This documentary tells the story of photographer Bob Gruen's career capturing the punk rock scene in the 1970s and 1980s. It follows Gruen's journey through the music industry during this time period, as he photographed famous artists like Alice Cooper and documented the alternative lifestyle and culture of punk music. The documentary has a linear narrative structure, using Gruen's perspective and interviews to chart his experiences meeting people, traveling for work, and feeling immersed in the world of rock and roll photography.
This documentary examines the career and life of Meat Loaf through a non-linear narrative structure. It uses interviews from Meat Loaf and those in the music industry, along with archive footage from award shows and music videos, to explore themes of the music industry, media marketing, and the lifestyle of a music star. Through voiceover narration and editing techniques like dissolves and zooms, the documentary links these elements to tell the story of Meat Loaf's success while portraying the fast-paced nature of the music business.
Badminton matches are played between teams in a league format with 7 matches in the 1st round, 8 matches split across 2 teams in the 2nd round, and 4 matches split across 2 teams in the 3rd round. Each badminton match lasts 7 minutes.
This documentary follows photographer Bob Gruen's career capturing the rock and roll scene from 1970-1980. It has a linear narrative structure as Gruen recounts his experiences meeting famous musicians like Alice Cooper and documenting the emerging punk and alternative styles. The documentary uses a variety of camera angles during interviews and incorporates archive photos and footage from Gruen's work to illustrate the themes of rock culture and lifestyle during this era.
ON THE SAME PAGE was a 2014 master studio project at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in collaboration with and serving Sykehjemsetaten, the directorate for elderly homes in Oslo.
Students: Line T. Bogen, Rickard Jensen, Liz LeBlanc, Simon Søgnen Tveit.
A master project in Systems Oriented Design at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in 2013. Partner is ABB.
Students: Amra Osmanovik and Hilde Dybdahl Johannesen
This documentary tells the story of photographer Bob Gruen's career capturing the punk rock scene in the 1970s and 1980s. It follows Gruen's journey through the music industry during this time period, as he photographed famous artists like Alice Cooper and documented the alternative lifestyle and culture of punk music. The documentary has a linear narrative structure, using Gruen's perspective and interviews to chart his experiences meeting people, traveling for work, and feeling immersed in the world of rock and roll photography.
This documentary examines the career and life of Meat Loaf through a non-linear narrative structure. It uses interviews from Meat Loaf and those in the music industry, along with archive footage from award shows and music videos, to explore themes of the music industry, media marketing, and the lifestyle of a music star. Through voiceover narration and editing techniques like dissolves and zooms, the documentary links these elements to tell the story of Meat Loaf's success while portraying the fast-paced nature of the music business.
Badminton matches are played between teams in a league format with 7 matches in the 1st round, 8 matches split across 2 teams in the 2nd round, and 4 matches split across 2 teams in the 3rd round. Each badminton match lasts 7 minutes.
This documentary follows photographer Bob Gruen's career capturing the rock and roll scene from 1970-1980. It has a linear narrative structure as Gruen recounts his experiences meeting famous musicians like Alice Cooper and documenting the emerging punk and alternative styles. The documentary uses a variety of camera angles during interviews and incorporates archive photos and footage from Gruen's work to illustrate the themes of rock culture and lifestyle during this era.
ON THE SAME PAGE was a 2014 master studio project at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in collaboration with and serving Sykehjemsetaten, the directorate for elderly homes in Oslo.
Students: Line T. Bogen, Rickard Jensen, Liz LeBlanc, Simon Søgnen Tveit.
A master project in Systems Oriented Design at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in 2013. Partner is ABB.
Students: Amra Osmanovik and Hilde Dybdahl Johannesen
Systems Oriented Design project end presentation from Master students at Oslo School of Architecture and Design.
Project for elderly home in collaboration with Attendo
The document appears to be from an engineering consulting firm in India called Cadon Consultants Pvt. Ltd. It includes their services offered such as architecture, town planning, construction management, and property valuation. It also contains technical specifications and standards for various construction projects including dimensions for beams and columns, rebar sizes, and sewer line diameters. Tables within list item numbers, descriptions, and color coding for construction stages.
Multimedia is a combination of different media types like text, graphics, audio, video and animation that is delivered interactively to users. It includes various elements like text, audio, still images, animation and video. These different elements are used in various fields for different purposes. For example, multimedia is used in business for sales and marketing presentations, in education for e-learning and searching information, and in entertainment for games and movies. It can be delivered through different product types like briefing products, reference products, databases, education/training products and kiosks. Computer graphics is used to create, store and manipulate visual images on a computer and has applications in many fields including user interfaces, science, business, technology, engineering and
Piracy involves the unauthorized duplication and distribution of copyrighted content. With advances in technology and the internet, online piracy has become a major issue for the movie and music industries. There are many forms of internet piracy, including peer-to-peer file sharing, torrent sites, and illegal streaming or downloads. For young people on tight budgets, the availability of free pirated content online is tempting when legal alternatives are perceived as too expensive. While cracking down on piracy supports content creators, some argue minor personal piracy should not be criminalized.
Napster launched in 1999 as the first major music sharing platform, but was shut down in 2001 due to copyright lawsuits from the music industry. Other peer-to-peer file sharing sites like Kazaa and Grokster emerged but were also targeted by lawsuits. Today, most music piracy involves using torrent clients and websites to download and share music files without compensation. Studies show this costs the music industry billions annually in lost sales and jobs. In response, efforts have been made to curb piracy through search engine delisting, content ID tools on YouTube, and ISP website blocking, but new piracy sites still appear.
This document provides an overview of BitTorrent, including its history, how it works, key terms, components, advantages over traditional downloading methods, popularity, and legal issues. It discusses how Bram Cohen developed BitTorrent and unveiled it in 2002. It explains the basic process of how users search torrent sites, download torrent files, and share content through peers and seeds in a swarm. Lastly, it provides statistics on BitTorrent's large user base and bandwidth usage.
BitTorrent is the name of a peer-to-peer (P2P) file distribution protocol, and is
the name of a free software implementation of that protocol. The protocol was originally designed and created by programmer Bram Cohen, and is now maintained by BitTorrent Inc. BitTorrent is designed to distribute large amounts of data widely without incurring the corresponding consumption in costly server and bandwidth resources. Cache Logic suggests that BitTorrent traffic accounts for 55% of all traffic on the Internet, while other sources are skeptical. The original BitTorrent client was written in Python. Its source code, as of version has been released under the BitTorrent Open Source License, which is a modified version of the Jabber Open Source License. There are numerous compatible clients, written in a variety of programming languages, and running on a variety of computing platforms.
The .ORG Dashboard Report highlights our domain name growth & trends, as well as our continuing efforts in other key initiatives such as DNSSEC and our anti-abuse policy.
The Pirate Bay (TPB), a Swedish Web site (Piratebay.org), is one o.docxoreo10
The Pirate Bay (TPB), a Swedish Web site (Piratebay.org), is one of the world’s most popular pirated music and content sites, offering free access to millions of copyrighted songs and thousands of copyrighted Hollywood movies. In June 2011, The Pirate Bay reported that it had about 5 million registered users, and 25 million non-registered users (so-called “free riders”). To put that number in perspective, consider that it is nearly three times the population of Sweden itself (9 million). The Pirate Bay is regularly in the top 100 most popular Web sites in the world, and reaches 1% of the global Internet popula- tion, according to Internet analysts in 2011. In Sweden, Norway, and the Netherlands, it often ranks as one of the top 10 sites. This despite the fact that TPB has been subjected to repeated legal efforts to shut it down. It bills itself as “the world’s most resilient bittorrent site.” But the battle is far from over. The Internet is becoming a tough place for music and video pirates to make a living in part because of enforce- ment actions, but more importantly because of new mobile and wireless technologies that enable high-quality content to be streamed for just a small fee.
First some background. The Pirate Bay is part of a European social and political movement that opposes copyrighted content and demands that music, videos, TV shows, and other digital content be free and unrestricted. In the words of the Pirate Party, “the Pirate Bay is a unique platform for distributing culture between regular people and independent artists, and that’s something we want to preserve.” In a unique twist on prior efforts to provide “free” music, The Pirate Bay does not operate a database of copyrighted content. Neither does it operate a network of computers owned by “members” who store the content, nor create, own, or distribute software (like BitTorrent and most other so-called P2P networks) that permit such networks to exist in the first place. These were the old techniques for ripping off music. Instead, The Pirate Bay simply provides a search engine that responds to user queries for music tracks, or specific movie titles, and generates a list of search results that include P2P networks around the world where the titles can be found. By click- ing on a selected link, users gain access to the copyrighted content, but only after downloading software and other files from that P2P network.
Voila! “No body, no crime.” The Pirate Bay just links its users to stolen media files. What could be illegal? The Pirate Bay claims it is merely a search engine provid- ing pointers to existing P2P networks that it does not itself control. It claims that it cannot control what content users ultimately find on those P2P networks, and that it is no different from any other search engine, such as Google or Bing, which are not held responsible for the content found on sites listed in search results. From a broader standpoint, The Pirate Bay’s founders also claim that ...
Internet piracy of music developed over time as technology advanced. Early platforms like Napster allowed widespread sharing of music files but faced lawsuits. Later sites like The Pirate Bay also ran into legal issues for facilitating access to copyrighted content. While some argue piracy can boost exposure for smaller artists, studies found it costs the music industry billions annually in lost revenue and jobs. Combating piracy remains an ongoing challenge as new platforms emerge.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, costing the film industry £170 million annually.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, with the top five box office movies being illegally downloaded over 1.4 million times last year.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, with the top five box office movies being illegally downloaded over 1.4 million times last year.
- Digg.com is a social news website launched in 2004 by Kevin Rose where users can post and vote on news stories.
- As of 2008, Digg had approximately 8.5 million in estimated revenues and over 70 employees located in San Francisco.
- According to statistics from 2006, Digg had over 180,000 registered users and served over 6 million pages daily, with over 1 million unique visitors that month.
darkweb-sites.net will provide you with real and updated dark web websites links. Also, you can read dark web-related articles from our site. V3 dark web links
Systems Oriented Design project end presentation from Master students at Oslo School of Architecture and Design.
Project for elderly home in collaboration with Attendo
The document appears to be from an engineering consulting firm in India called Cadon Consultants Pvt. Ltd. It includes their services offered such as architecture, town planning, construction management, and property valuation. It also contains technical specifications and standards for various construction projects including dimensions for beams and columns, rebar sizes, and sewer line diameters. Tables within list item numbers, descriptions, and color coding for construction stages.
Multimedia is a combination of different media types like text, graphics, audio, video and animation that is delivered interactively to users. It includes various elements like text, audio, still images, animation and video. These different elements are used in various fields for different purposes. For example, multimedia is used in business for sales and marketing presentations, in education for e-learning and searching information, and in entertainment for games and movies. It can be delivered through different product types like briefing products, reference products, databases, education/training products and kiosks. Computer graphics is used to create, store and manipulate visual images on a computer and has applications in many fields including user interfaces, science, business, technology, engineering and
Piracy involves the unauthorized duplication and distribution of copyrighted content. With advances in technology and the internet, online piracy has become a major issue for the movie and music industries. There are many forms of internet piracy, including peer-to-peer file sharing, torrent sites, and illegal streaming or downloads. For young people on tight budgets, the availability of free pirated content online is tempting when legal alternatives are perceived as too expensive. While cracking down on piracy supports content creators, some argue minor personal piracy should not be criminalized.
Napster launched in 1999 as the first major music sharing platform, but was shut down in 2001 due to copyright lawsuits from the music industry. Other peer-to-peer file sharing sites like Kazaa and Grokster emerged but were also targeted by lawsuits. Today, most music piracy involves using torrent clients and websites to download and share music files without compensation. Studies show this costs the music industry billions annually in lost sales and jobs. In response, efforts have been made to curb piracy through search engine delisting, content ID tools on YouTube, and ISP website blocking, but new piracy sites still appear.
This document provides an overview of BitTorrent, including its history, how it works, key terms, components, advantages over traditional downloading methods, popularity, and legal issues. It discusses how Bram Cohen developed BitTorrent and unveiled it in 2002. It explains the basic process of how users search torrent sites, download torrent files, and share content through peers and seeds in a swarm. Lastly, it provides statistics on BitTorrent's large user base and bandwidth usage.
BitTorrent is the name of a peer-to-peer (P2P) file distribution protocol, and is
the name of a free software implementation of that protocol. The protocol was originally designed and created by programmer Bram Cohen, and is now maintained by BitTorrent Inc. BitTorrent is designed to distribute large amounts of data widely without incurring the corresponding consumption in costly server and bandwidth resources. Cache Logic suggests that BitTorrent traffic accounts for 55% of all traffic on the Internet, while other sources are skeptical. The original BitTorrent client was written in Python. Its source code, as of version has been released under the BitTorrent Open Source License, which is a modified version of the Jabber Open Source License. There are numerous compatible clients, written in a variety of programming languages, and running on a variety of computing platforms.
The .ORG Dashboard Report highlights our domain name growth & trends, as well as our continuing efforts in other key initiatives such as DNSSEC and our anti-abuse policy.
The Pirate Bay (TPB), a Swedish Web site (Piratebay.org), is one o.docxoreo10
The Pirate Bay (TPB), a Swedish Web site (Piratebay.org), is one of the world’s most popular pirated music and content sites, offering free access to millions of copyrighted songs and thousands of copyrighted Hollywood movies. In June 2011, The Pirate Bay reported that it had about 5 million registered users, and 25 million non-registered users (so-called “free riders”). To put that number in perspective, consider that it is nearly three times the population of Sweden itself (9 million). The Pirate Bay is regularly in the top 100 most popular Web sites in the world, and reaches 1% of the global Internet popula- tion, according to Internet analysts in 2011. In Sweden, Norway, and the Netherlands, it often ranks as one of the top 10 sites. This despite the fact that TPB has been subjected to repeated legal efforts to shut it down. It bills itself as “the world’s most resilient bittorrent site.” But the battle is far from over. The Internet is becoming a tough place for music and video pirates to make a living in part because of enforce- ment actions, but more importantly because of new mobile and wireless technologies that enable high-quality content to be streamed for just a small fee.
First some background. The Pirate Bay is part of a European social and political movement that opposes copyrighted content and demands that music, videos, TV shows, and other digital content be free and unrestricted. In the words of the Pirate Party, “the Pirate Bay is a unique platform for distributing culture between regular people and independent artists, and that’s something we want to preserve.” In a unique twist on prior efforts to provide “free” music, The Pirate Bay does not operate a database of copyrighted content. Neither does it operate a network of computers owned by “members” who store the content, nor create, own, or distribute software (like BitTorrent and most other so-called P2P networks) that permit such networks to exist in the first place. These were the old techniques for ripping off music. Instead, The Pirate Bay simply provides a search engine that responds to user queries for music tracks, or specific movie titles, and generates a list of search results that include P2P networks around the world where the titles can be found. By click- ing on a selected link, users gain access to the copyrighted content, but only after downloading software and other files from that P2P network.
Voila! “No body, no crime.” The Pirate Bay just links its users to stolen media files. What could be illegal? The Pirate Bay claims it is merely a search engine provid- ing pointers to existing P2P networks that it does not itself control. It claims that it cannot control what content users ultimately find on those P2P networks, and that it is no different from any other search engine, such as Google or Bing, which are not held responsible for the content found on sites listed in search results. From a broader standpoint, The Pirate Bay’s founders also claim that ...
Internet piracy of music developed over time as technology advanced. Early platforms like Napster allowed widespread sharing of music files but faced lawsuits. Later sites like The Pirate Bay also ran into legal issues for facilitating access to copyrighted content. While some argue piracy can boost exposure for smaller artists, studies found it costs the music industry billions annually in lost revenue and jobs. Combating piracy remains an ongoing challenge as new platforms emerge.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, costing the film industry £170 million annually.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, with the top five box office movies being illegally downloaded over 1.4 million times last year.
This document provides information on legal websites for downloading and purchasing music, including Amazon, MP3.com, Jamendo, Facebook, and SoundCloud. It also discusses the most illegally downloaded artists such as Rihanna and Ed Sheeran. Finally, it notes that the number of illegal film downloads in the UK has increased nearly 30% over five years, with the top five box office movies being illegally downloaded over 1.4 million times last year.
- Digg.com is a social news website launched in 2004 by Kevin Rose where users can post and vote on news stories.
- As of 2008, Digg had approximately 8.5 million in estimated revenues and over 70 employees located in San Francisco.
- According to statistics from 2006, Digg had over 180,000 registered users and served over 6 million pages daily, with over 1 million unique visitors that month.
darkweb-sites.net will provide you with real and updated dark web websites links. Also, you can read dark web-related articles from our site. V3 dark web links
Similar to Top 10 Most Popular Torrent Sites of 2015 (14)
1. Top 10 Most Popular Torrent Sites of 2015
Most torrent users rarely change their downloading habits or
the places where they get their daily torrent dose.
This is also reflected in our annual top 10 where most torrent sites have had a consistent listing for
more than half a decade.
Like every year there are a few movers and shakers though, and the biggest impact was made by the
Pirate Bay raid early last month.
The notorious torrent site has been crowned the most popular torrent site since 2008, but isn't
serving any torrents at the beginning of this year. As a result, the top spot is now taken by
KickassTorrents.
The Pirate Bay hasn't gone away completely though. There are currently several popular clones and
copies of the site that together can easily match the traffic of most other sites that are listed.
Thanks to one of its top copies TPB managed to secure a spot in 4th place. Considering the situation
we decided to mention both the original Pirate Bay domain and the most-used copy.
The rest of the top 10 consists of other familiar names. Bitsnoop.com is the only site to drop from the
list, with Limetorrents.cc taking its place.
Demonoid, which returned online earlier this year, just fell out of the top 10 but appears to be
making a slow but steady comeback that's worth mentioning. There is a good chance that it will
return again next year.
Below is the full list of the top 10 most-visited torrent sites at the start of the new year. Only public
and English language content sites are included. The list is based on various traffic reports and we
display the Alexa and U.S. Compete rank for each. In addition, we include last year's ranking for
each of the 10 sites.
1. KickassTorrents
KickassTorrents was founded in 2009 and surpassed The Pirate Bay in traffic this year, even before
it went down. Battling various censorship efforts the site has burned through a few different domain
names over the years. Most recently it switched to the Somalian Kickass.so address.
Alexa Rank: 151 / Compete Rank: 711 / Last year #2
2. 2. Torrentz
Torrentz has been the leading BitTorrent meta-search engine for many years. Unlike the other sites
featured in the list Torrentz does not host any torrent files, it merely redirects visitors to other
places on the web. The site uses several domain names with .eu being the most popular.
Alexa Rank: 206 / Compete Rank: 1.716 / Last year #3
3. ExtraTorrent
ExtraTorrent continues to gain more traffic and has become one of the most active torrent
communities. The site is also the home of the popular ETTV and ETRG release groups.
Alexa Rank: 356 / Compete Rank: 3,446 / Last year #4
4. The Pirate Bay (copies and clones)
At the time of writing The Pirate Bay isn't serving any torrents. However, there are several copies
and clones of the site which, at least temporarily, take its place. OldPiratebay.org is currently the
most popular and based on its recent traffic the site is already ranked at least 4th in this list.
Alexa Rank: NA / Compete Rank: NA / Last year #1
5. YTS
YTS, also known as the release group "YIFY," has become the most recognizable movie piracy brands
on the Internet. Despite a court court-ordered ISP blockade in the UK the group's torrent site
continues expand.
Alexa Rank: 740 / Compete Rank: 4,271 / Last year #5
6. EZTV
TV-torrent distribution group EZTV is a niche site specializing in TV content only. Because of its
narrow focus, EZTV's traffic varies in line with the TV seasons. Despite posting only a few dozen
torrents per week it attracts millions of visitors.
Alexa Rank: 1,262 / Compete Rank: 5,421 / Last year #6
7. RARBG
RARBG, which started out as a Bulgarian tracker, was last year's newcomer and continues to rake in
more visitors. The site was blocked by UK ISPs last month, which put it on par with most other sites
in the top 10.
Alexa Rank: 1,326 / Compete Rank: 8,890 / Last year #10
8. isoHunt.to
Isohunt.to was launched in 2013, less than two weeks after isoHunt.com shut down. The site is not
affiliated with the old isoHunt but hopes to keep its spirit alive. The same people are also behind
3. Oldpiratebay.org, which is is listed in 4th place.
Alexa Rank: 1,890 / Compete Rank: 7,723 / Last year #8
9. 1337x
1337x is a community driven torrent site. The site's owners say they launched 1337x to "fill an
apparent void where it seemed there was a lack of quality conscience ad free torrent sites with
public trackers." This year the site dropped its .org domain and is now operating from 1337x.to.
Alexa Rank: 2,581 / Compete Rank: 11,389 / Last year #7
10. Limetorrents
Limetorrents.cc has been around for several years already, and regained a spot in the top 10 this
year. The site appeared in the news this summer after it was sued by LionsGate for posting a link to
a leaked copy of The Expendables 3. The case is still ongoing.
Alexa Rank: 2,608 / Compete Rank: 3,984 / Last year #NA
Disclaimer: Yes, we know that Alexa isn't perfect and that Compete has plenty of flaws, but
combined both do a pretty good job at comparing sites that operate in a similar niche.