I couldn't wait to upgrade my systems to Windows 7, seeing that almost all reviews for the OS were very positive. Ironically, Vista ran pretty well except for some display driver issues on the desktop PC.First upgrade from Vista 64bit to Windows 7 64bit:(New) Dell Studio 1737Dual Core Processor w/4GB of RAMThe upgrade took a very long time - I'm talking about 3 hours. When the upgrade finally finished, the only problem I experienced, was Windows not being able to see my DVD drive. After countless searches on the internet, it seems that nobody has a silver bullet solution.- I updated the BIOS- Disabled driver signatures- Uninstalled all programs that might take control of the drive (Nero, Dell Media Player)- I downloaded updated firmware, but when I go to install it, it doesn't see a DVD drive to updateIf anyone has a fix for this, I'd like to hear it!Second upgrade from Vista 64bit to Windows 7 64bit:Dell XPS 630iQuadcore Processor w/8GB of RAMThis upgrade was done in about 2 hours. When Windows did the compatibility check in the beginning, I did have to uninstall SQL Server 2005 (professional, not express), my graphics card display management software, and a few other piddley programs. The main thing I was worried about, is the dual display support, especially after having to uninstall the display manager software. Installation chugged along and rebooted the machine about 5 times, but when it finally came up, I was able to right click the desktop and select "Screen Resolution." The new display manager worked like a charm - actually even better than the ATI one I had before. So far, the upgrade has been flawless - no problems - knock on wood.To be honest, I don't experience much difference in performance versus Vista. There are a few UI goodies that are nice, like pinning programs to the taskbar, but for the most part, it feels the same. The OS loads pretty fast and shuts down quickly. I think only time will tell if what's under the hood has improved. I hope Windows 7 is more stable.
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While we are excited to experience the fast growth of our business with quite a few medium to large record labels signing up, we have made a few changes to our pricing/plan strategy. We used to have a plan aimed at the single artist. Pay a one-time fee and distribute your album to your contacts with our services. The idea looked great on paper and we had a few sign-ups, but as a whole, this model just didn't feel right. In this freemium internet world, many artists were appalled at the thought of actually paying to use a service to market their music. I partly agree, especially with Facebook, MySpace, Pure Volume, etc., there ARE other cost effective ways to deliver pre-release music to the masses. Our model might work a few years from now, depending on if "free everything" slows down.In place of the single artist plan, we experienced a demand for a service to handle a very small record label load - two releases per month maximum. With that, "Rising Star" was born. Upload two promos per month, send invitations to an unlimited number of media contacts and utilize five gigabytes of bandwidth space. This plan is geared towards that small record label that might be content with releasing a couple albums per month or that up and comer who is new to the game.We now feel our five price plans cover the majority of scenarios a record label might approach us with.
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