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SAN FRANCISCO (Business 2.0 Magazine) -- Amazon.com is spending heavily to build a digital-download business - and that has investors worried, as it prepares to take on Apple, the undefeated champion of online music, in a fight over online movies.
But don't underestimate Amazon (Charts) - these combatants may be more evenly matched than you think. And whoever prevails in this fight, anyone who'd like to watch a movie without a trip to the video rental store or the wait for a Netflix envelope in the mail is set to win - in just a few weeks.
Amazon has long been rumored to be developing both a digital music and video service to compete with Apple's iTunes. Now, a report in Advertising Age suggests that Amazon is having second thoughts about competing in music but is ready to launch a movie and TV download service in mid-August.
A head-to-head contest between Amazon and Apple for supremacy over digital movies could be the biggest thriller of the summer. No one's yet made a very big business from selling movie downloads over the Internet, but both Amazon and Apple have a good shot at it, and for very different reasons.
Apple's advantage is obvious: Through iTunes, it already dominates the legal music download market. It would be relatively straightforward for the company to add movies to the TV shows and other videos it already hawks online.
One of the main reasons iTunes is so successful is because Apple devotes most of its sizeable marketing budget to it and the iPod. Expect more of the same with any movie download service: Apple can tie in marketing of its video iPod to any new movie offerings.
But being the biggest retailer on the Web comes with advantages. Since it already does a brisk business selling Hollywood's DVDs, Amazon has negotiating power with the studios. It has a better chance than most upstarts in persuading studios to release movies online at the same time that they make them available on DVD.
If the price is right, though, this might not be such an Achilles heel. Most movies you don't watch over and over again the way you might listen to a music album repeatedly, and consumers are used to renting movies already.
On the marketing front, Amazon can direct its considerable Web traffic to its digital video service the day it launches. With millions of people going through its online store every day, it could easily start promoting digital downloads of movies to that captive audience.
Apple may seem to have an advantage with the video iPod, which it can make sure works well with any movie download service it launches. But Steve Jobs himself has dismissed the notion of watching two-hour-long videos on a small screen that you have to hold in your hand. People prefer to watch movies on big screens. As long as Amazon can get the movie to your PC, or better yet, the flat-screen TV in your living room, it should do all right.
And Amazon has a knockout punch of its own: its huge database filled with customers' DVD purchase histories. Apple has accumulated enough data about song purchases to be able to recommend new music to iTunes users - but it's starting with a nearly blank slate in movies. Amazon has vastly more data on the movie-buying habits of its customers.
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Windows Media Player is available for Windows-based devices. Use this table to find the right version of the Player for your system. (If you've got a Mac, you can download Windows Media Components for QuickTime to play Windows Media files.)
Learn video storytelling or sharpen your skills with new Storyboards. The premade video templates guide you through the movie-making process. Choose from 20 storyboards based on popular genres like Cooking, Product Reviews, or Science Experiments. Each storyboard includes a shot list with examples to guide you through capturing footage, organizing clips, and learning different story structures. Easily save your storyboard video to your Photos library to share widely on social, or send to a friend directly via Messages or Mail.
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Despite each having a long comic book history, Black Adam and Superman have really only fought a handful of times, with Black Adam primarily seen alongside his arch-nemesis, Shazam. Their first encounter wasn't even a battle between them, as Black Adam masqueraded as Shazam and attacked Superman, orchestrating a showdown between the two heroes. Supergirl stopped their fight by turning Black Adam back into Teth-Adam with the use of a magic staff. Another encounter resulted in a devastating fight between the two, until they realized they were after the same person. The Earth-S Black Adam's arrival on Earth-One prompted both Superman and Shazam to work together to stop Black Adam from conquering the world. Truth be told, the most epic Black Adam versus Superman moment in the comics is in the Forever Evil storyline, where Black Adam takes on Superman's evil doppelganger from Earth-3's Crime Syndicate, Ultraman. Long story short, there isn't enough shared history of conflict between the two in the comics to make a case for who would win. Who wins in a fight between the two, then, would be determined by specific qualities and intangibles, and who utilizes those most effectively.
Superman also has a set of abilities he can use that Black Adam doesn't have: X-ray vision, heat vision, super breath and super hearing. He's grown up with these abilities, so they are second nature to him, making them strategic wild cards in a fight between the two. Speaking of strategy, that's another asset Superman possesses over Black Adam. He has often had to think outside the box to take down threats, using his surroundings to formulate an attack plan on the fly and rarely giving in to hot-headed rage. Black Adam is hot-headed rage, and despite possessing the wisdom of Zehuti, he acts first, acts again, and then thinks.
Taking all of these things into account, checking the numbers, ticking the boxes, and pure old gut instinct, it's obvious that the winner in a fight between Superman and Black Adam is... Superman. Or Black Adam. The truth is that there is no obvious winner in a hypothetical fight between the two, with a myriad of circumstances and fortune required to swing favor to one or the other. That is exactly what is so enticing about the very idea of Superman and Black Adam duking it out on screen. We know Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) beats Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren). We know Spider-Man (Tobey Maguire) beats Green Goblin (Willem Dafoe). Going into a fight where the winner is not so cut and dried, where the outcome is as mysterious as the onset, would make Superman vs. Black Adam a must-see spectacular in a cinematic superhero world that so often defaults to the stereotypical "hero always wins" trope. So while the future of the DCU stands at a crossroads, with James Gunn and Peter Safran's plans for the DCU slowly coming into focus, we can always hope that those plans include a battle between these Goliaths, regardless of who dons the tights.
duluth, minn. The recording industry won a key fight Thursday against illegal music downloading when a federal jury found a Minnesota woman shared copyrighted music online and levied $220,000 in damages against her.
Norton built up a steady string of wins, some against journeyman fighters and others over fringe contenders like the giant Jack O'Halloran. He suffered a surprise defeat in 1970 just after The Ring magazine had profiled him as a prospect, to heavy-hitting Venezuelan boxer Jose Luis Garcia, who was unknown at the time. Norton overpowered Garcia in their rematch five years later, when both were rated contenders.
Norton was given the motivational book Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill,[7][8][9] which he said "changed my life dramatically. I was going to fight Muhammad Ali. I was a green fighter, but yet I won, all through reading this book."[10] Upon reading Think and Grow Rich, he went on a 14-fight winning streak, including the shock victory over Muhammad Ali in 1973 to win the North American Boxing Federation heavyweight champion title.[11] Norton said, "These words [from Napoleon Hill's Think and Grow Rich] were the final inspiration in my victory over Ali: 'Life's battles don't always go to the stronger or faster man, but sooner or later the man who wins is the man who thinks he can'."[12] Norton also took a complete course by Hill on gaining wealth and peace of mind. "It can be related to anybody, to be the best in a career, to think positive", said Norton.[13][page needed]
In an article which appeared in The Southeast Missourian[14] Norton said, One thing I do is only watch films of the fights in which I've done well or in which my opponent has done poorly.'" He also said, "In boxing, and in all of life, nobody should ever stop learning!"[15] 2ff7e9595c
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