Posts Tagged ‘music’

So much to say, so little time…

Wednesday, April 5th, 2006

It has certainly been a while since I’ve posted here, since I’ve been incredibly busy. The next person who tells me how easy students have it is going to regret it.

Anyhow, there’s been loads I’ve wanted to post about over the last few months that I haven’t got around to doing, so here’s one of those really long posts where I blog about many seemingly random and unrelated things. If you really want to read it all, I’d suggest you grab a coffee (preferably a cappuccino) and a comfortable seat :-)

Way back in Februrary, the day before I flew out to FOSDEM in fact, I went to see Goldie Lookin Chain at the Manchester Academy. They were great as expected, the beer was warm as expected and the atmosphere in the venue was unpleasant as expected. That night of passive smoking (of various substances) no doubt contributed to the rather nasty cold I woke up with the next morning and which stayed with me all through FOSDEM, completely ruining it for me. It’ll certainly be much better once the smoking ban comes in. Oh and while I’m on the topic, Mr. Blair (or should I say Brown): can we have a ban on smoking in non-enclosed public places next please?

There was an article at the BBC way back in February entitled Copyright sings to a different tune which is essentially editorial making the case for not allowing the record companies to have our copyright terms extended. I’ve blogged about this before, but the message is still the same: the public domain used to be a very valuable resource, from which creators could take work which was no longer of commercial value and make something new out of it. Nowadays copyright terms are so long that little is entering it, meaning everything is protected by an aggressive copyright police. Big business must not be allowed to dictate our copyright policy like they do so easily in the US.

Also in February the US Patent Office granted a ridiculously broad and obviously-invalid-to-any-sane-person patent covering things like Flash (not that I care about Flash, since it’s proprietary) and the technology frequently touted as being the next big thing on the web, AJAX. The fact that such a patent could be granted in the face of clear and obvious prior art is beyond words. This is why we must fight to make sure we don’t get this kind of nonsense in Europe.

At the beginning of March was the barely-touched-on-by-the-media national strike of university lecturers. I was out and about on the day and took a few photos. They were striking over pay, since they were promised more and didn’t get it (whereas management did get it). Such strikes are a pain, but if that’s the only way lecturers can get the powers-that-be to pay attention then so be it. The strike isn’t however the end of it and they’re also refusing to mark coursework, publish marks for already marked coursework or invigilate exams until they agree a pay deal. What this means to me, since I graduate this year, is that I may not know my final grade for some months which will make it very difficult to get a job. It’s about time this whole mess was sorted out and lecturers were given the pay to which they are entitled.

During the past six months or so I’ve been trying to get a graduate job, so far with no success. It seems that graduate employers aren’t actually interested in graduates at all: they just want decent staff they can get away with paying very little. Basically if you don’t have a significant amount of work experience (which many graduates won’t have – I certainly don’t) you can’t get a graduate job, which kind of defeats the whole point of graduate jobs in my opinion. What is also very worrying, especially given the state of corporate IT in this country, is the fact that many employers are recruiting for technical jobs without assessing the technical ability of candidates at all – they seem to think soft-skills are more important and that they can teach technical skills, even to non-technical people….. somebody should break it to them that the real world doesn’t quite work like that. I’ll resist the temptation to rant about this too much, but I can’t resist the temptation to shamelessly ask that anyone reading this who knows of a Linux/networking/web dev/FPGA engineer job going gets in touch.

I’ve been following the Sun UltraSPARC T1 developments for a while now, so I should mention that Sun have finally made their processor available on opensparc.net under the GPL. I’ve grabbed myself a copy and taken a brief look and it looks pretty useful. My course pretty much winds up over the next few months so after that I should have some spare time to get it running in a simulator and see what I can do with it.

A few weeks ago I saw a story which really made me laugh: ‘Sandal and ponytail set’ cramping Linux adoption?. Apparently the relaxed approach to clothing taken by Linux/FLOSS hackers is harming the uptake of Linux. What a load of old nonsense. Firstly, technical people are most often not customer facing, so nobody cares how they dress since they’re typically damm good behind-the-scenes technical people. I myself am not a stereotypical geek with a ponytail, sandals and long beard (maybe in twenty-or-so years) but like most geeks I do take a relaxed attitude to clothing (i.e. it’s purely functional – geeks don’t do fashion) and have never found it to be a problem. After all, decent clothes would certainly be ruined by all the ferreting around under desks and in comms cabinets. In any case, any business or government who wants to use Linux isn’t going to go to a Linux hacker for advice, they’re going to go to a suit-wearing consultancy filled with the kind of people geeks try to avoid at all costs. One quote really summarises the whole article:

"Open source has an unprofessional appearance, and the community needs to be more business-savvy in order to start to make inroads in areas traditionally dominated by commercial software vendors."

This guy seems to be living in a dream-world: the community doesn’t care about business. The community cares about producing good software and having fun doing it.

That’s all for now; I should get back to posting more frequently from now onwards.

Boycott the RIAA while listening to good music

Monday, January 10th, 2005

I don’t think there’s anyone out there who likes the RIAA – maybe it has something to do with their lawsuits against children or their love of DRM and other freedom-restriction methods. The easy answer of course is not to buy any CDs by American artists (or buy it digitally, licensed by the Russian Multimedia and Internet Society :-) ), but before you know it little-brother the BPI will be joining in.

So, how do you listen to good music without funding an attack on our digital freedom? Simple. Buy independent music and support raw, unmanufactured non-corporate-corrupted talent. I recently had an order with CD Baby who only sell independent music. I got 5 albums for £20, including delivery from the US – try and get that kind of value in Woolworths. These artists are also getting paid properly too, without the record company taking 90% of the profits. When you buy a chart album, the artist might get around £1. These artists will get around £6, depending on the price of the CD.

They currently have a sale on where you can buy 3 or more albums from the sale selection (over 9000 to choose from) for $5 each (that’s about £2.60). I really urge everyone to surf on over and select say, 4 CDs at semi-random. Just grab some CDs from your preferred genres and enjoy some good music at an amazing price, taking note of the nice fuzzy feeling you get for helping to save the world from the RIAA and friends.

I can especially recommend the following:

Diana PageLove Will Find a Way – not in the sale but some of the tracks are excellent. You’ll find the MP3s on the data track of the disc – take that RIAA!
Two TalesTwo Tales – every track on this album is fantastic. Worth every cent of that $5.
thebrothereggSnowflake & Fingerprint Machine – every track is completely different from the last – it’s nice to hear something truly different.

Razorlight at the Manchester Academy

Tuesday, October 5th, 2004

Razorlight at their bestI was lucky enough to be able to go to see Razorlight live at the Manchester Academy last night as part of the NME Rock N Roll Riot Tour. What a night. The mighty Razorlight were at their best and at only £10 per ticket (actually I paid £17, but that’s the original price) I think it was bloody good value! I’m sure the whole of Manchester felt the vibrations and sang along when they did Golden Touch and Vice.

Also worthy of particular note is one of the support bands, The Duke Spirit. They did a fine job of warming us all up and delivering something quite different from all the other stuff out there.

And yes, I was one of those people waving their phone in the air in some futile attempt to get a decent picture. As you can see, the best picutre I got was still crap. I really should buy a proper digital camera…

I’d not been to the Academy before and I was not disappointed (well, apart from the long queue to get it and the lukewarm beer, but I can cope with that). And who says downloading is killing music? Someone tell the RIAA – this music was very much alive! As a result of going to this gig I’m going to buy two albums. OK, I could probably download both, but good music – especially good British music – is worth paying for, I think.

OGG Players, Amazon & Debian

Thursday, July 8th, 2004

Just got myself a new portable OGG player, and it’s bloody brilliant. It’s called the IOPS and is, not suprisingly, Korean made. It is available in the UK if you’re made of money, but I saved a packet and ordered direct from the main Korean distributor. It’s about the size of a pendrive, weighs absolutely nothing, plays MP3’s and OGGs, works as usb-storage under Linux, includes an FM radio, has an OLED display and it’s just great. I went with the 512MB version (I could have lived with 256MB, but thought I’d leave plenty of room for the future). It’s great for transfering data between machines as well. It’s only failing is that it doesn’t like mono OGGs, so I have to re-encode LUGRadio as stereo to listen to it… (and I thought I could manage a whole entry without mentioning LUGRadio….).

On a completely unrelated note, I’ve recently discovered the Amazon Marketplace. Basically if you go to look for a CD or something, you are given to option to “Buy it new or used”. Click on “Buy it new” and you’ll get a list of both individuals and companies who are selling the item (usually) cheaper than the retail price. Today I bought a full album for just £2.99 when it usually retails for between £9 – £12. Yes, Amazon are evil, but technically I’m not buying from them, but from a third party. I do rarely buy CD nowadays, since I found a great legal-as-far-as-I’m-concerned download site, but if I can always get them for that price I’d buy more.
And speaking of buying things, I’ve noticed that Kelkoo has gone down the toilet recently. The search is just crap and so it’s very difficult to find what you’re looking for even if you enter the exact search terms. And when you do find what you’re looking for, I’m sure it doesn’t compare as many stores as it used to. Anyone else remember ShopSmart? Now that was a good shopping comparison site, until BarclayCard bought it and killed it off.

On yet another unrelated note, I’ve bought myself a nice new laptop. For the first time, I’ve actually decided to go for Debian on the desktop. Previously I always thought Debian was best left to servers (just because I can configure stuff on the command line, doesn’t mean I enjoy doing it) but I’ve now changed my mind. I bunged in a Debian-Installer CD as I wanted to run testing anyway and as the saying goes, “it just worked”. I compiled up the latest 2.6.7 kernel to make use of the Hyperthreading and now I’ve got a super-fast machine with a great OS on it. I always thought apt was great on server installs, but it’s bloody brilliant now that I use it on a daily basis. And every piece of hardware works, albeit some with nasty closed drivers.

And following on from the great Linux arseholes debate it seems that an arsehole has taken up residence on the Debian-SPARC mailing list. This particular arsehole thinks they’re qualified to slag off decisions made by the “gods” of SPARC kernel development, without whom there almost certainly wouldn’t be a SPARC port of Linux. This person also feels the need to make stupid and unhelpful posts to people asking sensible questions and is clearly making a deliberate attempt to annoy people. It will be interesting to see if my theory about dealing with such people actually works. Only time will tell.

I really should post more often so my posts aren’t so long and unrelated… Oh well. I’m off to Spain on Saturday and am looking forward to a week without so much as touching a computer.

Music downloads finally affordable!

Monday, May 3rd, 2004

No doubt most people will have seen this site plastered over every single news site not long ago, as did I. So I thought I’d give allofmp3.com a go. The site claims to offer LEGAL music downloads for just 1 US cent per megabyte. You can also select the format and quality of the songs you download – none of this DRM rubbish. So I paid my 144 Rubles (£2.80) for 500MB and started to browse around.

There seems to be quite a good selection. First you find the track you want, then select the format and quality. Then a few minutes later the songs are ready to download in your download area. The great thing is that I can choose OGG format at 192Kbp/s! Excellent! I’ve downloaded three tracks so far and I’ve no complaints at all. Does exactly what it says on the tin.

So are they legal? Who cares. I’ve bought the tracks in good faith so if they turn out not to be legal, that’s not my fault.

I wouldn’t be at all suprised if this site’s sales exceed that of iTunes in the near future…