Mike Varney, founder of Shrapnel Records, marks 25 years as a Metalhead – Marin Independent Journal
Author Archives: Ron Bieber
Podcasting: Do It Yourself Guide
On Sunday before creating the podcast, I grabbed the book Podcasting: Do It Yourself Guide by Todd Cochrane. In it, he gives a pretty detailed view of what you need to do in order to get started creating your own podcasts.
In the book, he includes information on things like:
- Getting Started
- The RIAA and playing music in your podcast
- Recording Software
- Microphones
- Advanced Studios (Mixers, Noise Gates / Compressors, Phone Patches)
- Recording your podcast
- Post Production (including noise reduction, something I consciously skipped in the first podcast)
- Editing Techniques
- Identifying a hosting provider to host your podcast
- Figuring out what bandwidth you’ll need
- Promotion
- … and a lot more
I found the book really informative and an easy to read primer on what you needed to do in order to get started. My goal was to put together one podcast and see if I liked the process. It was a lot more fun than I had originally thought it would be and I think it was worth the time spent. This book pointed me to software like Audacity, that allowed me to do it for the cost of a cheap, $20.00 microphone.
Todd currently runs Geek News Central, a web site dedicated to”create a quality site for people of all ages and backgrounds”. I just downloaded the latest podcast from this site to see what he is all about.
Bottom line, I enjoyed the book and found it really useful. Pick it up if you are looking to see what is involved in podcasting. The book is perfect for beginners, but also has a lot of advanced information. As I learn more, I keep referring to the book to find answers to questions and, to my surprise, I’m finding the answers in this book. So this isn’t just a one read book. The more you learn, the more you’ll pick up using this book as a reference.
SVK 1.0.1 released.
Aside
SVK 1.0.1 has been released. This release “fixes many edge cases and also improves performance and memory usage”. Click link for official announcement.
Subversion 1.2.1 released.
Aside
Subversion 1.2.1 released. On July 5 the Subversion team announced version 1.2.1 of the Subversion version control system.
The ChangeLog for this release is available from the announcement above.
SummerFest 2005
The sign to the left was the first thing you saw walking into Summerfest going in, and almost the last thing you saw going out, if you don’t count the people giving away grilled Spam sandwiches outside the gates. The idea that someone would spend their whole day standing in front of a festival holding a sign like this has always puzzled me — and at the same time it really amuses me. People are so tied and will do so much for their beliefs, no matter how goofy they are. But what the hell. I’ll give them some free press, just because they made the effort.
Yesterdays trip was pretty uneventful, except that we did see two fairly decent bands there. The first was Think Floyd, a Pink Floyd tribute band. They did a really great job of playing this stuff live and I would definitely go see them again. Just to give you an idea of how decent they were, I’ve uploaded a picture of the crowd they drew as they were playing.
They were a really decent band, and did a great job on every song they played. The only one I didn’t like was “Wish You Were Here”, as the band tried to get the audience to sing the song rather than the band. What wound up happening was a very good instrumental version of the song. They should have just sang it.
Before the Think Floyd, however, Jonna and I went to the Rock Stage and saw that there was a band called Beatallica playing at 6:30. Both being fans of Metallica we made a mental note that we definitely wanted to hit this show. There’s nothing better than a Metallica tribute band on a hot day — unless you are actually seeing Metallica live.
Now, around 6:00 pm the crowd started filing in. There were obviously a LOT of Metallica fans at Summerfest. By 6:15 the band started to play. They opened with a cover of “Back in the U.S.S.R [mp3 link]“, Metallica style. It was AWESOME. They sounded really good, but I kept thinking to myself — “This sounds really good. When did Metallica cover this song?”
Then the second song [mp3 link] came on. It started like “Enter Sandman”, but as the singer started singing, he was singing the lyrics to “Taxman” – another Beatles song. Then it hit me. They are a “Beatles in the style of Metallica” tribute band. This cracked me up.
We stayed for a few songs, watching some of the people who thought they were coming to see a Metallica cover band start to walk out. Jonna is not a huge Beatles fan, so we left after a few songs (though to give her credit, she did insist that we could stay – I was really enjoying it).
This band put together the most unique interpretation of Beatles songs that I have ever seen. I thought the whole concept was brilliant. As I watched, I started to notice the “little things”, like while the lead singer had a Hetfield style guitar (and had those Lennon style circle sunglasses), the bassist was playing a Rickenbacker – the bass that Paul McCartney played in the Beatles.
The part of the show I saw was a crack up and — I think — totally worth the price of admission to a show. It’s an extremely original idea. Go see these guys if you find them playing somewhere in Milwaukee.
For more information on Beatallica, including tour dates and quicktime samples of their live work, check out their web site. As I was writing this I found that they also have download-able sets of their albums on their music page, including the hit albums “A Garage Dayz Nite” and “Beatallica”. It seems that they do not sell CD’s. They state their position on selling music on their web site as well. They want their music to remain free – as in free.
I’ve also put together a photo set of the pictures I took during the soundcheck and start of the show for your enjoyment.
These are definitely two albums that are going on the iPod — as a matter of fact, this would make a damn good podcast wouldn’t it?
Experimenting with Themes Again
I’m experimenting with themes again this morning. This one is based off of Minima Plus, with some customization.
I’m still not real happy with the sidebar, but I’ll continue to work on it. I get bored with the look of the site very quickly, and quite frankly, I didn’t like the color scheme of the last theme and was too lazy to muck around with it. I also like the simplicity of this one. It doesn’t take away from the content and looks less busy.
Beginning an Addiction to Podcasts
Yesterday I hit the Acts of Volition episodes that seemed interesting to me, today I hit Adam Currys The Daily Source Code. I heard two promos for shows that sounded interesting on that and am downloading them for tomorrows drive.
For those who are new to this as I am, a good resource for finding podcasts (aside from iTunes), is Curry’s site iPodder.
I think I have my latest addiction … its definitely made the morning drive a little more interesting.
It’s a Great Time To Be an Entrepreneur
Tom pointed me to this article yesterday, which outlines quite effectively why bigger companies should worry about the “little guy”. Its definitely much cheaper to start out these days than it was “back in the day”.
I’m continuously amazed at how much Open Source Software has completely changed the landscape we live in. What I’m sure seemed like an impossible task when Stallman started it turned into a huge disruption for the industry.
Related articles and links
- Disruptive Technologies – Washington Technolgies
- The Little Engine That Could – I, Cringely
- The Myth of Disruptive Technology – John C. Dvorak (PC Magazine)
Related Books
Subversion 1.2.1 released.
The Subversion team has released version 1.2.1 of their version control system.
The following changes are included in this release:
User-visible-changes:
– Client:
* fixed: ‘svn lock’ on switched file locks wrong thing (issue #2307)
* fixed: ‘svn (un)lock’ errors on multiple targets (r14736, 14775)
* fixed: ‘svn (un)lock’ problems with URI-unsafe names (issue #2314)
* fixed: ‘svn (un)lock’ not caching authentication (r15088)
* fixed: ‘svn unlock’ loses executable bit (r14859, r14923, r14939)
* fixed: ‘svn unlock URL’ segfault (r14893)
* fixed: ‘svn commit’ failure on XML-unsafe locked paths (issue #2335)
* fixed: recursive directory copy bug (issue #2343)
* fixed: don’t initialize RA library in ‘svnversion’ (r14755)
* fixed: svn-push segfault (r14732)
* various translation updates for localized client messages– Server:
* fixed: ‘svn log’ performance regression, general (r14116, 14772, 14759)
* fixed: ‘svn log -v’ performance regression, FSFS-specific (r15016)
* fixed: mod_dav_svn bug sets content-type incorrectly (r15046)Developer-visible-changes:
* fixed: win32 innosetup’s add/repair/remove features (r14830)
* fixed: OBOE with ‘limit’ parameter of svn_repos_get_logs3(). (r15119)
* redhat RPM fixes (r15050)
* perl bindings:
– accessors for svn_lock_t (r15082)
– call utf_initialize, adjust global pool usage (r15076, r15080,
r15081, r15117)
You can download the software at one of the following links:
http://subversion.tigris.org/downloads/subversion-1.2.1.tar.gz
http://subversion.tigris.org/downloads/subversion-1.2.1.tar.bz2
http://subversion.tigris.org/downloads/subversion-1.2.1.zip
Tony MacAlpine and George Lynch – Tears of Sahara
As I was shuffling around the iPod yesterday, I hit the song Tears of Sahara, a guitar duet that appears on the Tony MacAlpine album Maximum Security. This song is a duet Tony played with George Lynch. The reason I’m writing this is that I had forgotten how much I really liked Georges playing and this song showcases his really unique style of playing.
I never really quite understood why his playing hit me so hard, but he is another one of those guitarists that when you hear him, you just know its him. His style and sound is completely unique and unmistakeable.
While his playing with Dokken was good, it was his work outside of Dokken that really showed his uniqueness as a player. One exception to this was the instrumental Mr. Scary from the Dokken album Back for the Attack, which was the one instrumental he did in the band that showed off what he could do as a guitarist on his own.
Anyway, hearing this song reminded me of how much I really liked Georges playing. I think this is the coolest thing about the iPod since I got it and started filling it up. Hitting shuffle exposes you to a lot of stuff you’ve forgotten how much you liked.
Tears of Sahara was one of those moments. Such a great song by two really incredible guitar players.
For those with iTunes, you can download the song here. Amazon users can buy the MP3 here (DRM free) for the same price. Its worth the $0.99.