Posts from November 2004

[untitled]

The good ol' BBC are now experimenting with making some of their programmes available as MP3 downloads. Melvyn Bragg's "In Our Time" is the first, and I can now listen to it on my iPod/Italk combo.   I've said it before & I'll say it again.  This is the future of radio.

Public Service Broadcasting is a wonderful thing when it's as good as this.  The BBC is the thing I miss most when I'm in the States.


Rip, Mix, Burn, Sue

[Original Link] Ed Felten's splendid lecture on understanding digital media and the

associated copyright issues.  You don't need any knowledge of technology to understand this one.
An issue Ed doesn't touch on, which should also be exercising the minds of the media industry, is that content of this quality is freely available on the web, and is certainly better than anything on offer on my TV channels tonight.  There's always been good stuff to read on the web.  Increasingly, there's a lot of good stuff to watch, too.
Thanks to John for the link.

iTalk therefore iAm

Well, not only have a recently become the proud owner of an iPod Photo, but today I went and got a Griffin iTalk for it.

italk picture

This works very nicely as a voice recorder, but also incorporates a small speaker. This allows you to play back your memos without headphones, but also to play back anything else that you don't mind hearing through a tiny speaker. Not great for music, but OK for listening to audiobooks while shaving...

Of Macs and Monsters

[Original Link]

The Delicious Library application is out for the Mac, and it's appropriately named. I have never really felt the desire to catalog my books and CDs. I certainly never felt like putting in the time and effort to do so. But on the other hand, I tried this software and almost immediately registered it.

Why? Well, in a bizarre way, almost because I wanted to reward the creators and because it was something beautiful that I wanted to own. It's very rare that a bit of software does that to me! I was going to write a longish piece about it, but I came across the Ars Technica review by John Siracusa and it says it all. Anyone involved in software development should read this, or at least the first couple of pages. Anyone who wonders why we Mac enthusiasts become Mac enthusiast should at least read page 2, which asks some serious questions about the nature of the software & platform experience.

This is an example of the best kind of peer pressure. There is simply a "climate of excellence" on the Mac platform. Any developer that does not live up to community standards is looked down upon, or even shunned. Commercial, open source, freeware, shareware, it doesn't matter: pay attention to detail, or else.

In the meantime - a couple of screen shots:
Part of my library:

How did I get this information in to my machine? By scanning barcodes with my iSight: