Songbird

Boing-Boing has a summary post on Songbird — a brand new, open source, universal music player / download / purchasing system designed to provide a common interface onto the dozens (hundreds?) of music download sites and services out there.

A team led by ex-Winamp-er Rob Lord today released a preview edition of Songbird, a desktop media player that offers an open source alternative to services like Apple’s iTunes and the Windows Media Player. Instead of connecting to one locked store full of DRMmed goods, it can connect to any and all available music (and video) on the internet. Code brains behind the project include people who helped build Winamp, Muse, Yahoo’s “Y! Music Engine” media player, and developers from Mozilla Foundation. Initial release is for Windows only, with editions for other OSes to follow in the coming weeks.

The digital music market is becoming increasingly fragmented with a multitude of DRM formats and incompatible media players (both software and hardware). Most people don’t think twice about the fact that when they purchase music from iTMS, they’re permanently buying into Apple’s software and hardware for playback. Or people do think twice about it, but are willing to make the sacrifice in exchange for the excellent discovery and purchasing experience (I’m in the latter category). Songbird can’t fix that problem, but it can — especially assuming a pace of plugin development to match what’s happened for Firefox — at least become a Rosetta stone for locating the music you want.

When I’m looking for a particular artist or album, the order of operations is this: Check emusic.com. If that fails, check iTMS. If I can’t find it in either of those places, I’ll reluctantly launch Acquisition and do the P2P thing. Pandora sits off to the side turning me on to new things, but without letting me grow my library. Songbird could allow all of these paths to converge in one spot — an idea I love.

Thread at DIGG on this. And yes, the Songbird logo bird does indeed appear to be passing gas.

Hands Off My Internet!

Verizon, AT&T, BellSouth and their ilk are tired of net neutrality – the principle that “packets is packets,” and all should be passed along as equals. Net neutrality is one of the things that makes things “just work.” If these megacorps have their way with Congress, they intend to start double dipping – charging customers for broadband access, and also charging Google, Amazon, eBay etc. for bandwidth by giving preferential treatment to packets from companies that pony up.

Bellsouth’s William L. Smith told reporters that he would like the Internet to be turned into a “pay-for-performance marketplace” where his company would be allowed, for example, to charge Yahoo for the right to have its site load faster than Google.

Similar quotes from clue-free CEOs here. Common Cause is running the Hands Off Our Internet! campaign to let execs know they’re harshing our mellow.

Music: Stereolab :: Infinity Girl

Chanterelle Hunting

Chantrelles Two days this weekend in the dreaded claustrophobic bowels of our house’s crawlspace, installing a 6 mil vapor barrier (we’re in pitched battle with household moisture problems – gutters, french drains, caulking, mildew-resistant paint, dehumidifier, the works). On belly in mud, no space to work, ribs bruised from pushing through the tiny access point… exhausted and rubbery after today’s session, but just enough time for a quick shower and to hop in the car with [dude] and head for the Berkeley Hills to do some mushroom hunting.

It’s wild Chanterelle and Oyster mushroom season, and the rains have been kind this year. I’d never been, but had always wanted to. No walk in the park! These guys grow on the sides of steep hills, in deep underbrush far from the main paths, under logs, amidst thorn bushes. Two hours of pushing through thickets, puffing up hills, sliding into mud bogs, and we ended up with almost five pounds of forest delicacies (yes, [dude] knows which ones are dangerous).

Actually, it was almost all Chanterelles – I spied the monster Oyster sprouting from a log just as we were heading out at the end of the day. Tomorrow will have a glorious saute’ session and do a pasta. Tonight I’m elastic.

Music: Andre Previn :: No Words For Dory

The Day I Met Grandpa Munster

Al Lewis, aka Grandpa Munster, has died. If it were not for a trip to Cuba I made with an old girlfriend in the early 90s to see the International Film Festival, do some music writing, and see the country before the embargo was lifted and it became an American tourist destination, Al Lewis wouldn’t mean much to me. But at the end of that festival, we were invited to Fidel Castro’s palace to sip mojitos and consort with other attendees. And, in one of the more accidental/surreal confluences of my life, I ended up in a circle of people talking to Fidel Castro about the potential for hemp products to boost the Cuban economy, with Al Lewis standing across the circle from me, interjecting crazy talk into the conversation. Never watched much Munsters, but will never forget that moment. Have included here a pre-weblog journal entry from that day. Farewell Grandpa Munster!
Continue reading “The Day I Met Grandpa Munster”

Picture Time Has Ended

Miles Shadow While on a walk on the Berkeley Pier today, Miles took his first picture… this modernist interpretation of his own shadow. He then flat-out refused to take a picture of me. “No, Daddy — picture time has ended!” No further explanation requested or offered, but I’m not taking it personally.

For some reason, he’s been fascinated lately with the wrinkle in my forehead, and today objected that he couldn’t see his own wrinkle. “You don’t have one,” said Amy. “You have to earn your wrinkles over time.” “No!,” answered Miles, “People don’t earn wrinkles, they earn stickers!” (referring to our “eat a good dinner” incentive system).

He’s been living with a doozy of a head cold lately. A week ago, trying to get him to take medicine when sick … you’d think we were trying to yank teeth out of his head. Then, suddenly one evening, he actually asked for his medicine — seemed to have made the causal connection between it and feeling better. And last night, after eagerly gulping down a tablespoon, he boldly informed me: “Daddy, medicine is my favorite food!”

Music: Konono No.1 :: Lufuala Ndonga

Quality Tips for Webmasters

Long known for its terse, sometimes dense, but always authoritative documentation of the official HTML specifications, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has launched something very different — a totally readable collection of Quality Tips for Webmasters. Just the stuff you need to care about if you want to develop pages that work well in a wide range of environments, that play well with screen readers and other devices for the disabled, that degrade well in older browsers, that respect the basics of web standards, etc. Sort of a back-to-basics primer for a web gone mad.

Music: The Fall :: Industrial Estate

The Smell of Decay

A year old, but interesting — Michael S. Malone for Silicon Insider: R.I.P. Microsoft? Malone detects a whiff of decay in the air around Microsoft, both in its inability to execute:

Now the company seems to have trouble executing even the one task that should take precedence over everything else: getting “Longhorn,” its Windows replacement, to market. Longhorn is now two years late. That would be disastrous for a beloved product like the Macintosh, but for a product that is universally reviled as a necessary, but foul-tasting, medicine, this verges on criminal insanity.

… and in its perpetual inability to really capture the public imagination:

Great, healthy companies not only dominate the market, but share of mind. Look at Apple these days. But when was the last time you thought about Microsoft, except in frustration or anger? The company just announced a powerful new search engine, designed to take on Google — but did anybody notice? Meanwhile, open systems world — created largely in response to Microsoft’s heavy-handed hegemony — is slowly carving away market share from Gates & Co.: Linux and Firefox hold the world’s imagination these days, not Windows and Explorer.

Of course marketshare will carry you a long, long way when your company is failing in other ways. But I think he makes some valid points. Whether it matters to the market is a separate question.

Thanks mneptok

Also interesting: Managing a Megaservice — a technical / QA peek inside the sausage factory at Hotmail.

Music: Bettye Lavette :: Just Say So

8MP Cell Phone Camera

Absurd headline: 8MP Camphone Spells Doom For Stand-Alone Digicams. Yes, it is incredible that Samsung is about to release the 8-megapixel SCH-V8200 camera phone. And yes, it is true that it’s all about convergence – I’d love to have really fine images come out of my phone. But there’s a long row to hoe between this and a true replacement for the standalone camera, both in terms of features / flexibility and in terms of lens quality, depth of field, etc.

One of the most difficult limiting factors in cell phone image quality is that there just isn’t enough physical depth in tiny plastic lenses to allow for decent focus or depth of field. One interesting approach to this problem is in hydraulically controlled liquid lenses, which closely resemble the way the human eyeball works.

8MP is a huge stride, but far from spelling doom for standalone cameras. But it’s not inconceivable that we’ll get there one day.

Music: Lou Reed :: Busload of Faith

Helium Hat

Mark V Helmet For Dad’s upcoming 70th birthday, wanted to track down an old mixed-gas diver’s hard hat, hopefully similar to ones that would have been used by the U.S. Coast Guard in the late 1950s. Figured, naively, that I could do it for a few hundred bucks. eBay turns up close to nothing, though I did find a replica there for a lot more than that. Started emailing with collectors (all in other countries, for some reason). Turns out these things are a lot rarer than I thought. Typical of the responses I got:

The price of a helium hat is around $8500, and a friend of mine in England, just had one delivered to him from Desco. If you were to find a used one, you are looking at maybe 12 to 14 thousand dollars.

That guy offered up this 1918 Schrader Mark V for a paltry $9k. Unless someone shows up quick with an antique diving helmet fab, time for Plan B. Wonder whether Dad might prefer a new grill instead…

Music: Bettye Lavette :: Only Time Will Tell Me

FACE

Amazing Flash-free web page animation techniques: FACE (Faruk’s Animated CSS Enhancements). DOM manipulation via CSS+Javascript. Open source, and with a very clean API. Follow the Examples link for more. “Almost, but not quite entirely unlike Flash.” Wow.

Music: The Feelies :: Fa Cé-La