January 29, 2005

Delcious Library Test - Jazz Not Product Smart...Yet


Delcious Library Test - Jazz Not Product Smart...Yet
Originally uploaded by Vince Outlaw.
Delicious Library is a mac-only (regrettable) piece of software that builds, in cool ways, and maintains a library of your Things. I'm looking for a way to quickly get information about the CD I've just chosen to play on the show out to listners of TNJT on whatever device is most convenient (car radio display, desktop web browser, hand-held / phone). Our CD players are not internet-enabled, so it's up to me to get the word out to listeners who continually tell us they want to know each tune we are playing...as they should with the richness and depth that is Jazz...and we should be able to give them more in this information-connected culture. So, link CD bar code to product info on the web and toss it out to an RSS 2.0 podcast enabled weblog, with the RSS news feed providing the information to where we want it. Now.

One of the cool ways is by reading the bar code on your CD, DVD, book, whatever (I guess) with your webcam..or at least the iSight camera, which I'm lucky enough to have. Once it reads the bar code, it goes out to some internet-based information source to pull in info like cover art, track names, title and adds it to your library. Less cool and more time consuming ways include manual entry...ugh.

Being able to hold the bar code up to the camera just right to get it recognized by the camera took more than a few tries, but 20 minutes tops to figure it out, but after that, it sailed. And the look up to wherever it's getting it's information (Amazon?) worked well...when the data was there.

But in over 50 percent of the cases where I had a bar-code I could read (promo CDs sometimes have the bar code purposely obscured...another part of the problem), there was no info to be obtained about it. I'm sure more checking could determine why this is, but it's definitely a problem that should be remedied: A central single place where information like this can be registered by artists or others putting out product. CDDB, for instance, has some of this information and I know for a fact that two of the CDs that Delicious couldn't find information for looked up just fine when iTunes looked it up on CDDB. Could Delicious use that as a source?

Quick wrap-up is that this idea of bar-code reading CDs to indicate which is being used is pretty right on, although actually doing it through the CD player would be more timely. But it all depends on the source for the data and if it's incomplete, being quick on the scan is all for naught. This is worth pursuing for me and TNJT listeners.

Posted by voflickr at 09:21 AM | Comments (0)

January 26, 2005

Recording Phone Interviews Digitally Using Skype and Other Mac Software

Glenn Fleishman, in MacDevCenter.com: How to Record a Podcast provides a really cool sounding, Mac-based software / hardware architecture for recording phone interviews directly to MP3, for potential usage in podcasted shows. Here's his business case,

"In my line of work as a freelance reporter in Seattle, I spend most of the time that I'm not testing hardware, software, or services -- or actually writing -- on the telephone, interviewing people from companies, fellow authors, folks deploying equipment, and analysts. I write most frequently about Wi-Fi and related wireless networking, and have found a pretty fervent interest in that industry.

I decided that podcasting interviews and audio that helped elucidate about topics that I cover, in the first-person, direct from the source, would help my site better meet its audience's expectations.

Adding a pre-recorded interview component to my currently all-Live radio show would add a whole different to dimension. And would probably broaden the amount of interview content I could have on the show...but it would also mean more interviews to edit for radio broadcast, something I currently have very little time for.

Posted by outlawv at 10:15 AM | Comments (0)