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Archive for February, 2006

20060218 Feed your ipod beatiful: yuppster, trash80, jean9, ps and kosmoplovci

Some weeks ago, I dared myself to listen to as much non-commercial music as I could. What I did was as simple as going to scene.org archive and started downloading files from the ftp://ftp.scene.org/pub/music/groups directory. Of course, there's a lot of stuff there, but I'll point some interesting things I found.

First I tried with 2063music, but they didn't manage to have any song that catched my attention. Too much ambient for my taste, songs seemed a bit too pale. Sorry mates…!

Then I downloaded the contents of 8bitpeoples. This one had great stuff in it! My favourite artists from 8bpp were definitely yuppster and trash80. Yuppster does some very original music, ranging from melodic ambient soundscapes made with buzz to super noise-destructed songs made with gameboy (how was the name of that tracker software for gameboy? i never remember its name). Trash80 is in a different wavelength, making more electro music. I really loved the vocals in his songs.

After that I jumped to jean9's music. I already had listened things from jean9 of course. Not only in matt current's demos, but also had listened to jean9's tracked music before. He manages to make music in a lot of quite different styles quite decently, but what I like most are the more powerful songs - i.e. that kind of songs they use in matt current's supermegasyncronized demos.

And one thing comes after the other. After listening to rhythmic noise one just can go for non-rhythmic noise. I was feeling really curious about noise music, specially after the noise demos ecclosion which had happened relatively recently. And also after having listened some interesting explanations from ps about noise music, its why's and how's, I decided to go for the noise  music dose! So I just went and downloaded all ps's music in his netlabel, enoughrecords (they are also in the ftp archive, in the enough_records folder).

I must recognize I was deeply impressed by these songs. I listened to them without any prejudice, just letting them flow and hearing how they sounded like. As I have told today to ps, somehow the songs reminded me to situations like browsing through the shortwave radio frequencies, and hearing weird voices and unexpected sounds, which you can't really locate where they come from, or what are they telling. There were very interesting textures on them. (Of course, if you are a dumb listener you aren't going to appreciate this at all). Lots of sounds that I thought: how did he manage to do them? I know he uses buzz but I never managed to get that kind of output from it, yay!

There's another thing with noise music which is really curious. It somehows triggers something in my head, and I remember things that I hadn't remembered for years. Like situations, people, things, conversations. How does it manage to do it, I don't have a clue. But it's absolutely amazing, it might be like a kind of auditive hypnose - by isolating your ears from known and recognizable sounds your mind is free to think and remember. A very weird sensation, indeed.

After listening to all ps's records, I decided it was time for some kosmoplovci music. Trace had already recommended me kosmoplovci's transmisije before, but unfortunately I hadn't paid enough attention (shame on me!!). Transmisije are some radio sets they prepare, where they mix very interesting electronic, experimental and techno music. Styles are very varied, as you can imagine, and they are not as noisy as ps's music, instead they are more coarse, defined, maybe even stunning. I hadn't finished yet listening to those transmissions - there are a lot and they all are more than one hour each. But they are also highly recommended if you want to listen to different music and sounds (and you should do it).

When I finish with the transmisije I'll probably go for domin8tor/kosmoplovci music, as it looks as if he does very good music too, from the few songs I've listened until date. But I'll tell you in future posts!

And well, you can put all of these songs on your ipod (or favourite portable music player), excepting the transmisije, which are encoded in ogg vorbis format. While apple decides to do a firmware update and allow ipod's to play ogg's, you can try and convert them to mp3 with any of the good utilities which are everywhere on internet.

20060215 What if microsoft did an ipod?

microsoft ipod

I normally don't find this class of images very funny but this one synthetises perfectly the confusion that I feel with windows machines, now that I am more used to the mac style. Ohh and look at that "Direct access to clip" button! Hilarious…

20060214 Interesting and more or less useless software for mac

Today at lunch time I was commenting with luy about some of the latest releases of mac software, and I thought it may be interesting to point out some programs that I find interesting. They are not as mainstream as the ones we mentioned (i.e. Apple's Aperture, iLife'06, etc…) but they can be as useful or useless as the other ones, depending on the hands they fall on. So there we go, let's have a look at my Applications folder!

  • AdiumX. A gaim based instant messaging application. Can connect with MSN, yahoo!, gtalk and all of those other networks I can't remember now. It's quite nice and leaving aside the fact that it still can't work with a webcam (specially because I don't have a webcam), it's very very good. Highly recommended! (Stop using that MSN Messenger crap)
  • Azureus. Best BitTorrent application I have ever tried. Runs under java in fact but in this case it doesn't hurt that much. (You have used this one under windows too)
  • Bricksmith. A lego simulation software. Not really useful but very entertaining.
  • Camino. The native-mac-os-interfaced browser with the gecko engine. Now in their 1.0 release!
  • Chicken of the VNC. A simple program for connecting to VNC servers. Very handy if you want to control all the computers from your chair…
  • ClamXAV. Mac version of ClamAV. I installed it just for making sure there weren't infected files in the folders I copied from my old pc, and for cleaning possible malware html pages (specially in the form of evil spam mail messages).
  • CocoModX. A module player with a Cocoa interface! If you can't stop listening to your favourite tracked music even in your mac, this is the perfect solution. Comes with fmod, bass and mikmod libraries integrated, so as to make sure each module is played with the best and most accurate player. The icon (a 3.5" disk with headphones and an amiga bouncing ball) is lovely!
  • Colloquy. For your oldskool IRC chats. Can connect to multiple servers, etc. Like mIRC but without the pop up with the author's picture ;)
  • Cyberduck. Simple [S]FTP client. Allows for online editing as well. It's often updated, and they say they are now using universal binaries, so they should work on your brand new mac-intels.
  • Firefox. The one and only.
  • iEatBrainz. This application will look through your iTunes collection and find out which songs do not have tags. Then it can proceed to analyse them and look for their right tags in an online database of songs.
  • iFeedPod. Read your favourite rss feeds on your ipod! (obviously, it's useless if you have an ipod shuffle).
  • Jomic. Simple Java based application for reading scanned/electronic comic books.
  • LameBrain. A powerful all-in-one Lame interface. It can rip cd's, encode them, convert between formats, etc…
  • Linotype Font Explorer-X. Nice font manager.
  • Locomotive. Superhelper for developing ruby on rails applications. A must have.
  • NeoOffice. The Mac flavour of openoffice. Stop pirating Microsoft Office and start using OpenOffice!
  • Paparazzi. This creates screenshots of a whole page (no matter how much it needs to scroll). Now you can create a png with the contents of your front page, even if you have a very long blogroll on it! ;)
  • Pixen. A very funny pixel art program. Latest version, even if it's a bit buggy, has nice features.
  • Schism Tracker. The definitive replacement to Impulse tracker.
  • Skype. For those neverending phone calls. It doesn't support video yet but who cares?
  • svnX. A subversion client for MacOsX.
  • TextMate. My favourite editor by the moment. It doesn't annoy you when it tries to help, it's fast, mac os native, etc.
  • UnRarX. For all those folks which keep compressing things in rar, well, we now can open that stuff with this little program.
  • VLC player. Usually, it plays more videos and better than quicktime. Honest! Audio sucks a bit, anyway.
  • xnntp. A news reader (nntp). For extreme boredom cases…

So you have a lot of things to procrastinate with now!! I'm so evil…! Most of these programs are free or very cheap, if you were wondering about that…

Heaven signal

pi

You go shopping and add some usual, ordinary items to your basket, nothing relevant, and then you realise that the final balance is the magic number: £3.14 (pi)

Wouldn't you think it is a heaven signal?

A very simple Commodore Amiga question

Amiga ball

What does have even the most ridiculous Amiga 500 which is preventing any of the emulators around there to work properly? Why there is not a single emulator which works decently? I tried to see a pair of old amiga demos (well, basicly State of The Art), and I couldn't stand that slow agony for too long… I know Amiga had several dedicated processors (Paula and so on), but it had around 16MHz processor, and we are talking about emulating it with machines of more than 1000 Mhz, which also have their own dedicated chips (graphic card, sound card).

We have seen good Megadrive, SuperNes and even NeoGeo emulators… all of these machines had their own dedicated chips for sound, graphics, etc, if I am right, so something is going wrong here… I'd like to listen any kind of explanation, as I think I'm missing something for sure :-) (and super greetz go to Humphr3y which I am sure that will like to know why as well, as we commented about this issue some time ago)