There are now over 20 albums in the top 100 hot sellers on Amazon.com (that’s one-fifth!) that are not released by RIAA members. This is the highest point since I have been tracking it, which started in October 2003. (Here is my report page, if you want to follow along.)
Dear Lazyweb, please make my old iPod as cool as an iPod photo
Dear Lazyweb, please make an iPod hack that will display the album art on my older iPod, using ASCII characters. Thanks in advance.
Thoughts on playlists and iPod usage
Random personal notes on this “article” in the New York Times on how people use playlists and randomization:
- This entry is an excellent instant reaction to the piece. Why are such simple functions (shuffle, smart playlists) so unknown and mysterious?
- Mr. Angus (although somewhat fruity) is creating playlists for specific purposes. Good!
- Smart playlists will not solve the randomization or conspiracy theory problem. Smart playlists are based on completely objective data. The only way you could never have an “incorrect” song play is by providing/accessing metadata about uses and meanings of particular songs.
- Saving the uses and meanings of songs is, oddly enough, exactly the kind of stuff that I am doing with Mixmatcher. As people add songs to playlists, it is relating that song with some sort of subjective metadata. Over time, you will be able to get an understanding of what a song means, along with its possible uses based on the playlists it has been added to, without having to know the song beforehand.
- I really like the idea of TuneTags, which is basically creating adhoc metadata (ala del.icio.us) for songs. Let people tag them however they want to describe them, and let the aggregation sort out what is the most popular way of tagging. (“Kill them all and let a Norse God sort ’em out!”) I think the missing link with this idea is how to use this newfound data: What is the best way to make a mix for Mr. Angus bike workout? Create a smart playlists based on songs tagged with “upbeat” and “biking”? Are people really tagging things that way?
- I really like the possibilities of Mixmatcher or TuneTags for disovering new music. There are literally millions of songs that are published every week. There is no way to even begin picking the relevant (although not necessarily always “good”) songs out of that haystack. Even if only a small percentage of people tagging or sorting songs, I think it would still be providing enough data to make the songs useful to rest of the population. It would at least level the playing field, instead of 99% of those songs being obscure in a month.
- I think tagging ala del.icio.us might end up being easier and thus more popular, but that alone wouldn’t be giving people the final end product they desire. Even if you do give people another way to access the music, you still don’t have the things that mixtapes do well: structure and specific song selection, often done by a trusted individual.
- I don’t want to say it, but Audioscrobbler is another app that I don’t think fulfills its potential and/or does a very good job of its mission priorities (if I am to go by what their site tells me) of a) building my musical profile, b) matching me to people with similar tastes, and c) personalized music recommendations. Part A is being handled very well, but Part B and Part C are basically one section or page of each user profile. Does anyone know of any apps built using their data?
(This reminds me of one of my favorite jokes: Two women are eating at a restaurant. One says, “This food is terrible,” and the other woman says, “And such small portions!”)
This making sense to anybody?
Mixmatcher is faster now
I finally got a break from mudding and taping drywall, and I made Mixmatcher about a billion times faster. Turns out I only had it on 10, thus promptly turned it up to 11.
Something is the new something
A list of cliches (via Google) where something is being transposed to be the new thing:
- Clarendon is the new Helvetica
- The location field is the new command line
- Fake is the new real
- Orange is the new black
- Quiet is the new loud
- Nearshore is the new offshore
- Red is the new blonde
- Blacker is the new black
- Iraq is the new Vietnam
- Movie piracy is the new plague
- Fat is the new thin
- Wide is the new black
- Fat is the new tobacco
- Organic is the new kosher
- MFA is the new MBA
- Small is the new big
- Spim is the new spam
- Being uncool is the new cool
- Gay marriage is the new abortion
- 30 is the new teenage
- Butt crack is the new cleavage
Of course, everything is the new black. Why is black the standard? Have any other favorites?
On news shovelware
It isn’t “shovelware” to me if I never saw the pile it was originally shoveled from.
My del.icio.us wishlist
In this space I will chronicle my many del.icio.us wishes and Lazyweb requests. Feel free to leave your own in the comments.
- Create a del.icio.us user recommendation script/engine. The end result would be a list of users (ala Audioscrobbler’s “musical neighbors”):
- The most closely matched people based on purely similar linkage. If someone has linked to 60.7% of the things I have linked to, I probably want to subscribe to that user.
- The most prolific linker based on similar linkage. I want to know, based on similar linkage, who linked it sooner more often. I want to find people who find new things and/or are on the front end of memes I am interested in.
- The most prolific linker based on popularity. Same idea as above, just for all del.icio.us. (Perhaps date of post compared to most recent post by another user could be a factor in some of these calculations?)
- Show me all the people who subscribe to my links
- Show me all the people who my subscriptions link to, and possibly even 3rd degree connections (perhaps only multiply-related subscriptions)
Netflix, Open up or die…
This feature from Engadget is nice, but I just wanted to nitpick, because the particular line I have an issue with is now being quoted elsewhere. The quote says:
Open up. Google did it, Amazon did, Apple did it, Netflix— expose your API so people out there can use www.netflix.com the way they want to, in new ways, in ways you haven’t imagined.
I don’t mean to break the euphoria, but although they may have developed a seemingly neat thing or two, they do not have an open API for the iPod or iTMS. (See also: iTunes Music Store wins a Webby when it’s not even a Web site)
A universal symbol for the unmarried
There are many lifestyle choices that have fairly established symbols that can help a person be identified. Democrats have a donkey, Republicans have an elephant, the gay community has the pink triangle (although it wasn’t necessarily chosen by them), straightedgers have their Xs, etc.
What graphical symbol would you use to represent being single? Is it a different symbol if you are choosing not to get married?
Vegan fish sticks
I am now soliciting vegan fish stick recipes to test. Here is a fairly complicated-sounding one, involving kelp powder, Amino acids, and unheardof seasonings. Here is what I would call a “quick and dirty” way, which would be dipping in soy sauce, lemon juice, and breading. The secret trick will most likely be the way the tofu is cut up. It can’t be just a square block, or you won’t have that terribly-processed-cheap-fish feel to it.