Tagged: mp3 RSS

  • Dave 11:46 pm on December 8, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: free, , mp3   

    Momus – Creation Advent Calendar 

    momus2008adventIf you care to look at my last.fm profile, you will see that my most played artist is Momus – by quite a margin. During December, he is releasing the six albums that were released on the now defunct Creation label for free on his blog. The first one, Poison Boyfriend is available now.

    I bought all of these albums and I would say that these Creation albums are among my favourite Momus albums, and some of them are some of my favourite albums by anyone. I think they’re quite varied musically from one to the next but the style and stamp of the artist remains.

    So, if you’ve never heard any of these albums before, I’d say download a few tracks from each one as they get posted, just to get a good mix of the contents. I don’t think any track can be downloaded to give you that ‘oh, he’s that kind of artist’ summary – all of these albums are different to each other, and that continues throughout all of the albums that followed these soon to be free Creation ones. I personally think that these albums got better and better as they were released, and this first one is probably the one I have listened to the least – so it’s a good opportunity for me to listen again to appreciate it – probably with new insights having listened to so much of the later stuff.

    My favourite albums out of the bunch: Hippopotamomus, Don’t Stop The Night, Voyager and Timelord – but really, I can quite happily listen to all of them and enjoy them. Hippopotamomus has a special place in my heart though – so be sure to have a go at that when it appears

    Creation Advent Calendar 1:The Poison Boyfriend
    http://imomus.livejournal.com/419757.html

     
  • Dave 10:10 am on October 14, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , itunes, mp3   

    DRM 

    This sums up DRM for me. I have no qualms about buying music of film DRM-free. Shops like Bleep or Emusic just sell high quality MP3 files at reasonable prices – and that’s fine. In the past I bought an audio book from Audible and it’s a right pain in the arse to listen to where I want – consequently I never used them again. In order to listen to it, I need to install iTunes and I need to remember some ancient audible.com log-in to authorise use of the files – which is years old and I’m probably using a different machine too which causes further problems.

    So, the last audio book I wanted to listen to – I got on CD from Ebay and ripped which is slow (waiting for a parcel) – I’d have quite happily paid for it in MP3 format from a shop if that were possible.

    These days, a lot of music is available in MP3 format legitimately, but considering a lot of the costs have disappeared, a lot of the shops seem to be over priced to me. However, it is the format that is most useful to me, and it is much cheaper that compact discs were at the height of the record industries taking the piss period when you’d need the best part of £20 in HMV for a single disc.

    As far as I’m aware, there isn’t a way to legitimately buy DRM free films in the UK at the moment. You can buy films in digital format from iTunes, but they’re crippled with DRM. If I buy a film from iTunes, it’s tied to iTunes or one of those Apple TV boxes. I can’t for example watch it using Windows Media Centre. It’s a sad state of affairs that there aren’t any legitimate ways to buy films and watch them using a Windows Media Centre other than buying a DVD and sticking it in to watch! – Thank god for technology! You can rent short term DRM films, but buying is a no-no.

    All of this is crap frankly and means that doing things the illegal way is far easier than trying to do it legally. The reason illegal music sharing became so popular in the first place was because it was made so difficult to get music legitimately. The same is true of films now.

    Magazines are another area where DRM ruins the experience. I had an article published in a camera magazine some time ago, and I noticed that the magazine was for sale from Zinio. Zinio distribute magazines digitally, so in theory, when a new magazine in your subscription becomes available, you get notified, it downloads and you can read it.

    In practice this is another DRM crippled file that you can do next to nothing with. Their DRM kept breaking and their support pages on their web site tells you to go wandering in the file system to delete files and uninstall their software before installing it again. This works but when it goes wrong, it’s a pain to go through these steps to get the DRM working again. This has happened several times during the year long subscription. That experience means I won’t use them again.

    What’s wrong with using a PDF file that can be indexed by desktop indexing so it’s easy to find articles within the magazines. The Zinio distribution method has no advantages over the paper version. Indeed,  the magazine I subscribed to was often available in the shops before my digital copy arrived. Because of the DRM, it wasn’t going to be use-able anywhere but on the computer it was locked to.

    So, in summary, all of this DRM crap makes using modern technology a pain in the arse to use. You pay for crippled services that drive you mad and drive people to doing things the illegal way because it’s more convenient and doesn’t put you at risk of your purchases becomming unusable later.

     
    • Diana 5:04 am on November 12, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      I’m not sure if it’s available over there, but I’ve been using Amazon’s MP3 store lately. Being a mac user, I love the convenience of iTunes, but I have been reminding myself more and more, to go buy via Amazon. The downloader is easy, one click buying and DRM-free. And a side benefit is they have a higher bit-rate.

    • publicenergy 11:13 am on December 22, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      The Amazon MP3 store launched in the UK recently. It's not that nicely presented, but it is good value and the files are good quality which is what really matters.

  • Dave 9:39 pm on April 5, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: mp3,   

    Muxtape 

    muxtape

    I’d seen Muxtape recently and it looked interesting but I didn’t really pay that much attention to it. This evening though I listened to the full tracklisting of this one by BennehBoy. I really enjoyed listening to it and decided to have a go myself.

    There is a very nice feature that isn’t immediately apparent – you can subscribe to people’s pages using RSS. That means these things don’t have to stay the same – you can swap the songs on them and hopefully your friends or contacts will get notified and be able to listen to the new tracks you’ve added – or indeed visit the page again and listen to the mix in it’s entirety.

    All in all very nicely done. You can hear mine by clicking on the image.

    By the way, I don’t normally use Internet Explorer – my Twitter client insists on launching it when I click on a link instead of my default browser (Firefox). This seems to be common with all applications build on top of Adobe’s Air. So there you are!

    Anyway, if you make one, please post a link so I can have a listen.

     
    • Primed Minister 10:23 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Nice one, nice little site that. I like the way it’s presented, dead easy to use too. I think my fave track from your list was Yello’s Planet Dada which is more of the electronic persuasion (my cup of tea), great track, love all those stuttered Kraftwerk-esque vocoder vocals.

      Anyway, I’ve done a playlist, enjoy!

      http://primedminister.muxtape.com/

    • publicenergy 10:59 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      I think I could easily swap this over and over with all sorts of different styles of music because my taste is fairly wide. I had a quick look at your tracks and recognise over half of the tracks as stuff I like.

      The 10Mb file size limit is a problem for me though because a lot of my music is encoded at quite high rates, so some of my first choices were too big.

      It all depends on what mood I’m in and what I like at the time though.

      I do really like the fact that they’ve incorporated RSS feeds – it makes it really easy to see when friends have updated their page and listen to the new stuff.

      I’ll have a proper listen to yours this evening :)

    • Primed Minister 11:09 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      I knew you liked Autechre so I had a feeling we could have similar tastes. My own tastes vary quite wildly although I do tend to prefer electronic stuff. I might put a more eclectic playlist together next time or go more ambient, depends on the mood like you say.

      I had to convert some mp4s to mp3 and at a lower quality for some of the tracks over 10Mb. Like yourself I have a lot of stuff encoded at high rates. The RSS feed is good too. Cheers for letting us know about muxtape, I’ve already told a few friends about it who are now making lists.

  • Dave 5:41 am on October 25, 2005 Permalink
    Tags: mp3,   

    Squeezebox Network MP3 player 

    A few years ago I discovered a device called a SLIMP3 – made a by Slim Devices. It is a network MP3 player. It uses a piece of software on a PC that acts as a server for it and makes all of your MP3 collection available on your hi-fi. This was just what I needed so that I wasn’t restricted to being near the PC to listen to MP3’s.

    They have just announced the new version which looks like this…

    Squeezebox

    This looks very smart to me. I’m still in love with my older version though – it does the job beautifully.

    The previous version – the Squeezebox 2 was a revised version of the one that I currently own – it looks like the one pictured below. The Squeezebox 2 had the display from the new version above. My squeezebox has the display pictured below – not quite as fancy but still very nice :D

    Squeezebox2

    The very first version of this that I owned (I’ve only had 2!) – was the original called the SLIMP3…

    Slimp3

    The version I had was a very early one before they put the back on to it pictured, so it was a piece of dark frosted perspex with all of the electronics visible from behind.

    Despite that, that and all of the version since work so well.

    These things don’t just play MP3’s though – the server software will convert just about any other music format on the fly if the player can’t handle it natively. This means you don’t notice when you are using it – why would you care what format the file is anyway?

    You can also stream Internet radio stations, there are plug-ins to show RSS feeds, you can use it as an alarm clock, you can get it to check your email – there are endless plug-ins that the community develop for it.

    At the end of the day though all versions of this are kick-ass! – They do exactly what you’d hope they do incredibly well.

     
    • publicenergy » last.fm 1:25 pm on January 2, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      [...] Just over a year ago I discovered Audioscrobbler which is now called last.fm. Over the last year, a plugin in my audio players (iTunes and Slim Devices Squeezebox) has been updating a profile of what I listen to on the last.fm server. [...]

    • publicenergy » » S 9:13 pm on August 5, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      [...] I’ve enjoyed using a Squeezebox for many years now. They’re simple, elegant devices that just work and get on with the job at hand – playing music streamed from your computer. Users have created plugins for the server software that do all sorts of things. Most usefully for me, the device reports it’s usage to last.fm – so all of those clocked up songs played over the last few years weren’t listened to sat in front of a computer – well, not all of them! [...]

    • publicenergy .:. Zune Loving S 11:04 am on January 23, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      [...] So, I started reading a number of reviews on the Internet of the Microsoft Zune and discovered lots of negative reviews, but when I read what they were complaining about, they were all things that wouldn’t affect me in the slightest. The features that mattered to me were the ones getting lots of praise. A lot of the criticism was about different stores using different DRM so that songs bought in various online shops wouldn’t play in the device. I really didn’t care about that – I have no intention of ever buying music that is crippled from the iTunes Music Store, the Zune Market Place or anywhere else for that matter. I use MP3 files because they’re flexible and I can listen to them anywhere – primarily using my Squeezebox. [...]

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