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Archive For: February, 2006

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A Comment on Comment Spam

Can I just say that of all the foul, underhanded marketing on the internet, blog comment spam has got to rank right up there as one of the worst. Not only is it unsolicited advertising, but it’s invading a personal realm that bloggers are sharing with their friends, family, and colleagues.

Luckily, content management developers like those behind Wordpress detest this practice just as much as I, which is why they’re integrating powerful technologies such as Akismet into their software. Even with Akismet’s commendable spam-killing capabilities though, we’ve still been having some underhanded comments slip through the cracks.

Hopefully it’s not too big of an inconvience, as really all we can do is continue to kill off any spam we find. Of course we’ll keep dreaming of a future where all spamers, be they emailers or commenters, are keel-hauled in a river of boiling oil.

Boiling oil, and robot space-piranah.

Album Artwork Resource

If you are anything like me, one of the biggest things you miss about the transition toSee the music electronic distribution and management of music is missing out on album artwork. I still have CD cases and covers that I like to take out and look at once in a while. There is something to be said about the artwork that a band or an artist chooses to accompany their music. It somehow spoke to them and they wanted to share it with their fans. In the past, you linked those images and how they made you feel to the music you were experiencing. Would Kid A have had the same otherworldly feel without the landscapes and illustrations of Stanley Donwood? The artwork and images are there to help the music wash over you and give you something to get lost in visually while you are assaulted musically.

While iTunes has done a good job including digital covers and even booklets with some recent albums like Beck’s Guerolito, most older albums miss out on this treatment. Mac users have the option of using Fetch Art or one of the many excellent applescripts available at Doug’s Applescripts to grab album art and assign it to their music. But PC users have thus far been left to fend for themselves if they want to seek out artwork for the albums that they have either ripped from CDs or compiled back in the early days of music downloading. While automation may still be out of reach, I have found a great resource for album covers. The aptly named Coverdude.com offers hi-res images of nearly every album that I have searched for thus far, even relatively obscure artists. The site is very basic and not much to look at but it makes up for it by offering three sizes of each album cover and quick searches. Get back the visual element you lost during music’s evolution. It’s time to see what they want you to hear.

iTunes Music Store Billion Songs Countdown

The Apple iTunes Music Store has now sold over 950 million songs in 21 countries. ToiTunes Music Store celebrate, they are running a promotion during the countdown to the billion songs sold milestone. Every 100,000th song downloaded wins a black 4GB iPod nano and a $100 iTunes Music Card. The grand prize for nabbing the billionth song is a new 20-inch iMac, 10 (count ‘em) 10 60GB iPods (5 white/5 black) and 1 U.S. $10,000 iTunes Music Card. On top of that, Apple will create a full-ride scholarship in your name to a world-renowned music school. Not bad eh?

It’s hard to imagine that less than 5 years ago, the only reliable way to get music electronically was to dowload it using services like Napster, Audio Galaxy and Morpheus. Then you had to clean up the titles of each track, filter out the bogus ones, and get rid of any that cut off early or had skips in them. Now here we are in 2006 with a fully featured and mature digital music and video store that has sold nearly a billion songs. Say what you will about the walled-garden approach of only loading songs onto iPods, I don’t see any other service offering this kind of digital entertainment quality.

The Power of Ecto

EctoFinding time to post to a blog poses a serious challenge to many writers on the web, present company included. It’s understandable then, that I’m quite excited by a new tool that helps to make the process of posting to a blog that much more streamlined. Chris gets the credit for this one, as it was his comment over on Jason’s blog that introduced me to Ecto.

Ecto is a blogging client that acts as an intermediary between the writer and his or her blog. As much credit as the development team gets for their web-based rich text editing features in Wordpress, the fact remains that any web-based interface just isn’t quite as snappy as a true, full featured application. Tying into your blog via the XML-RPC specification. Created by a bunch of people who are smarter than me, XML-RPC is an avenue for platform independent, distributed computing that’s proving itself worthy of an extensive variety of exciting applications.

Setup is beautifully simple: enter your site’s URL, the path to your xml-rpc.php file, and finally your login information. Ecto then pulls down your latest blog posts, and provides both a rich-text editor and an XHTML editor with syntax highlighting, which is something I’d really been missing. On top of that, you’ve got all your controls for selecting categories, allowing or disallowing comments, and assigning pings and trackbacks right in the application. Get your post configured just right, then hit publish and that’s a wrap: no need to even touch the web based interface for your blog!

Ecto’s creators are asking $17.95 for a registered copy, which is pretty cheap when you consider how helpful this little app is. Follow the links below to download a trial version for your platform of choice!

Ecto - OSX version
Ecto - Windows version

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