There's plenty of digital music-related stuff happening around Wired today...
- There's a glut of stero Bluetooth headphones on the way that use A2DP to let you listen to music on cellphones and MP3 players with the right adapter, but none that I've heard of that display the Caller ID information of the person calling you on your iPod's screen before you decide to answer and talk using your Bluetooth headset/headphones, aside from the Mavizen MyBlu, which Mike Ansaldo discusses on GadgetLab.
- I was going to try to write something clever to link to Robert Andrews' Wired news article about using your brain to control musical instruments, but this sentence gives you a better gist of the article than anything I could come up with: "Haill has been using her brain-scanning hardware for the last 14 years to play MIDI with her mind, but says it is the inter-application events protocol
in Apple's OS X operating system that allows her to trigger differentGarageBand samples and other devices for each type of neuro activityand for each side of the cortex."
- Scott Gilbertson at MonkeyBites uncovers a DRM-free digital music store called GrooveShark that claims to be "Last.fm meets iTunes," and will sell MP3s over P2P networks for under 99 cents each.