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Iomega has announced its all-new Media Xporter drive, a game console-oriented 2.5-inch portable hard drive that will provide storage for both Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 consoles.
The company says the new drive will make it “easier than ever to use game consoles and high definition televisions and other large screen TVs to share photos, videos, and music collections with family and friends.”
The very portable, wallet-sized drive is USB powered and will use the USB 2.0 ports on either console to offer a plug-and-play solution alongside 160GB of media storage.
According to the press release the drive is “designed for use the Xbox 360 and PS3, the Media Xporter is also compatible with Apple computers and Microsoft Windows and is bundled with software to convert media to console-friendly formats, where necessary.”
The drive is available now and retails for $120 USD and in Europe for 99 euros.


Result for: music collections

New York District Judge William H. Pauley III has dismissed the RIAA’s copyright infringment lawsuit against MP3Tunes‘ CEO Michael Robertson but has said the lawsuit against the company itself will go on as planned.
The lawsuit, brought forward by the RIAA on behalf of EMI and 14 other labels claims that MP3Tunes “infringed on copyrights as it offers an online music storage service, allowing users to upload their music collections and access them from virtually anywhere.”
Robertson is quick to point out that much larger corporations offer the same exact service as his company does and that “MP3Tunes was targeted because of its comparatively small size, ensuring EMI an easier victory that would then be used to shut down similar services and cripple consumers’ rights.” A few notable examples of other similar services are AOL’s Xdrive, Microsoft’s Skydrive and BT’s The Vault.
When the case is eventually ruled on it will determine whether customers can store their legally-obtained music in cloud services. MP3tunes currently has 150,000 customers who have uploaded their music into online “lockers.” The music is then accessible from any web-enabled device.