slow
I haven’t found my backup index template, and I haven’t updated the 208 mp3 to something that will play, sorry. I’ve been busy. Its the rare time in Minnesota where there are no bugs, the weather is fair and cool. So I have been out bike riding and out and about doing other fun tings. I’ll get to it soon.
208 in Concert
Get it now, 208 in concert. (save to file, I don’t think it will stream.)
This was a live piece performed by the 6th grade (I think) class at Manitoba grade school in Milwaukee. The music teacher tried to bring pop culture into the classroom. So as well as singing old standards like “This Land is Your Land” (sans the anti-corporate verses I later discovered), we sang “Africa” by Toto. This piece I believe was written by our teacher and had some roots in improvisational electronic music and may resemble superficially the work of Herbie Hancock at the time.
This recording is staticy. It sounds the same on my PC as on the original tape. This may be due to hardware, but I don’t have any other hardware to try. I believe my 6th grade class was “taper friendly” and would allow the free trading of this material. I may be wrong.
whoops
I seem to have accidentally blown away my index.tmpl when creating an atom feed. You may notice some more funkieness than usual today while I sort that out.
I know I have a backup copy somewhere … now where did I put it?
- Author: timbu
- Published: Apr 22nd, 2004
- Category: Generalities
- Comments: Comments Off
Happy Birthday
Happy Birthday to Me!
It’s been a great year, and as my grandmother always said “…being one year older, was always better than the alternative.”
MP3 goodies
Last week I finally resolved my “play mp3s in my car issue”. Now it’s time to whip my MP3 collection into shape. To start with I am updating all the id tags. I am doing this with the musicbrainz software. They have a windows client as well as a Perl API that make this very easy. Combinging that with MP3::Info, the current data, and a little help from the maligned File::Find module and I am home free. (Check out Identifying Audio Files with MusicBrainz on perl.com for ideas.)
- Author: timbu
- Published: Apr 19th, 2004
- Category: Generalities
- Comments: Comments Off
Wedding
So Matthew was a ring bearer at a wedding this last weekend. (Not a “ring bear” as he originally supposed.)
Matthew acted his age, which is appropriate. After walking down the aisle quietly to the music he announced loudly, “I made it all the way down here.” He continued to talk until the moment he was supposed to sit down. At this point I indicated that we would have to go down to the church basement if the talking continued. It continued. In the church basement he outfoxed me and managed to sneak back in the back of the church. When I got him in my arms again he shouted out, “Let go you evil beast!” This was entirely improvisational and unrehearsed, although frankly I felt Matthew was working the crowd at this point.
We went for a walk outside the church until the ceremony was over.
Canoeing Books
I read a pair of related books over the weekend, “Canoeing With the Cree” by Eric Sevareid and “Distant Fires” by Scott Anderson. These two books are both about very long canoe trips undertaken by ill-prepared kids starting in Minnesota and ending in Hudson Bay. Each was a good read. “Distant Fires” was a lot funnier, but not quite as well written. Sevareid’s book was better written, but lacking in some detail. Both books were lacking technical details of the trip, although the did have some gear and food lists as well as some maps.
Sevareid’s trip started in Minneapolis, followed the Mississippi to the Minnesota, and follows the Minnesota to it’s headwaters. Then the cross the divide where the waters flow north and head towards Canada. Anderson’s trip begins near Duluth and follow Lake Superior to Grand Portage and then roughly follows the Canadian border west for some time. I would imagine that the Minnesota River route would be very hard to follow today as I am sure that there would be a lot of portaging in muck where it is low.
I am really astounded that each of these parties made their destination. Each was under prepared and used poor gear. Still they made it. Hats off to them, I’ve never done anything quite as exciting myself. The kind of intestinal fortitude it took to keep going when faced with the grind of the trail must have been huge. I also can’t really imagine taking canoes across such large bodies of water. While I am no expert paddler, white caps and canoes don’t seem like a good mix in my mind.
One other note, Sevarieds book occasionally paints relations with Native Americans in such a way that seems a bit shocking today. The world sure has changed for the better since the 1930s.
Amazon Links
Distant Fires
Canoeing With the Cree
Amazon Links
Distant Fires
Canoeing With the Cree
Notes from MPLS Perl Mongers
The Minneapolis Perl Mongers met last night. The speaker was none other than Andy Lester. His comments on the event can be seen at use.perl.org.
Here are my very sparse notes.
amazon feature where you see “People who liked this book also purchased this book.” I think you could actually adopt FOAF for this purpose. Instead of filling in the friends with names they are modules. Then people could upload them, or publish them somewhere on the web and viola we could all share CPAN data. It’s pretty clever actually. Here is an example I made in foaf-a-matic which was slightly edited to remove the field I didn’t use Friends Email. I think this could work quite easily.
- Keep testing simple, constantly, extensively. Make it part of the culture.
- if it’s pain to write no will write and maintain them.
- smoke script, smoke bots
- human testing doesn’t scale
- don’t write untestable code
- code review must include test files
- Check out Junit, Test::Class, Xunit
- Need to look at WWW:Mechanize and the Test::* hierarchy
For more links and info check out qa.perl.org
The most interesting meta-topic was how to find modules on CPAN and how one might find groups of modules that might work well together. I think this topic has been disussed numerous times in the Perl community and there have been a lot of ideas. Last night’s idea was a spin on social networking where people would indentify which modules they use, and then share. This would work alot of the FOAF stuff or maybe the social networking websites. The idea is a lot like theamazon feature where you see “People who liked this book also purchased this book.” I think you could actually adopt FOAF for this purpose. Instead of filling in the friends with names they are modules. Then people could upload them, or publish them somewhere on the web and viola we could all share CPAN data. It’s pretty clever actually. Here is an example I made in foaf-a-matic which was slightly edited to remove the field I didn’t use Friends Email. I think this could work quite easily.
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:rdfs="http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#" xmlns:foaf="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/" xmlns:admin="http://webns.net/mvcb/"> <foaf:PersonalProfileDocument rdf:about=""> <foaf:maker rdf:nodeID="me"/> <foaf:primaryTopic rdf:nodeID="me"/> <admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://www.ldodds.com/foaf/foaf-a-matic"/> <admin:errorReportsTo rdf:resource="mailto:leigh@ldodds.com"/> </foaf:PersonalProfileDocument> <foaf:Person rdf:nodeID="me"> <foaf:name>tim burlowski</foaf:name> <foaf:givenname>tim</foaf:givenname> <foaf:family_name>burlowski</foaf:family_name> <foaf:nick>timbu</foaf:nick> <foaf:mbox_sha1sum>96a89b9e488e2af86f950313a1c0d1e6956dc7f2</foaf:mbox_sha1sum> <foaf:homepage rdf:resource="http://timbu.org/mtblog"/> <foaf:knows> <foaf:Person> <foaf:name>Text::Format</foaf:name> </foaf:Person></foaf:knows> <foaf:knows> <foaf:Person> <foaf:name>Yahoo::StockQuote</foaf:name> </foaf:Person></foaf:knows> <foaf:knows> <foaf:Person> <foaf:name>DBI</foaf:name> </foaf:Person></foaf:knows></foaf:Person> </rdf:RDF>The best part of Andy’s talk was to listen to someone who seemed happy, engaged, and actually cared about something. I remember feeling this way about technology a while back.
CD-MP3 car stereo
Christmas 2002, my lovely wife bought me a CD-player for the car I commute in. After 110,000 miles I finally decided the car was a keeper and deserved a stereo upgrade.
She got me a Panasonic CQ-DP171U, obviously named by engineers. It distinguished itself by playing MP3′s which was a rarity on affordable MP3 decks at the time. While I enjoyed this new deck immensely with CD’s, especially audio books from the library, I never got one MP3 disc to play until today.
What’s the trick you ask. Well as the warranty wound down late last year, I sent it in to be repaired. Audio King now Ultimate Electronics sent off the deck to a local repair company who does warranty work for Panasonic. The repair tech had the same problems I had with my disc (which worked in other players, BTW) but couldn’t figure it out. After a long wait he got through to a engineer at Panasonic who indicated you couldn’t play anything with a bitrate greater than 128 kbs. So he sent it back. At this point Audio King promptly lost the deck for 3 months. My wife finally tracked it down in some dusty back room somewhere. After it was re-installed I dilligently burned a new disc, using MusicMatch, which has the option to downsample to 128 kbs. Still no luck. Then I decided to look at the files more closely. Sure enough they were still at their native 192 or 256 kbs rate. Of course software defects! So I downloaded LAME and RazorLame for Windows and downsampled to a verifiable 128kbs, burned another disc and ran out to the car.
Lo and behold it worked. I was playing MP3′s in my car. Watch out world.
Now if only Panasonic had mentioned on their manual or on their web site, I could have been playing MP3′s for 15 months but no! Hope this info is useful for someone else.
BTW, all my MP3′s are legal, I have the original CD, and am only space shifting and I don’t share. I would like to share if it were legal.
Polished off another sailing book
I just finished up Proving Ground, by Bruce G. Knecht. It was about the 1998 Syndey to Hobart race. This race is famous for a couple of things. One, Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle was onboard his ship Sayonara, and two, a huge storm that claimed several lives. It had good descriptions of the storms. I wish there had been more maps and more race kind of information, as it was sometime hard to keep track of the who and wheres.
It was a good read, and really conveyed the characters pretty well. I thought the Larry Ellison accounts would have been more interesting as he is well known in the computer industry for being a rather “different” individual.
It’s not my favorite sailing book, but it was a good read. I just wish I could get out on the water more than once per year. Wonder if I could ever get on a trip like this onerounding Cape Horn.