We just added a new feed to the add-ons site called “Newest Songbird Add-ons.” If you subscribe, you’ll get an update anytime someone uploads a new add-on. Subscribe and keep up with the progress!
Are there other feeds you would like to see? We’ve kicked around ideas for “Updated Songbird Add-on” that would show changes to existing add-ons, “Recommended Add-ons” that showcase some of the community favorites, and “author mega-feeds” which would roll comments for all add-ons from a single author into one feed. Have we missed any good ones? Let us know!
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The switch to digital cable isn’t just yielding a multibillion spectrum auction, it’s also prompting cable companies and broadcasters to join forces and fight against a government mandate.
The government’s been worried about how cable subscribers would get their less-watched local broadcasts once the analog signals go dark next February. Enter the dual-carriage rules, which were put forth by the Federal Communications Commission last fall.
The rules dictated that unless a cable carrier was really small, and paid the legal fees to get an exemption, operators needed to carry certain programming (such as public access channels and local niche programming) in both dual and analog versions until all subscribers had a digital set-top box or TV capable of converting digital signals.
Cable companies don’t mind doing this for popular local broadcast channels, but smaller ones will take up twice the space on a cable network under these rules. Obviously cable companies, which already face capacity constraints, would like to choose how they allocate their capacity, rather than have the government mandate it.
The major cable operators represented by the National Cable and Telecommunications Association grudgingly agreed to the rules, but the American Cable Association, which represents smaller cable firms, came out against it. On Monday, six programmers representing cable channels including C-SPAN, Discovery Communications, The Weather Channel and Scripps Networks sued to stop the rules from going forward, saying that if it did, cable operators might have to dump their channels to make room for the duplicative signals.

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