Making use of the Data

I was listening to some audio samples of voice talent today for work and it occurred to me through a simple change in how the samples were created I could get much more out of the experience. As you probably know, ID3 tags contain all sorts of helpful information about the track of music, or the audio book, or the whatever happens to be in the format.

I listened to about half a dozen MP3 files which had been emailed to me and a few others as links… when I clicked them iTunes opened up, though it could have been any media player…As is my habit, I looked over at the album art / now playing area but saw nothing. It probably would have taken the talent house about 30 seconds to add the head-shot of the person whose voice I was listening, but they clearly did not do that and I am guessing it’s because they just did not think about it.

As Adam Curry recently mentioned on his daily Source Code audio blast, there is simply too much focus on the music …speaking about devices and licensing. I agree though certainly music is the sexy part of portably players much more so than audio books and way more so than audio talent, but since we use the same interfaces for these things, there’s no reason not to take advantage of the tools.

Dave Winer has been broadcasting morning coffee notes and while he’s been driving across the continent, he’s included a nice photo (yes I know that link was for a video, but he left a still on the audio, which was the same) as the art behind each file. It’s a nice way to contextualize the experience and squeeze get a bit more flavor out things.

Do Area Codes Matter?

Good question… I don’t think so either. Phone plans are no longer offered (unless you really have a tough time affording service) with limits other than minutes. Everyone pushes time on rather than where you are calling – outside of international which is still premium. Though Skype is certainly working to reduce that pain as well.

Do area codes really matter any more? These days, I’ve gotten used to plenty of people I know having mobile phone numbers from some distant place where they used to live, rather than where they live now. With so many plans no longer having any real marginal costs for long distance calls, it hasn’t much mattered, other than as a status symbol. The same is starting to come true in the VoIP world, as well, as people are even purposely ordering VoIP phone numbers from locations that don’t represent where they live. [Techdirt]

Chatter Email now does attachments

If you’ve been enjoying Chatter Email or waiting to use it until attachment support arrived, today is your day. Chatter Email, in case you’ve been sleeping through things lately, is a IMAP (IDLE required) email client that can PUSH email to you in the background. It’s a very efficient email client and can manage up to 8 connected mailboxes, either folders on an account or 8 different accounts.

The latest version is 1.0b10.2 and fixes an early attachment release issue, but is stable enough to use daily if you like.

Living in a Box

Growing up, I always remember The Who singing Eminence Front and thinking, what the hell do they mean living in a box… Give it a listen –

I learned long ago know it’s not living in a box, but rather Eminence Front. I’m not living in a box either, but sort of feel that way now that I’ve got my work area gated off as well as the home theater front. I simply could not stop thinking about this song… that and Less Nessman actually, now that my office has walls, though real structure rather than taped lines on the floor… 😉

No more access for you Hannah…It’s a put on.

Behind an eminence front
Eminence front, it’s a put on
It’s an eminence front
It’s an eminence front, it’s a put on
An eminence front
Eminence front, it’s a put on, eminence front
It’s an eminence front
It’s an eminence front, it’s a put on, it’s a put on, it’s a put on, it’s a put on

The Engadget Interview: Hank Nothhaft, CEO of Danger, Inc.

Good read…

…this week journalist J.D. Lasica tries out the Sidekick II and speaks with Hank Nothhaft, CEO of Danger, Inc., about the device’s upcoming release, the market for wireless handhelds, the cachet of having Derek Jeter and Paris Hilton as Sidekick fans, and whether, if forced to at gunpoint, he’d buy a Blackberry or a Treo. [engadget]

The Temboz RSS aggregator

This looks very nice… Might be a nice option for FOF users looking for more, but who don’t want Bloglines… I’ll stick with Bloglines for now, but like the way this looks.

Temboz is a RSS aggregator. It is inspired by FeedOnFeeds (web-based personal aggregator), Google News (two column layout) and TiVo (thumbs up and down). [Fazal Majid]

Skype Beta quick report…

One thing I noticed right away after installing Skype on a second computer is that none of my contacts and no info from my profile seemed to find there way to my system. This is a tad frustrating since I had to resend the Skype hello message out to the people I’ve listed. I’ve also had some issues connecting as the app starts up, which seems to be solved by simply going offline, while leaving it open. Definitely beta…but working mostly working well.

Music for Kids

For our trip back on Sunday I decided to get some new tunes for us to enjoy beyond the 35+ GB already housed on my iPod. There’s a fantastic bookstore in Manchester, VT called the Northshire and they have a terrific children’s section for books, toys, video and music. Prices on music are higher than I’d like to see, but it’s an beautiful independent bookstore, so it’s (hopefully) going to a good place.

Our picks:

I like them all, though Dan Zanes continues to be a family favorite for us. His songs are highly singable, easy to listen to repeatedly and seem to have a calming effect when we rock out together. TMBG is hit or miss… some songs I had to skip immediately but others seemed good. Have to give more of a listen in time. The Garcia and Grisman is a nice album, though Ashley had a bias against it from some precious Grateful Dead association… 😉 I like other Garcia and Grisman albums and this fits nicely in the same manner of music though is more bluegrass / country than the others.

VOIP gets the job done

I used my Vonage (X-Ten) softphone for all but one call last week based on a flickering wi-fi connection in my hotel room. I was also able to use Skype on occasion to connect with people as well. All connections were computer to computer or computer to phone.

I’m sold on this as a way to go now and even just changed my Skype name to assure ease of use for the future. I was (and am still) atmasphere on Skype but have added jonathangreene and will most likely use that as my full-time skype name. I definitely saw an opportunity to lock in my actual name as well as my usual alias and took it. No need for someone else to snag it before I had a chance.

Now that I’ve got it running on my Macs at home, I can see using it much more frequently. I love the notion of calling to phones and believe the rates are unbeatable! Skype to Skype is free and you can Skype to phone close to 500 minutes a month for about $12. Prices are listed in Euro, so you need to do a quick conversion. I have not actually used Skype to call phones yet, but it seems pretty straight forward.

Feel free to look me up and if you are online.

Car Tech

As I’ve mentioned all last week, we took a break from the city and headed North to Vermont. This was actually our second trip north recently, having driven to Saratoga for my sister-in-law’s wedding. On both occassions, we were fortunate to rent a great family truckster, the Volvo XC-70 wagon. It had a surprising amount of cargo capacity, compared with the SUVs we’ve also rented for trips, but was a great deal more comfortable and of course handles like a car. It’s a tad under-powered for my taste though perhaps that will be resolved in future models… now that I hear a beefy engine is coming for the XC-90.

Both times we had the car (different cars, but the same model), it came equipped with a Hertz / Magellan Neverlost III system. The Nav system worked incredibly well, though frankly it took me a while to actually understand all the features of it while we were going. Perhaps it was the distraction of a screaming baby at times, but there are some nice features hidden within the NL III which could easily be brought to a driver’s attention with a handy reference card. Regardless the system enabled us to find a new faster way to drive up to Vermont, than any time we’d been in the past which was handy and while in Saratoga, kept this direction-impaired dad on course in between wedding events for the weekend.

Upoc SMS Chats with gold medallists

This is a very interesting sign of how things have changed… I recall how about 10 years ago (1995), AOL hosted (and perhaps still does) live chats with celebrities in their forums. Now it’s all being done from the mobile…

Last week, AT&T Wireless and Upoc Networks hosted a moderated, live “TXT Chat” for fans of swimming phenomenon Michael Phelps. Subscribers were invited to join the chat session by texting the word “swim” to the number 11111 from their handsets, and could then send in their questions for Phelps via text message, according to a company press release. [textually]

Netflix and TiVo

I like this idea a lot… this could be a solid driver for new subscriptions for both services and lets TiVO compete outside the existing VOD services currently offered on Cable and Satellite. The main difference will most likely be depth of catalog, but it really seems like only a matter of time until Cable MSOs offer a deeper selection. At the moment, my currrent VOD offers from Time Warner is very similar to what you would find at Blockbuster on a given week.

As has been commented as well at the PVRblog, consumers are going to have to accept a reduced quality and a potential delay in delivery.

Tomorrow’s Newsweek carries a story about a new Netflix/TiVo partnership that sounds perfect for anyone that has a subscription to both TiVo and Netflix. [PVRblog]

Subscribers who belong to both services will be able to download their Netflix DVDs over the Internet directly into the TiVo boxes in their homes, instead of receiving them in the mail.

Apple needs to fix iPod limitations

Something that bothers me about the limitation of the iPod is that I can’t easily put music on my iPod from multiple computers. I know I am not alone in this, but it’s continually frustrating.

I manually sync since my digital collection is way larger than my 40GB iPod and I use iTunes now on 3 computers (Powerbook, iMac and now a PC laptop). I’d like to just connect to each of them when I want to push new tracks to the iPod while on the go.

My main collection is on the iMac but my main computer is the Powerbook and now with the PC Laptop thrown in — plus iPodder, I need an easy way to add tracks to the iPod from any of my systems.

I appreciate the copyright and DRM issues, but still don’t get why if you play within the limits of the iPod / iTunes licensing you still have to use a single computer to sync or update the iPod.

UPDATE —

Clearly I was wrong in my understanding that this was impossible… I have to get a cable now though to sync with the PC – at least transfer tracks at will. I’ll also be looking forward to doing this on my Powerbook.

I was definitely under the impression that you were not able to move tracks to the iPod from more than a single system even in manual sync mode, which is actually how I use it to sync a single large playlist from our desktop at home.

iPodder is very slick

I passed on a link to iPodder yesterday and mentioned I was unable to use it since it was Mac only. Well Pieter Overbeeke posted a link in the comments that he’s coded up a windows version.

I am using it today and have to say it’s totally cool. The code automatically connects and downloads audio from feed sources and creates nice playlists in iTunes when it’s done. You get alerts when each feed is downloaded so you know when to switch over to iTunes and give a listen.

Checking out Adam Curry’s Source Code right now…

Thanks Pieter!

IE is Relentless… News at 11

Even though Firefix is set to my default browser, if IE is running (works best for remote Exchange access and some other Intranet stuff) it picks up the link I click on from any app… Bad IE, down!

iPodder

Can’t try this yet… out of town on a PC laptop, but can’t wait to get it going on my Powerbook when I return.

iPodder automatically downloads new mp3 files when they become available from any of 5 sources (you can change these if you wish) and copies them to playlists in iTunes based on the channel name. If you have an iPod, connecting it to your computer will load the songs automatically. [Adam Curry’s Weblog]

Orange Deploys PTT With Treo 600

Not sure if this is considered data or voice (data would be free to umlimited plan users) or what the latency might be which is the key to successful Push to Talk Applications. Nextel for example is less than a second once the initial connection is established. You need to at roughy one second of the delay makes usage much too annoying…

Orange has announced the commercial availability of Talk Now, Europe’s first advanced Push-To-Talk over GSM service. The first device able to take advantage of the new service is the palmOne Treo 600. [PalmInfocenter.com]