The recording industry has failed miserably in its…

The recording industry has failed miserably in its attempts to define what is – and is not – considered “fair use” in this increasingly virtualized age of content acquisition and consumption.

In many cases, they’re using legislation that’s decades old to try to go after regular folks who just want to listen to stuff they’ve legitimately acquired. As always, technology races ahead of society’s ability to manage it. Unfortunately, we all get caught in the middle.

Your music management is far more sophisticated than mine. I archive all my material carefully on an external hard drive and backup CDs and DVDs, but my iTunes management is, frankly, almost non-existent. I seriously despise that software!

Not sure what Tanya thinks of it, though. I should ask her 🙂

Waking neighbours – and getting sidetracked into piracy …

Nah – don’t think I’ve done any of that, although I have listened to half my iTunes library over the past 3 weeks 🙂 And at 2794 songs, not counting duplicates or songs I really dislike, that’s a decent sized library now.

Good job I got another laptop at the start of the year, the old one woulda been creaking 🙂

I’ve got a couple more days of off-work time to go, I’m wondering if I can get the recently played in iTunes up to 1500 different songs over the last fortnight. Going to iTunes has revolutionised the way I listen to music, as its Party Shuffle (now iTunes DJ) lets me pick and choose what’s coming up. So instead of lobbing cds into the player, I’ll listen to a variation. It’s very good quality too, as the Airport Express widget lets me pipe the music through to my cinemasound speakers. They’re not up to separates hi-fi standards but they’re still pretty good. Good enough that I’ve not felt the need to cart around the separates system I still have stored at my parents’ place.

I still listen to the albums too, my iTunes DJ typically has an album queued up along with the semi-random picks.

The iTunes habit brings me to something in the news today, where the people behind a major file-sharing network have been found guilty of copyright breach on a massive scale. The way UK law stands at present, I’m technically in breach of the copyright law by importing my cds into iTunes. Even though after import, the cd then gets stored on the shelf, safe in its box. Let’s examine that :

Sleepy buys cd in the shop
Cd gets imported into iTunes
Cd gets stored on the shelf, while I listen to the copy that’s inside iTunes

The dodgy (according to UK law) part is the “copy” bit, even though I’ve bought the music, law says I can’t import it into a software program that then allows me to drop it onto an iPod. I can’t even leave it on the safety of the shelf, where it won’t get damaged or scratched by whizzing around inside a cd player at several hundred rpm.

Crazy law, out of date now we’re in the digital age.

Another curiosity is Youtube. I’ve used the video site to check out new bands and new singers, to see if it’ll be worth me buying a cd or not. For one or two groups, I wouldn’t have bought the cd’s if I hadn’t checked them out on Youtube first. So the people uploading a copy (there’s that word again) to Youtube have led to me (and quite possibly many others) buying what they’ve watched. I suppose the best way to think of it is to see Youtube as an equivalent of Top Of The Pops or MTV, where you get to view or listen to the music but you don’t walk away with your own copy of it.

My sister and I do our own file sharing too – we’ll bounce tracks off each other via MSN. That’s technically breach of copyright too, however I can name a whole heap of albums that neither of us would have bought if we hadn’t done that.

I’m starting to sound a bit like a frustrated teenager at the moment, railing against a law that while it was a good idea at the time, hasn’t kept up with events. My real interest is in the music, I get bored quick so one habit I’ve developed is to hunt around for new music. When I find something promising, I’ll get the wallet out and lay out the cash. Actually buying your music instead of pirating it means your favourite artists get something back from the hard work they’ve put in and hopefully, they’ll make some more 🙂

The pop industry is littered with artists who have simply given up because they’re not feeling appreciated enough. If they give up, then they’re not producing interesting new music for us to buy. And as the pirates don’t believe in paying for anything, they’re cutting down the chances that they’re going to get lots of new stuff to listen to.

Right – that’s the rant out of the way and this post has grown far too big to add in what I intended to, which is to tell people about the wonderful new music I’ve been listening to lately ! Think I need to do another post …

PS Now at 1466 different songs listened to over the past 3 weeks 🙂

Telly’s been behaving itself today :-) Which means…

Telly’s been behaving itself today 🙂 Which means a little bit longer before I go hunting for HD tellys …

Yep – me got a heap of books that aren’t getting read while they’re in the heap …

Hey Pete, sounds to me like you need a new telly -…

Hey Pete, sounds to me like you need a new telly – and less computer-playing!

Mourning my lack of re-enactment this weekend, so visiting Tanya to make up for it 🙂

cq

Thinking about … voices & space

The game that currently has me caught is called Mass Effect, where the hero (you!) is going for that long used staple of sci-fi stories, they’re out to save the galaxy 🙂

It’s by Bioware, people who are extremely strong on Role Play, so there’s a lot of story and side quests alongside the main event of saving the galaxy from the machines. And with Role Play comes voice acting, which brings me to what I was noticing earlier … Some voices stand apart and in this case, it’s the female version of Commander Shepard, the heroine of Mass Effect. I should really have recognised the voice, as I listened to it all the way through another of Bioware’s games.

The voice behind the game belongs to one Jennifer Hale and my surprise at the voice being shared shows how good she is at her job. Games are sometimes criticized for the poor quality of their voice acting, often because Hollywood actors/actresses are used to provide the voices. Star Trek’s Marina Sirtis also turns up in a cameo in Mass Effect. Not quite sure what the difference is between the Bastila character in the second game and Shepard in Mass Effect but the Commander personality exudes the confidence, professionalism and authority you’d expect from a tough soldier of the 22nd century. And it’s different enough that I only recognised it when seeing the page on the Mass Effect wiki (linked above)

There’s another common factor between the two games, they’re both space scifi games. Doh – I never said what the other game is. Jennifer Hale’s previous credits include Bastila, a character from the Star Wars universe set 4000 years before the movies. Star Wars, Knights of the Old Republic was a classic too, played that one to death a few years ago 🙂 (bugs mean I don’t touch it now)

I have a few games but it seems like it’s the space sci-fi games I go back to most often. I have a couple of others fairly new in the collection that haven’t seen so much attention, which are both swords & axes games. I was wondering why that was and I figure, I must have a hankering to live more in the sci-fi world than the medieval world. Definitely more interest in living other places than the 21st century …

I guess that’s why I go for the games so much and the sci-fi movies. Even the swords & axe type books I read tend to have a sci-fi flavour to them occasionally, even if the sci-fi is magic. Both forms of storytelling allow one to escape the world we live in right now, to jump into one that has action, adventure, romance (yep – it’s programmed in!) and that little bit of magic. They allow us to do things we couldn’t imagine doing for real, like all those people who play Soldier on the online games or who have an alter-ego in Warcraft. And there’s no consequences too, the “save” button lets you reverse decisions and it takes away the risk that real soldiers have to cope with.

Currently taking a rest from the virtual world, if you could call watching Die Hard 4.0 escaping 🙂 And later, I’ll be back to listening to some more of those wonderful voices.

New artist alert ! This one’s Natasha Khan, centrepiece of Bat For Lashes. Amazing voice here and another album on the list to grab 🙂

It’s not a bad system when it works, iPodFM – but …

It’s not a bad system when it works, iPodFM – but you’d have thought that the car radio makers would have added in 3.5mm headphone jacks years ago. Even before the iPod arrived, people had CD walkmans that they wanted to plug in to their radios …

One more day …

… And then a decent period away from work to rest, recharge and repair 🙂

I’ve been feeling the strain lately, which usually manifests in me seesawing between hyperactive and hypoactive states. I’ll lose track of precisely which day of the week it is too, as the days blur into each other. Of course, it also doesn’t help that I’ve been more into the computer games lately, which leads to not getting quite as much sleep as I should be getting 🙂

Heh heh heh – self inflicted wounds …

There’s good sides and bad sides to being away from work – I won’t miss being able to lock the duties in the drawer with the rest of the papers but I always miss the people. There’s some very special people who I have the pleasure of interacting with at work. I guess that’s another reason I keep coming back to the online games too, there’s good people in those too. But nattering over text isn’t nearly the same as being able to lean over the Snow Queen’s or The Boss’s desks and make them laugh.

Yep – hearing a lady laugh (and seeing the smile) is far better than just reading “lol” in text.

So I’m looking forward to chilling out for a solid week but I’ll definitely miss a few of the personalities at work. People like the Snow Queen, The Boss, WT and Ms Sunshine (who is almost as jumpy as me with people walking up the floorplate!) who make working on my project a lot more fun. Also Ms Cantina and her friends who are constantly trying to outguess me on what sandwiches I’m going to have for lunch 🙂

Right – time to get back to the finale of Star Trek Voyager, it ends soon which will allow me to turn the telly off. It’s started to develop a high pitched “singing”, which is probably why neighbourhood dogs are howling …

Addon time – Peeking round the web, I found this story from the Register – Bacon Sarnies Cure Hangovers … Official !

Still in the Jetta ?

Think my best loved ca…

Still in the Jetta ?

Think my best loved car is still the Astra I had – that was an ’82 car. But I know it would not have survived for long when I started working …