Tori Amos – American Girl Posse

A Little slow reviewing this – having been out for a month or two. But I  have found that Tori’s later albums take a lot longer to digest as her lyrics tend towards the obscure. Although the  subject of the opening song on latest album American Girl Posse leaves little space for misunderstanding as criticism of George Bush.

 

The album’s song fluctuate from style to style as it delivers songs from different members of the ‘posse’ which it does with a fair degree of success. It seems that its each of the songs intros provide the clearest indication of which character is performing. 

 

Unlike earlier albums the presence of the drums and guitar are a lot more noticeable giving album a more driven feel overall where as earlier albums the other instrumentation tended to be lower in the mix giving space the vocals and piano.

 

Overall not a bad album, but not Tori Amos at her best. But still distinctive and a cut above other the other ‘kookie’ female singer/songwriters.

 

 

The Great CD Digitisation

I came across rather interesting article about the challenges and questions involved in migrating a substantial music collection to a digitised solution which allowed the media to be streamed around the home (the article can be found here ongoing · The Great CD Migration).

 

Its a challenge that both a friend of mine and I have been dealing with for a couple of years now – both of us have significant amounts of media (legitimate I hasten to add). We’ve both arrived at slightly different solutions, but they reflect the difference in emphasis of source – one being music the other video.  But the core solution seems to be the same – a small box stashed away acting as a file server and a dedicated D/A component (Squeezebox in on case and a modified XBox in another).

 

With hard disk capacities rapidly rising the cost of a file server – we’re very close to a single drive holding 1 terabyte now. As well as the fact that the processing power of the machine doesn’t need to be powerful – a simple Pentium with the right O/S will be enough.

 

The thing that may intimidate less techie people is avoiding the loss of the digitised media once the mammoth task of conversion has been completed.  We’ve both ended up configuring the storage into a basic RAID array – so a single disk failure can be recovered from.

 

I think that as the media solutions such as slim devices becoming increasingly more mainstream it is the ease of managing things like storage that will become the next big challenge.

 

SeeWhy Software Selected by eCourier

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 The news about our success at SeeWhy with eCourier is clearly starting to spread.  Rather than blow my own horn (as Software Development Manager) for SeeWhy just take at look at the article on ebizQ – Link to SeeWhy Software Selected by eCourier.

 

Hopefully we’ll have some more news soon.

 

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DAB digital radio on your iPod

 We recently introduced a DAB radio into the house more for Mrs Monster than myself; but I’ve discovered listening to radio can be a pleasing experience (until now I’ve always got annoyed at the sound compression, and noise if there are poor atmospherics or tuning drift).

 

 I also happen to an iPod owner, and rather attached to the little box of magic. Until the arrival of DAB I’ve never been worried by the idea of not having radio incorporated into it, always believing that dedication to a single purpose is a good thing. But now I’d like to combine the two, rather than having to carry two larger devices which are bound to have overlapping features, I wanted something small and compact so it can travel with me and my iPod which can use the iPod’s audio capabilities.

 

So trawling the net I thought I’d find a raft of possibilities – but this isn’t the case!  There are radio alarm clocks that will dock your iPod and have a DAB tuner – but something small enough to travel with the iPod – nada, nothing. The best I can find is an article (Get DAB Digital Radio on your iPod) about a product due out later this year.  The picture I found of a prototype elsewhere makes it look pretty funky – and will be going on my wishlist.

 

If you know of anything available now though – I’d love to hear about it.

 

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MindMaps & Other Site Tweaks

I found yesterday that there was a problem with the amount of screen real-estate being given over to the Fash display of the mindmap.  The problem was fixed last night – so it is pretty much full screen now.  I’ve also made a few other tweaks to the site such as the About page.

 

I’ll be doing a few other site tweaks in the coming week or two.

New York Legalizes Ticket Touting

 After my recent grumbles about the UK government’s efforts, or lack of them (go here) to control ticket touting.  It would seem that New York according to Glorious Noise (referencing an article on MSNBC) has gone the other way – on the basis of free trade.  So if you want tickets for a gig in New York I hope you have deep pickets.

 

Beauty under your nose

 

When you look at flowers, often to you look real close to them, and see how beautiful they can be? Here are a few shots I’ve taken recently.

Interestingly enough, Peter Gabriel has been talking about the very samething in recent months in his ‘moon casts’ (see ww.petergabriel.com).

Mpre can bee seen on our flickr site (or go here).

 

 

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Google Reader feeds offline

 Google Reader – the online RSS aggregator now has offline capability by utilising Google Gears libraries (more details here Access your Google Reader feeds offline with Google Gears).  This brings the tool very close to being an all killer RSS solution – all it needs to address is the storing of private username and passwords for those feeds that require authorisation to pickup.

 

 

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DRM Free iTunes carries personal details

 A number of sites are reporting that the new DRM free iTunes files are carrying personal information such as the buyers email address are encoded within the file such as your email address (Link to Privacy Concerns Surface Following iTunes Plus Launch — Digital Music News).

 

Although having some form of deterrent to file sharing is understandable (although I’d suggest futile – you just need to watch the people behind hymn, CSS etc can quickly defeat a changed encryption). But something like an email address will upset the privacy lobby.  Which I understand and fully support after all your email address is effectively half the key into your iTunes account.  Apple could have so easily run a key system so that they could identify the original purchaser of a file, but no one else can.

 

The naive, may argue that if you don’t share your files, you’ve nothing to worry about. But it is probably those very naive people who don’t realise that their personal LAN with wireless have no security settings (or have managed to put some protection in place but don’t realise someone who knows what they’re doing can still break in without too much effort) on it and wide open for the casual person to help themselves to your nice DRM free music among other things and dump onto the web.

 

Of course having information like email addresses in the file does make it easy for the RIAA to find someone to accuse and exploit people’s naivety to get themselves a ‘collar’.  It does raise the question that if the RIAA where to do such an action are they breaching the Digital Millennium Copyright Act?

 

The concern I have with this is although Apple is removing DRM, these actions aren’t going to win the support of the anti DRM critics, and in the case of iTunes – there is still no a win for the interoperability argument. Which ultimately may kill the the momentum for DRM free thinking in the future.

 

 

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FQ Magazine: Parenting Magazine for fathers , new dads and single dads

 For the new daddies – graduating from FHM. Still has has and gadgets and great competitions.

Link to FQ Magazine: Parenting Magazine for fathers , new dads and single dads