August 30, 2005

Portable Pickle.

Mrs. Pickle and I are on a sojurn from busy city life. We are in Maine, and I am struck by the complete lack of racial diversity in the state. I've never seen so many white people in one place.

Acadia National Park is beautiful; even an indoorsy guy like me can appreciate its beauty. Unfortunately the weather hasn't been that cooperative, so we've been driving around, taking photos, and going to used bookstores and a really wonderful Asian import store with a really knowledgable owner - in the middle of Nowhere, Maine.

August 25, 2005

Google Talk

Google has a new talk application which apparently allows two people with gmail accounts to talk (like not instant message, but actually speak to one another) over the internet for free. I guess it's like free VOIP; I'm anxious to try it out with another gmail user...

August 23, 2005

Synthesizer Innovator Bob Moog dies at 71

Synthesizer innovator Bob Moog died over the weekend. He was the topic of a great documentary and even inspired my recent podcast.

August 22, 2005

24 hours of bladders

I stayed up for 24 hours straight yesterday helping a friend edit a video for a medical conference. I spent twelve of those hours staring at footage of kidney stones floating in pee, enormous, red prostate glands, and the wall of some guy's bladder. All I can see is yellow. I would post some screenshots, but I'll spare you. Pray you never have a problem with your urologic tract - the camera they use to take the shots is about the diameter of a pencil.

August 18, 2005

If you actually want to use music you've purchased from iTunes

This post is "old news", but describes a problem I have only recently encountered. I have mixed feelings about digital copyright as a law-abiding citizen. Sure, p2p filesharing - sharing digital music files purchased once and then copied millions of times across the internet - doesn't sit too well with me ethically. But, the restrictions iTunes places on music legally purchased for personal use are way too onerous. For example, the 5 computer limit on sharing the files, the fact I can't transfer files I've bought to my wife's iPod, the limit on burns to CD, or the fact I have to use iTunes to play all of the files I've bought.

In Apple's Defense
Understandably, when Apple established these rules and regulations, they were probably reacting to the possible legal disaster that its cash cow is going to somehow be sued out of business by whining rockstars with expensive lawyers. Certainly, the fact iTunes came out in the wake of Napster and P2P file sharing hysteria was probably a contributing factor in iTunes onerous DRM requirements embedded in each AAC file consumers buy from iTunes.

With that said
With that said, the DRM (digital rights management) imposed by Apple renders music I've legally purchased strips away functionality of these files for my own personal use. I can't put our prenuptually-purchased songs on my wife's iPod. I can't take the files, convert them to MP3s to submit as part of my own podcast on iTunes.
Sure, emerging technologies were first feared by authors, musicians, and Hollywood. The photocopy machine was seen as the death of publishing for authors. Yet, the average American has never photocopied an entire book and sold it on the black market, or prevented an author from getting royalties by giving it to a friend. Dual-tape decks and two VCRs were also seen as the end of music and movies respectively, but the poor quality of copies was an obstacle. Obviously, digital files like .mp3, AAC, and even the CD do not decline in fidelity when copied, which is a very real fear for artists. But, as much as I support the desire of the music industry and Apple to prevent mass piracy (good luck, especially in China), I have a right to be able to use copies of music I have purchased for my own personal use. I also have a right to play AAC files using whatever player I chose, especially if I hate the iTunes interface.

hymn Project
The hymn (Hear Your Music Anywhere) project shares this philosophy. The java-based program strips AAC files you've purchased and allows you to use them in a player other than iTunes, to re-encode them as MP3s if you decide that you hate your iPod (God only knows why), and to otherwise use them as you, the legal purchaser, should be able to do. I have had a lot of success with the program, but be sure to read the instructions carefully before you use it.

August 17, 2005

Addicted to Podcasting

So, it's pretty easy to set up a podcast. First, I signed up with libsyn.com to host the podcast, because it supports enclosures and basically foolproofs the process; it uploads the .mp3 file, creates an RSS feed, and posts text as a blog.

Audacity (free download) allows you to record voice and music, splice music files together, and encode the finished product as an .mp3 (you also need to download the LAME MP3 encoder to export your finished product as an .mp3).

I have all of the CDs in my collection converted to AAC files, so I used the dBPowerAmp music converter and the corresponding codecs to re-encode my AAC files as .mp3s, because I can't figure out a way to get Audacity to convert them directly.

I spliced the files together using Audacity and here is the finished product. Although the actual podcast doesn't have any speech (I don't have a microphone) and I forgot to edit the ID3 tags, I am thrilled with how easy it was. Better living through podcasting.

August 16, 2005

The Kinkster.

Kinky Friedman, the Texas gubernatorial candidate and self-proclaimed "Jewish Cowboy", is the topic of a recent The New Yorker article.

August 15, 2005

Found this on planetdan


Found this image on planetdan. I don't know who Dan is, but his blog is funny. It's a wonderful way for all who drive massive SUVs to "support our troops" by helping out governments that fund terrorists.

I need a TiVO.

I've had lots of extra time lately to watch television. These ads make me want to become a French citizen.

Screeching Fanta Women: Like a nail in my eye. The colors and the screaming give me petit mal siezure each time I see it, which is pretty often. So awful it makes me never want to drink a Fanta, even if I travel to South America.

"Tony Sinclair": Someone at Tanqueray Gin thought having a fictious foppish jackass making banal jokes would sell more Gin. Tony Sinclair sucks.

August 14, 2005

Terabyte.

Matt's recent revision to his website inspired me to post again. Active maintenance of a blog reminds me a lot of being a teenager and trying to start a journal about fifty thousand times. I guess that now that I'm done with law school and was schooled by the bar exam, I have to develop some hobbies.

One of my recent achievements has been transforming the CD collection I now share with my wife into AAC files. All 1500 CDS are now squeezing on a 320 GB hard drive, which is going to be replaced tomorrow if UPS delivers my f*ing terabyte of storage. I cannot believe I actually purchased that much space, but if I contiune to rip CDs in that Apple Lossless format, I am going to fill it up sooner rather than later.

Just saw a great documentary on Bob Moog, the inventor of the Moog synthesizer and one of the greatest musical pioneers of the twentieth century. I was a little confused as to why Wendy Carlos, the artist responsible for Switched-on Bach, wasn't mentioned in the film.

OK, Too much time in front of the computer today. Time to interact with my poor neglected wife.