a largely Cajun variety. Electronic fans will surely enjoy the spate of DJ’s (Paul Oakenfold, Deadmau5, Ferry Corsten and more) and bands with electronic leanings dotting the impressive lineup. Of course you’re not going to want to miss MGMT on Halloween, Ozzy or Muse headlining Night One, but we’re here to give you a heads-up on some of the lesser-known acts playing earlier in the day and a closer look at My Morning Jacket’s festival-headlining Halloween performance.
Friday, October 29
1. Stanton Moore Trio w/ Anders Osborne and Robert Walter :: Preservation Hall Tent :: 2:15-3:30 p.m.
The first of several super jams for the weekend. This set features a Swedish ex-pat swamp rocker (Osborne), a respected jazz/funk vet (Stanton Moore), and a Greyboy All-Star (Robert Walter). The diverse array of influences driving these three unique artists should make for a great show and a righteous kick-start to the weekend. It should also be noted that the same trio of Moore, Osborne and Walter made up the lineup for Anders Osborne’s impressive 2010 record American Patchwork. Stanton the scene staple, Walter the stalwart, and Osborne the rising star makes for an impressive promo poster and should be one helluva show.
2. Dead Confederate :: Voodoo Stage :: 4:30-5:30 p.m.
The dark, heavy, grunge-adelic sounds of this new-ish Georgia band should sound outstanding coming out of the main stage speakers. It will be exciting to see the band for the first time in a large festival setting. Known for their loud, ruthlessly intense live shows, this should be one of the strongest rock sets of the weekend. Dead Confederate, who are winding down a big year in support of their outstanding second album Sugar, signed on late for this one, and we’re mighty glad they did.
3. Jonsi :: Sony Make. Believe Stage :: 5:30-6:30 p.m.
The soothing and recognizable voice of Sigur Ros frontman Jonsi will prove tonic for those who make the quick turnaround after taking in the Dead Confederate set (the Voodoo Stage and Sony Stage are close to each other, set up on opposite sides of the track oval). Despite Jonsi’s main band being on hiatus this year, the Icelander has been touring fairly heavily in support of his surprisingly perky, long overdue Go album. This is potentially one of the more intriguing sets of the weekend.
ALSO: On the eve of the festival Soul Rebels Brass Band will be appearing at Le Bon Temps Roule. And Widespread Panic will be kicking off a three-night run at the UNO Lakefront Arena with Dumpstaphunk opening.
Late Night Recommendation: Galactic pulls double duty (and triple duty for drummer Stanton Moore). The locals will be playing for a half-hour before Muse takes the stage for their headlining set and then performing a late night show at Tipitina’s Uptown. The show will be recorded and released as a live record as a follow-up to 2001′s We Love ‘Em Tonight.
Continue reading for Saturday recommendations…
Saturday, October 30
1. Florence and the Machine :: Sony Make. Believe :: 6:00-7:00 p.m.
One of the few bright spots from this year’s MTV Video Music Awards, the young British rock ‘n’ soul sensation has really made a name for herself this year. Hopefully the set will include a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain” like earlier this year at the Glastonbury Festival.
2. Street Sweeper Social Club :: Sony Make. Believe Stage :: 8:00-9:00 p.m.
A rare performance by the rap-rock supergroup featuring Tom Morello and Boots Riley. No need to elaborate further to anyone with decent taste in music.
3. Theresa Andersson :: Preservation Hall :: 5:45-7:00 p.m.
A great chance to see an intimate performance by the uber-talented multi-instrumentalist artista. For those looking to beat the larger crowd over at the main stage(s), this will undoubtedly be a dazzling, virtuosic performance in a much smaller setting. Andersson, known for her looping one-woman show a la Keller Williams, moved to New Orleans from Sweden (along with Anders Osborne) as a teenager and has been making her mark as one of the city’s essential solo artists ever since. Also, around these parts, you never know when someone special may drop by for a sit-in.
ALSO: To satiate pure curiosity and intrigue, consider checking out South African rave-rappers Die Antwoord (6:15-7:15 p.m., Le Plur), a bizarre viral act that exploded earlier this year from a non-existent scene – South African Zef(?) – in large part due to the blogosphere. For your daily brass band fix, local favorites Rebirth Brass Band will be playing a midday set from 3:30-4:30 p.m. at the SoCo/WWOZ tent. The healthier, fitter festivarians may want to consider participating in the Jazz Half Marathon on Saturday morning in support of the Children’s Hospital before heading to City Park, although we’re guessing that if you aren’t already planning on running it’s probably too late.
Late Night Recommendation: Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue late night at Tipitina’s Uptown.
Continue reading for Sunday recommendations…
Sunday, October 31. Halloween
1. My Morning Jacket :: Voodoo Stage :: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Fresh off the weeklong, career-spanning retrospect at New York City’s Terminal 5, MMJ arrives in New Orleans (a city Yim Yames seems to be especially fascinated by in recent times) having played every single song from all five of the band’s albums proper, along with a rediscovery of a host of deep covers, b-sides and the like. What does that mean for fans at Voodoo? The chance to possibly see long-shelved, Halloween-leaning originals like “The Dark,” “I Think I’m Going to Hell,” the epic destroyer “Strangulation” and hopefully a few festive covers. Generally speaking, My Morning Jacket’s “specialty shows” have been the stuff of legend, from New Year’s Eve 2006 (one of JamBase’s Top 10 Moments of the 2000s) to the late nights at Bonnaroo in ’06 & ’08 to Prom Night at the 40 Watt in Athens, GA, these types of shows have all been career-defining performances. After five nights in New York and a homecoming show in Louisville on Friday night (first time in 2-plus years), this Voodoo performance, even with only two hours to play, is likely to be one folks will be talking about for years to come.
2. Janelle Monae :: Sony Make. Believe :: 1:15-2:15 p.m.
Yim Yames may not be the most animated, talented front-person performing at Voodoo on Halloween Sunday. After Monae’s electric midday performance summoned a thunderstorm in 2009, the festival has invited her back to City Park once again to share her talents. With the gusto of Tina Turner, the celestial weirdness of George Clinton and the experimental vision of her friends and collaborators Outkast, Monae has been turning heads nationwide on a tour in supporting of Montreal (with whom she has been sitting in on a handful of Michael Jackson covers). This is arguably the can’t-miss early afternoon set of the weekend. Monae’s song “Many Moons” has my vote for Voodoo’s unofficial anthem.
3. The Zydepunks :: Bingo! Tent :: 2:45-3:45 p.m.
With an extra hour on Saturday night to catch a little rest as the clocks “fall back,” there’s no excuse to not be energized, fully costumed and ready to go for “New Orleans’ Favorite Irish Cajun Jewish Punk Band” down at the Bingo! Tent. With a Dropkick Murphys level of raw energy and an assortment of influences on par with Gogol Bordello, some folks may leave this one with ears ringing but that 2:30 feeling will be a distant memory.
ALSO: The costume-watching on the vendors’ road is worth the price of admission on Sunday. Preservation Hall Jazz Band will be playing in their “home tent” set (at least for Voodoo) at 3:30 pm and Local WWOZ DJ Soul Sister and her Booty Patrol will be spinning J5-era funk at 8:30 pm in the Preservation Hall Tent. The New Orleans Saints will be playing the Pittsburgh Steelers at the Superdome for Sunday Night Football, and therefore the collision of the post-Saints game spill-out and the annual Halloween freak show down on Frenchman will be a sight for weary eyes after the festival spills out at 9:00 p.m.
If you have any more suggestions for Halloween weekend in New Orleans, feel free to share them in our comments section. Enjoy the weekend!
JamBase | Louisiana
Go See Live Music!
AMD Fusion APU Zactate Preview Planned Next Week
AMD is to preview its Fusion APU, codenamed Zacate, in San Francisco, while rival Intel plans an unveiling of its Sandy Bridge chip. – Chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices announced next week in San Francisco the company would
unveil the first North America public demonstrations of its Fusion
Accelerated Processing Unit, known as Zacate. The APU is a
dual-core, 18-watt TDP processor containing discrete-level graphics
capabilities o…
Life is good Festival Preview
By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate Editor
Life is good Festival :: 09.11.10-09.12.10 :: Prowse Farm:: Canton, MA
Good music, a good cause and a good attitude. What’s not to like about the inaugural Life is good Festival? Spring forth this coming weekend in Canton, Mass, a suburb of Boston, this event gathers together heavy hitters like Ben Harper & Relentless7, Ziggy Marley, Jason Mraz and Grace Potter and the Nocturnals to help raise much needed funds for the Life is good Kids Foundation, which aids children and their families with life-threatening ailments.
“The 2010 Life is good Festival at Blue Hills is a one-of-a kind event. No other festival in the country can offer the talent and entertainment experience that families and music fans alike will find at the 2010 Life is good Festival – all while helping to raise funds for kids facing life-threatening challenges,” said Bert Jacobs, Chief Executive Optimist for Life is good. “We have some of the very best performers coming together and we are going to have a great time while we raise more than $1 million dollars for the Life is good Kids Foundation.”
On top of being a positivity charged fine use of one’s dollars, this festival has some great musical talent over and above the top names. Here’s a few suggestions if you make your way to Blue Hills on Saturday and/or Sunday.
1. The Sippy Cups:: Saturday & Sunday :: 11:30 AM-12:30 PM :: “Good Kids” Stage
Kids music is largely a wretched hive of sub-par crapola (trust the parent of a 3-year-old boy), but Bay Area gems The Sippy Cups are fun, clever AND good musicians who don’t pander to kids so much as engage them in a cool way. The Cups open musical festivities both days and it’d be tough to start your ‘goodness’ on better footing – whether you have kids along or not!
2. Eli “Paperboy” Reed & The True Loves :: Saturday :: 12:30-1:15 PM :: “Life Is Good” Stage
Real soul music is making a small comeback in 2010, and this Massachusetts native is part of the cresting wave that’s bringing back the quality and vibe of vintage Motown, Stax/Volt, etc. but in a living, breathing way rather than a nostalgia exercise.
3. They Might Be Giants :: Saturday :: 2:30-3:30 PM :: “Good Kids” Stage
Speaking of kids music that doesn’t suck it sideways, TMBG have carved quite the nifty niche for themselves inside the Disney empire in recent years AND done so with real dignity – a trick the Mouse Factory makes VERY hard. Like Ween’s good-natured twin, the Giants are masters of all styles and know a hook when they find one. They also play on Sunday, 1:00-2:00 pm, on the same stage. Go and yell, “Istanbul!” at them and see what happens!
4. Toubab Krewe :: Sunday :: 1:15-2:30 PM :: “Good Vibes” Stage
Each time onstage is different yet consistently electrifying for audiences and players alike with Toubab Krewe, who dabble in a bit of this and that to mold something rhythmic, dense and engaging that’s as original as anything out there today.
5. Brett Dennen :: Sunday :: 4:45-5:45 PM :: “Good Vibes” Stage
A spot of sensitive singer-songwriter fare always goes down so, so well around sundown, and there’s not many better proponents of this stuff than Dennen. Grab a piece of grass, lay back and let him float you away on wings of song. Kinda corny but sounds nice, eh?
Life Is Good General Information
JamBase | Joyful
Go See Live Music!
Bumbershoot Preview
By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate Editor
Bumbershoot :: 09.04.10-09.06.10 :: Seattle Center :: Seattle, WA
As much a city-unifying cultural spectacle as a music fest, Bumbershoot plays up all the quirks and characteristics that make Seattle such a hyper-cool town while offering a smorgasbord of stage talent as well as comedy, film and more. Its name comes from a slang term for umbrellas, which seems appropriate given the locale’s notorious rep for wetness. Bumbershoot takes place on a 74-acre site originally built for the 1962 World’s Fair, and has been running annually since 1970, making this installment the 40th anniversary. Big names on the bill this year include Bob Dylan, Hole, Jenny & Johnny, The English Beat and The Decemberists. Here are a few other acts on this year’s lineup that’ll brighten your Labor Day Weekend at the Seattle Center.
1. Plants and Animals :: Saturday :: 12:45-2:00 PM :: Green Vibes Stage
A true original in the rock world, Plants and Animals take the raw ingredients familiar to all and mix them up in a way that renews faith in the genre. Like kindred spirits The Slip and Apollo Sunshine, this band approaches their music with a level of craftsmanship and empathetic instinct that is truly impressive. They are currently on tour behind one of the great sleeper releases of 2010, La La Land, which listeners with good taste are encouraged to explore post-haste.
2. Justin Townes Earle :: Saturday :: 4:55-6:00 PM :: Starbucks Stage
Not so much a chip off the old block, Steve Earle’s son is happy extension of the line begun by Woody Guthrie and his namesake Townes Van Zandt, a true songwriter’s songwriter and boot leather slaying troubadour. Justin is full of tics and scars all his own, too, which makes his work more compelling with each passing year.
3. Horse Feathers :: Sunday :: 1:15-2:15 PM :: Starbucks Stage
Delicate things and ideas who elude easy phrasing soar in this folk-slanted quiet-rock unit, who seem to go from strength to strength with each release and subsequent tour.
4. Billy Bragg :: Saturday :: 8:30-9:45 PM :: Starbucks Stage
For decades has fought the good fight for the right causes AND made a mountain of great music in the process. Rarely has a politics and social justice ever had such a hugely romantic champion. The struggle for connection, be it on a grand scale or one hand cradling another, is at the center of Bragg’s oeuvre. Don’t miss a chance to see one of the few guys doing what Joe Strummer once did. He’s also a masterful storyteller, as this clip shows.
5. Trampled By Turtles :: Monday :: 1:15-2:30 PM :: Starbucks Stage
We’ve pushed TBT before, but we really think that Dave Simonett is one of the emerging young Americana songwriters out there, and the whole damn band picks with a finger-bleeding intensity and nimble skill that bowls one over live. They’re also really smart, nice guys, and that rates in our book. After catching two bracing sets at High Sierra, we’re more convinced than ever that these Turtles are picking up speed fast.
6. The Moondoggies :: Monday :: 5:00-6:15 PM :: Starbucks Stage
With a harmony sense that harks back to Crosby & Nash, a gospel sprinkled songbook, focused playing and an all-in energy that compares well with Delta Spirit and Dr. Dog, Seattle’s The Moondoggies are ripe for much wider discovery. Their debut floored a bunch of us (JamBase review), and their follow-up, Tidelands, arrives October 12. And kids, we’ve heard it already and it’s freakin’ awesome!
Bumbershoot General Information
JamBase | Pacific Northwest
Go See Live Music!
Microsoft ‘Vail,’ ‘Aurora’ Server Builds Are Now in Preview
Microsoft has released preview builds of its "Vail" Windows Home Server, as well as its "Aurora" Windows Small Business Server. "Aurora" emphasizes cloud interoperability, which plays into Microsofts larger cloud strategy. – Microsoft has released preview builds of its Windows Home
Server, codenamed Vail, and its Windows Small Business Server, codenamed Aurora.
The new Vail build adds native support for Mac OS, and can be
downloaded here. Other features include improved multi-PC backup and
restore, simplified setup…
Outside Lands 2010 Preview
By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate
Editor
Outside Lands :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco,
CA
For the third year in a row, Outside Lands will sprawl over the lush, rolling
landscape of iconic Golden Gate Park in a contemporized Golden State happening that
combines good music, fine wine and a distinctly West Coast sensibility. The organizers
wisely trimmed this from a three-day to a two-day festival and contracted the overall
hours a bit, too, starting later and ending earlier to accommodate the public
transportation needs of the vast majority of attendees. Once through the gates, this is a
classy, big city festival with quality headliners Furthur
(Saturday) and Kings of Leon (Sunday) alongside fest staples My Morning Jacket
(Saturday) and Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley (Sunday). This year will also introduce
the DJ/dance music Inspire area for those that must boogie, day or night. As for
the rest, we’ve cherry picked three sets from each day that should prick up your ears.
Saturday, August 14
1. The Whigs ::
12:00-12:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage
There’s not a great deal of four-to-the-floor rock in this year’s assortment, with most of
the rollers tending towards alternative modern rather than bitchin’ Camaro in tone.
Athens, GA stalwarts The Whigs should set things on a fine trajectory for folks who start
their musical dance card with them on Saturday, peppering their more refined recent work
with messy outbursts full of flying hair, sweat and snarled spit as the music rips from
them in a fantastically real way.
</center
2. Levon Helm
Band :: 3:45-4:35 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage
Seriously, what’s going on that could stop any serious music aficionado from spending a
little under an hour sitting at the heel of one of The Band’s co-founders and ostensibly
the spiritual keeper of that landmark group’s flame? No disrespect intended to anyone
else playing at this time but Helm is history. This is a time when many young people think
rock started with Nirvana and some of those bands their parents listen to. Levon helped
draft a blueprint that countless artists are still building upon, and while we’ve still
got the man it behooves us to give a listen whenever he hits a stage. Don’t be surprised
to see a gaggle of his fellow performers lurking in the wings during this set.
</center
3. Wild Beasts
:: 7:55-8:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage
While most will be nestled into the Dead-y fog over at Furthur (7:25-9:55 PM – Lands End
Stage) or gettin’ popped NYC style at The Strokes (8:45-9:55 PM – Twin Peaks Stage), this emergent U.K. act
will be spinning webs of their own. Only two albums in and Wild Beasts have something of
their own brewing, and while it touches upon Echo & The Bunnymen, Stone Roses and other
countrymen past, their sound is flecked with original bits and an unforced swoon that’s
pretty dang neat.
</center
Sunday, August 15
1. Mayer Hawthorne
& The County :: 1:30-2:10 PM :: Sutro Stage
The luscious strains of Curtis Mayfield, vintage Motown and Hall & Oates flow inside the
very easy to like grooves of Hawthorne and his large ensemble. This borders on nostalgia
but works nonetheless, maybe partially because Hawthorne looks all the part of a Buddy
Holly impersonator yet digs down deep for his heapingly satisfying blue-eyed soul.
</center
2. Garage A
Trois :: 4:30-5:10 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage
Four improvisational superheroes – Mike Dillon (percussion, muscle), Skerik
(saxophonics, general weirdness), Marco Benevento (keys, beard) and Stanton
Moore (drums, mojo) – with ZERO fear and the curiosity of Peter Pan with a snoot full
o’ pixie snuff equals pure adventure music. Yes, Garage has compositions – some good
ones, too – but live all bets are off, no matter how many times one has seen them or
thinks they know what to expect. The unknown can be scary but it can also be way
cool. Garage A Trois is surely both.
</center
3. Social
Distortion :: 6:55-7:45 PM :: Sutro Stage
Without always getting the name recognition they deserve, Social D has influenced a couple
generations of young rockers to do it hard, true and to tell their story, whatever
it may be. Mike Ness and co. are what punk looks like when it grows up but not
old. Go get an eyeful of the real deal amidst the tie-dye and yummy pinot.
</center
JamBase
2009 Outside Lands Review
JamBase | By The Bay
Go See Live Music!
Microsoft Delivers Final Peek at IE9 Preview Before September Beta
Microsoft has made key improvements to its next-generation browser in the fourth and final platform preview of the Internet Explorer 9 technology prior to its beta release. Improvements include integrating the "Chakra" JavaScript engine into the IE9 browser. – Leading
up to a beta version of Internet Explorer (IE) 9 in September, Microsoft
has released another Platform Preview of the browser that features native
JavaScript integration, hardware-accelerated HTML5 and much improved Acid3
scores, among other enhancements.
At
the Microsoft Financial …
Gathering of the Vibes Preview
By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate Editor
Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.29.10-08.01.10 :: Seaside Park :: Bridgeport, CT
Once again the pilgrimage to the Vibes begins as folks gather along the Connecticut shoreline to enjoy headliners including Primus, Furthur, Robert Randolph & The Family Band and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley & Nas. With Wavy Gravy as colorful MC, this weekend is filled with two stages packed with some of the best the jam world has to offer. Here’s five recommendations beyond the big names to consider if you’ll be Vibin’ it in the days ahead.
1. Hot Day At The Zoo :: Thursday :: 12:45-2:00 PM :: Green Vibes Stage
Put directly, Hot Day is one of the best string bands out there. Full of feisty energy, wicked chops, increasingly together songwriting and a good nose for covers, New England-based HDATZ offer a slightly sophisticated take on country comfort with no small measure of individual personality to boot. Well worth having your campsite set up early so you can attend and fully get into it with the Zoo.
2. Leroy Justice :: Thursday :: 4:15-5:30 PM :: Green Vibes Stage
One of NYC’s finest, classic-minded outfits should be the perfect score to get your first solid drunk on for the weekend. There’s something raw ‘n’ real about Leroy Justice that makes a person want to bend an elbow and get down into the muck with ‘em. Anyone with a sweet tooth for Black Crowes style meat ‘n’ taters rock – especially from guys who write way above par original material and deliver it with significant muscle and flair – are in for a treat this Thursday. Leroy Justice also put out one of the great sleepers of 2009 called The Loho Sessions, which was produced by mixing board maestro John Siket. Read the JamBase rave here.
3. Jackie Greene :: Friday :: 1:40-3:10 PM :: Main Stage
Bay Area boy Greene is on a pretty hot roll right now. His new album, Till The Light Comes (see review here), is an end-to-end corker, his band is tight, he’s grown into one of the strongest interpreters of the Dead catalog around, and his beard is coming in nicely. Greene is quality bang for your buck, and with Furthur on the festival grounds the same day chances of a Phil sit-in are pretty decent.
4. Assembly of Dust :: Saturday :: 2:40-4:10 PM :: Main Stage
AOD’s tunes have the quality of fantastic lost singles – easy to dig right away and better loved with repetition – and the band plays with a level of care and technical dexterity that’s rare today. Assembly’s whole aura draws one in and reminds one of an era when real musicians with genuine artistry made pop music. If radio weren’t the corporate wasteland it is then AOD’s music would already be bumping shoulders with Tom Petty, Sheryl Crow and the other mainstays on the FM dial. However, folks can enjoy their craftsmanship on a sunny Saturday at the Vibes and imagine how much better the airwaves would be with AOD on them.
5. Martin Sexton with the Ryan Montbleau Band :: Sunday :: 3:25-4:40 PM :: Main Stage
Sexton’s new album, Sugarcoating, is perhaps his most tuneful and readily appealing song cycle to date. So it makes a certain cosmic sense for him to hook up with Montbleau and his populist leaning crew. What’s in store is an hour and change filled with fleshed out, nicely rockin’ pop with tasty covers from the likes of Zeppelin and The Beatles. And by Sunday afternoon this might be just the ticket to get you to the finish line for Vibes 2010.
Gathering of the Vibes Music Schedule
Gathering of the Vibes Directions
Gathering of the Vibes Official Site
JamBase review of 2009 Gathering of the Vibes
JamBase | Seaside
Go See Live Music!
Microsoft Windows Phone 7 Reaches Technical Preview
Microsoft is releasing a build of Windows Phone 7 to developer partners, as the smartphone operating system inches toward release. Microsoft has been testing Windows Phone 7 internally for months. – Microsoft is announcing that Windows Phone 7 has reached its
“technical preview” milestone. Developer partners will now have the chance to
test the upcoming smartphone operating system, due later this year. The
announcement comes a week after Microsoft released its Windows
Phone Developer Tools …
Dead Confederate: Free Download Preview of New Album, Tour
A JAMBASE FAVE RETURNS WITH NEW ALBUM IN AUGUST
Dead Confederate will return with their sophomore album, Sugar, on August 24th via TAO Recordings/Old Flame. Sugar was recorded by John Agnello (The Hold Steady, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr.) and as Dead Confederate’s Hardy Morris (guitar/lead vocals) explains, “We’re a loud, big-sounding band, and wanted the album to be fun and creative – instead of just recording the songs. It’s not like we decided we couldn’t have anything grungy or heavy; that’s just not all that we’re interested in. You can listen to the record a bunch of different ways. What we were doing felt right.”
In support of Sugar‘s release, Dead Confederate will be hitting the road, including dates with Deer Tick and a Bumbershoot after party with Surfer Blood.
More fall dates to be announced very soon.
Dead Confederate Tour Dates % – with Deer Tick
07.09.10 – Louisville, KY – Forecastle Festival
07.10.10 – Chattanooga, TN – Rhythm & Brews
07.23.10 – Augusta, GA – Sky City
07.24.10 – Savannah, GA – The Jinx
07.25.10 – Charlotte, NC – Visulite Theatre %
07.27.10 – Orlando, FL – The Social %
07.29.10 – Tampa, FL – Crowbar %
07.30.10 – Tallahassee, FL – Engine Room %
07.31.10 – Atlanta, GA – Buckhead Theater %
08.01.10 – Nashville, TN – Exit/In %
08.03.10 – Oxford, MS – Proud Larry’s %
08.04.10 – Memphis, TN – Hi-Tone Cafe %
08.05.10 – St. Louis, MO – Off Broadway %
08.28.10 – Austin, TX – The Mohawk – KUT’s Red River on the Rocks Festival
09.05.10 – Seattle, WA – Bumbershoot After Party at Hard Rock $
09.17.10 – Telluride, CO – Telluride Brews & Brews Festival
$ – with Surfer Blood
Microsoft Delivers New IE 9 Preview with Canvas and HTML5 Video, Audio
Microsoft delivers a new preview version of Internet Explorer 9 (IE 9), the next major release of the companys dominant Web browser featuring support for the HTML Canvas tag and more. – Microsoft has delivered a new preview version of Internet Explorer 9 (IE 9),
the next major release of the company’s dominant Web browser featuring support
for the HTML Canvas tag and more.
This release, known as IE 9 Platform Preview 3 (IE 9 PP3), is the third update
of Microsoft’s IE 9 preview…
Bonnaroo 2010 Preview
By: Wesley
Hodges
![]() Bonnaroo 2009 by Snyder |
Like the festivals that helped inspire its unique existence (Jazz Fest and Glastonbury),
the Bonnaroo Music
& Arts Festival has so much more to offer than just the music. This year’s 9th annual
event takes place
from June 10-13 in Manchester, TN in Great Stage Park, and will once again draw 70-80,000
of the biggest music
fiends you’ll find anywhere. Hell, you have to be half-crazy to pay money to endure this
kind of heat, but
coming from someone who’s been to all but one Bonnaroo, I can tell you that this year’s
king of American music
festivals, like all previous editions, will be well worth the trip. Let JamBase tell you
why with our list of
12 Must-See-Daytime-Bands, a run-down of late-night suggestions, and a few hints as to who
to see and what to
do in many of Centeroo’s smaller cafes and activity centers.
As in 2006, the event promoters have shaken things up with the event’s first real
rap headliner (Jay-Z), the
youngest band to ever
headline (Kings of
Leon), as
well as a certain well-coiffed red-headed (unemployed) comedy icon MC’ing one of the main
stages and the
welcome addition of an all-night Lunar Stage devoted entirely to electronic
music.
On paper, the 2010 edition reads like a synthesis of the last eight years with no musical
styling or amenity
unturned. Although one might not exactly be boiling over with excitement about some of
the bands at the top of
the bill, as always, there are infinitely more bands and activities than one could
physically be there to
enjoy. That right there is what makes a festival on the scale of Bonnaroo so enjoyable.
The phrase “to each
his own” captures the pioneering spirit of the Bonnaroo fan, and this festival is every
bit as much about
that person who makes it down to the front row to join the ruckus at The Melvins as it
is for that dude
hundreds of feet away getting chills at his first Stevie Wonder show or the girl who drags her boyfriend kicking and
screaming out of the
tent to catch the early Ingrid
Michaelson show (and that guy then tells his girl, off-the-record, of course, that
he kinda dug it).
The beauty of it all is that these people all get to coexist in a bizarro escapist utopia
and live out their
musical dreams amongst friends. So, saddle up and take our suggestions at face value,
because after all, as a
wise spray painter once tagged, “The Roo You Take = The Roo You Make.”
Thursday, June 10
Over the course of four days and some very late nights on two big stages, three decent
size tents, and several
smaller cafe like settings, a movie theatre and a comedy tent, Bonnaroo will feature
around 160 artists. This
list can’t even begin to cover a fraction of the talent on display this weekend, but it is
our hope that
artists highlighted here help you uncover a lesser-known, an up-and-comer, or perhaps help
you make a tough
decision at a certain time slot. Instead of giving love to well known headliners we adore
like Stevie
Wonder, Jeff Beck or The Flaming Lips, we’re going to direct your
attention to a few bands
you weren’t perhaps planning to see. You can check out the entire Bonnaroo schedule here.
1. Baroness ::
5:45-6:45 pm :: The
Other Tent
For those set up to get down early, these ferociously sharp South Georgia metal warriors
might just blow your
mind wide open right from the first licks of “A Horse Called Golgotha”. The band’s highly
acclaimed Blue
Record has brought them into the limelight, and with a stop at Coachella this year
already under their
belt, you’ll be seeing a lot of these guys on the festival circuit for years to come.
2. Local
Natives :: 7:00-8:00 pm ::
That Tent
Gorilla Manor may be the strongest, most accessible indie rock album to come out in
the last year, and
these guys made a name for themselves after wowing the masses at this year’s SXSW. Local
Natives should be a
nice change of pace for those who check out Baroness, and the lustrous vocal harmonizing
should beam out nicely
under the setting Tennessee sun. Those not familiar with the band should check out their
cover of the Talking
Heads “Warning Sign” that made it on the band’s debut album, along with the excellent “Sun
Hands”.
3. Miike Snow
:: 7:30-8:30 pm. ::
This Tent
A little baffled that this one didn’t get a slot after sunset, but nonetheless the DJ duo
has made a name for
themselves under the moniker of Miike Snow and this one will likely be the first of
several hot, raucous and
youthful get-downs at this year’s festival.
Other Suggestions
If you arrive before the music gets cracking in the main tents, don’t miss dexterously-
gifted Australian guitar
wunderkind Joe
Robinson (age
19), who is playing as well as attending his first Bonnaroo. Robinson told JamBase, “I
can’t wait for the
always fun challenge of winning over a new audience.” Having already wowed over the likes
of Steve Vai and the
late great Les Paul with his uniquely outstanding talent, we can confidently say that a
trip down to the
Troo Music Lounge at 1:00 p.m. would be the perfect way to start the weekend. For
those who can’t make
it, Robinson told us he’d be picking with his buddies, the Nashville jam band Elmwood on
Saturday in the Troo Music
Lounge.
Also, Thursday night has always been the best night to go exploring all this ephemeral
Tennessee utopian
acreage has to offer. So, spread your wings, grab a comfortable chair, meet your
neighbors, and set up shop
for a big weekend.
Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Friday…
Friday, June 11
1. Dr. Dog ::
4:00-5:15 pm :: The
Other Tent
The prolific Philly-based vintage rockers just released their sixth excellent full-length
album in less than
ten years back in April. Shame, Shame is a little more polished production-wise,
and the boys bring the
guitars to the forefront this go-round following 2008′s harmony-heavy Fate. A
summertime day set with
these festival scene staples should be nothing short of spiritual and will likely summon
those “Shadow People”
out from the woodworks that bassist/vocalist Toby Leaman sings about on the band’s
new tune. With the
new album peaking at #44 on the Billboard charts, these guys are finally getting the
recognition they’ve
deserved for a few years now.
2. Edward Sharpe &
The Magnetic
Zeros :: 2:30-3:30 pm :: The Other Tent
Founded by vocalist Alex Ebert previously of the late-90s L.A. pop band Ima Robot,
these guys flew onto
the radar in a big way with the commercial success of their single “Home” and the recent
appearance of
“Janglin’” in a Ford commercial. The folk-psych tunes and communal vibe of the ensemble
(boasting 10-plus
members at any given time) will hopefully bring back a little taste of the Old
Bonnaroo, even if just
for an hour.
3. Trombone Shorty
& Orleans Avenue
:: 12:00-1:00 pm : Which Stage
At the age of 24, Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews is already a well-known artist in large
part to his recent
appearances on the hit HBO show Treme (where he plays himself) and vocal approval
by the likes of Bono.
Born and raised in the Treme, Andrews has been entertaining fans in the Big Easy since
he’s been barely old
enough to walk. Andrews and his band is more than your standard New Orleans jazz show.
We highly recommend
you start your Friday at the Which Stage (you know, the one with the bobble heads).
Friday’s Late Night Picks
The Black Keys
:: 12:00-1:30 am ::
That Tent / Galactic :: 2:00-3:30 am. :: The Other Tent
Lots and lots of great choices on what is generally the apex of the weekend. On Friday,
you’ve still got fresh
legs and the ability to go all night long and this year’s late-night lineup is as stacked
across the board as
it’s ever been, and with The Flaming Lips doing Dark Side, Daryl Hall & Chromeo and the
dance party that will
surely ensue at LCD
Soundsystem,
you can’t go wrong anywhere. But our pick is to check out The Black Keys playing in That
Tent and then head on
over to Galactic down at The Other Tent. Galactic’s legendary 2005 epic late night
Krewe de Carnivale
indicated what these guys are capable of when given the limelight of the after midnight
show. Even though
these guys have been out on the road for about 15 years now, they proved this year during
Mardi Gras at
Tipitina’s that they can still make magic well past the break of dawn. Bassist Robert
Mercurio gave JamBase an
idea of what’s in store for the Galactic set.
“We’re bringing in some extra production lighting-wise. It’s gonna be our most
extravagant light show and
stage set-up that we’ve ever done. We really just decided that we’re gonna go over-the-
top this year. We’re
excited to see it, too; we haven’t really seen it either,” laughs Mercurio. “Our Lighting
Director has been
working hard on it and programming it and it should be really a spectacle beyond what
you’ve ever seen from a
Galactic show. We’ll have Corey Henry
and Cyril Neville
with us at the
Bonnaroo show like we’ve had on the entire Ya-Ka-May tour.”
Other Suggestions For Friday
Go see Steve
Martin & the Steep Canyon
Rangers tear it up at the
acoustic-based Sonic Stage from 2:15-2:45 p.m.
If you are rolling along towards the break of dawn, head down to the Lunar Stage where a
bumpin’ club scene
will be spinnin’ wild from 2-6 a.m. at Crystal Method and Lee Burbridge.
Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Saturday…
Saturday, June 12
1. Dave Rawlings
Machine :: 3:15-
4:30 pm :: That Tent
Most are probably familiar with Dave’s wife and Bonnaroo veteran Gillian Welch,
but this flat-picking
lyrical genius is finally getting his day in the sun with the long overdue release of his
debut A Friend of
A Friend last year and a nice mid-afternoon slot at this year’s ‘Roo. Rawlings has
played guitar in
Welch’s band for years and the roles are being reversed this time. The energetic, free-
wheeling live shows are
always full of surprises and the only time I got the chance to see him Norah Jones stopped
in for a tune and
the show closed with an impromptu “Friend of the Devil > Just Like Heaven > Friend of the
Devil” that I think
even left the musicians themselves a little surprised. Definitely got that wholesome
Carter-and-Cash kind of
good feelings vibe.
2. Mumford &
Sons :: 5:00-6:00 pm
:: That Tent
With Mumford following Dave Rawlings Machine and John Prine following them, one could just camp out by That Tent
for the afternoon and
do just fine. These Londoners have quickly made a name for themselves in 2010 with a
reputation for incredible
live performances following them around the globe. After hearing their excellent album
Sigh No More,
we’re hopeful this will still be a well-kept secret (if there is such a thing at Bonnaroo)
and a great chance
to get a decent spot up front. Also, we have a feeling that “Dustbowl Dance” is gonna
stir up the crowd in a
big way.
3. Jimmy Cliff :: 3:30-5:00 pm :: Which Stage
Even though he’s a world-renowned, generation-spanning artist, Cliff seems to fly under-
the-radar with a lot of
twenty-somethings and younger. That’s a shame because Cliff is one of the most soulful
foundational reggae
artists ever. In most circles, Cliff is best known for his 1975 hit single “The Harder
They Come” and a cover
of “I Can See Clearly Now” from the Cool Runnings soundtrack, but there’s far more
to this legend than
those soundbites. Come see for yourself.
Saturday’s Late Night Picks
Thievery
Corporation :: 12:00-2:15
a.m. :: That Tent
The downbeat international collective headed by the production duo of Eric Garza
and Eric Hilton
bring their ethereal club grooves to the Manchester late night scene for the first time
and it’s a mystery why
it took this long to happen. These guys reportedly stole the show at 2006′s one-off Echo
Project and dropped a
fire late night show at the House of Blues at last year’s Lollapalooza. This one’s a
can’t miss pick.
GWAR :: 2:30-3:45 a.m. :: The Other Tent
Sometimes there are no words to sufficiently express a thing. Just watch the clip below
and imagine yourself
on the front lines of this craziness.
Other Suggestions For Saturday
They’ll be showing the World Cup opening match between the good ole Red, White, & Blue vs.
England at the Lunar
Stage starting at 1:30 p.m. Enormously important soccer game at a music festivalÂ…things
could get rowdy.
The snide, fast-talking Aziz Ansari of Funny People and Parks and
Recreation notoriety
will be doing stand-up in the Comedy Theatre from 6:00-7:15 p.m. Shouts of
“RAAAAAAAAAAAANNNNDY” will be not
be in short supply. Ansari’s recent comedy album Intimate Moments for a Sensual
Evening even included a
track called “Bonnaroo,” so you know he’s been around this block before.
The Silent Disco: First made popular in the European club scene, be sure to hit up the
Silent Disco over near
The Other Tent at any point of the day or night, for any amount of time, and you’ll be
glad you stopped in at
this fun mashup club scene. Always an invigorating AND disorienting experience.
Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Sunday…
Sunday, June 13
1. Worst Conflict of the Week :: 4:00-6:30 pm :: What, Which, This, That & The
Other Stages
It happens every year, and 2010 is no different, at one point there will be at least two,
three, or even four,
must-see acts playing at the same time, and this year there are FIVE! This weekend, the
crossover occurs late
Sunday afternoon. Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman/60s icon John Fogerty
(What Stage :: 4:00-5:30
p.m.) has still got it, and his familiar voice still sounds like its beaming out of
an AM radio. This
year he’ll be making his Bonnaroo debut on the main stage (he’s also an extremely
underrated guitar player).
Also, from 5:00-6:30 p.m., Ween
will be playing over on Which Stage. We don’t have to tell you to at least stop in. The
set which should
perhaps spark the most curiosity out of this quintet would have to be aggressive Boston
rockers Dropkick Murphys
(This Tent :: 5:00-
6:15 p.m.), who have promised to scare off the hippies with their aggressive, bag-piping
brand of punk rock.
Should be interesting to see a band even try to get a dog-tired Bonnaroo crowd riled up on
late Sunday
afternoon. Next, the all-time great tunesmith Kris Kristofferson will be in That Tent from 4:30-6:00 p.m., and
things will likely get
legendary. Finally, you’ve got the campy, cheeky post-punk rockers They Might Be
Giants over in The Other
Tent from 4:30-5:45 p.m. to make the decision even tougher. Guess there could be worst
choices to make.
2. Phoenix ::
7:15-8:45 pm :: Which
Stage
One of better live acts currently touring, if there is one band that can bring back the
crowd-surfing, sing-
along, Glastonbury-type scene one last time before DMB closes it out it’s these Versailles
rockers who
established themselves in 2009 as a force to be reckoned with in popular music with the
release of the aptly-
named Grammy-winning album Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. Phoenix’s brilliantly crafted
rock songs are as
catchy as they are sophisticated, and a lot of up-and-coming synth-y indie bands should
take note of Phoenix’s
subdued usage of the synthesizer – just the right amount in just the right places without
overdoing
it.
3. Medeski Martin &
Wood :: 6:15-
7:45 pm :: The Other Tent
Kinda weird, but also kinda nice to see MMW playing at the festival’s smallest of the
major venues. Those
looking to get a head start on the traffic out before the Dave Matthews Band are gonna
wanna stick around for
one last blowout with these uber-talented jazz pioneers and who, along with Les Claypool,
DJ Logic, Umphrey’s
McGee, John Butler Trio, Galactic, Ween and Norah Jones, make up the returning alumni from
the Bonnaroo charter
class of 2002.
No one lucky enough to attend the inaugural Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in 2002
could’ve foreseen the great
transformation and amazing growth that the event has undergone in its first nine years.
However, the seed for
growth and constant evolution was planted in the early planning stages of the first
edition of the festival.
The early focus of the event was centered mostly on musically boundless genres, with
programming largely
revolving around improvisational jam bands, bluegrass, jazz, DJ’s, funk and New Orleans
music. The creators
had a simple mission and that was to recreate the round-the-clock experience of Jazz Fest
with the late night
shows, food, and lagniappe, but instead of requiring hotels, the vision of Bonnaroo was to
create a small,
sustainable city for four days in the middle of nowhere in the dead of summer and invite
the world’s finest
bands to master the ceremonies. The crazy thing is that thus far the wildly risky
experiment has paid off in
spades, producing some of the most indescribably enjoyable times most folks will ever
have. Bring an open
mind, see at least one act you’ve never heard of each day, and be kind to your camping
neighbors and they’ll do
the same. Good luck and good times on the good road to Bonnaroo 2010!
Continue reading for Wesley Hodges’ special Bonus Feature of Bonnaroo “A Timeline
Through The Years”…
A Timeline Through The Years
2002: The inaugural festival sells out 70,000 tickets well in advance without the
use of traditional
advertising methods, relying on word-of-mouth and far exceeding the promoters’
expectations. Widespread Panic
plays one of its final
concerts with late guitarist Michael Houser. Galactic‘s Robert Mercurio described the first ‘Roo as having
“something special
about it, because people questioned how you can get 80,000 people in the woods and no one
get hurt. It was
unprecedented to have anything like that in the U.S.” moe. plays a marathon late night set featuring special guests from
The String Cheese
Incident, Umphrey’s McGee, The Disco Biscuits,
and Robert Randolph.
They would later be
recognized for the show with a Jammy Award for “Concert of the Year”.
2003: James Brown, Bob
Dylan and Neil Young & Crazy Horse appear at the festival. Stages and
tents renamed What,
Which, This, That, and the Other, confusing Bonnaroo attendees ever since.
2004: Two vicious electrical storms followed by an abnormally cold summer night at
The Dead‘s set
blow through Manchester causing several delays and turning Centeroo into a mud pit. Sets
by Steve
Winwood, a late night Umphrey’s McGee set, David Byrne and the
resurgence of the The
Dead were highlights of the fest.
2005: Temperate weather and amazing late night sets by Galactic and Sound Tribe Sector
9 highlighted the
’05 edition. The Cinema Tent debuts showing Mike Tyson’s embarrassing 7-round TKO loss to
Kevin McBride as
chilled-out festival patrons enjoy the tent’s air conditioning.
2006: Mysterious smoke rings begin appearing in the Manchester skies and a turning
of the tides begins.
At the time, the addition of the iconic Radiohead was seen as a huge transition for the previously jam-
centric festival, but
this was just the beginning of a new era. Radiohead would play the longest show of their
career and one that
Thom Yorke still considers to be perhaps the band’s best. G.R.A.B. (Trey,
Mike & The Duo) are
the surprise Superjam late night act and are joined by Phil Lesh for a few songs,
including “Going Down
the Road Feelin’ Bad.”
2007: The polarizing psychedelic hard rockers Tool are invited to headline, perplexing/angering Bonnaroo
veterans and hippies. Many
of these same fans go to the show and most become Tool fans. The Flaming Lips‘
Wayne Coyne
lands his spaceship, distributes thousands of laser pointers and waxes on about the war in
Iraq to thousands of
starry-eyed fans. The String Cheese Incident play Which Stage late Friday as part
of their Farewell
Tour.
2008: “FUCK KANYE” becomes a rallying cry after rapper Kanye West
lobbies to get his “Glow in
the Dark Tour” headlining set rescheduled to 2:45 a.m. and subsequently doesn’t take the
stage until 4:30 a.m.
amidst twilight and boos. My Morning
Jacket plays a cover-heavy set in the driving rain and almost no one leaves until
the show’s completion
at 4:00 a.m. MMJ are joined by Jeff Coffin, Kirk Hammett and Zach
Galifianakis, among
others. “Best show ever” is a common sentiment amongst attendees (including yours
truly).
2009: A dream fest for many, Phish finally headlines the festival playing a late night show on
the main stage on
Friday and closing out the festival on Sunday with Bruce Springsteen joining the band for “Mustang Sally,” “Bobby
Jean”and “Glory Days.”
Nine Inch Nails, moe., Yeasayer,
and MGMT
highlight one of the
best late nights in the festival’s history on Saturday.
Join JamBase next week when we’ll have pictures and insights from the ‘Roo!
JamBase | Manchester
Go See Live Music!
AVIcode to Preview Silverlight Monitoring at Microsoft TechEd 2010
AVIcode, a provider of real-time, always-on application monitoring solutions, plans to preview its upcoming monitoring capabilities for Microsoft Silverlight at the upcoming Microsoft Tech Ed North America 2010 event in New Orleans. – AVIcode, a provider of real-time, always-on application monitoring
solutions, plans to preview its upcoming monitoring capabilities
for Microsoft Silverlight at the upcoming Microsoft Tech Ed North
America 2010 event in New Orleans.
AVIcode will preview its Silverlight monitoring technology d…




