February 2007

You are currently browsing the monthly archive for February 2007.

I was thinking about the iPod’s fifth anniversary, and how the iPod and the MP3 have revolutionized how we interact with recorded music. I thought I’d offer up 5 things I’ve learned about keeping a digital music library in the last 5 years or so. (I’m told that numbered lists make great blog entries.)

  1. Use MP3. Although file formats like OGG and AAC/MP4 offer some advantages in quality (OGG) and features (AAC/MP4), nothing is as portable as the MP3 file format. I can play the same MP3 file on any computer, in the car, on my iPod, and on almost any mobile device. Other file formats don’t offer the same “encode once and forget it” possibility.
  2. Go big. While on the “encode once” theme: Encode at the highest possible bit rate you can afford in terms of storage space. For the longest time I encoded at 192k out of concern for file size and drive space. I now encode at 320k knowing that hard drive prices continue to drop dramatically. More importantly, at 320k the audio fidelity of a well encoded MP3 file is absolutely indistinguishable from CD audio. At 320k I’ll never rip that same file to MP3 again.
  3. The MP3 encoder in iTunes is not great. Use LAME instead. It’s open source and free. Blacktree (maker of Quicksilver) even makes an iTunes interface for LAME (iTunes-LAME Encoder) so you can encode with LAME from within iTunes. Couldn’t be easier.
  4. It can be a real housekeeping chore, but it’s crucial to be meticulous with your files’ ID3 tags. Meta data is your friend. Make sure you fill in the ID3 info religiously. ID3 tags will help tame the largest of digital libraries and they’ll make perusing your MP3 collection a pleasure. Use an application like Media Rage to get your meta data in ship shape. Once your ID3 tags are in order set iTunes to “Keep iTunes music folder organized” and “Copy files into iTunes folder when adding to library” (preferences/advanced) and your iTunes library will look a thing of beauty.
  5. Back up.

As you may have read here before, the record for downloads of a single National Arts Centre podcast is held by Paul Gross interviewed by Laurie Brown in our Celebrity Speaker’s series. We’ve just posted the second in that series; Laurie Brown interviews Canadian playwright, novelist, actor and broadcast journalist Anne-Marie MacDonald.

The race is on for the title of NAC Podcast Supremo. Any bets?

 
 Celebrity Speakers: Ann-Marie MacDonald [60:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Internal memo

OK, OK, I’m done futzing with the permalink format on this blog. Thanks for your patience, and please do adjust your sets if required.

As this is ’sposed to be a blog about digital media (mostly) and since I’ve been an XM Radio subscriber for more than a year and half, I’ve been meaning to post about how much I love XM, and how I’m lukewarm on Sirius.

And then, last week XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio made official their plans to merge in the US. XM and Sirius in Canada are independent partner companies of the US corporations. I believe CBC owns up to 40% of Sirius in Canada.

The FCC will need to rule on whether the proposed merger will constitute a monopoly. Interestingly, the satellite operator’s best argument in support of a merger is the strong competition offered up by Internet radio, terrestrial HD radio, streaming audio/video over mobile networks, audio over digital TV, and of course podcasts. No doubt there’s future blog fodder here.

I first considered getting XM for the cottage. While I have about 200GB of music in my iTunes library and a 5th generation iPod, sometimes I don’t want to be the music programmer. That’s where XM is great; great music channels with deep playlists, higher fidelity audio than Sirius, no commercials on their music channels, BBC World Service, pretty decent comedy, and Major League Baseball — Summer just isn’t summer without baseball on the radio, and with XM, I can get every single Mets game, home or away. On top of that, XM even offered a dedicated channel for World Cup 2006. For me, Sirius doesn’t stack up.

It’s unclear how the merger might unfold in the US. Sirius and XM each operate their own satellites and their signals are incompatible with each other’s radios. They may, for the time being, duplicate their services over both sets of satellites, but there will surely be a purge of duplicate programming.

What will this mean for Canadian subcribers of one of the two services? Is a Canadian merger inevitable?

Stay … err, tuned.

Here’s a round-up of merger commentary from this past weekend on SatelliteLink.net

Here’s Tod Maffin on the merger

Wiretapped

Wiretap junkies, get your fix of Jonathan Goldstein at Collectik:
http://collectik.net/collectik/feed/21055

From Wikipedia:

WireTap is a half-hour radio show that airs on CBC Radio One Sunday afternoons at 1:00pm, and again on Fridays at 8:30pm (30 minutes later in Newfoundland). An hour-long version of WireTap will be distributed in the United States by Public Radio International in January 2007.

Hosted by Jonathan Goldstein, former producer of Public Radio International’s This American Life, the show features stories that are told over the phone ostensibly by Goldstein’s friends and family … The show has possibly been best described as “a weekly half-hour of conversation, storytelling and introspection, culled from equal parts real-world experience and the warp of Goldstein’s imagination.” Each show tends to follow a particular investigative theme; titles for past shows includes: “Life Lessons”, “Reach for the Top”, “Prized Possessions” and “Our Fathers”.

Here’s an interesting new service: Bandwagon, “an online iTunes backup service for Mac users”. Bandwagon offers unlimited storage for iTunes backups for only $69 US per year. That’s right, install their app and it will manage automatic, unmonitored backups of your entire iTunes library for less than $10 CDN per month.

Too good to be true? Martin and I put on our tinfoil hats to come up with some theories behind Bandwagon’s offering.

  • Bandwagon is sharing your music with all their friends
  • Bandwagon is a front for the RIAA. (’Got IP?)
  • Bandwagon is financed by AllofMP3 as a cheap source of new files

Got any ideas? Leave a comment.

Kidding aside, I’m definitely going to give this a try and report back.

I had the opportunity to hear Bill Gates address a capacity crowd of 2300 in Southam Hall here at the NAC on Tuesday. I even met him briefly backstage while he was waiting for his (surpsingly small) entourage to sherpa him off to his next appointment on Parliament Hill.

He didn’t impart the gathering with any remarkable bits of insight, which you’d half expect coming from one of the most influential people on the planet. (Well, he did mention that we are currently witnessing a blurring between the desktop application and web applications … gasp!)

That said, he didn’t come off as the devil incarnate either (which I’m fully predisposed to believe). Au contraire, his foundation’s work came up a couple of times in the Q&A session after his presentation. You have to admire the money and effort he has put into his organization’s work in Africa. He got a very long and deserved round of applause for his humanitarian work.

Other than that I really can’t think of anything else to say. It was somewhat of a non-event.

I probably have Steve Jobs’ keynotes to thank for setting my expectations high — It’s almost as if I was expecting Bill to announce the Zune phone, that he thinks Steve Ballmer is a baffoon, or that he checked out the NAC’s podcast offerings on his way over.

I’ll be making a 15-20 minute presentation on new media projects at the National Arts Centre this Saturday, February 17, at 9:30am as part of the NAC’s annual public board meeting.

It’s an honour to be chosen as the featured NAC producer this year. I’m still unsure of what exactly I’ll be presenting but I’ll definitely spend some time on our podcast projects as well as our work in broadband videoconferencing. I’ve got some compelling video to share from our Hexagon project.

If you have nothing planned for a cold Saturday morning swing by the NAC’s Fourth Stage for a coffee and muffin and then continue on to Winterlude right next door.

MiTube (bis)

As a follow-up to a recent post on how to get video, specifically DVDs, onto your iPod, here’s a tutorial on how to use Handbrake in a one-step process.

HandBrake is a GPL software that can decrypt and convert a DVD into a MPEG-4 video file in .mp4, .avi, or .ogm containers. Originally created for BeOS, it has been created for Mac OS X and Linux. It is very popular for its ease of use, fast encoding, and excellent layout and set of features.
A Windows port was created, but the project was abandoned as the creator, titer, has begun to devote more time to his other project, Transmission. However, a new project has been started to create a real GUI for a Windows version of HandBrake in the official HandBrake for Windows forums. The current working GUI (as of January 2007, version 2.0) converts DVDs well and as it should, but the project is far from the completeness of the Mac OS X or BeOS versions. (wikipedia)

Museum podcasts

‘Makes total sense. Listen to the podcast in advance of a visit, during your visit, and even follow up on a particular exhibit that blew you away after the fact. Now they’re easily found on MuseumPods. The ROM’s podcast made it to the top ten

« Older entries