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Archives: December


Tuesday, December 20th

Guns don't kill people, people kill people...

Soundtrack: Howard's Alias - The answer is never

...and hedgehogs do too [if they've got a gun]. Another setback for the blue sky in games campaign.

On a slightly less silly note, you may recall me mentioning a little project a while ago to turn a knackered old p166 box into a fileserver, giving me somewhere to shove all my music and stuff and also letting me have a play with this Linux malarkey.

I've picked this up again lately, and have been looking around for a distribution which will run on a pretty low spec machine but still be reasonably newcomer friendly. However all I have found myself wondering so far is why it seems to be so hard for people producing Linux distros to stick, somewhere on there websites, a couple of lines saying "Requires approximately XXX MB hard disk space and XXMB RAM*". Surely not difficult?

Since I'm trying to avoid actually spending any money on this project (other than eventually putting a rather large hard disk in it), the search goes on.


*the correct answer will hopefully be less than 2GB and 32MB.

posted by David @ 08:32 PM [link]


Saturday, December 10th

Tabcrawler is killing the music industry!

Soundtrack: The Cooper Temple Clause - See this through and leave

Not content with seeking to criminalise most of it's customer base, or even with infecting their computers with viruses, the music industry now has a new target:

Song sites face legal crackdown - BBC News.

Apparently, sites offering lyrics and tablature are the next great evil (after music cassettes, CD-Rs, Napster, Kazaa, etc, etc) which are going to cause record labels to fold and recording artists to end up penniless. According to David Israelite, president of the National Music Publishers' Association:

"Unauthorised use of lyrics and tablature deprives the songwriter of the ability to make a living, and is no different than stealing."

So next year we are going to see lawsuits against several popular tab and lyric sites, and they aren't just aiming to shut down websites, they are trying to put site owners in prison.

So where does this end? If I quote lyrics on here (as I do quite frequently), am I depriving the band of the ability to make a living, or am I publicising their music? Are record companies going to storm into tribute band gigs and demand the arrest of the musicians? Am I allowed to sing along to my CDs? What if a signed band puts up tab/lyrics for a song on their own website - as many do in response to requests from fans?

You might think the paragraph above is a bit absurd, but there is an obsession in the music industry with controlling exactly when, where and how we use their 'product', which is completely in opposition to the reason most people listen to music.

I love music. The bands I've listened to and the words they've sung over the years have touched me, changed me, made me who I am. That belongs to the band and it belongs to me. It has nothing to do with record company profits.

We dare you to mean a single word you say/feel free if you've time to try and change our minds/you might wanna duck before you lose your head/it seems we're the ones who've got the guts to bleed/it's not number one who will come out alive/it's the freak in the corner with his eyes on fire/LET'S KILL MUSIC BEFORE IT KILLS US ALL.

Is that a police siren coming up the road?

posted by David @ 10:25 PM [link]