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Mixing it up

Electronic dance music is, no doubt, an international phenomenon. Last years Electric Zoo festival at Randalls Island Park, for example, brought in 85,000 attendees including visitors from all 50 states and more than 100 countries.

But its the jet-setting DJs themselves hitting a different city night after night, bouncing from club to club and festival to festival who globe-trot like no others. Electric Zoo, back for its fourth year on Labor Day Weekend (August 31-Sept. 2), put us in touch with some of the biggest names on its 2012 lineup to talk about a life where the beats and plane rides never end.

Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com

Tiesto spins at his favorite club, LIV in Miami.

TIESTO

Whats been your favorite spot to travel for work?

Id have to say Miami, of course. Thats why Ive named my new compilation Club Life: Volume Two Miami after the city. It has my favorite club to play in LIV as well as incredible restaurants, amazing architecture and so much glamour.

Whats been your favorite spot to travel for leisure?

Ibiza is a pretty special place for me to go. Ive been going there every summer since the 90s, and the island is a perfect place for relaxation and of course a lot of fun. More than any place I go to, it embodies the spirit of Club Life. I cant wait to get out there for the start of the season at the end of May when I start my new residency at Pacha.

Where are you most excited about going in the future?

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Mixing it up

TEDxSussexUniversity – David Birch – Identity in the 21st Century – Video

18-05-2012 04:55 DAVID BIRCH is a director of Consult Hyperion, an IT management consultancy that specialises in electronic transactions. Described by the Oxford Internet Institute as "one of Britain's most acute observers of the internet and social networks", in The Telegraphas "one of the world's leading experts on digital money" and by the Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation as "one of the most user-friendly of the UK's uber-techies". He is a media commentator on electronic business issues and has appeared on BBC television and radio, Sky and other channels around the world.

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TEDxSussexUniversity - David Birch - Identity in the 21st Century - Video

FIFA 12: Wasting My Money – Ep22 "Desperate Housewives" – Video

18-05-2012 09:28 100 Likes? Sub to my 2nd channel: ---------------------------------------------- Follow me on twitter: WIN Money Playing FIFA, SIGN UP: Check out my FIFA Livestreams here: FIFA Street World Tour: FIFA 12 Pack Openings: IWC's Ultimate Teams: Subscriber Squad Reviews: Yeousch Sports Uploads:

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FIFA 12: Wasting My Money - Ep22 "Desperate Housewives" - Video

Currency Trading With Binary Options Trading With Digital Options – Video

18-05-2012 11:28 Binary Options Free Training: Open Account Here: binary options, make money with binary options, binary options trading signals, binary option course, binary option strategy, binary option trading, binary option money, what are binary options

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Currency Trading With Binary Options Trading With Digital Options - Video

Could digital sales also be contracting?

In my last two columns this week, I've detailed some of the specifics behind the declining retail video game market in the United States, focusing on the lagging hardware segment and the collapse in casual gamer engagement on traditional game systems. Now I want to get to the picture for the market outside of retail, specifically the digital content market.

The NPD Group has been refining its methods for capturing data about the sales for video game content being sold outside the new, packaged retail market. For over two years they have been periodically publishing their estimates for this consumer spending, and I believe are now including it in their U.S. Games Market Dynamics report. The next report, about the first calendar quarter of 2012, is due out next month.

In terms of public data, the NPD Group only reports two types of numbers. The first is the total for new, packaged video game content the physical discs and cartridges and cards on which games are sold. The second type is, quite simply, everything else. That includes used games, full game and add-on content downloads, social network games, mobile games, rentals and subscriptions. For the sake of brevity, I'll refer to this second category as ex-retail.

If you read that description of ex-retail carefully, you'll notice that the data includes money spent on non-physical game content and two specific types of physical content, rentals and used game sales. That makes this a little more tricky, since we don't have just the digital part.

Now, let me outline the numbers we have. According to my records, the information released by the NPD Group shows that the ex-retail sales in the first quarter of 2010 were approximately $1.68 billion. In the first quarter of 2011, that figure rose to approximately $1.85 billion, an increase of 10%.

The final figures for the first quarter of this year aren't out yet, but the preliminary estimates that have been released for individual months are $350-$400 million in January and $550-$600 million in February. (For the sake of completeness, the figure for April was about $350 million again.)

The only figure missing is for March, but the data we have already is troubling. According to these figures, total ex-retail spending was $0.9 - $1.0 billion for the first two months of 2012.

Therefore March would have to come in around $850 million to $950 million in order for this segment of the market to remain flat year-over-year. On a weekly spending basis, consumers would have had to increase their spending by over 35% just in the month of March, just to keep 2012 even with 2011.

If the spending rate in February were to continue through March (i.e. if we scale the 4-week total for February up to a 5-week total for March) then under the most generous assumptions ex-retail sales for the first quarter of 2012 would come in around $1.75 billion, a 5% decline from the 2011 figure. I've visualized that possibility below.

That's the best reasonable case, I believe. If sales in March were more like January or April both of which had averages of about $90 million per week then the industry could end up with a mere $1.45 billion in ex-retail spending in the first quarter of that year. That's not just a 20% decline from last year, but even comes in below 2010's figure.

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Could digital sales also be contracting?