rickshangle.com

March 28, 2006

CNN.com - ‘Sexiest woman’: Scarlett Johansson - Mar 27, 2006

Filed under: Media — rshangle @ 7:05 am

The correct choice.

Alba - pretty, but too waifish / invisible.

Jolie - too infatuated with knives.

rds

March 20, 2006

now playing… returns with meta 7

Filed under: Data Control — rshangle @ 4:49 pm

Although I guess “returns” implies we ever went away with this, by far the most absurd concept I’ve become infatuated with recently… yet i can’t get enough!

You never stop…

np meta 7 2

March 16, 2006

np meta 6

Filed under: Data Control — rshangle @ 10:44 pm

I swear I wouldn’t have done this one if I didn’t like the song now playing so damn much…

np meta 6

now playing… meta 5!

Filed under: Data Control — rshangle @ 10:38 pm

please, somebody stop me, before i hurt myself!

np m 5

now playing… meta 4…

Filed under: Data Control, Music — rshangle @ 9:48 pm

ok… last one… i swear… for a little while…

np meta 4

Now playing… meta3…

Filed under: Data Control, Music — rshangle @ 7:57 pm

You may be wondering when I’m going to get tired of this. I’m wodering the same thing. Not yet, anyway.

np meta 3

now playing… meta2!

Filed under: Music — rshangle @ 7:30 pm

I am a huge nerd.

np meta 2 2

Now playing… meta!

Filed under: Music — rshangle @ 7:27 pm

In the grand tradition of infinte cats project, how far can it go? How far can it go?

np meta 1

rds

Now Playing… now playing!

Filed under: Data Control, Music — rshangle @ 7:22 pm

Most members of the vast community of three individuals that read this blog are rock-and-rollers with one foot in their grave, just like me.

That’s why, for extra action, I’m sure they’ve been rawking out over the last 24 hours via a deeper understanding of what’s playing in my iTunes at any given time:

now playing

You can go check out this guy’s page, as he wrote the iTunes now playing visualizer plug-in that dumps the song metadata as XML and automatically ftp’s it to my web server, where some PHP handles the presentation (such as it is).

For $10… I wish I could say it was an interstellar value, considering I’m a php/xml n00b, but it’s rocking out, has only crashed once in the last 72 hours, and lets the world stop and melt with my awesome taste in music. Looking forward to updates…

Looking at the bright side, I know 1,000-10,000% more about PHP, XML and editing Wordpress templates than I did before this exercise (considering I knew practically nothing… you can tell i’ve learned a lot. And these are good things and probably worth the $10 alone.

Ancillary Benefit: I’m an iTunes metadata freak, and the current obsession is getting album art inserted with a relatively high hit rate in my 35K+ song library. Now Playing has an extremely high hit rate for pulling down album art from Amazon when you have good song/album metadata in the file. At which point I just look at my page, click on the album art, and I’m automatically at Amazon where I can pull down a high-res version of the image (usually).

After that, an option-click on the album link brings up just the entire album… apple-A, insert album artwork. Could be a cleaner/fresher process, but it beats having to actually go to Amazon and look for the stuff.

rds

March 15, 2006

Legal (indie) MP3 music downloads at eMusic

Filed under: Media, Music, Network — rshangle @ 4:38 pm

Although I’m sometimes flambasted as an Apple fanboy, when I became aware of iTMS-competetor music download site eMusic, I had to give it a shot.

I first signed up for the 14-day trial, then after sniffing around decided, what the hey, I’ll go for the discounted $100 12-month subscription. In iTMS terms, I’ll need to download about ten albums to break even.

###The eMusic model:

1. you pay X dollars a month (the plans are $10, $15 and $20)…
2. … to download Y songs a month (mapping to 40, uh (I’m trying to find the T+C, now that I’m a member)… maybe 60, and 80 songs, respectively?)
3. The songs are in MP3 to do what you wish.

Why, one might ask, did I try out eMusic considered i’m an iTMS users but not a Napster user?

My friend Mike told me about an eMusic commercial featuring a 1/10th of a second clip of Bob Pollard, so that pretty much made it worth checking out.

So… based on that model… I have 480 songs to download over the next year… and I’m basically paying $0.21 a song, compared to $0.99 per song or a little less (if it’s part of a standard-priced $9.99 album, and has more than ten songs) on iTMS.

###The pros (after 10 minutes of user-dom):

1. MP3 @ 240kbit VBR means relatively good quality without DRM issues
2. 1,000,000+ songs, 3,000+ (can this be?) labels. A lot of indie content.
3. User reviews, message boards, “neighbors” (listing of people with similar interests), etc.
4. It’s MP3 so I can use it in any player… but I’ll (shocker) continue to use iTunes
5. This may be my ignorance talking, but the fact that there’s no DRM means that although eMusic can change their T+C for music I have yet to download, they can’t do anything for the music I already have downloaded.
6. Lots of indie content.

One might think, “ok, how is this different from iTunes?” Remember that iTMS’s FairPlay-DRM’ed content is always being cross-checked back to the mother ship. If Apple decides to change their use policies (which I doubt they’d do for already-purchased content, unless they’re willing to weather a major user backlash), that means they have control over determining if / how / in what way you can continue to use the stuff you bought.

###The cons:

1. (Puzzling) No album artwork included, although it takes two seconds to get that from Amazon or a dozen other locations
2. Uses a seperate app to download - you browse on the web, then when you click “buy” it kicks over to the other download manager app to seal the deal. It works, it’s fast. I haven’t found a downside it in yet… but it’s not a clean as iTMS/iTunes.
3. I’ll post more as I find them.
4. “Lots of indie content” is a bit of an understatement - almost entirely indie content and, well, sub-indie. You won’t find most big bands here, so I won’t be using this to replace iTMS. However (a pro), you will find tons of good stuff that you’ll probably never see on iTMS.

rds

pollard

St. Bob wants you to watch him jumpstart. also, his bands and other indie rockers can be found at eMusic.

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