Archive for February, 2004

Mathcaddy Radio Session 1

Thursday, February 26th, 2004

With apologies to Acts of Volition, mathcaddy.com launches Mathcaddy Radio.

Anyone with a microphone is weclome to contribute their own four to eight track radio show playlist, but the mp3 file must include commentary on each track and be all one file.

So… here is Adam’s Mathcaddy Radio session 1: [37 mb]

If you have problems, please understand it was thrown together hastily just to try it out quickly. There are a number of things that will be improved for session 2 (if there is a session 2). First, I will use better recording and mic technique. Second, I will arrange my comments ahead of time regarding each track. I figured it would be easier than it was. I had a hard time not just saying, “this was a good song,” or “that was a great track” all the time.

After hearing it (if you choose to) please leave a comment– yay or nay: is it a worthy thing to keep trying to do? and if so, what are your thoughts? if not, then why not?

Now featuring Mathcaddy Radio Session 1.1, with better sound and better (?) commentary. (Well, at least better sound.)

back to content…

Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

I have been listening now and then to what I think is a really good idea. It’s a radio playlist with commentary by Steven Garrity of Acts of Volition, just done straight off of his weblog. I think it’s a great idea. In fact, when I play his show on my iPod in my car, I have this really great “fresh radio” feeling. It just makes listening more fun when it seems someone else is randomly picking songs they like. The whole radio show thing sounds like it would be pretty fun. Maybe if I can get a good microphone I might do it on a fairly regular basis.

The weirdest thing about the few songs that make Garrity’s radio playlists is that there are so many that at different times were incredible stand out songs to me: Counting Crows - Angels of the Silences, Ben Folds - Brick, Foo Fighters - Hey, Johnny Park!, Poor Old Lu - Ring True, and a couple more.

On another note, it’s back to the old standby: I invite any regulars to share your current top 10 albums or songs that they’re listening to. I will consider mine and be posting something sometime this evening.

It’s over.

Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

The links are now dead, for our visitors joining the party a little too late…

And now we wait to see the real response and effects of this landmark day of online protest.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled web site. We will no longer be gray, despite what had been suggested previously. I got a little tired of the absolute lack of color. I just kept expecting to wake up, surrounded by farmhands and saying, “You were there… and you were there…. and you were there!”

Long live the Copyright Reform Movement!
See also:
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
Larry Lessig: “Open Culture” [Flash lecture]
Larry Lessig: “What I Thought We Knew” [Real Video]
Robert S. Boynton: “The Tyranny of Copyright” [NY Times article]

These are just a few sites, articles, and lectures that I’ve found very interesting reads in the past few days. Of them all, Lessig’s “Open Culture” is the best and most interesting. I highly recommend it, although it will take some time, as it is an actual lecture.

Beginning a New American Revolution

Tuesday, February 24th, 2004

As pretty much everyone knows, mathcaddy.com is participating in Grey Tuesday, which is today.

Why am I taking part in this protest?

Because I believe today is the copyright equivalent to the Boston Tea Party.

EMI’s cease and desist letter makes it sound as if Grey Tuesday is about infringement and theft. It’s not. It’s about copyright reform. And the internet provides the perfect platform for such a protest. Just as was dumping tea into the Boston harbor, this is a symbolic protest. It is ridiculous to believe we are really contributing toward infringement on a significant level. If the demand for this album is there on the internet, people can already get it on many different p2p applications. We are putting the album on our web sites because it makes a dramatic statement. Practically as significant as dumping tea into a harbor.

The people who are taking part in Grey Tuesday are not only protesting for the right of musicians to sample. They are also standing up to the RIAA’s general oppression of freedom as well as their attitude that demands absolute control of all copyrighted works, and - most importantly - the fact that they are so large and so rich that they will get what they want. Unless, of course, the people stand in their way. (You know, the “people” referred to in “We the People…”)

On a larger level, Grey Tuesday is about the freedom to peaceably assemble in order to protest something we think is wrong. It is about whether our government values more highly the rights of the people with the rights of the corporation. The supreme court and many other lower courts are constantly attempting to balance rights, weighing the freedoms of individuals against the protections given to copyright holders. However, in my opinion, a victory of EMI in any of the potential lawsuits against protesters would be a clear statement that our country no longer values the rights of its citizens.

This is the cutting edge of a new American Revolution. Where a small percentage of people once took it upon themselves to speak out and act out against Britain’s attempts to undercut the rights of colonial citizens, a small number of people are beginning to light a fire that has been quietly flickering in many hearts.

Make no mistake. Due to the financial and legal might of the record companies, this is not a majority revolution. Nor was the first American revolution. In fact, only a third were for it (a third were against it and a third were indifferent). While the colonists were afraid for their lives, people today are afraid for their bank accounts.

Fear is a reasonable emotion, especially given the fact that we do face corporate entities that could will any of us into bankruptcy through sheer brute force.

But I believe in this country and the foundation upon which it was built. And if corporations wish to subdue the freedoms of citizens of the 21st Century in the name of profit and control, there are a large number of people who are willing to fight them for every square inch.

Flash

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

After seeing a site like this I start to wonder what is keeping me from learning Flash. If a monkey can make stuff like that, why can’t I make a circle that stops when it hits a wall? HUH?? WHY AM I NOT A WINNER? I also need to find something that is funny besides repeating the phrase ‘but does it win?’ all the time. But then you have to ask yourself a question, would the new phrase really win? I think not.

Grey Tuesday Collected Updates

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Update: Read the legal response to the c&d from downhillbattle.org here.

Update 2: It appears the law firm sending the c&d not only represents EMI, but a whole host of other very large corporations, including (but not limited to) BMG, Sony Music, Clear Channel, Coca-Cola, Universal Studios, Columbia Pictures, JC Penney’s, AT&T, IBM, Major League Baseball, the RIAA, and the fricking Empire State Building. Oh yes. And American Girl doll company.

And, if you’re interested, here’s a pic of Cowan, Liebowitz & Latman’s “Hottie of the Month”, who also happens to be the lawyer Mr. J. Christopher Jensen, himself.

Update 3: mathcaddy.com gets a high-profile mention from downhillbattle.org in relation to this post on mathcaddy.com. See the note below their statement in their reply to the cease & decist email.

They see you!

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

The lawyers have a very powerful zoom on their binoculars… They see all! You cannot escape! Muhahahahaaaaaa!

Little Piggies

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

I received this cease and desist today.

And this is my response:

have you seen the little piggies
crawling in the dirt?
and for all the little piggies
life is getting worse
always having dirt
to play around in

have you seen the bigger piggies
in their starched white shirts?
you will find the bigger piggies
stirring up the dirt
they always have clean shirts
to play around in

in their sties with all their backing
they don’t care what goes on around

in their eyes, there’s something lacking
what they need’s a damn good whacking

- The Beatles: “Piggies” (From The White Album)

We do not negotiate with pigopolists.

We’ve come a long way, baby

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Using a great application of permalinks, take a look at this cute little chart from almost exactly a year ago.

1076 hits a month? Was I on crack being that excited? Mathcaddy gets that in a day now! And usually more like 2000! Sheeeesh.

But does anyone know if it wins?

Permalinks work!

Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Woo! We now have permalinks.

Next major site addition is a “search archives” feature. There is also a slight chance that this site will move to movabletype instead of using blogger. Movabletype is a server based blogging app, meaning you would actually log in to a page on mathcaddy.com to add stuff to this site. Please let me know what you think. I may set up a demo site for you to review movabletype.