Archive for June, 2005

Jun 30 2005

Yet MORE iTunes 4.9

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I know readers are probably getting tired of hearing about iTunes by now, but there’s one or two more features I forgot to mention (for those considering getting into podcasting).
With the addition of podcast support in iTunes, you can now read the show notes for each episode, in iTunes. I gripped already that, though iTunes has an integrated browser, you can’t click the links within show notes.
However, the nifty thing is it also puts the show notes on your iPod, so you can read them while listening to the show.

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Jun 30 2005

More on iTunes 4.9

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Now that I’ve been playing around with it for a couple of hours and actually using it to listen to a few podcasts, subscribed to a bunch, etc, I have more, more educated, thoughts.

  1. Forget what I said earlier about not converting to AAC. While everything I said was true (there’s no facility to automatically convert to AAC, doing the conversion is a pain because it convets to m4A instead of m4B, the manual conversion from A to B is a pain), it’s completely unnecessary. Just as the difference in iTunes / iPod’s handling of m4a v. m4b is entirely within the software, so is the handling of “music” v. “podcasts”, in mp3 format. The iPod (and presumably iTunes 4.9) handles an mp3 “podcast” the same way it handles an m4b. It will bookmark your file and resume where you left off if you stop it and listen to something else and come back later. Yay Apple! They got that one right. mp3 is smaller than aac (all files I converted to aac ended up being larger) and that’s the native format of almost all podcasts. This means less disc space, less bandwidth and I don’t have to wait for the terrible CPU suck while iTunes converts the file.
  2. As I put in the edit to the last post, no Bittorrent support.
  3. It appears if you are a podcaster and you want to have your podcast listed in the Apple Music Store (ie: in the podcast directory in iTunes) you have to have an iTunes Music Store account. These are only available to residents of certain countries, so if you don’t live in the US, Canada or (the UK?), you’re SOL. Your podcast doesn’t get listed. An Australian podcaster was complaining about this in the support forums. I’d say it’s a legit complaint. Will Apple simply open membership to everyone? Open membership to everyone but not allow downloads of purchased music, to comply with copyright regulations? Create a “podcasters” account type that is only good for adding / editing podcast listings?
    Better yet, just let anyone with an Apple ID list a podcast, instead of having to have a Music Store account.
    However, there’s more to this than it seems: “Life Stories Radio“, a podcast out of Sydney, Australia, is in the iTunes podcast directory / iTunes Music Store. The Music Store got it’s initial directory entries from the ipodder.org directory. The question is, will it continue to update it’s offerings from ipodder.org? Thus, if you’re an Australian podcaster, if you list your podcast in ipodder.org’s directory, will you show up in the Music Store automatically?
  4. Like just about every other podcatching software out there, there’s no per-podcast settings. All the settings for scheduling downloads, how long to keep them, etc, are all or nothing. The only per-podcast settings available is to control which podcasts get synced automatically with the iPod.
  5. You have the option of setting the frequency of podcast downloads: Every day, every hour, every week, manually. You do not get to set when the podcasts are downloaded. If you select “daily”, iTunes decides for you what time of day. On the surface this would suggest that every iTunes 4.9 process will try to download podcasts at the same time every day (and even the differing time zones doesn’t avoid this: I’m in Central Daylight Time. My iTunes says it will download at 7:00 PM. Dave Slusher’s says it will download at 8:00PM. I believe he’s in Eastern time. That means they will both fire at the same time.) This effectivly creates a DDOS on a podcaster’s server.
    However, there is some evidence to suggest that iTunes actually changes the time it will do it’s download run each day, setting it to a pseudo-random time after each run. Sounds like, just as it did today when it was released, when all those new installs hit their first daily download mark all the podcasters will get DDOS’d, but after that each iTunes will be set to a different time and after a couple of days things should settle out. Still, it would have been nice if Apple had given a field where the user could set a time that was best for them.
  6. No facility, it appears, to add old, already downloaded, podcasts to the Podcast menu. Normally this wouldn’t be too big a deal, other than loss of sorting / searching features, but that also means old mp3 downloads get treated like standard “music” mp3s, not like “podcast” mp3s with bookmarking. Apple: how ’bout adding some facility to tag a file as a “podcast”?

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Jun 29 2005

iTunes 4.9 released

Published by Andrew under Uncategorized

Apple just released iTunes 4.9, which has podcasting support built in. Now you can subscribe to and download podcasts through the iTunes music store interface.
If you own an iPod, be sure to also grab the iPod updater software 2005-06-26, which which installs the needed functions on your iPod.
This is why I got an iPod in the first place. Now it all comes together.
Thoughts on iTunes 4.9 so far:

    The minuses -

  1. No support for converting to aac? Apple, what were you thinking? If I’m listening to an hour long podcast, there’s a good chance I can’t listen to the whole thing in one sitting. I don’t want to have to start from the beginning again when I come back to it. That’s what m4b is for. If you’d been really smart, you’d have set up something in the interface that pre-converted everything for us, so the file we download in the first place is an m4b (taking a page from the IT Conversations book.) I can understand where this might be problematic, since Apple isn’t actually hosting the files, making the conversion is CPU intensive (just take a look at how much CPU iTunes takes up under windows when converting from mp3 to aac. Forget about getting anything else done.
  2. While you can manually convert your podcasts to aac, and they’ve add a new “podcast” quality level to the AAC quality selection, they haven’t fixed my chief complaint with this: it converts it to an m4A. To make it an m4B, you still have to go through the extra steps of right clicking, select “show file”, manually renaming the extionsion, close the window, right clicking again, select “get info”, get the error dialog that it can’t find the file and would you like to locate it manually, click yes, click on the m4b file, the close the file info window. Considering the only difference between an m4a and an m4b is the extension and how the software handles it, based on that extension, there should be some provision in iTunes to select which form of aac you want to convert to.
  3. Along with the above: when you (manually) convert a podcast from mp3 to aac, the new aac version of the podcast appears in the library menu, not the podcast menu. You lose all of the advantages spelled out below.
  4. FINDING the podcast you want seems to be hit or miss. There’s plenty of search functions and so on, but let’s face it, it’s the Apple music store. Not the best layout.
  5. “Download all episodes” appears to be broken. I selected this, and the first podcast I subscribed to after doing so only downloaded the most recent episode automatically.
  6. No facility to tag podcasts you already have in your library as “podcasts” to be handled like all the podcasts subscribed to using the new interface. While it obviously can’t associate the files with a given podcast, it would be nice if you could move all those files into the Podcast menu hierarchy.
  7. Subscription interface: OK, subscribing is easy. But once you click “subscribe” on a podcast, it takes you to the “downloading” page that shows all your current subscriptions, all your downloaded and downloading episodes and so on. To get more subscriptions, you have to click on the “Directory” button again and navigate your way back to where you were. Apple, couldn’t you have put a checkbox or somthing, so you could select multiple podcasts, then “subscribe” all of them at once when you’re done selecting?
  8. Irony of ironies: Fully half of Adam Currys’ Daily Source Codes are broken.
  9. This one’s an actual bug: In the settings window, Podcasts tab, second item: “When new episodes are” with dropdown list containing “Download all”, “Download most recent one”, “Do nothing”. “When new episodes are” what? What does this setting item do? Nothing, as far as I can tell.
  10. Minor nit: if you right click on an episode, select “Show description”, you get whatever “show notes” the podcaster created. Since iTunes already has a web browser built in (eg: it uses the IE API), couldn’t you have made links in the show notes clickable?
    The pluses -

  1. The interface for subscribing to a podcast is great. Once you’ve subscribed, selecting episodes to download is simple.
  2. Once you install the iPod software update, it adds a new menu level: Podcasts. This very nicely fixes an issue I’ve had with every podcast / podcatching software I’ve tried: Munging the mp3 tags such that I can find every episode of a given podcast, in order, on my iPod (or even in iTunes). Adam Curry puts the name of each episode in the Album field, with date and episode number or some such in the Name field. Since he sometimes has guests on his show, they get listed in the Artist field with him. This makes finding all Daily Source Codes problematic with the stock menus / mp3 tags, since MOST will be under “Artist” Adam Curry, but not all. There will be literally dozens of “albums” by that artist, each “album” having exactly one track. Any “album” with a guest won’t be found under “artist” Adam Curry though. Until now the solution was to use podcatching software that creates a unique playlist for each podcast, but even then it doesn’t solve the dozens-of-albums-per-artist problem. This new menu item takes care of it.
  3. Along with the ability to download podcasts and sync them to the iPod, it also includes functions for when to delete them, with options such as “Last X” episodes, “most recent” and “Unheard”, so you can automatically remove any podcast you’ve listened to. Some podcatching software has features for removing podcasts from iTunes (or WMP) under various criteria, but none of them had any concept of whether or not you’ve listened to them, since, if you’re using iTunes or WMP to do your listening, the catching software wouldn’t have any way of knowing if you’ve heard a particular podcast.
  4. No longer having multiple copies of each podcast on your hard drive!
    With Doppler, it would download the podcast, then copy it to the iTunes library. This meant having at least two copies of the podcast on your had drive: the Doppler copy and the iTunes library copy. If you were converting to m4b, that was 3 copies: the original mp3, the converted m4b in Doppler and the m4b in the iTunes library. If you count the copy on your iPod itself, that’s 4. All other podcatching software I’ve found had the same problem. With iTunes doing it directly, just one copy on your hard drive. However, see my complaint above about no facility to convert formats automatically.

[Edit: Dave Slusher at Evil Genius Chronicles posts about Apple linking to his podcasts' Bittorrent feed rather than his alternate direct MP3 feed, but not including Bittorrent support. I was afraid of that. I hadn't actually added his podcast into my subscriptions yet (hadn't gotten that far down the list) but I had a feeling I would run into that. I didn't know he had a direct MP3 feed, so I'm glad I actually looked at his text blog today and saw his comments. Now when I get that far I'll know to bypass the Apple music store entry for his podcast and use the Advanced menu to add his alternate feed.
Also, Dave, you mention that your iTunes is scheduled to download every day at 8:00 PM and you can't change it, and ask if everyone else is the same. No, mine says 7:00 PM. But then, I'm in CDT. If you're in EDT, then we'd still be firing at the same time.]

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Jun 27 2005

Martin on the move

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Martin ( to LJers) landed a job back in San Francisco. He’s now on his way back from Fort Lauderdale, FL.
He’ll be stopping in New Orleans tonight, then tomorrow he stays the night at my place.
Just got off the phone with him. He’s currently in Tallahasse.

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Jun 27 2005

keeping up with friends pages

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Due to a combination of problems with my RSS aggregator, being out of town and general laziness, I haven’t read my friend’s LJ entries in about 3 weeks. I apologize if I’ve missed anything important. I’m slowly going through them over the next few days, but I probably won’t go all the way back 3 weeks on all friends LJs. If there’s something particularly important you want me to see, let me know.

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Jun 23 2005

Where was I last week?

Published by Andrew under Uncategorized

In Taos, N.M., helping repair some of the homes on the Taos Pueblo.

[NOTE: If you're using Firefox and the pictures don't load, blame Yahoo. They're service just doesn't work with Firefox. Since they're not my photos, I don't control where they got posted.]

Photos here, here, here and here.

the_title

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Jun 08 2005

R.I.P. Anne Bancroft

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CNN.com - Actress Anne Bancroft dies - Jun 8, 2005

Like David Gulliver, Keeping the Faith is one of my favorite movies. I loved her character. I will watch it again tomorrow.

Keeping the Faith

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Jun 05 2005

301st post

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This is officially post #301 in Wordpress, since June, 2003.
Looks like some of the posts to my original MoveableType blog didn’t make the conversion, since I’d been running that for several months before I moved to Texas, but the first post in WP is the announcement that I was moving. I didn’t actually convert to WP until over a year later.

somthing is deffinitly wrong with the built in spell checker. I always use it before publishing anything to WP, and I know my spelling isn’t the greatest. (I’m pretty sure there are a couple of misspellings in that last sentence.) but it never finds any errrors any more. The web server log isn’t giving me any useful diagnostic info either.

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Jun 05 2005

Wow!

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I just got a call from one of my closest friends. She’s in town and on her way to my place.
Talk about a pleasant surprise!

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Jun 02 2005

ServSafe Certification

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I received the results of my NRA ServSafe certificaton testing today.
I passed. 76 points out of 80, 95%. 75% is passing.
>90% means I qualify to train to be a ServSafe food safety trainer, the next level of certification.
I got 36 of 39 points in the “food” category and 3 of 4 in the “regulation/law” category. Perfect scores in everything else.

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