In an unusual reversal of technological trends, Chinese radio stations began broadcasting podcasts to listeners in a weekly radio show earlier this week, the China Daily reported yesterday.
The half-hour programme is currently being broadcast on 16 local radio stations across the country, and the number of broadcasting stations is set to rise to over 50 next year.
Podcasts are sound recordings which can take many forms, although the majority are akin to a personal radio show or an audio diary or blog.
Listeners normally access podcasts by downloading audio files from the internet and playing them on digital audio players, such as Apple's iPod, or PCs.
While podcasts are sometimes described using terms like 'internet radio', this is because they are seen as putting the power of radio in the hands of ordinary people. It is not common to broadcast podcast recordings over old-fashioned radio networks.
"By working in conjunction with traditional media such as television, radio and newspapers, we hope to help people broadcast and share their lives," explained Buddy Ye, chief executive of Wangyou, one of the websites providing the podcasts. "We call this life-casting."
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Korea's Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) has confirmed that it is investigating allegations that electronics manufacturing giant Samsung is guilty of selling products at below cost to win market share.
Allegations that Samsung may have agreed to sell two and four gigabyte Nand Flash memory chips to Apple for half the normal price were reported in local media this week.
"We are now checking whether the allegation is true," a KFTC official said yesterday, according to the Joongang Daily.
The paper linked the inquiry to pressure from Korean digital music player makers, which have complained about unfair pricing of Flash memory chips.
Last month a legislator from the governing Uri party questioned Korean trade regulators about Samsung's flash memory pricing policy.
Apple announced earlier this week that it would prepay $1.25bn during the next three months as part of a deal with Samsung and three other memory makers to secure supplies of Flash memory through to 2010.
The Korea Times reported that Samsung would receive $500m of this. Apple plans to use the chips in its iPod series of portable media players and related products.
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