Saturday Night Music

Groover’s Paradise is a great music blog.  It’s a collaborative effort by a bunch of knowledgeable music bloggers, featuring short posts around a single song.  I’ve liked just about every song they’ve featured.  Recently, they went from awesome to absolute must-read when they featured a song by the most wonderful Freddy Fender.  I liked the Texas Tornados.  And I liked Doug Sahm a lot.  But I knew about Freddy long before I’d ever heard of either his future band or his future band mate.  One of my favorite records from my teens was Freddy’s excellent Before the Next Teardrop Falls.

Here’s about the best cover you’ll ever hear of What’d I Say.  Tell me that doesn’t rock.  Seriously, if you don’t love that song, you better call 911.

One of the contributors to Groover’s Paradise is the guy from The Adios Lounge, the music blog that I have repeatedly raved about.  Another excellent music blog I discovered via Groover’s Paradise is The Rising Storm.  Any blog that dedicates posts to Mountain Bus and this fantastic record (here’s my take) is a must read.  I don’t know these dudes, but I wish I did.

John Doe (of X fame) and the Sadies have a new record of classic country covers and originals, called Country Club.

The other night organicsue, one of my favorite Blip.fm DJ’s, played a great Gretchen Peters/Tom Russell song off of their new record.  I immediately bought the record, once again proving that these social network sites are good for musicians.  The song that made me buy the record is Sweet & Shiny Eyes, but every song on the record is good.  Update:  Even though I bought the record and gave it good press, I got a take down notice from Gretchen and Tom’s record label.  No more sales or good press here, folks.

Album covers, much like science fiction book covers, can attract me to buy a record by someone I’ve never heard of.  Here’s the latest example of that.  You can hear all therfac songs on the record on Ronnie Fauss’s web site.  Or you can buy the record off iTunes like I did- before I listened to the songs.  The songs are as good as the cover.

Obviously, one of the records everyone has been waiting for is Potato Hole, Booker T. Jones‘ new record on which he is joined by The Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young.  Neil’s ever-growing political weirdness is starting to wear on me a bit, but he is still one of my all-time favorites.  And anyone who reads this blog or knows me in the real world knows how much I dig the DBT.  It’s an amazingly effective mashup of styles, with a definite DBT vibe surrounding Booker T’s organ and keyboards.  It’s an instrumental record, as should be expected.  I don’t know that I’ll sit and listen to it over and over, but it’s clearly good car music.  My favorite track so far is Warped Sister.

Rarely in my life have I discovered a musician I like some and dislike some any more than Colonel Bruce Hampton.  Cold Mountain is one of my all-time favorite songs.  Many of his records have some great stuff- I’m talking about as good as it gets, intermingled with songs I really don’t like.  Yesterday I heard Colonel Bruce do an awesome version of Skip James’ I’m So Glad.  The version I found for sale is off the Code Talkers’ 2007 record, Dee-Lux Uh-dish-un.  That song completely rocks.  I bought the record and so far, it sounds consistently good.  Really good, actually.

Shooting the Bird: More on the Blog Publishing Problem

I’m working with some good folks at Microsoft to resolve the photo publishing problem I wrote about the other day.

This is a test post from another computer, but over the same internet connection.

birdftp

There is (or is not) my little test photo.

Initially the photo would post to the Blogger photo server (which I don’t generally use), but not to my server.  I got this error:

(Publishing Error) A publishing error occurred: 200 Type okay.
227 Entering Passive Mode (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
150 Data connection accepted from xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; transfer starting.

So I tried to post on my laptop, using an ATT wireless card.

It worked (there is the long awaited photo).

Which means the problem is caused by my network.  Hmmm.  Let’s see if it’s my computer or my internet connection. . .

Here’s another photo- this time I’m posting on my desktop, but using the ATT wireless card.

ftperror321

This also worked, which means that the problem resides in my internet connection, not on my computer, not in Live Writer and not on my web server.

I’ve narrowed it down, but I’m not sure where to go from here.  I guess I need to look at the router settings.

When I disable my router’s firewall, the photos publish correctly.  But I obviously don’t want to permanently disable my firewall, so I need to configure my router to allow Live Writer to publish these pictures.  It’s odd that Live Writer can publish the text of the post (via Blogger) but not photos.  It’s also odd that I can publish photos via an FTP client, but not via Live Writer.

There’s a Thousand in Every Crowd

Despite the fact that it often feels like a mashup of Deepak Chopra and P.T. Barnum, I continue to enjoy Twitter.

But Twitter has a growing content problem, that if not checked will ultimately reduce Twitter to an online version of your email junk mail folder.

For starters, the volume of MLM, get rich quick and grow your follower count posts (3 versions of the same thing) is light years beyond absurd.  Add to that an endless supply of self-help posts, many of which are either nonsensical to the point of self-parody or disguised spam.  And then there’s this one dude who obsessively posts the same links day after day, which doesn’t particularly annoy me except that I can’t figure out why he does it.  If he doesn’t have an angle, he’s the most dedicated linker in the history of html.

One conclusion I have reached after spending a good amount of time on Twitter is that there are thousands of people trying to sell the same thing to each other.  MLM opportunities, get rich quick schemes, self-confidence, karma, etc.  There are vendors everywhere and, as far as I can tell, not a customer in sight.

I also wonder how potential Twitter advertisers feel about this demographic.  If everyone is selling, who is left to buy?

But among all the noise, there are many benefits.  I have seen links to interesting articles, beautiful photographs and great songs.  Most by people who, if you can believe it, aren’t trying to make money off of me or sell me some get (them) rich quick scheme.  I have also made contact with developers who have answered questions and provided assistance with respect to their applications.  In return, I try to add value and fun by posting links to interesting articles, and by posting music.  I have been doing an alphabetical survey of new wave music, via the Blip.fm/Twitter integration.  It takes time to find the music, and to add short commentary to each.  But it’s fun and I’m building a good playlist over at Blip.fm.

But maybe I am misusing Twitter by doing all that.  Maybe I should forget about content and focus on MLM and how to increase my follower count and whatnot.  Because in the midst of all of the Twitter chaos, it seems that posting music makes me a spammer.

I’ve received many positive responses to my music posts, and a grand total of two complaints.  This dude and another guy from Houston, thereby proving what I already sort of knew- that I live in a town of music haters.  Not really, but it’s interesting that anyone who has spent 5 minutes in the great Twitter flea market can get all pissy over a series of song posts, manually done, with commentary (to be fair, he later said that maybe spam wasn’t the best word to use).  He un-followed me, which is exactly what he should have done if he didn’t want to see my music posts, and this little issue was resolved.  But I think this exchange is indicative of the bigger content problem Twitter is facing.

In sum, there is a huge spam problem on Twitter, but in the words of Lynyrd Skynyrd (another annoying music reference), I ain’t the one.  Yet it seems I’m not the only one being labeled as a spammer, just because I’m not trying to game Twitter or sell people a bill of goods.

Another tech blogger who isn’t trying to make money on Twitter is Louis Gray.  It seems that the Twanalyst application, one of the many barnacles that cling to Twitter’s traffic-rich API, believes that Louis is spamming Twitter, in part because he doesn’t retweet (e.g., repost) a bunch of other people’s posts.  That is even more absurd that these muddy sticks squawking about my music.

Louis presents a logical and iron-clad defense of his Twitter philosophy:

In my opinion, begging for retweets, and retweeting is simply lazy, just like live tweeting a conference panel is lazy blogging. It’s the equivalent of forwarding e-mail, or copying and pasting someone else’s blog post to your site and adding a short link. If Twitter is truly conversational, as many argue, then repeating what someone else has said doesn’t do much to add to the conversation.

Amen, brother, although I don’t think Twitter is as conversational as we would like, or as many would have us believe.

Interestingly, Twanalyst doesn’t think I’m a spammer.  It says I am a “renowned obsessive cautious” personality with a “chatty academic” style, whatever that means.

All of this nonsense demonstrates that the rules and expectations on and about Twitter have been turned upside down.  If you blast links and mindlessly retweet posts by others, you’re viewed as adding value.  If you obsessively post about MLM, getting more followers and making money, no problem.  But if you post actual content or- God forbid- music, you are a spammer.  Or at least an annoyance.

At the beginning and end of the day, I don’t care if someone thinks I am spamming- just stop following me.  And I’m not going to unsubscribe from Louis’s blog because some application thinks he needs to change his Twitter approach.  But I think Twitter needs to develop a plan for encouraging good content.  So far it looks, at least from the outside, like Twitter is solely interested in traffic, at the expense of just about everything else.

At some point the coolness factor will fade, and Twitter will have to rely on good content.

Like music.

Frustrating Live Writer – Blogger FTP Problem

All of the sudden, when I publish a blog post with pictures in it, Live Writer is unable to transfer the pictures to my server via FTP.  When I try to do so, I get the following error.  I have a screen cap below, but Live Writer replaced the picture with the word “ftperror,” which is the name of the picture I am trying unsuccessfully to post.


      I had to upload this picture to Photobucket
and then link to it. What a pain in the ass.

I can tell by looking on my server that Live Writer is creating a directory on my server the way it is supposed to, and there is an appropriately named file in the directory, but the size of the file is 0 bytes.  I used a jpeg for the screen cap below to confirm that it’s not a png problem.  It’s not, as Live Writer replaced that screen cap with its name too.


Here lies the symptom, but what is the problem?

Sometimes the 0 Filesize is a permissions problem, so I tried changing the permissions in the target folder on my server.  No dice.  So I restored the permissions to their previous levels.

For some reason, I’m starting to think this may have something to do with the way Live Writer names the image files.

I was able to upload the files via FileZilla, my FTP application, without a problem.  This indicates that the problem resides within Live Writer.  I tried to test that theory by uploading some pictures to my Photobucket account via Live Writer.  No dice.  Same error message, but I couldn’t get any FTP client to display the proper directory on Photobucket- the connection times out when trying to retrieve the directory listing.  So I don’t know for sure.

Here’s my test picture, so I can keep trying until I figure out how to fix this nightmare.  Anyone who reads this blog knows that I think Live Writer is the most useful and feature perfect application out there.  I have become very reliant on it, so I need to fix this problem.

birds42
If you can see this image,
I have fixed the problem.

The mysterious thing is that I didn’t change any settings prior to the problem arising.  On the one hand, it’s strange that Live Writer can post blog posts, but not pictures.  But my blog posts are published to my server via Blogger, whereas the pictures are set up to post directly to my server via FTP.  I deleted all the FTP information in the Live Writer blog account settings a couple of times and reentered it.  Live Writer was able to access the directories on my server at that point.  Somehow, when it tries to transfer the picture file, something goes wrong.

This makes the formerly simple process of publishing a blog post very difficult.  It requires me to separately upload the pictures and then link to them.  It was much easier to upload the pictures at the same time I publish the blog post.  Little pain in the ass problems like this that suddenly spring up for no apparent reason drive me crazy.

But my devotion to Live Writer requires that I continue looking for a solution.  Time for a Twitter SOS.

Galveston

We spent last weekend in Galveston, celebrating Cassidy’s birthday.  It rained a lot, but we still had fun.  Several of Cassidy’s friends came down and we spent Sunday at the Schlitterbahn.

IMG_0661
Chairs

IMG_0663
Cassidy and Remy handhelding

 

IMG_0652
Delaney playing Light Bike on the iPhone

IMG_0658
Luke made the best of the bad weather.

Evening Reading: 4/21/09

Online Reality Show: Penelope Trunk makes a lot of excellent points about the uber myth that is blogging as a way to make a living.  People continue to confuse the software platform that we call a blog with the guy next door pounding away at the keyboard.  They are very different things, and most of the high traffic “blogs” are either old media sponsored, new big media owned or online pioneers who made a gigantic space grab while the rest of us were still trying to decipher stock quotes in the newspaper.  Meanwhile, some continue to hype the myth while one of the few who hit the blogging lottery is realizing that the best way to make a small fortune through blogging is to start with a large fortune.  All in all, it’s a case of wishful thinking overwhelming horrible odds.  Like Vegas, only not as fun to watch.

Wally Bangs Department: Wally has a flyer from Cantrell’s, one of my old Nashville hangouts.  I saw a lot of good music there back in the day.  Oh, and one night some biker chick flashed me there.  That was awesome.  Really, for those who wonder if I’m kidding.  The other best writer on the net is Will Truman.  Here’s one of the best blog posts I’ve ever read, and here’s his latest masterpiece.

Deep Art Ment: I love old album covers by obscure bands like this.  Here’s another one by the same band.  Listen to them @ YouTube.  Not bad.

What to Do with the Empty Bag: Mashable has a fun read on protecting your online identity.  So how does one becomes an “online identity expert”?  Is it an apprentice thing, like Castaneda and Juan Matus, or is there a degree in online identity?  There’s nothing as wonderful as watching “experts” fill the perceived vacuum of a new area of popular interest.  I wonder whatever happened to the hordes of Y2K experts?  I obviously agree with the personal branding idea of a central online location that connects to other websites.  Too bad the entire social media movement is designed to prevent that from happening.

Sour Grapes Department: This is going to sound whiny, but only because I am whining.  I continue to be amazed at how many “big” blogs say the same stuff I’ve already said over and over.  Yet I rarely get included in their conversations.  On the other hand, it’s mostly an equal, unequal playing field.  Very little about the blogosphere is based on merit, so most unaffiliated bloggers are in the same leaking boat, thus proving again the point Penelope makes above.  Louis Gray‘s well-deserved profile being one of the few examples where hard work alone pays off in the blogosphere.  I’d love to see him become the next self-made blogger to get hired by one of the “big” blogs.

Mac Mini Department: PC World takes another look at the Mac Mini media center.  Dave Wallace thinks this might help.  I hacked my Mac Mini as soon as I got it.  It’s a tough little computer.

Bad Java, Bad: Trying to sneak software onto computers is so nineties.

Windows Agony Prevention: Here’s how to make Windows Explorer stop treating every single folder like a video collection.  Restore the Windows Explorer columns to sanity.  This drives me crazy.

Double Edged Logic Department: A Techdirt commenter makes a very good point about the newspapers’ Google complaints.  If Google is robbing them, then they are robbing the people who actually do the newsworthy things they write about.

That’s Not Funny, Bone: Here’s everything you need to know about the funny bone.  Which runs along the runs along the humerus.  Get it?

FriendFeed Chaos: FriendFeed is simply too chaotic unless you live on it, which I don’t.  It desperately needs RSS output for filters, to allow you to output filtered content to other locations.  More than that, it needs an RSS feed that contains only the most recent one or two items that each of your friends have posted.  Until then, it’s useless to me.  It got a lot of well-deserved buzz when the beta was released, but it needs to give users a way to slice, dice and export content.

Freaky Photo of the Day: ID this interesting photo for a free subscription to Newsome.Org.

I Had No Idea: That CompuServe still existed.  CompuServe was my initial gateway to the pre-internet.  I have fond memories of the Sports Simulation forum back in the day.  I was so awesome at Front Page Sports Football.  Great career play implementation, that has still not been matched.

Content Master Page (2.0)

After using Version 1.0 of my Content and Twitter Juggernaut Page for a couple of weeks, I decided it was time to knock it down and see if I could come up with something simpler and better.  Among the areas I wanted to improve were:

1. A more unified interface, on a single page.
2. One instance of Google Reader and one instance of TwitterGadget.
3. An easier way to add items to my Google shared items.
4. Avoidance of the flashing/font reset problem I was experiencing when posting via TwitterGadget.

After trying several iGoogle hacks and scripts, some hand-written, I decided to trash iGoogle completely and do something I never thought I’d do again.  I decided to use. . . a frameset.  Why?  Because by using frames, I could solve all four of the above issues, and enhance navigation too.  By creating a frameset with a menu frame across the top, a 40% width TwitterGadget frame on the right and a 60% full Google Reader (not the gadget) frame on the left, I can do several things that improve my content reading, blogging and Twitter posting.

I can keep a TwitterGadget box open and always visible on the screen on the right hand side.  This is critical for dragging links into the message box for commentary and posting.

By taking all of my content that was previously in the Google News gadget and the Feeds Tab Reader gadget and adding them to organized folders in Google Reader, I can access all of my content in one, unified window.  If I am reasonably current in my feed reading, there is little need for scrolling, but if not I find scrolling to be preferable to stacked windows.  All of this is done in a single instance of Google Reader and one instance of Twitter Gadget.

Because I now have the full Google Reader open in the left column, I can add items to my Google Reader shared items directly, instead of having to use the bookmarklet.  Plus, I can access my starred items more easily.

And by having the Twitter Gadget in its own window, I avoid the annoying flashing/font reset problem.

In other words, I went through old school to get to new school.

The drawback to Version 2.0 is that it requires some work to organize your feeds within Google Reader.  I don’t always want my traditional news feeds to be in alphabetical order.  For example, I want Google News “Top” items to be at the top, not the “Business” items.  To solve this I added a numbering convention at the front of the renamed feeds (the ability to rename a feed being one of Google Reader’s best features).

I was also able to add a navigation bar at the top of the page to allow me to return to another of my most common destinations.

At the end of the day, I have a content reading and Twitter pushing page that is smaller, faster and easier to use (click the image below for a bigger view).

If you’re interested in experimenting with this setup, here is the frameset.  You don’t have to have server space- you can open the file from your hard drive.  If you don’t want to do that, you can use the Newsome.Org Content Master (Update: now depreciated) page.  If you are logged into Twitter and Google, your information will appear in the appropriate windows.  All I ask is that if you use that page, please Tweet about this post and subscribe to the Newsome.Org RSS feed.

There is still room for improvement.  I would like to get rid of some of the screen waste on the Google Reader Home page, such as the entire right hand column, but all that unnecessary stuff is hidden once you start clicking on folders and individual feeds, so it’s not a huge problem.  Additionally, Google needs to implement native column resizing in Google Reader.

What I really want is for TwitterGadget to add a feature to copy the headline, followed by a shortened URL (and not just the URL) when you drag a headline into the message box.  That one feature would reduce Twittering time by over 50%.

Otherwise, I’m pretty pleased with this setup.

For now.

PimpMyNews: Make Blogs Talk

I have been experimenting a bit with PimpMyNews, an Xzibitly named service that allows users to create a feed list of blogs, news and other selected sources and listen to that content over the web or on an iPhone, iPod Touch or other mobile device that can play MP3s.  While this is a pretty handy tool for anyone, I think it’s greatest potential may be as an accessibility device.

Let’s take a look.

According to co-founder John Atkinson, PimpMyNews, which launched its first generation platform in 2008, “puts consumers in control by automatically collecting the news and blogs they wish they had time to read – and converting them to audio – so they can listen while doing other things, like driving, working out, riding the train and more.”  The service allows users to choose from over 1,200 sources to create personalized audio playlists, and to share that content with friends via email or on Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Digg and other social networking sites.

Once you’ve completed the quick registration process, and clicked on the expected email confirmation link, you can easily create playlist of feeds.  You can start with a pre-selected group of feeds via a “FastPack” or you can browse the available feeds and create your own mix.  There are FastPacks for Apple, Entertainment, Politics, Sports and Technology.  At present, you can’t add feeds to your playlist that aren’t already available in the various PimpMyNews categories.  If the ability to add new feeds is ever added, it would be cool if you could also import OPML files exported from your feed reader.

But there are plenty of feeds available to get you started.  After you have your initial feed mix set up, you can access your playlist via the My Account tab at the top of page and you’re off and listening.

The audio conversion is excellent, with the read text sounding about as natural as can be expected.  I like the fact that you get an assortment of voices.  Here’s a sample of how it sounds.  Note that you can view the text by hovering over the View Summary link.

Once you have your playlist set up, you’ll want to enable your podcast so you can listen on the road.  Click the set up link, and add the content from your playlist you want to include (which can be all the feeds or just some of them).  Click the save button, and you’re presented with a one-click button to subscribe in iTunes and a link to use to subscribe elsewhere.  Here’s my feeds podcast link if you’re interested.

You can rate posts and share them easily, via the handy buttons at the bottom of the View Summary pop-up box.

And, of course, there’s an iPhone app (iTunes link).  A Blackberry app is forthcoming.

I’ll be using the iPhone app this weekend as I run errands and do my chores.  As noted above, I also think people with accessibility issues could find PimpMyNews very useful.  I can’t wait to see what new features are added in the coming months  There are lots and lots of cool possibilities.

And the best thing is, now I can make those so-called A-List bloggers talk to me, whether they want to or not!