A Musical Mystery Solved

Until today, I had two great musical mysteries.  Now I have one.

I remember back in the 60’s and 70’s there were these songs on the radio in which someone pretended to interview people and the answers were clips from popular songs.  For years and years, I have wondered who did those songs.  I did web searches.  I rooted around AllMusic.Com.  All to no avail.

And then today.  On the way home from work, I was surfing around XM.  I happened across the 60’s channel and lo and behold there it was- one of those songs.  XM displayed the artist as Dickie Goodman.  I came home, did a little research and found a Wikipedia entry, an AllMusic.Com entry and even a CD for sale.

Here’s a clip from one of the songs I remember, via Amazon.

The remaining musical mystery may be even tougher to solve.  In Nashville in the mid-eighties I used to hear this song on WRVU, which was either called or had as its chorus the words “I wish I’d killed John Wayne.”  It was a great song, probably by a local band.  I have racked my brain trying to remember who did that song.

But I can’t remember.

Maybe Wally Bangs knows.

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Morning Reading: 9/11/06

5 years ago today I was speaking at a conference at the Omni Hotel in Houston.  Someone from the hotel walked up to the podium and handed me a note.  It said that I needed to come pick up my daughter, because they were evacuating the school. I excused myself and walked off stage and out into a world that was changed forever.  Doc blogged it, which I find a more compelling record than most of the news stories today.  This really demonstrates the archival beauty of blogging.

Earl Moore had some good additions to my conversational blogging post.  Note passing and cribbing are widespread problems and prime offenders of the conversational manifesto.

10 reasons to drink more water.  I gave up Snapple tea about 3 months ago for water.

I am starting to get very, very, very wary of Google.  At some point someone of importance at Google needs to come out and tell us Google isn’t trying to spy on us all the time in the name of profit and targeted ads.

Kinky Friedman, who will get my vote, has rightly backed off of his prior comments about deer hunting.  Having said that, he’s spot on when it comes to big game hunting.  The second to last fight I got into was over hunting lions and tigers and whatnot.  I won’t get invited to any more parties at that person’s house, but I made my point.

Amy Gahran has some thoughts on how movie theaters can remain relevant.  I like her ideas.  I also think movie theaters need to combine other forms of entertainment.  A theater that has a good, inexpensive restaurant next door and/or a fun bar for afterwards would likely draw more people.  I’d also like to see more smaller, neighborhood theaters, but sadly the time for those seems to have passed.  While I’m dreaming, I’d love to see some family-oriented drive-ins.

I’ve never seen any of the best movies you’ve never seen.

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Email- as Quaint as Those Old Letters?

One of the neat by-products of the migration of our culture online was the return of the written word- via the emergence of email as a primary mode of communication.  The telephone largely replaced letter writing, but email allowed the written word to muscle its way back into our everyday lives.

For a while.

Now Fred Wilson (who I continue to read, enjoy and link to, even though he is not a particularly conversational blogger) says that spam, with a little help from AOL, is killing email. There’s no doubt that spam is a major pain in the ass for emailers (and fax machine owners) everywhere.  I have found, however, that the newer versions of Outlook do a pretty good job of weeding out spam- as long as you regularly update your junk email filters.  But something else is taking a toll on email- at least personal email.

It’s text messaging via handhelds and IM via computers.

Email will always rule over the business arena, because of the archival and attachment advantages, but as far as personal communications goes, the migration has started to move to text messaging and IM, at the hands of young people.

As Stephen Baker points out, young people are far more likely to use text messaging or IM to communicate with their friends than email.

Even the young adults I know seem to greatly prefer text messaging to emails.  It’s quicker, they say.  And as Stephen points out, there’s less thought required.  In other words, it’s a few steps away from a letter and closer to verbal communication.

For those of us who don’t use text messaging or IM very much, it seems foreign to rely on them for your primary connection to others, in lieu of a phone call or an email.

But to our kids, an email seems sort of quaint.  Like those letters in that shoebox they found in the attic.

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Morning Reading: 9/9/06

I lost yet another power supply last night.  This time with a loud bang and a flash.  Dwight has a bad memory module.  Technology can be frustrating at times.

If the RIAA is fighting the release of the Sirius Stiletto, it’s time for a serious boycott of major label music- by customers, by musicians and by online music sellers.  At some point, the world simply has to stand up and say that enough is enough.

Seth Finkelstein on Wikipedia.

Battelle Watch is a little harsh and a little funny at the same time.

Stowe Boyd on the newest new bedouins.

Jason Fortuny and the Craigslist experiment.  This is a really interesting read.

Second Life has been hacked.  User info obtained.

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Morning Reading: 9/8/06

Eventually we’ll all get a turn at being CEO of Gateway.

Mashable reports on Faketown 2.0 (you just have to love the 2.0).  Sounds like Webkinz for grown-ups.  Come to think of it, so does Second Life.

C|Net on getting fit with Web 2.0.

Never shoot your wife’s pet chicken.

Remember back in February, I made fun of a friend of mine who wanted to buy cargo containers and turn them into housing for retirees?  Somebody beat him to it.

Mark Evans reports that Shutterfly has filed for an IPO.

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Freddy vs Jason: On YouTube

freddy jason

Not since Godzilla vs King Kong, or Alien vs Predator or at least Pee Wee Herman vs Mr. Rogers have we seen a battle like the one that took place today in the blogosphere. Teens of people sat glued to their computer screens as Freddy and Jason went to battle over how many millions of dollars of annual net revenue could be generated by that IPO-in-waiting, YouTube.

Freddy came out swinging, with an estimate of around $150 million, thereby making everyone associated with YouTube giddy with Monopoly money joy. About adding a 10 second ad to the beginning of videos- Freddy says that won’t reduce YouTube’s user base or the amount of views because 10 seconds isn’t very long and- I’m almost too excited to type- users might be able to tag their favorite ads. I can’t wait to retirement age so I can spend all my time tagging ads.

Imagine Freddy backing Jason into a corner by beating him over the head with orange $500 bills.

But then, in true Hollywood fashion, Jason flipped Freddy over his shoulders and started chasing him with a chainsaw made of low CPM rates and content provider lawsuits. He lunged at Freddy, wielding his business acumen like a mighty sword:

If I was a video holder I would go to YouTube and say you can have all our stuff for an $8 CPM and you keep all the upside and we want an upfront, non-refundable advance of $3M a year.

And then he tried to finish the battle with a thrusting irony: “If YouTube did that they would be a real business. Of course, of other folks tried that and never got there.”

But Freddy ducked and the battle raged on in the comments to both posts. Freddy, correctly, calling Jason a “YouTube hater.” Jason parrying with another “pay users for their content” speech.

It has been a mighty battle, not yet won or lost. Meanwhile the onlookers place their bets and wait for the sequel.

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Xanga Gets Popped: Who’s Next?

I said back in May that if the social networking sites didn’t start taking meaningful steps to make their web sites safer, particularly where kids are concerned, that someone- namely the government- was going to start doing it for them.

First we had the so-called My-Space Law.

Now we have fines. Big ones. Mashable reports today that social networking site Xanga has been fined $1 million for violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). What should be scary about this is the fact that Xanga is reported to have better privacy features than most social networking sites- probably because it is geared more for young people.

COPPA applies to the online collection of personal information from children under 13. It contains requirements for a privacy policy as well as the contents thereof. It attempts to ensure parental consent before such information is collected, with consent to be evidenced by a signed form, a verifiable credit card number, a telephone call, or an email with a digital signature. COPPA is the basis for the birth date question you see when registering for many web sites.

On the one hand, this looks to me like a warning shot across the bow of a bunch of social networking sites. Many will have a knee-jerk reaction against anything that keeps a user from content, but I’m on record as a supporter of any reasonable requirements that will keep kids safe on the often unsafe internet. Any reasonable requirement.

It’s an open question, however, about whether COPPA actually does what it is intended to do, since it seems the only requirement is to refuse to register someone who admits to being underage. If we lied to buy beer in the 70s, why do we assume kids will tell the truth when registering at web sites in the oughts?

According to Mashable, Xanga’s mistake was not checking the user-supplied birth date for those who checked the “not under 13” box. Checking the box does not eliminate the need to do the math on the birth date. So those who checked the box but supplied a birth date showing themselves to be under age should have been refused.

Checking the birth date is one line in the code. So unless there’s evidence that Xanga was trying to make it even easier for a kid to lie, this seems to me like a million dollar technical glitch, as opposed to a big win for internet safety.

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Jamming Those Pesky Cell Phones

At lunch today, there was a very popular lady sitting at the next table. I know she is popular because her cell phone rang about every 3 minutes. She’s also deaf. I know that because every time it rang, the rest of us dove under our tables, mistaking her insanely loud cell phone ring for a civil defense warning.

While I was irritated that this lady couldn’t turn her phone off or put it in silent mode for the 45 minutes it took her to eat lunch, I can’t support any effort to ban or jam cell phones.

Why? Because I am a parent. And because any legislation would likely substitute one problem for another. And because the restaurant and movie industries, which are desperately trying to draw customers to restaurants and theaters, probably wouldn’t enforce the law anyway.

Yes, it aggravates me when somebody’s cell phone rings off the imaginary hook at a restaurant or a movie. And yes, there are a lot of people who think (or more likely want us to think) they’re too crucial to the wheels of commerce to be off the grid for a hour (most of them like to wear sunglasses inside too). But notwithstanding those inconsiderate and insecure folks, there is a legitimate need to be reachable when you’re out at dinner and a movie.

Rather than ban or jam cell phones, establishments should develop and publish cell phone policies. The easy one is to require that all cell phones be put on silent mode during a movie and that anyone who wants to take a call must first go to the lobby. If someone really needs to tell someone something in the middle of a movie, send them a text message that does not disturb others.

If someone needs to talk to me, I want them to be able to reach me. It’s up to me, and every other right thinking person, to decide who really needs to talk to me now or who can wait an hour or two. And it’s up to me to take calls I need to take in a way that doesn’t disturb the people in the next row or at the next table.

The way to get there is via uniformly enforced cell phone policies and societal pressure- not via cell phone jamming and legislation.

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Down to 999,999

firefoxEd Bott says there’s one less reason to use Firefox, now that someone has made an add-on that replicates Firefox’s find box.

That’s a neat feature, but the fact remains that Firefox has left IE in the dust.  From time to time, IE might close the gap a little, but barring some radical open source move from Microsoft, the race for the power user is over.

One add-on to replicate one feature is simply not going to matter in the long run.  In the time it took to write that one add-on, hundreds of Firefox plugins were likely written, updated, etc.  There is too much developer support behind Firefox for IE to regain the momentum.

There are, of course, millions and millions of Windows users who don’t know anything about Firefox.  So it’s not like IE is going to fade into oblivion.

But I can’t think of a legitimate reason why a tech savvy power user would prefer IE over Firefox.

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RoamEO, RoamEO, Where Art Thou Dog

As more and more GPS devices come to market, we are seeing lots of devices that allow you to track cars, people and pets.  Gizmodo has a post about a new one.

The lastest is a pet tracker cleverly (or not) called RoamEO.  I think GPS for pets makes sense.  Lucky Dog has a one of those chips that allow him to be identified should he hop a plane to San Diego or something.  I’d consider using a GPS device as well.

But not one with a limit of 1 mile.  If he’s within a mile of home, he’s not so much lost as he is out for a walk.  Granted, if he was outside of that radius, I could drive around and hope to get a beep on the unit.  But that seems less than ideal- for pet control.

But boy oh boy would I love to have one of these for quail hunting.  The unit will tell you how fast your dog is moving, which probably sounds silly to anyone who isn’t a quail hunter.  You can track 3 dogs at the same time, which is also perfect for quail hunting.

The 1 mile limit is still a little short, but I’m intrigued by the possibilities.

Lucky Dog probably won’t get a RoamEO, but some of his hunting friends might.

Now someone just needs to invent a KidEO before my kids hit the teenage years.

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