Blog Archive for March 2007
Music Industry To Kill Online Radio
You'd think that one of these times the RIAA would make a smart move. Well, I guess the only word in their vocabulary is "money". One of these years, they will figure out that just means, "losing money".
The Copyright Royalty Board recently released its updated rates for Internet radio stations. Five or six years ago, the board finally required online stations to pay royalties and it killed most of the small radio operations on the Internet. It was the case that many did not make enough money to pay the eight cents per song played to the right persons. It's just insane, too, that the real over-the-air and satellite stations are not required to pay these fees. Thank the Lord for that, because RadioU can still be on the air despite a much higher Internet streaming cost.
However, even the biggest names in online broadcasting are crying foul because the rates are going up drastically. Many, including the Music Genome Project's Pandora, are saying they will have to go out of business. No online radio will be left unless its sponsored by companies that can bleed cash. If you run the numbers, stations will be required to pay thousands or millions more per year. But there's even something more at stake.
As the folks at This Week in Media were saying, the RIAA has almost run out of town all the ways to get free promotion of their music. If online radio does not exist, there's only boring over-the-air radio that is free for listeners. How am I supposed to listen to music that I like? Where am I to find new music? The guys on TWiM were saying that they don't buy any new music because they don't hear any new stuff. I'd love to bring the music of inReview.net to the Internet in the form of podcasts or something, but with all the fees, it's never going to happen.
What can you do? Write your state representatives, the Copyright Royalty Board, and at least sign this online petition.
The Academy Awards of DVD
The guys over at The Digital Bits have been covering the wide world of DVD for a whole decade now. I've always enjoyed that they find out the advance word on DVDs. Plus, their in-depth reviews tell me all that I want to know - if the video and audio quality is good and how many special features are on the disc.
This week they announced their yearly awards for the DVD format, The Bitsys. This year, of course, they also branch out to HD-DVD and Blu-Ray related awards. It looks like there's great stuff here: I want to see the beautiful new copy of Seven Samurai from Criterion. Bill Hunt has talked up the extended cut of Kingdom of Heaven a lot too - apparently it's a well-made movie that suffered from excessive cutting for theaters. Of course, they rightfully moan about George Lucas and Star Wars as well. Plus, for the kid at heart in you, there's even an award category for "Best DVD - Retro Saturday Morning". I mean, who doesn't want The Animaniacs on DVD?
Apple TV and Hacking
So, apparently the Apple TV should be coming out any moment now. However, some of the other portions of the info at AppleInsider were more interesting to me. Here's the juicy bits:
As AppleInsider exclusively reported back in January, Apple TV will drawn its graphics capabilities from NVIDIA's G72M graphics chipset with 64MB DDR2 video memory -- essentially the firm's GeForce Go 7400 chip.
At the heart of Apple TV device is a 1.0GHz Pentium M-based Intel chip with 2MB of L2 cache (code-named "Crofton"), which will be under-clocked to run on a 350MHz bus. The device will also pack 256MB of non-upgradable 400MHz DDR2 main system memory, a 40GB 2.5-inch PATA hard disk drive, and a 802.11n capable wireless card.
Let me tell you. There definitely will be a whole underground movement of geeky hackers doing amazing stuff with this box. There will definitely be a couple distributions of Linux for the machine. Hopefully they'll even get a version of MythTV running on the box if it has enough power. With that underclocked processor, there'll definitely be whole cooling systems the size of the machine itself to make it into something nice and snappy. Who knows? Maybe someone will even find ways to install Mac OS X and make it the even cheaper Mac Mini.
Internet Marketers and Getting Married
Marketers are odd people. Internet Marketers - doubly so. Sure, their jobs are getting their client's sites to the top of the search engines, but they also know how to use the web for fun (or personal gain - or both). And, of course, they're not your normal blue-collar workers; they're out-of-the-box, mind-blowingly smart people.
In the last couple years, one thing they've used the media for is to make engagement proposals. The owner of Search Engine Roundtable, Barry Schwartz, even made mainstream news headlines by working with Ask.com to propose to his girlfriend.
But only this year was Barry one-upped by another member of the search industry. Apparently Rand Fishkin of SEOmoz (which has a great site and Internet marketing blog, btw) had been secretly planning to propose to his girlfriend during the Super Bowl. It didn't work out because even the local the Super Bowl ads are sold out far in advance, but about a month ago he did the next best thing. Rand ran a spot during his girlfriend's favorite show, Veronica Mars. She agreed and they are to be married, but that's probably the most public thing I've ever seen anyone do for a marriage proposal.
OpenID Working
For those who wanted to use OpenID to authenticate themselves on my site, it should now work. There were some problems reported with logging in because my PHP was not compiled with the GMP library. You should and are encouraged to start using OpenID in many places, if possible.
New Life in the Heart of Minneapolis
About five years ago, I was walking around on the streets of Chicago Ave. and Lake St. in Minneapolis and we were talking about Christ and praying with people in the neighborhood. There were many homeless and very poor people walking around and it was a tough neighborhood. We told people that we wanted to make the neighborhood better by leading them to Christ. I remember one man saying, "If you want to help out this neighborhood, buy that building."
The building he was referring to was the Sears, Roebuck and Company Mail-Order Warehouse and Retail Store in the middle of South Minneapolis. According to the Wikipedia article on the site, it was built in 1927 and is the second-largest building in the state to the Mall of America. It's a huge, old stone building that was closed by Sears in 1994 and has a 211-foot tower that climbs above the surrounding area.
I was told that the neighborhood was getting a bit better but I hadn't been down there since then. A couple years ago I started hearing about a large redevelopment project on the property. I heard they were putting in some fancy condos and was worried that they'd drive all the people out of the neighborhood and just bring in lots of richer people. Thankfully, that did not happen.
Today I went into the building for the first time to get my state ID card renewed. I found that past the beautiful entryway and down in the basement was the nicest DMV office I've ever seen. It wasn't busy, looked great, and had fancy computer systems that called my number when they were ready to help me. (She said there was a glare on my glasses for the ID photo, and she asked if I'd take my glasses off. I bet I'm making a funny face just because I didn't have my glasses on.) Of course, I decided to stick around and find a bit more about the building.
Of course, the condos were there. I didn't see them, but The Chicago had a big presence in the signage and I've seen plenty of ads over the last couple years. I think a condo on the 10th floor of that tower would be so cool to have, overlooking all of Minneapolis. Of course, they are expensive, new property though. There's a lot of rentable office space there too, with a large Allina Health office on the main floor. I just realized that there's also a large section that is apartments for rent, many of which to people of moderate incomes
The biggest community benefit, though, is the Midtown Global Market on the south half of the first floor. It reminds me a lot of the State Fair because it's a large smorgasboard of items in a crowded marketplace. There was clothing, jewelry, art and collectibles, plus plenty of foods from all over the world. The many cultures that live in the neighborhood were all there to hang out with friends and enjoy life together. It's great that there's a year-round place just to congregate in public. Next time I'll have to remember not to each lunch before I go too!
Hats off to the city for doing a good job at bringing life into the neighborhood. It was really needed, and it seems like it helped out a bunch. Find out more information about the building and the Midtown area at the Midtown Exchange News site.
Apple and Windows Software
Dear Apple,
Some of us can't afford the MacBook Pro you've brainwashed us all into buying yet, OK? We love you, but you're just a bit too much to afford. Sure, I could not eat for a year and then get a computer, but, frankly, I like to eat.
So, of course, since I have a Dell desktop, I get to use Windows because I like to get things done and installing Ubuntu wouldn't be worth the six months of lost productivity, although it would be a learning experience. So what does it have to do with you? I know it's hard, but y'all need to start publishing decent Windows software.
Seriously, find some people that know how to write Windows code or who don't complain about it the whole time or something. The guys on the team right now are total jerks. If you tell me that Mac OS X is written by the same people who write iTunes for Windows, I might just go out and buy a cheaper laptop and skip the beautiful brushed metal and pretty interface.
What are my "whines", for those who listen to MacBreak Weekly? Well, for one, why can't iTunes be a multi-user application? If I have it running on my user account all the time to share my library with friends, nobody else can open iTunes. OS X has it working and so does every other Windows program. Get with it.
OK, and then I took the bait earlier this week and updated to the latest versions of iTunes and QuickTime. Thanks. But no thanks. I tried to watch the latest from the RSS feed of the latest Movie Trailers, but the trailers wouldn't show up. I even went to the trouble of checking through Internet Explorer because I thought maybe your testing monkeys miss the FireFox icon. But no, QuickTime is now mostly unusable.
Next time, find some Windows users on the street and stick your software in front of them for an hour and give them $10. They'll tell you some interesting stuff. They might not be as cheap as your monkeys, but they'll get the job done.
Maybe next week if you push out a patch, I'll talk about the Apple features I like. I'm looking forward to it.
Thanks,
Dan Ficker
A Three-Dimensional Display?
It looks kinda interesting. Kevin found this interesting bit of news that someone has developed an interactive three-dimensional display. Apparently the picture is projected in 3-D and there may be some sort of small particles that make the picture hang in the air. For more information and a video or two, check out the technology's official page.
The Server Debacle
Avid readers of my blog and fans of my other associated sites may have noticed that my site was down for almost nine hours today. I'm very sorry about that if you rely on any of my server's services. Believe me, I didn't like it any more than you did.
I figured out that I could get newer versions of software by using the apt-get
command. I wasn't happy with the version selection inside the confines of my hosting company's distributions, so I changed my /etc/apt/sources.list
to include the main Debian package repositories. Over lunch I performed a major upgrade of a bunch of that software.
During a couple of these updates, it asked me if I wanted to overwrite a file or two. I looked at the diffs of the files and it seemed to be harmless enough, and, well, the apts
almost always work well and were coming directly from Debian. So, I loaded up the new file and finished upgrading. I figured it would be a good time to restart the machine just to make sure everything updated correctly That's when I realized it didn't go so well.
My server did not come back up. Luckily, my hosting company, 1&1, has this great tool called a Serial Console. Apparently they have all their machines in their large data center wired up to a big KVM switch that doesn't need to have Ethernet connectivity. So, I logged into the central console and could interact with my server as if I was right inside the data center. Geniuses!
I tried, but I just couldn't figure out why the Internet couldn't communicate. At that time I read something in the FAQ saying that under no terms should you mess with the routing or networking settings on your server because it probably wouldn't work anymore. Well, too late for that. I guess I'll have to find something else.
I called up their technical support, and they were as usual unhelpful. The guy said my server was down because I couldn't ping it and almost ignored the fact that I said I could see it running on the serial console just fine. He recommended another option, which is rebooting the machine over the network in a Debian recovery mode. He then said something about mounting a readable file system or some such crap. I knew I wasn't going to do that.
After a bit of thinking, I started doing some queries on Google. I searched a lot about 1and1 nameservers
and was finding mostly the wrong stuff. Then I realized that I wanted the 1and1 dhcp
information. There I found quickly that the 1and1 root servers need this weird routing configuration in /etc/network/interfaces
:
up ip route add 10.255.255.1/32 dev eth0 up ip route add default via 10.255.255.1
Weird. Once I put those in there and refreshed the connection, all was well. Nice.
So I learned a bit, got frustrated a bit, and am still fairly happy with my hosting decision. I mean, when have you ever bought hosting services and ever been totally satisfied? And when do those support people know what they're talking about? As my dad says, "Never is a long time," but I think in this case it fits.
Measuring Your Web Visitors
Web analytics tools such as Google Analytics can provide a lot of useful information, but you have to dig through the data and know where to look. Of course, for large companies, there are the expensive, full-featured packages such as WebSideStory and WebTrends. I recently found this interview with Jim Sterne, who seems to be a leader in this field. I found some good ways to think about Analytics. Many people try to say that there's no way to get accurate information about your visitors, but he counters that you can discern changes in user behavior and figure out most of what is going on. If you're trying to market your own website, I would recommend giving this a read.