Archive for March, 2009

March 29th, 2009

Yahoo! Media Player – Hacks

yahoo! media playerIn general, I’m not a big fan of anything Yahoo!, but the Yahoo! Media Player is actually a really cool and easy way to stream music from your site. The only unfortunate thing is that there is a long list of to-do’s on the Yahoo! wiki (some of which should be standard).

Trackseek, Trackresume, Trackfocus Hacks

The good news is that this guy Eric Fehrenbacher developed a few amazing hacks, but for some reason the hyperlinks to the javascript files arent’ available and he hasn’t been replying to comments.

I’ve been trying to get these hacks to work on my other site, so I went ahead and extracted the .js files. Copy these files and then link to them in your HTML header:

This code is necessary for all 3 hacks:
http://www.danceatthepostoffice.com/js/ef.ymp.utilities.js

And then you can choose which extension(s) you want:
http://www.danceatthepostoffice.com/js/trackseek.js
http://www.danceatthepostoffice.com/js/trackresume.js
http://www.danceatthepostoffice.com/js/trackfocus.js

I’m not taking any credit (or responsibility) I just extracted the code. Please don’t deep link to these files, copy the code to your own server, and then also check back with Eric’s site in the future as he’ll hopefully be making updates.

How To Remove “Learn More About This Player”

Also, I couldn’t figure out how he got rid of the “Learn More About This Player” link. So I made up my own simple hack with CSS, just add this to your stylesheet or header:

<style type=”text/css”>
#ymp-relevance {
visibility: hidden;
}
</style>

March 25th, 2009

View Password Bookmarklet

view password gmail

  1. Go to any login page where you have a password “starred out”
    Ya know, like this:

  2. Copy and paste this code into the address bar in your browser
  3. Watch as the password is decoded into plain text
  4. I couldn’t believe this was possible, but then it started to make sense considering that in HTML source our passwords are plain-text in the value field:

<input type="password" value="1234spaceballs" />
    But what a good way to decode old passwords you may have forgotten (or…uh….decode an ex-girlfriend’s gmail password). And as Lifehacker shows, it’s easy to save this code as a bookmarklet for easy access.

    Click Here To Go To The Example Page

March 24th, 2009

‘Yahoo! Shortcuts’ Is Annoying

About a year ago I was using “Yahoo! Shortcuts” to add photos to my site musicneutral.com. Basically it scans your posting for keywords and suggests a photo (basically, saving me the time of uploading it to my server). Well, one month later I stopped using it because it was buggy, but now looking back I see this: “The Photo Is Currently Available”. Annoying!

yahoo! shortcuts

March 17th, 2009

Creative Commons Case Studies

Building An Australasian CommonsAlmost a year ago Creative Commons launched the Case Studies Project with the aim of qualitatively measuring the impact of CC licenses on the world. The project lives on the CC wiki and everyone is invited to contribute by adding “interesting, innovative, or noteworthy uses of Creative Commons.” As of this writing, the project showcases around 500 Case Studies of people using a CC License for photography, music, film, literature and education.

Unfortunately, the CC wiki (IMHO) is slightly awkward to navigate: you can browse through the case studies, but since most of us aren’t looking for a specific case study it is difficult to get an overall impression. Luckily, Creative Commons Australia recently completed a book entitled Building an Australasian Commons that highlights sixty-five of the case studies (a pre-print PDF version of the book is now available online). Building an Australasian Commons is an amazing first step for aggregating this information and presenting it in an easily digestible and persuasive manner. The 195 page PDF lifts the project from the website, and with the magic of good design techniques, reworks it into something that tells a larger story – and something that is fashionable enough to put on your coffee table.

How To Improve the Case Studies
In order to spread CC beyond the walls of the free-culture movement and into mainstream society CC needs more evidence that demonstrates whether it has been successful for artists. So in addition to the book, what other ways can the case studies be presented such that they have the power to influence the general public?

Is there additional data that we could be collecting from the CC licensed artists?

The first thing that comes to mind is that the case studies need to include more hard data about artists’ income and listenership. Among the participants in the music study, a few of the more generous participants have disclosed the following:

  • Nine Inch Nails provided some of the most detailed information on their pricing model and revealed that they took in 1.6million in the first week from sales on their website.
  • Musician Jonathan Coulton was “unable to give statistics” but did say that 45% of his income in 2007 was from paid digital downloads.
  • Jamendo, the online music platform promoting CC-licensed music, has made all of the site’s donation statistics publicly available. Economist Aaron Schiff tabulated the data and published his findings that, “Over the 22 months there were 1,454 donations made, for a total value of US$21,150. So each artist is receiving very little money, if anything.”

While these numbers are interesting, they aren’t enough to conclude anything about the Creative Commons licenses as a whole. For instance, there isn’t a constant metrics that I can rely on to make comparisons between the musicians. And further, how can I relate these results to musicians that aren’t using a CC license?

As a parallel think about how Billboard Magazine has been reporting on album sales and popularity for the past 60 years. Their rankings are publicly available and provide the industry with a standard for measurement. What standards of measurement can we use in the CC case studies?

I’d also like to learn if there are people who feel that their work has been hindered by the use of a CC license. What went wrong? What can we learn from this? Considering that the only “negative” conclusion was drawn from one of the few participants that had disclosed the largest amount of hard-data (Jamendo’s finding that “each artist is receiving very little money”), there hasn’t been enough research into the true consequences of using a CC license.

If CC could collect more data about each musician then perhaps the “musicians, music professionals and record execs” (Billboard’s audience) would pay more attention. And more importantly, Creative Commons would gain the ‘stickiness’ necessary to penetrate mainstream culture.

Read the Original Post on musicNeutral

March 14th, 2009

Play Any Song – Jango Hack

jangoI wrote a simple PHP script that queries the Internet radio site Jango and allows you to play any song they have in their database. Jango is already far superior to other Internet radio sites when it comes to finding a particular song. In contrast, Last.fm and Pandora are more like traditional radio stations: you can pick the band or genre you want to hear, but you have to wait around if you want to hear any particular song. At Jango half of songs are available to be streamed (check out The Arcade Fire’s page to see). But if you notice, a song like “No Cars Go” is listed as not available. And so this script makes a link that accesses the entire library.

It’s really easy to understand the pattern, here is “No Cars Go”:

http://www.jango.com/music/arcade+fire/no+cars+go

Try out the search tool and let me know how it works. I’ve made the code available on this site, so feel free to build upon it and make it better. Also, here is a stand alone Jango Search example.

Song Title:

March 13th, 2009

Songbird Bookmarklet

Songbird 1.1 Is Now Available.
songbird
In the latest update the team at Songbird have added one-click album artwork retrieval, bug fixes and a long list of performance enhancements (most notably a reduction in memory & CPU usage).

One of the things I’m excited about is the new Songbird protocol handler (songbird://) which allows Songbird to be accessed from a URL. For example, click this URL in Firefox and it opens Last.fm in the Songbird browser:

songbird:open?url=http%3A%2F%2Flast.fm

This helps blurs the line between finding music on the web and playing music in a music library.

Songbird Bookmarklet
One example of the protocol at work is this bookmarklet by Trent on Lifehacker. Simply bookmark this link below. Then when you come across downloadable music on the web, click the bookmarklet and the files are ready for download in Songbird:

javascript:document.location=”songbird:open?url=”+escape(document.location);

I’d like it if Songbird offered this as a default during installation – like delicious does. It’d be a lot easier for newbies who might be intimidated with anything that is related to javascript code.

View the original post on musicNeutral

March 8th, 2009

Blender: Is Too Much Self-Reflection and Network Theory Bad For The Network?

Blender is the leading open-source 3D graphics application that can be used for free, and by anyone to create “Hollywood-style” art and video animations. While there are over 50,000 people participating in the online community, the “active” development team is composed of about 50-60 people. At Winter Camp nine of the member came together to discuss improvements for the software. I had a chance to join Blender on Day 1 while they were getting warmed up.

The group focused very granularly on topics such as the MVC model for Blender, and how they should handle default keymapping in the case of users that have international keyboards. And while these discussions seem to be relevant for future releases of Blender, even the group admitted to me that the topics covered at this workshop are of much more interest to the developers and not for the end-user.

I had a chance on Day 3 to follow up with Blender members Campbell Barton and Brecht Van Lommel regarding Blender and their thoughts on Winter Camp. When I asked them about Blender’s competition they responded very slowly as if it wasn’t something that they’d thought much about. “We’re not really competing with anyone”, said Lommel. The guys agreed that Blender’s success had grown large enough to keep the project moving along – as well as keeping them employed – so they don’t have to worry whether “Hollywood” is paying attention or not.

Winter Camp

“An amateur could see something like Lord of The Rings and say, ‘hey, I need to go out and get the same expensive software if I want to be serious about 3D design’, but the truth is they probably won’t use all of the complex functions”, they exaplained. Therefore, Blender’s target audience is the low-to-mid level 3D designer. Also, it is especially useful for high schools and colleges that want to offer 3D modeling courses, without the pricey overhead to afford a high-end software package.

After sitting in on meetings with five of the networks here at Winter Camp the difference between the technical groups like Blender and the more theoretical groups was striking. Blender, for instance, has a concrete goal that is almost tangible and therefore within the group there has been little to no discussion about the group’s identity or “hierarchy”. Barton talked about his experience at the plenary session, “Maybe I don’t understand the abstract talks we’re having at these meetings or if it doesn’t so much apply to Blender. We’ve been working well together for a few years now, and I’m not sure how useful it is for us to think…ok well each of us are nodes, and so-and-so here is our network diagram.” In the case of Blender, an abstract discussion on Blender’s own network structure may be more beneficial to the other networks here at Winter Camp hoping to learn about how a successful network operates. As one of my colleagues here commented, “It seems like the groups that are confused about their goals and identity are having the most trouble collaborating this week, while groups like Blender and GOTO10 are too busy to worry about it.”

Read the original post on the Winter Camp site

March 6th, 2009

freeDimensional, Day 3, and open-space

freeDimensional had the chairs arranged in a circle and were already engaged in a passionate debate when I entered the room. The discussion was about the presentation they would give on Day 4 – the question: what is the best way to represent the group’s identity in twenty-minutes?

At first FD began by posting orange sticky-notes to the board – each with a different theme for discussion. Twenty sticky-notes later they decided they would give a brief introduction and then split into separate discussion groups. Since FD is a multi-dimensional network, by breaking into smaller groups they could better target the parts of the Winter Camp audience that share an interest in collaborative writing, education, the use of video for storytelling etc. In line with the FD’s general philosophy, they “hope to use the power of open-space as a meeting tool.”

FD wants to make clear that they are an inclusive network – “everyone is invited: artists, writers, tech people…” On Day 4 they will ask the audience to engage and raise questions. I’m enthusiastic about this approach, for as long as the crowd is willing to interact it could be a nice dialogue. They affirmed, “any type of communication can be seen as jargon”, so rather than hide behind network jargon they’ve decided they’ll open up the discussion and ‘include everyone’.

Read the original post on the Winter Camp 09 Site

March 4th, 2009

MyCreativity: Open-Source Urbanism

MyCreativity met on Day 1 of Winter Camp to discuss issues concerning open-source urbanism. Today the group was composed of fourteen artists and activists that (as a group) were all meeting together for the first time. The afternoon session included three presentations full of examples, a history and criticism of open-source architecture.

Anthony Iles on the 2012 London Olympics and Flexible Architecture
Anthony Iles addressed the group on issues of industrialism concerning the upcoming Olympic Games in 2012, as well as questioned what flexible architecture says about the collapse of play and work. For instance once you create a flexible scenario: how is it structured and how is it governed?

The architect Cedric Price’s Fun Palace is an early example of flexible architecture: a building comprised of pre-fabricated walls, floors and stairs that could be moved and reassemble by cranes. He wanted to use cybernetics to model the activity of visitors and to see how interactive and playful they could make an area; resulting in a model which stressed the distinction “this [here] is play, while this [over here] is industry”. Illes pointed out the influence of Price’s Fun Palace on Richard Rogers’ Pompidou Centre and went on to ask, “Where are the Fun Palaces of today?” To which he replied that the modern examples can be seen in Roger’s Millennium Dome as well as in the upcoming design of the 2012 London Olympics.

As the site of the London Olympics are confronted with issues of money, funding and other unforeseeable events, the project will need to be flexible in ways that go beyond Price’s original vision:

  • considering London doesn’t have a need for an additional stadium the upcoming Olympic stadium will need to be mobile
  • also they’ve planned to house the international media in a shopping mall

Marijn Oudenampsen on Open-Source Architecture
The second presentation by Marijn Oudenampsen explored the possibility of formulating a positive urban agenda by revisiting the utopian urbanism of the 1960s and 1970s, and combining those with the current agenda of the open-source movement. He explained that in the late 60s, the urban space was where the struggle against authority took place (e.g. the civil-rights riots in Prague, in Saigon during the Tet Offensive, as well as in Paris and the United States). “In the 60s there were two logics emerging”, explained Oudenampsen, “one of a functionalism and one of an open-source urbanism attacking this previous functionalism that was part of modernist architecture.”

Oudenampsen contrasted the English pop art architecture group Archigram with the Dutch architect Constant Nieuwenhuys. He criticized Archigram’s centralized planning agency and their ideas about a “new economy of individual lifestyle consumption that remained couched in the language and concerns of functionalism.” Nieuwenhuys’ New Babylon project, on the other hand, was a metaphor for open-source urbanism “inhabited by a creative, nomadic mass, that would be able to spontaneously reconfigure every aspect of their environment.” It was this new avant-garde of creativity that Nieuwenhuys believed would take over the world.

Currently Archigram’s philosophy of close-source urbanism has manifested itself in companies like Microsoft. For example:

  • software architects hide behind the central role
  • impenetrable jargon obscures meaning
  • public opinion is being swayed by bad information
  • information is withheld in ‘commercial secrets’

So after looking for Nieuwenhuys’ influence on modern society, Oudenampsen emphasized, “The only fertile domain of utopian politics today seems to exist in the digital world, in the open-source movement”. He cited examples of Pekka Himanen’s Hackers Ethic, as well as Howard Dean’s internet-propelled campaign (which lead to the term ‘open-source politics’). Oudenampsen then began his discussion on open-source architecture with a quote by Brian Carrol:

“the computer industry has borrowed terminology from the discipline of architecture to describe structural and conceptual workings of electronic machines and its designer: computer architecture and software architects. Now, what if architecture borrowed popular terminology from the discipline of computer science?”

Oudenampsen seemed optimistic about the potential for the creative city, but gave us some clear and shocking examples of open-source architecture impostors. First he told the MyCreativity group about an article he had recently read in a 2006 edition of Dutch Real Estate Magazine. In the article a few real-estate entrepreneurs said, “the concept of the creative city is on the rise, sometimes planned, sometimes organic, but up till now always thanks to the real estate developers.” The article talked about how they use artists to spice up the values of real estate and say “the thing not to do is to publicly announce you’re going to haul in an artist, instead give them the feeling they thought of it themselves”- to which Geert Lovink quietly laughed, “evil, evil”.

Oudenampsen followed up with some additional examples of pseudo-open-source architecture in what he referred to as “Urbanism Web 2.0”. He included the sites Buurtleven.nl and FixMyStreet in England, but most accurately illustrated the problem with the Wij Bouwen Een Wijk example. The site wijbouweneenwijk.nl (similarly to the architects in the Dutch Real Estate Magazine article) allows the community to feel like they are in control because they can post and comment on new residential designs, but in reality it is the central powers that have the final word on which ideas get approval. “Open-source is not just about having the Internet – it’s about how you deal with knowledge”, he said. Many people say these projects are revolutionary, but they’re NOT very revolutionary – they are normal and they are just pacifying the public. If we are to establish true open-source architecture “we can’t just provide the emperor with a new set of clothes”, said Oudenampsen, “but we need an emperor that is openly exhibitionistic.”

Micheal La Fond and Reflections of Berlin
Micheal La Fond looked at the “incredible challenges” that have faced the city of Berlin. In his talk he emphasized issues of culture and communication more than technology by asking: how do the people of Berlin live together? Work together? Organize themselves and share their stories? He believed that the people of the city need more rights and should be allowed to design and manage their immediate environments. “We need to engage people, and show them what is possible”, said La Fond.

Considering the current economic crisis, La Fond told the story of GLS, UNVELT, and Trias – three Germany banks “that are fundamentally built on another idea”. He explained,

“They say we’re not interested in speculation and profits…we’re interested in changing ownership structures. And these banks are doing well right now, they’re not taking a beating at all. They don’t have the bad credit that they’ve sold somebody else, they’re working on small projects that have a good foundation and they’re pretty healthy right now.”

MyCreativity will meet again during the next two days of Winter Camp and present their findings on Day 4.

Read the original post on the Winter Camp 09 site

March 4th, 2009

Winter Camp 09 Opening Ceremony

Winter CampThe opening ceremony of Winter Camp 09 began last night at Studio K in Amsterdam. The 12 groups that had been invited to participate came from many countries from around the world and filled the small stadium-seating theatre (typically used for screening movies) to its maximum capacity. Interestingly, not everyone within each of the groups had met in person before Winter Camp, so for each of the 12 groups it was an amazing opportunity to shake hands with group members who were previously separated by wires and oceans.

Geert Lovink welcomed all 150 participants, and then went into a brief explanation of the funding and planning for Winter Camp over the past year. 115,000€ had been raised of which 25,000€ went to the transportation costs for brining the participants to Amsterdam, 100,000€ was used for the venue and accommodations, and the other 25,000€ was used for miscellaneous functions such as the brochures, supplies etc.

Winter Camp
Ned Rossiter, Associate Professor of Network Cultures, followed Lovink with his hope that over the next few days we could attempt to address the important question, “how do we move beyond the current phase of the network condition?” The question of the network vs. the institution has been one of the key motivations for Winter Camp. Rossiter reminded us of how the institutions have been taking advantage of networks and open-source technologies for many years, and wondered why the networks shouldn’t take advantage of what the institutional model may or may not have to offer?

Winter Camp

Shortly after Rossiter, each of the 12 groups had a five minute lighting-round introduction, while in the background a PowerPoint shot through the details of each network’s scope, goals, members and financing. The artist collective GOTO10 somewhat timidly filed down to the stage, but soon warmed up as they professed their love for spreading FLOSS to “digital creatives and art geeks” around the world.

Winter Camp

Next came DYNE.ORG who relaxed the tone of the evening as they rapidly handed off the mic – each shouting out the first word that came into their head that describes DYNE.ORG. They used words like “video”, “copyleft”, “activism”, “openness” and “whatever”. After all 12 networks had introduced themselves, it was clear that the words activism and openness are what lie at the heart of everyone here at Winter Camp.

http://www.vimeo.com/3470116

The original post on the Winter Camp 09 Site