has the world gone mad??
The latest people to provide freely available stuff but make it hard to use is Radio National, Australia.
For some time now they have made their online sound files available in streamable-only RealAudio format (a secret format that I detest). I got around that previously by using Streambox, a program which tricks the .ra file into streaming into a file on my machine so that I can play it later at my leisure without needing to be online, and without being subject to the vagaries of net-weather -- the stalling and stopping and starting of the file when bandwith gets choppy. (I have a very fast net connection, but still regularly have problems with that. God knows how people with normal connections manage!)
Radio National's online programs now defeat this streaming to a file trick so that my only options are to either download the program each time I wish to listen to it, or else record in real time while it plays. Both options suck royally. The program is online only temporarily, and recording through the sound system introduces distortion.
I read an article a little while back that was pointing out that the current fetish for "protecting" files against saving is going to be a nightmare for historians. A large chunk of our social history is just disappearing. We are not allowed to record it. It is quite mad -- most stuff simply is not kept because people don't have the time or room to save everything. The only people who do want to save it are exactly those that society benefits from. Those individuals who maintain the public record so that when we look back there will be something to see.
The greatest irony is when Radio National puts history programs online in a format that can't be saved for history.
For some time now they have made their online sound files available in streamable-only RealAudio format (a secret format that I detest). I got around that previously by using Streambox, a program which tricks the .ra file into streaming into a file on my machine so that I can play it later at my leisure without needing to be online, and without being subject to the vagaries of net-weather -- the stalling and stopping and starting of the file when bandwith gets choppy. (I have a very fast net connection, but still regularly have problems with that. God knows how people with normal connections manage!)
Radio National's online programs now defeat this streaming to a file trick so that my only options are to either download the program each time I wish to listen to it, or else record in real time while it plays. Both options suck royally. The program is online only temporarily, and recording through the sound system introduces distortion.
I read an article a little while back that was pointing out that the current fetish for "protecting" files against saving is going to be a nightmare for historians. A large chunk of our social history is just disappearing. We are not allowed to record it. It is quite mad -- most stuff simply is not kept because people don't have the time or room to save everything. The only people who do want to save it are exactly those that society benefits from. Those individuals who maintain the public record so that when we look back there will be something to see.
The greatest irony is when Radio National puts history programs online in a format that can't be saved for history.
no subject
Do you know when you will be coming up?
no subject
Just read the poems today. Amazing stuff Lois!
Join a writing or poetry community on LJ and submit them -- particularly the incredible "Her Hair in a Ponytail".
A great way to find communities is to go to
Just a little pointer... when you post a story or a long poem on a community it is considered polite to put the cut-tag around the bulk of the post. So you would do something like this...
Here is your short, few lines of introduction/description
<lj-cut>
then you put your main story or poem in here
</lj-cut>
and you can put a few more lines after the cut-tag if you want, but not many people bother to.
You should join some communities. There are lots more out there -- I've only listed a few, and they are a terrific way to meet wonderful people.