Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Amiga virtual machine and Ain't No Other Man: Difference between pages

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{{Unreferenced|date=April 2007}}
===[[Amiga virtual machine]]===
{{Infobox Single
An Amiga emulator is no more a ''Virtual machine'' then any other emulator. Should we have pages for [[NES virtual machine]], [[Mac virtual machine]], etc...? I believe the topics in this article is sufficiently covered by [[Amiga emulation]] and [[WinUAE]].
| Name = Ain't No Other Man
| Cover = Anom single 1149215764.jpg
| Caption =
| Artist = [[Christina Aguilera]]
| from Album = [[Back to Basics (Christina Aguilera album)|Back to Basics]]
| A-side =
|UK]]) CD2 Maxi</small>
| Format = [[Digital download]], [[CD single]]
| Recorded =
| Genre = [[pop/r+b]]
| Length = 3:48
| Label = [[RCA Records|RCA]]
| Writer = Christina Aguilera, Charles Roane, Chris E. Martin, Harold Beatty, [[Kara DioGuardi]]
| Producer = [[DJ Premier]], Charles Roane
| Certification = Platinum <small>([[RIAA]])</small>
Platinum <small>([[CRIA]])</small>
Gold <small>([[Australian Recording Industry Association|ARIA]])</small>
| Chart position =
* #1 <small>([[Portugal]])
* #2 <small>([[United World Chart]], [[Norway]], [[United Kingdom|UK]])</small>
* #3 <small>([[Brazil]], [[Ireland]], [[Canada]])</small>
* #4 <small>([[Europe]] </small>
* #5 <small>([[Finland]], [[Germany]], [[New Zealand]], [[Switzerland]])</small>
* #6 <small>([[Australia]], [[United States]])</small>
* #7 <small>([[Austria]]) </small>
* #10 <small>([[Belgium]]) </small>
| Last single = "[[Tilt Ya Head Back]]" <br>(2004)
| This single = "Ain't No Other Man" <br>(2006)
| Next single = "[[Hurt (Christina Aguilera song)|Hurt]]" <br> (2006)
| Misc = {{Extra album cover 2
| Upper caption = Alternative cover
| Type = Single
| Cover = Single Cd Ain't No Other Man (Maxi).jpg
| Lower caption = Maxi cover
}}
{{Audiosample
| Upper caption = Audio sample
| Audio file= AintNoOtherManSample.ogg
}}
}}
"'''Ain't No Other Man'''" is lead single released by [[United States|American]] singer [[Christina Aguilera]] from her third studio album ''[[Back to Basics (Christina Aguilera album)|Back to Basics]]'' ([[2006]]). The single won a [[Grammy Award]] for the [[Best Female Pop Vocal Performance]] category in 2007.
 
==Song information==
*'''Delete'''. This looks life a strange (and OR) "parroting" of things like the [[JVM]], which are actually ''intended'' to be virtual machines, and never were real hardware. "Write once, run anywhere" was never a stated goal for Amiga [[Motorola 680x0]] executable programs, and the term "AVM" itself is not attested at all. '''Advice''' that the content of the "Bytecodes" section (by the way, again, nobody ever called M68k instructions [[byte-code]] before, and they most definitely are not) be merged into [[Motorola 680x0]], as it may contain useful information about the M68k instruction set. [[User:LjL|LjL]] 19:01, 16 May 2006 (UTC)
Produced by [[DJ Premier]] and Charles Roane, the song contains [[sampling (music)|samples]] from The Moon People's ''Hippy, Skippy, Moon Strut'' (1969) and ''The Cissy's Thang'' (1969) by The Soul Seven. It was released as the first [[single (music)|single]] from ''Back to Basics'' in June 2006 (see [[2006 in music]]); originally meant to be available for purchase on [[June 13]], it was released early to [[iTunes Music Store]] on [[June 3]]. It debuted on UK radio on [[June 7]], and also on Brazilian radio stations on the same day. It is thought to be Aguilera's comeback single, due to its strong chart performance after Aguilera's four-year hiatus from her previous studio album ''[[Stripped (Christina Aguilera album)|Stripped]]'' (2002). This song, contrary to popular belief, does not have a live brass section. The brass interludes are samples from a 1970's Latin funk track called "Happy Soul", performed by Dave Cortez and the Moon People. Obviously the drum track has been largely edited, and made to sound a lot bassier, but the main structure of the repeated brass riff is still intact.
:'''Follow-up''': I've done the above (merging into [[Motorola 680x0]]), as well as putting some content into [[Amiga emulation]] as well. Please review my edits! [[User:LjL|LjL]] 19:40, 16 May 2006 (UTC)
*'''Keep''' If you don't personally like Amiga Virtual Machines then that is fine but that is no reason to damage wikipedia by removing a clearly written article. To Mr. LjL, your complaint is false as Macintosh Virtual Machines and PC Virtual Machines are already listed in various other parts of the wikipedia such as [[Comparison_of_virtual_machines]]. Perhaps you feel that Java inc. owns the term "Virtual Machine". It does not. Furthermore the term "Virtual Machine" is synonymous with "Emulator". The trouble is that people who type in the phrase "Emulator" are usually looking for games, while people who type in "Virtual Machine" are typically searching for some type of serious application to perform work. Thus 2 different articles are needed, each with its own clear focus. Also if you were to discriminate against PC, Mac, Amiga virtual machines and delete them then you would also have to delete Java Virtual Machine. It sounds like your complaint is an attempt to give Java a Wikipedia monopoly. There are '''many''' types of virtual machines in the world today and they are '''ALL''' worthy of wikipedia articles.--[[User:StoneGiant|StoneGiant]] 07:16, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
::'''Comment''' I see your point that an ''Amiga emulator'' == ''Virtual Machine''. BTW, is there a difference between an emulator and a virtual machine? Anyway I still disagree that all virtual machines are deserving of a Wikipedia article. It clutters Wikipedia to have (small) articles about largely the same topic, why not simply mention in the emulation article that emulators can be viewed as virtual machines in the same vain as Java, C#, and virtualizes? Bottom line, ''Amiga Virtual Machine'', ''Amiga Software Abstraction Layer'', ''Amiga Runtime Environment'', and ''Amiga emulator'' is just ways of saying the same thing. (And I doubt those searching for ''Virtual Machine'' is overtly interested in WinUAE.)--[[User:Anss123|Anss123]] 08:48, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
DJ Premier said about the track: "It's pretty much about how Aguilera's husband has stolen her from the beginning", and it began receiving airplay on American radio stations within the same day. [[SonyBMG|Sony-BMG]] issued a statement regarding the release of the song, claiming that a full investigation would be launched in order to find out how the song was leaked, as they did not intend for the song to be released until after it premiered at the [[MTV Movie Awards 2006|2006 MTV Movie Awards]] on [[June 3]]. Because of the leak, [[RCA]] Records officially released the single to all U.S. radio stations the day after it leaked.
::'''Comment'''. Nice ''non sequitur'' there: my complaint is false because PC and Mac VMs are listed in another article. So? Add Amiga-related information to [[Comparison of virtual machines|that article]]. On the other hand, I don't see a [[PC virtual machine]] or a [[Macintosh virtual machine]] article.
::That people who type "emulator" are "usually" looking for games, while people who type "virtual machine" are looking for serious stuff, is, to my ears, an absurdity. I've been involved with Amiga emulation (and emulation of other systems) since 1997, ''never using games'', and I've always referred to ''emulators'', and that's what I always heard people calling them as well.
::Two articles with different focus are definitely not needed, in any case! You're suggesting two articles on the ''very same'' topic, except from two ''different points of view'' (gaming vs applications). That's absolutely frowned upon!
::Instead, if you think people searching for "virtual machine" rather than "emulation" is an issue, than just make this article a redirect to [[Amiga emulation]], and add useful content there.
::What you say about Java makes no sense whatsoever. Obviously Sun (Java Inc.? What is Java Inc.?) does ''not'' own the term "virtual machine", but the JVM has always been called so. Amiga emulators have always been called Amiga emulators, not virtual machines, by the very authors of them.
::Make no mistake, they ''are'' virtual machines technically, but that's simply because ''every emulator is a virtual machine''.
::I restate my point: this article is a POV fork of [[Amiga emulation]], and has no place on Wikipedia. Merge its content into the appropriate article(s), and if felt necessary make this article a redirect.
::Additionally, I feel a separate [[Amiga Anywhere]] article is needed. [[User:LjL|LjL]] 14:27, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
[[Big Boi]] from [[OutKast]] was scheduled to contribute a rap verse on the remix of the single. It is rumored that his record label pressured him to remove himself from the song to prevent the "Ain't No Other Man" remix from competing with [[Outkast]]'s own single, "The Mighty O." RCA subsequently replaced [[Big Boi]] with [[Houston, Texas|Houston]] rapper, [[Chamillionaire]]. Nonetheless, Chamillionaire's additional rap verse on the song proved not to be popular amongst fans and hardly received any radio airplay.
*'''Keep''' I'm sorry but I cannot find anything in this article that violates any rules. It is NPOV, uses proper English etc. I wish it had more meat but I am sure someone will expand it. I agree with StoneGiant that Sun does not own the concept of Virtual Machine. Wikipedia is not a soapbox for rich corporations. Opensource free virtual machines are deserving of articles just as much as any other.--[[User:4.231.152.76|4.231.152.76]] 09:53, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
The single was released over two weeks in the UK. CD1, featuring the Radio Edit and Instrumental is released on 24th July 2006. CD2, featuring the Album & A cappella versions, and two remixes of the track was released on [[July 31]] [[2006]]. The two weeks release of the single in the UK prevented it from going to #1 in the UK singles chart and peaked at #2 being blocked off by Shakira's "Hips Don't Lie". Had "Ain't No Other Man" had just one release it would have reached the top spot of the UK singles chart because it sales for that 1 week would have been enough to block of "Hips Don't Lie" off the top spot.
::'''Response''' You said "I see your point that an ''Amiga emulator'' == ''Virtual Machine''" but in fact my point is that ''Amiga Virtual Machine'' >= ''Amiga emulator''. Amiga Virtual Machine is a very large and complicated subject. It requires a reasonably large article to explain it all. When someone says "Amiga Emulator" they are normally referring to UAE or Fellow which emulate existing hardware and '''not''' referring to '''Amiga Anywhere ''' which is a virtual machine with no native hardware. You can't simply absorb the article into [[WinUAE]] that would be completely unfair to the competing [[Fellow]] AVM and you can't absorb it into [[Motorola 680x0]] because '''Amiga Anywhere''' uses completely different byte codes than Motorola. I think you are trying to oversimplify things. Give the article a chance to grow. --[[User:StoneGiant|StoneGiant]] 13:53, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
:::'''Response''' - "Amiga virtual machine", in the broad sense you give to the term, doesn't need ''one'' article ''at all''. It needs a few. One is [[Amiga emulation]] (not [[WinUAE]] or [[Fellow]]), which covers "virtual machines" that run 680x0 software; another ought to be [[Amiga Anywhere]], which should exist in its own right as an article IMHO (just as you said, it uses ''completely different'' opcodes and is ''completely different'' in almost every possible sense). [[Motorola 68000]] or [[68k]] (which is the same as [[Motorola 680x0]], a bit of a mess there) are, additionally, appropriate places for discussing the 68k architecture/instruction set in some detail. [[User:LjL|LjL]] 14:12, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
"Ain't No Other Man" garnered Aguilera another nomination and win at the [[49th Annual Grammy Awards]] in the category [[Best Female Pop Vocal Performance]]. This is her fourth time being nominated in this category, and second win.
*'''Comment''' - by the way, see how many hits "Amiga virtual machine" (with quotes) gets on Google (and compare with "Amiga emulation", if you really feel the need). This is a made up term, as is "AVM", as is the idea that "write once run anywhere" was an intended goal of the 68k Amiga architecture. Remove all the POV, and what you're left with is [[Amiga emulation]]. Except for the recent addition of an Amiga Anywhere section -- make an article out of it. [[User:LjL|LjL]] 14:38, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
==Music video==
*'''Response''' you said "This is a made up term,". It is a scientific term not a made up one. <br> AVM is an abbreviation not a made up term. Why don't you attack JVM? JVM is a made up term by your criteria. Are you a Java sock puppet? <br> You said "as is the idea that "write once run anywhere" was an intended goal of the 68k Amiga architecture."<br>1. You are the only person claiming it was the intended goal so your argument is false.<br>2. The word "goal" does not even appear in the article so your argument is completely erroneous.<br>3. The "write once run anywhere" is just something that happened as a result of many hours of work by many people who released their work as open source. There is no need for you to be hostile about it and try to delete it.--[[User:StoneGiant|StoneGiant]] 16:29, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
[[Image:Ain'tNoOtherManScreen.PNG|thumb|200px|left|Aguilera in the music video for "Ain't No Other Man" (2006).]]
::'''Comment''' Open source is evil and must be eliminated. Java will rule the world!! Seriously, my point isn't that this article is without merit, my point is that there is no need for ''both'' an article about Amiga emulation and Amiga virtual machine. In other words, we can keep this article and delete [[Amiga emulation]] or drop this article in favor of [[Amiga emulation]].--[[User:Anss123|Anss123]] 16:51, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
The [[music video]], directed by [[Bryan Barber]], was shot from [[May 1]] to [[May 3]] in [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]]. In an interview with [http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1539161/08222006/aguilera_christina.jhtml MTV], Aguilera stated, "it intrigued me that this man, Bryan Barber, had been very locked into and had surrounded himself with this whole world of the '20s and '30s era," in response to Barber's film project, [[Idlewild (film)|Idlewild]]. It was released exclusively to iTunes on [[June 20]] and went to number-one the following day on the iTunes video chart. It then premiered on [[MTV]]'s ''[[Making the Video]]'' on [[June 21]].
 
The music video is supposed to be set back in the 1920s to 1930s Era, where Christina Aguilera plays the role of her [[alter ego]], Baby Jane (a [[Peggy Lee]]/[[Judy Garland]]-ish nightclub singer). The name is shown on the car's plate and on her dressing room door. The video takes place mostly at a club, with Christina getting ready in the backstage area, and then coming up the stage performing along with the song. In between scenes, there were short vignettes that showed Aguilera in gold and silver dresses, singing to a mic, while photographers are taking pictures. She appeared in several looks; in one of the scenes, Christina appeared using rhinestone studded headphones, showed a bit of a modern day portrayal.
:::'''Response''' I would agree there was not a need for both [[Amiga emulation]] and [[Amiga Virtual Machine]] '''if''' the subject matter was simpler. But due to the complexity of the subject I '''cannot''' agree to this. The Amiga emulation article states in the first sentence that it is '''only''' about Classic Amiga emulation. Info about Amiga Anywhere does not belong in that article according to itself. Furthermore it is my opinion that info about bytecodes and other technical stuff does not belong in that other article. [[Amiga emulation]] should target "light" information useful to people who want to play games on an emulator and do the warez scene IMHO. While "heavy" technical information should be in the [[Amiga virtual machine]] article IMHO.<br>You are complaining that there are now 3 articles covering various aspects of Amiga virtual machines but look what I found in 60 seconds of wikipedia searching:<br>
* [[Java (Sun)]]
* [[Java programming language]]
* [[Java Platform, Enterprise Edition]], targets server environment
* [[Java Platform, Micro Edition]], targets embedded consumer products
* [[Java syntax]]
* [[Java keywords]]
* [[Java virtual machine]]
* [[Java platform]]
* [[Java applet]]
* [[Java Servlet]]
* [[Java Platform, Standard Edition]] (Java SE, J2SE)
* [[JavaOS]]
* [[JVM]]
That is 11 articles all about the same thing. How did you decide that Java virtual machine gets 11 articles but Amiga virtual machine must be deleted for having 3 articles? Why don't you merge those 11 articles down into 2? Why were those articles allowed to grow unchecked for years? Why haven't you proposed them for deletion since they are all about the same thing?
 
In the beginning and in the end of the music video there are clips from another song from ''[[Back to Basics (Christina Aguilera album)|Back to Basics]]'', entitled "I Got Trouble."
::::"Java" refers to a programming language and to a virtual machine (JVM) and its bytecode language. Those should be treated separately, as the JVM can and is used with other high-level programming languages, and the Java programming language doesn't necessarily compile into bytecode executed by a JVM. So some distinctions are appropriate.
The song played as if it were on the radio with minor white noise.
::::Some of the articles you cited, however, ''do'' look to me like they would benefit from a merge: for example, I'm not sure it's appropriate to have an article entirely devoted to listing Java keywords, nor am I sure the various editions of Java Platform are best kept as separate articles.
::::"Amiga" refers to a lot of things, as well. Amiga computers, the AmigaOS (and then MorphOS, AROS...), Amiga Anywhere, the M68k architecture, the PPC architecture, emulators, and many other things. And these are roughly all represented on Wikipedia, just search for "amiga site:en.wikipedia.org" on Google.
::::It's ''many more'' than just 11 articles for sure.
::::The way you seem to put it, having to separate "Amiga emulation" and "Amiga virtual machine" articles would be rather like having two separate "Java platform for gaming" and "Java platform for application use" -- a distinction that would be completely arbitrary (since it would only exist on Wikipedia), stemming from two different POVs.
::::And please stop referring to Amiga Anywhere as a reason to keep this article; Anywhere, DE, whatever-they're-called, are completely different things from the "classic" Amiga computers and the emulators/VMs for them. Amiga Anywhere needs its ''own'' article, possibly [[Amiga Anywhere]]. [[User:LjL|LjL]] 19:07, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 
The music video has been well received by audiences. On MTV's ''[[Total Request Live]]'', it has achieved the number one video spot on the countdown twenty two times, and was retired at number one, making it Christina's most successful video and the most successful video of 2006 of TRL. "Ain't No Other Man" is third only to [[Behind These Hazel Eyes]] by [[Kelly Clarkson]] and [[Me Against the Music]] by [[Britney Spears]] as the most successful female video on TRL of all time. It has also been in the top 5 videos on [[VH1]]'s Top 20 Countdown and number one in [[TMF]]'s top ten countdown in [[Europe]]. It was nominated at the [[2006 MTV Video Music Awards]] for [[MTV Video Music Award for Video of the Year|Video of the Year]], [[MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video|Best Female Video]], [[MTV Video Music Award for Best Pop Video|Best Pop Video]], and [[MTV Video Music Award for Best Choreography|Best Choreography]]
::'''Response''' - why exactly are you turning my words upside down? What I claimed is that '''it was ''not'' the intended goal''', and that the fact that the article implied overwise is POV. The word "goal" does not have to explicitely appear in the article to make it POV'd like I said. For example, the article says
 
:::''The AVM has instructions for the following groups of tasks''
==Chart performance==
::(originally, it even said "bytecodes") - it's the M68k that has instructions for those tasks, and the "AVM" (i.e. Amiga emulators) have them simply as an effect of the fact that they, well, emulate a M68k. Obviously. So the phrase is not false, just horribly POV. This kind of POV impregnates the whole article, though I will refrain from quoting every relevant part of it here.
On [[June 15]], [[2006]], "Ain't No Other Man" debuted at number nineteen on the [[Billboard Hot 100|''Billboard'' Hot 100]] as a result of strong [[digital download|download]]s. The song became Aguilera's highest debut on the Hot 100, a title that was previously held by "[[I Turn to You (Christina Aguilera song)|I Turn to You]]" (2000).<ref>''[[Billboard magazine|Billboard]]''. Bronson, Fred. [http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/chart_beat/bonus.jsp "Aguilera bounds into the Hot 100 with her highest debut yet"]. [[June 15]] [[2006]]. Retrieved [[June 21]] [[2006]].</ref> The song soared into the top ten before quickly peaking at number six. However, the song has proven to have longevity as it has spent nineteen consecutive weeks within the top forty. It has sold over 1,000,000 digital downloads in the United States making it [[Music recording sales certification|Platinum]]. "Ain't No Other Man" has been proven very successful, as it is Aguilera's first top ten hit on the Hot 100 since "Beautiful" back in late [[2002 in music|2002]]. The song has proven to be a big dance hit as well, where it reached number one on Billboard's [[Hot Dance Airplay]] and [[Hot Dance Club Play]] chart.
::And while the term "JVM" is as made up as "AVM", JVM was made up '''not by Wikipedia''', but by the folks who ''made'' it. "AVM" is being made up '''by this article alone'''. Wikipedia does not do [[WP:NOR|original research]]. That it's an abbreviation doesn't quite matter, acronyms are terms too. And the phrase "Amiga virtual machine" itself is not an attested term, as a search on Google will obviously tell.
 
::I'm not hostile about open source, and I'm specifically not hostile against Amiga emulators. I'm just kinda hostile about this article.
In the [[United Kingdom|UK]] "Ain't No Other Man" reached number two due in part to RCAs ridiculous release of spreading out the single to be released in 2 different weeks. This cost the song the #1 spot of the UK singles chart where it was blocked off by hips don't lie. The song debuted on the Canadian [[Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems|BDS]] Airplay Chart the same week it did in the U.S. (at number thirty-eight) and peaked at number three on [[August 19]] [[2006]]. It also reached number three on the Canadian Dance Chart. However, despite commercial success on these formats, it did not chart highly on the [[Canadian Singles Chart]] (number fourteen) perhaps because of the release of ''Back to Basics'' (that same week). "Ain't No Other Man" became Aguilera's most commercially successful single in Canada (10.000 units sold; Platinum) since "[[Fighter (song)|Fighter]]" (2003).
::Lastly, you refer to me as a possible "Java sock puppet". May I ask you what you mean with this? That mine's a sock puppet account? Hopefully it's just my misunderstanding of English, and you really mean something else. Sockpuppeting is a grave accusation.
 
::(By the way, I mostly agree with [[User:Anss123|Anss123]] if that wasn't clear enough, except that I rather favor keeping [[Amiga emulation]] and merging this article to it instead of doing the opposite.) [[User:LjL|LjL]] 17:59, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
"Ain't No Other Man" became Aguilera's tenth top ten hit on [[Top 40 Mainstream|Top 40 Radio]], where it peaked at number seven. The song's performance on pop radio is similar to those of many of her past hits like "Fighter", "[[Can't Hold Us Down]]", and "[[Come on over Baby (All I Want Is You)|Come on Over Baby]]". It was also her first top ten hit on Top 40 Radio in over three years, with the last one being "Can't Hold Us Down" in [[2003 in music|mid-2003]].
 
The song has gone on to have unusual longevity on the radio charts. However, "Ain't No Other Man" has only peaked at number six. This song is now considered a successful comeback single due to its slow paced decline. On the Billboard 2006 Hot 100 Year-End chart, "Ain't No Other Man" was ranked thirty-second.<ref>''[[Billboard magazine|Billboard]]''. Bronson, Fred. [http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/yearend/2006/charts/hot100_2.jsp "2006 Hot 100 Year-End Chart"]. [[December 21]] [[2006]]. Retrieved [[December 26]] [[2006]].</ref>
 
==Track listings==
;American CD maxi single
# "Ain't No Other Man" (radio edit) – 3:49
# "Ain't No Other Man" (instrumental) – 3:57
# "Ain't No Other Man" (call out hook) – 0:10
 
;European basic CD maxi single
# "Ain't No Other Man" (album version) – 3:47
# "Ain't No Other Man" (instrumental) – 3:47
 
;European premium CD maxi single
# "Ain't No Other Man" (album version) – 3:47
# "Ain't No Other Man" (Jake Ridley remix) – 6:01
# "Ain't No Other Man" (Ospina & Sullivan remix) – 3:45
# "Ain't No Other Man" (a cappella) – 3:30
 
==Remixes==
;Official Remixes
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Ospina & Sullivan Radio Mix] 3:44
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Ospina & Sullivan Radio Mix - Vox Up] 3:44 - This is the version released on the main CD single.
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Ospina & Sullivan Mixshow] 5:16
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Ospina & Sullivan Club Mix] 7:11
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Ospina & Sullivan Dub] 5:38
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Junior Vasquez Mix] 5:56
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Junior Vasquez Radio Edit] 3:57
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Jake Ridley Remix] 6:00
* "Ain't No Other Man" [Shapeshifters Mixshow Mix] 5:24
* "Ain't No Other Man" [feat. [[Chamillionaire]]] 4:15
 
== Charts ==
{| width="0%"
|- valign="top"
| width="50%" |
{| class="wikitable"
!align="center"|Chart (2006)
!align="center"|Peak<br>Position
|-
|align="left"|[[United World Chart]]
|align="center"|2
|-
|align="left"|[[ARIA Charts|Australian ARIA Singles Chart]]
|align="center"|6
|-
|align="left"|Austrian Singles Chart
|align="center"|7
|-
|align="left"|Belgian Singles Chart
|align="center"|10
|-
|align="left"|Brazilian Singles Chart
|align="center"|3
|-
|align="left"|[[Canadian Hot 100]]
|align="center"|4
|-
|align="left"|Canadian [[Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems|BDS]] Airplay Chart
|align="center"|3
|-
|align="left"|Czech IFPI Chart <ref>http://www.ifpicr.cz/hitparada/index.php?a=titul&hitparada=2&titul=143774&sec=1fcdaf9d133ede1f81aa62254bc0d68f</ref>
|align="center"|15
|-
|align="left"|Dutch Singles Chart
|align="center"|12
|-
|align="left"|[[Eurochart Hot 100 Singles|European Singles Chart]]
|align="center"|4
|-
|align="left"|Finnish Singles Chart
|align="center"|5
|-
|align="left"|French Singles Chart
|align="center"|26
|-
|align="left"|German Singles Chart
|align="center"|5
|-
|align="left"|[[Irish Singles Chart]]
|align="center"|3
|-
|align="left"|[[Recording Industry Association of New Zealand|New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart]]
|align="center"|5
|-
|align="left"|Malaysian Singles Chart
|align="center"|2
|-
|align="left"|Norwegian Singles Chart
|align="center"|2
|-
|align="left"|Russian Airplay Chart
|align="center"|32
|-
|align="left"|Swedish Singles Chart
|align="center"|15
|–
|align="left"|Swiss Singles Chart
|align="center"|5
|-
|align="left"|[[UK Singles Chart]]
|align="center"|2
|-
|align="left"|U.S. [[Billboard Hot 100|''Billboard'' Hot 100]]
|align="center"|6
|-
|align="left"|U.S. ''Billboard'' [[Pop 100]]
|align="center"|4
|-
|}
 
==Notes==
<references/>
 
{{Christina Aguilera}}
 
[[Category:2006 singles]]
[[Category:Christina Aguilera songs]]
[[Category:Billboard Hot Dance Club Play number-one singles]]
 
[[da:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[es:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[he:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[it:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[nl:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[pt:Ain't No Other Man]]
[[sv:Ain't No Other Man]]