Barb Dybwad
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Barb Dybwad is the Associate Editor at Weblogs, Inc. She is also senior editor at Engadget and senior editor of the Social Software Weblog. Before becoming a professional blogger she served her time in the corps of freelance web developers, coding sites for academia and small businesses in PHP and ColdFusion. Current interests are all things Web 2.0, social media, remix technologies, the mobile web, folksonomy, collaborative tools, and user-created content.
Barb Dybwad
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Barb Dybwad is the Associate Editor at Weblogs, Inc. She is also senior editor at Engadget and senior editor of the Social Software Weblog. Before becoming a professional blogger she served her time in the corps of freelance web developers, coding sites for academia and small businesses in PHP and ColdFusion. Current interests are all things Web 2.0, social media, remix technologies, the mobile web, folksonomy, collaborative tools, and user-created content.
by Barb Dybwad on Mar 5th, 2005
Bob Sullivan’s MSNBC article is trying to pin some privacy issues
on Apple’s iPod, and they’re not sticking. It talks about the Gracenote CDDB, the database that lives behind the scenes
and gets queried every time you put a CD into your computer to fetch the metadata associated with the disc: artist,
album names, track names, genre, et al. The issue is being framed as one of privacy, because Gracenote stores the
queries sent to it and uses them to compile aggregate music listening preference data. However, even if this data were
to be tied to individual IP addresses (which get discarded after use in determining geolocation-based “top 10” data),
it would be impossible to pinpoint individual persons to target them based on it. Furthermore, framing this as an issue
somehow created by the advent of the iPod is disingenuous, because Gracenote really has nothing to do with Apple’s
famed portable audio device, nor any devices made by other makers — it comes into play any time you put a music CD into
your desktop or laptop. Gracenote doesn’t know whether you’ve ripped the CD or not, as erroneously stated in the
article.
MSNBC also wrongly invokes the leering specter of the RIAA, who could not extract any information about illegal music
downloading from Gracenote if they tried — Gracenote doesn’t have any way of ascertaining the legality of an inserted
disc. They even trot out the opinion of Washington Post reporter Robert O’Harrow to up the ante on the fear-mongering,
despite the fact that he admits to not having studied the Gracenote CDDB. He says he “fears the chilling effect that
could be produced if people know someone else knows their musical tastes.” I bet he only listens to Britney Spears with
the car windows rolled wayyyyy up.
by Barb Dybwad on Mar 2nd, 2005
Dude, Podcasting is so two weeks ago.
Shufflecasting is the latest and greatest in background soundtrack for your day: instead of downloading fully-produced
podcasts, Rael Dornfest is taking a more
eclectic approach by using AutoFill to dump a random
assortment of shorter clips onto her his iPod shuffle. Audiobooks, soundtrack snippets, sound effects,
IT Conversations all combine willy-nilly to produce a
never-the-same-sequence-twice cocktail of “geek NPR meets Prairie Home Companion meets The Screensavers.”
As a departure from the more linear and “produced” sound of quasi-radio podcasts or pre-sequenced playlists chosen by
others, I think this is a cool trend. Seems like everybody is hot to
be a DJ in some form, whether for others or just for themselves.
I vote yes on this DIY soundtrack trend. Is anyone else tapping into the random with Shufflecasting?
by Barb Dybwad on Mar 2nd, 2005
Leo Bodnar, the same intrepid soul who overclocked his
Mac mini, continued his sleuthwork and has uncovered an unused FireWire bus in the Ultra ATA-100 riser card that
connects the mini’s optical drive to the motherboard. What’s up with this vestigial FireWire connector? Leo thinks the
riser was designed to feed an iPod Dock connector built in to the top cover of the mini. Whether the feature was
originally built in and then dropped, or whether this foretells the advent of an iPod Dock-enabled Mac mini (or whether
this is all pure shinola, for that matter), is unknown. But considering that
not a single iPod now ships with a Dock as a standard
accessory, it sure would be mighty convenient if the next revision of the Mac mini arrives sporting an iPod Dock.
Next, imagine hooking your video iPod (since Steve
keeps adamantly poo-pooing it, it’s bound to happen) in to your Mac mini dock and sucking down the video content you’ve
just downloaded from the iMovies store. How cool
would that be?
by Barb Dybwad on Mar 1st, 2005
So I see C.K. has had a chance to introduce
himself before I got a chance to whip up a welcome post, so — he’s fired already!! ;) Nahhh, let’s be serious for a
moment (must we?) and extend a hearty welcome to the newest member of TUAW. We’ll be sharing the Apple goodness and
Borging our way through the blogosphere one member stronger, so look for even more obsessive Macintosh goodness than
you ever thought humanly possible coming your way.
Welcome, C.K.!
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 28th, 2005
So we already knew this phenomenon has been going on
overseas for some time now, but it’s apparently
becoming more of a phenomenon on this side of the Atlantic as well. Clubs such as the Cafe Saint-Ex in Northwest
Washington D.C. are now regularly
inviting patrons to bring in their
iPods for 12 minutes’ worth of song-spinning fame.
Definitely a positive trend, but I’m far more interested in a little nugget buried within this Washington Post
article: ”[iPod DJ] Wildt bought her iPod ‘a year and five months ago,’ she says, and calls it ‘Gayle.’ (’I just
thought it looked like a Gayle. My computer doesn’t have a name, but for some reason this one has a name.’ Holly
Tegeler, 24, calls her iPod Karl, with a K. ‘I knew he was a boy,’ says Tegeler, a Web developer. ‘I don’t know why, I
just know he is.’)”
Clearly the real question here, folks, is what is your iPod’s name?
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 28th, 2005
It’s John
Gruber appreciation week here at TUAW. I’m very sad to witness the end of this
Freeware February series, but I’m happy to ring it
out with one uber-useful tool for web authors. Markdown is a
text-to-HTML conversion tool that enables you to write in a format that’s actually legible, then convert your text into
structurally valid XHTML markup. Written in Perl (there’s also a
PHP version), it works as a Unix filter or script plug-in
to BBEdit or
TextWrangler, the latter of which is my new editor of
choice thanks to recommendations from all of you.
I only started putting Markdown into practical usage this
past month (this entry composed in it!), and I can safely say it’s drastically improved my workflow. As a programmer, I
truly appreciate the underlying philosophy of using one simpler, more legible method of markup to specify another,
machine-presentable version. The software is freely available under a BSD-style open source license, but if you use it
and enjoy its numerous benefits, please consider chipping
in to support further development of an already life-saving utility.
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 28th, 2005
There’s a nice write-up on the French site
Pomme Grenette covering how to
add an internal Bluetooth module to your PowerMac
G5. The article is in English and includes photos for each step; a nice resource for anyone planning this upgrade.
[Via Power Page]
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 28th, 2005
File this in the “is anyone surprised” category: music labels are chatting with online retailers about raising
wholesale prices for digital music downloads, looking to capitalise on growing demand. The RIAA wants a bigger piece of
the pie, which we’re sure they’re going to, uh, give right back to the artists. Yeah.
Steve Jobs apparently expressed anger at the news, and with good reason: Apple reportedly has multiyear agreements with
the record labels to preserve digital downloads at 99 cents per track. So what’s the game, here — are the labels
planning to strong-arm the iTMS? What’s your take on this?
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 28th, 2005
There’s more than one way to extract a bootloader, and Nils Schneider has come up with a rather
inspired one. He wanted to study
the iPod firmware in order to write new software for the device, but couldn’t examine the code without first somehow
extracting it. He ended up using a piezo element to output the firmware as a series of sounds, which he recorded and
analyzed on his PC to convert the squeaks and squawks into a digital representation of the code. He essentially turned
iPod and microphone into an acoustic modem, and wrote his own application to decode the signal. Then, he wrote it all
up for posterity and posted it online in contribution to hacker lore. Hats off to you, Nils!
[Thanks Brian for the tip!]
by Barb Dybwad on Feb 27th, 2005
Big thanks to AK for sending along this item that clearly begs filing under “news of the weird” — conservative
German newspaper Die Welt came up with the following analysis following George Bush’s recent meeting with Russian
President Vladimir Putin: “Bush wants to be a great reformer, both in terms of domestic and foreign politics.
Domestically, he wants to revamp America to the same degree FDR did with his New Deal… The new plan involves
marketing, surprises, big design overhauls.” Marketing, surprises and big design overhauls apparently, according to the
paper, equates Bush with the “endlessly creative (and fabulously wealthy) founder of Apple Computer, Steve Jobs.”
Huh. I’ve seen some creative political
analysis in my time, but this… this is really, er, something. Clearly the result of some German Mac-using journalists
in the throes of a slow news day. Or maybe W.’s iPod is
exerting some influence. All I will say is that I am a huge fan of one of the two men, and have very little to approve
of regarding the other — I’ll leave it to you, dear readers, to do the matching up. ;)
[Thanks, AK!]