Unnecessarily verbose WWR post

Media

This post took just under a week to type because of constant distractions such as studies and work. (isn't that always the case?). Because of this, it may seem a bit disjointed. Then again if you're used to reading my ramblings, this probably will seem normal.

My beautiful late mum always said to start everything you write by setting the scene. Considering I'm typing this and not writing it I'm not entirely sure if this rule still applies, but for the sake of posterity I'll indulge in it here. I always thought the word posterity was funny because it looks like posteria. I'm sitting at a coffee shop in Singapore in the early morning; the sun has just recently risen and (at the risk of unintentionally sounding risque) so have I. I'm enjoying an Americano and a slice of Tiramisu, a cute Japanese girl at the table next to mine just winked at me and I said ohayo gozaimasu which made her blush – which made me blush – and for some reason am feeling intrigued, a little confused and quite excited – but wait, it's for another reason!

A warped bookshelf impending doom!
A warped bookshelf impending doom!

Due to a particularly disastrous night sleep involving a bookshelf falling on my head (note to self: use all the screws Ikea gives you in the box, and don't stow a copy of The God Delusion high up because that's just tempting the powers to get back at you) I found myself at 3am listening to Jim Kloss's 11am Shoe (sic) despite promising myself I was going to try to realise a regular sleeping pattern again. I don't understand why one of the most entertaining and interesting people on radio and the intertubes does a show at such a bizarre hour of the day; I've been told it has something to do with time zones, but I can't shake this feeling that somehow he's involved in a conspiracy to turn me nocturnal, or to use the biological term: nocturnal.

ASIDE: I studied biological in high school, but I was mush better at chemistryical and enjoyed it much moreical.

In retrospect though I wish I had built that bookshelf ever so slightly worse than I did so it could have whacked me in the head twenty minutes or so earlier, because when I tuned into the 11am shoe at the misleading time of 3:24am I was downright fascinated by what I heard. Mr Kloss proposed that Whole Wheat Radio could be the world's first truly community driven radio station!

The idea infuriated me as I had not thought of it myself first, but as the initial anguish subsided I realised: Jim was absolutely right. Whole Wheat Radio is a community powered radio station.

Whole Wheat Radio

To get a feel of why I thought Jim was right, consider regular, traditional terrestrial radio:

  • It exists for the sole purpose of generating advertising revenue (a business model that I’ve never been a fan, or indeed even an air conditioner, of).
  • Playlists of songs are generally created in advance
  • The music itself generally conforms to only a select few genres and stays that way
  • Music can be chosen by listeners only through request shows, and even then the chances of your chosen tune being played are lower than my doctor’s opinion of my coffee intake

And now consider Whole Wheat Radio:

  • It exists for the purposes of creating a community of people who listen to, appreciate and support independent music
  • Playlists of songs can be created in advance, but not by the "management", but literally by the listeners themselves.
  • The music conforms to no set genre, meaning the community can choose what music fits their mood at any particular time
  • Individual tracks can be requested and are almost certainly played

To put it as bluntly as possible, it's a friggen damned eye opening comparison! But there's even more to it than that: not only do wheatheads listen to and request the music that's played in Whole Wheat Radio (a fact that in itself would be enough to distinguish it from traditional radio), we are also directly involved in the music playing infrastructure itself.

  • We rate songs which determines what music stays and what music gets the boot. We tag songs depending on mood, genre or any other arbitrary categorisation scheme we can think of, which can be used to create shows and make the tracks easier to find
  • We purchase music which supports this artist as well as the site, not just a record label.
  • We engage in heartfelt discussions on the state of world affairs, the global music scene, what coloured socks Jim should be wearing, the draconian copyright laws that make our lives so much more complicated and less rewarding than they could be.
  • We create, update and maintain the information on (hopefully eventually) every song, album, artist on the collaborative wiki system.

Esther Golton: Unfinished HousesRuben Schade: Five and Fabulous!

For these reasons I can't help but agree that not only am I fortunate enough to be part of this beautiful community, but that I'm also a part of possibly the first truly completely community driven radio station. I'm positive there have been other radio stations that can boast community driven elements, but I doubt there's been one that's been driven by real people outside "management" to the extent Whole Wheat is.

ASIDE: I tried being community driven myself once.

I posted on Twitter that I would do whatever people told me to. After five minutes of hopping on one leg in public wearing three sandwich boards, a clown shoe on my left hand and a saucepan in the other, a tea cozy over my head and shouting "THE IRISH ARE COMING!!" in a faux Russian-Africaans accent while riding an imaginary flying hexagonally-wheeled bicycle, my self preservation instincts kicked in and I abandoned the project.

For what it’s worth, my therapist says I’m making admiral progress.

It does present an interesting problem though; what do we call such a phenomena?

  • Collaborative Radio?
  • Community Driven Radio?
  • No BS Radio?
  • People Powered Radio?
  • Listener Powered Radio?
  • Shared Direction Radio?
  • Cheese Steak Jimmy’s?

And those phrases don't even account for the international community behind it! Since Jim encouraged us to come up with our own ideas though, and given the fact I'm a fan of FLOSS software, I also propose this name which is 100% Rubenerd:

International Open Source Radio

Think about it: the term "open source" implies we are allowed to see how software works and take an active or passive role in it's future direction. As a community of people from around the world constantly changing, adding to and improving Whole Wheat Radio, and who know how it works from the top end, the term seems to fit perfectly. Considering the wiki software that powers the website is open source too, and the fact that everyone who listens to Whole Wheat Radio is either a computer programmer or someone who's obsessed with electronics, it's a great choice. To use an Elke phrase: "… uh, yeah!"

Not impressed? Okay, what about this?

International Free and Open Source Independent Music Distribution and Collaboration System… Thingy

You could call it IFAOSIMDACST (pronounced eye-faw-sim-dak-est) if you wanted a catchy acronym too!

I think I'd better just stick to programming. Hey, it's the thoughts on the subject that counts right? If not, I just wasted a lot of time :-)

ASIDE: How much Whole Wheat Radio could a woodchuck Whole Wheat Radio, if a woodchuck could chuck Whole Wheat Radio?

I’m not good at telling jokes either it seems.

Back to you, Jim.


Rubenerd Show 237: The Whole Wheat Renovators episode

Show

The Renovators!

Podcast: Play in new window · Download

39:45 – Elke in Malaysia, different sized pond thingys, scared of copyright law, making more money from concerts than recordings, Answers to my philosophical Twitter question, why I'm confusing even myself, reviewing songs from The Renovators album Rhythm & Blueprints including Rip Up the House, It's Been Done, Blue Reggae, I Don't Ski, audio from a Whole Wheat Radio Audio Magazine including an American NBC anchor in the 1970s, the I Could Be Wrong song, and why I also can't stand Dr. Phil!

STRONG LANGUAGE WARNING!

Recorded in Singapore. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


A philosophical Twitter question

Internet

In a similar vein to my last useless philosophical question, consider this scenario! Imagine you've configured your weblog software to republish all your Tweets into daily weblog posts. Then imagine you've set up TwitterFeed to watch your weblog and update your Twitter profile with each new weblog post.

Would you be publishing the same information to Twitter and your weblog every day for eternity?


Cutting Mono out of GNOME on FreeBSD

Software

Despite many people writing up detailed, phone-book length blog posts vehemently saying Mono isn't a necessary or an integrated part of GNOME (who are they trying to convince, us or themselves?), the simple reality is that most package managers do treat it as such, including FreeBSD's ports system.

GNOME Terminal running in FreeBSD showing the removal of Mono

If you installed GNOME either with the gnome2 metaport or metapackage you'll get Mono and Monodocs, which if you have a problem with Microsoft's patent litigation or just don't like seeing Microsoft get their claws into free software, you can remove (albeit with a warning you have to supress with the -f switch):

  1. # pkg_info | grep mono
  2. # pkg_delete -f mono-x.x.x.x

I'm mostly a KDE and Xfce person trying out GNOME as my DE for a week, so I'm by no means an authority on its package requirements. That said though, having removed Mono on Friday and using the bundled applications I haven't had any issues at all. Obviously I won't be using Banshee or Tomboy, but I didn't need them anyway!

Richard Stallman at the launch of the GPL v3
Richard Stallman at the launch of the GPL v3

For those who don't know, Mono is an open source implementation of Microsoft's .Net framework. I don't agree with a few of the things Richard Stallman says, but his summary of why Mono is problematic hits the issue right on the head:

Mono is a free implementation of Microsoft’s language C#. Microsoft has declared itself our enemy and we know that Microsoft is getting patents on some features of C#. So I think it’s dangerous to use C#, and it may be dangerous to use Mono. There’s nothing wrong with Mono. Mono is a free implementation of a language that users use. It’s good to provide free implementations. We should have free implementations of every language. But, depending on it is dangerous, and we better not do that.

And my own argument can be described in three words and a phrase: embrace, extend, extinguish, and those who don't learn from history are destined to make the same mistakes.

I guess it just bothers me that more people aren't bothered by Mono. It would be useful if people were using it to migrate existing software they had spent time and money on over on Windows, but creating software from scratch with it just doesn't sit well with me.

All this said though, this is another great thing about the free and open source software world on the desktop, if I don't like a particular application or the language/framework it's been written in, I can slot in an alternative free application that I prefer. For example, who needs Mono-encumbered Banshee when there's the gorgeously designed Exaile written in Python!


Rubenerd Show 236: The ridiculous fun with a label printer episode

Show

Fun with a label printer!

Podcast: Play in new window · Download

48:01Roel247's comments on electronic voting, compulsory voting in Australia, Senator Bob Brown of the Greens meeting the Dalai Lama, my label printing obsession! The Brother PT-80, labeling CDs, boxes, magazine holders and everything in my father's home office, there's no need to write anything anymore, the growing complexity of CMSs and why I'm moving over to home brew again using Ruby and SQlite, WordPress 2.5, loudly dropping aerosol cans, Elke's gigantic honey sandwich, converting metric to imperial in Google, Russian mail order brides, Ruben's idea for a standardised New World Order (patent pending), seeding torrent files, too many tabs in web browsers, why South Park is actually a great show to watch, being able to laugh at yourself, not taking life too seriously!

Recorded in Singapore. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Why do you use Twitter?

Internet

Twitter

I noticed this morning on the side of Twitter profiles a question hyperlink had sprouted. Clicking it took me to a form where the Twitter folks asked "Why do you use Twitter?" along with the promise of a Jeep Wrangler if I answered. I'd heard similar promises before, but I figured I'd give it a shot:

What don’t I use it for? I use it as a replacement for SMS on my phone using m.twitter.com, as a replacement for a blog aggregator for urgent news where time is critical, to meet and talk with people near me, to meet and talk with people on the other side of the planet from me, to get questions on any topic imaginable answered in a flash by all kinds of people, to keep up to date with big names in tech, to post humerous signs I’ve just read, to let people know when I’ve created a new weblog entry, to let people know when I’ve updated my podcast, to clean the glass in my windows, to use as a replacement for salad dressing…

Oh, and and to let people know what I’m doing in 140 characters or less.

It's a shame, I'm learning how to ride a motor scooter not a car right now. I guess I could sell it and buy lots and lots of computer equipment. Like a rack full of Xserves.


Rubenerd Show 235: The Elke Sims 2 bombardment episode

Show

Elke's Sims 2 family at the time of recoding the show!

Podcast: Play in new window · Download

1:07:00 – The Simpsons Bombardment, Elke's first live morning Whole Wheat Radio show, Elke on The Sims 2, slow Singapore internet today, Microsoft gets new open source chief, Ruben rants about "shared source" nonsense, CalgaryGuru on Flickr's new video uploading service, is Yahoo's brand failing, Elke on different social networks across the world, suss people on Bebo, verbose MySpace video profiles, rant on people intentionally misspelling names, Ruben versus Reuben, Miss Cook adventures in primary school in Melbourne, Web 2.0 buyout baiting, Jerry Yang's haircut, Wikipedia as a drug, Yahoo Mash, Facebook discussion including remembering 30 passwords, Elise Hopkins, The Schade Clan group, rant on how useless nationalities and patriotism are becoming, origin of the word expat, Mr Slave, ridiculously long lists of Facebook requests, fun in my own introversion, testy-pops, 2005 was a very good year, "Liberal" meaning different things in the US and Australia, Lotus SmartSuite, Microsoft Plus 95, my OBSESSION with screeshots, Ruben's dad Rainer debunks mind-controlling chemtrails, huge ships near the Port of Singapore, illuminati controlling my mind as a sheeple, why it's hard to find words that rhyme with sheeple.

Recorded in Singapore. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Batam trip: Straits of Singapore photos!

Thoughts

For 2 days last week my father, sister and I nipped next door (as it were!) to the Indonesian island of Batam for some much needed R and R. Given we've all lived in Singapore on and off for over 10 years we figured we should explore the area around here some more instead of just travelling through Peninsular Malaysia or Bintan like we usually do.

Singapore skyline with ships
Singapore skyline in the distance on an overcast day

The journey from Singapore to Batam was an adventure in itself! After we boarded the boat from the Tanah Merah ferry terminal we were zipping due south east through the aptly-named Straits of Singapore.

Tanah Merah ferry terminal
Tanah Merah ferry terminal

I had forgotton that the Port of Singapore was the busiest in the world, the entire time we were surrounded and navigating between the most gigantic ships I had ever seen! Liquid and gas tankers, container ships, sand barges… we never got too close to any of them but they still looked enourmous. It felt like we were travelling on water roads in a huge city out in the ocean!

Our first ferry to Batam :-)
The boat that took us to Batam, as seen from other boat on our way back

With the bobbing action of the boat it was hard to get clean shots, but these were some of the better ones. The photos do NOT do justice to the size of these ships!

Container ship in the Straits of Singapore
And I thought just ONE of those containers was massive!

These two shots provide some perspective. The ferry in the first shot is slightly larger than the ferry next to the tanker in the second shot!

Boat in the Straits of Singapore   Empty tanker in the Straits

Photos from Batam itself are on the way!


Inheriting a little Armada M300 subnotebook!

Hardware

Though my father's company I've been able to get a hold of a very svelte, thin, lightweight Compaq Armada M300 laptop, complete with docking station that provides the optical and disk drives!

My new (at least to me!) Compaq Armada M300 subnotebook

The specifications are fairly conservative (as in old but still nice, not the icky political kind) so it won't be running Windows Vista any time soon, but for a mostly FreeBSD guy like me who's been wanting to try out his favourite OS in a mobile environment it's just what I've been looking for:

Weight and Dimensions
1.5kg, less than 2.3cm thin when closed
Processor
Mobile Pentium III 600MHz with SpeedStep (whatever that means!)
Display
12.1″ TFT XGA display
Memory
128MiB PC133 SDRAM, upgradable to 320MiB
Audio
ES1978 Maestro 2E
Hard drive
40GB 5400RPM IDE Seagate
Networking
Belkin Wireless G PCMCIA card
Lucent LT WinModem (bummer!)
Ethernet Intel Ethernet Pro 100 (82557)

The only major downside is that the battery it came with is completely shot, it barely holds a charge. Fortunately now that I found a kickarse battery shop in Sim Lim Square, having the cells in it replaced shouldn't be too expensive. I'll probably want to get a tad more memory for it as well: a check on the current Singapore hardware pricelists shows that'll cost less than SG$40.

Compaq Armada M300 specs

With all this talk about ASUS EeePC's and MacBook Air laptops that don't have integrated optical drives and are therefore much smaller and more portable, this Armada M300 subnotebook without the docking station (and therefore without optical and disk drives) is also stunningly slim and much lighter than my MacBook Pro! Obviously it's more underpowered than the Air, but for a machine I can slip into my bag and just use in coffee shops for email, light web browsing and updating Twitter and this weblog, it looks just right.

I can see though I'll be very tempted to upgrade a lot of things with this machine, but I'll try to resist! Perhaps a brand new 7200RPM 200GB hard disk to increase performace… oh and a glossy screen protector… and a nice new Crumpler bag to put it in… and some FreeBSD stickers for the lid… and a keyboard protector… oh and a nice little black aluminium cooling pad…

And something else? In the bag it came in, there's a licenced, retail copy of Windows 2000 Professional. I know OEM versions are tied to the machine you bought it with (how do you spell corruption?) but this retail version will let me install it on another machine. With copies of 2000 harder and harder to find thesedays now that Blista and XP are out, this is reassuring, even if I don't end up using it.


Using del.icio.us just as a bookmark repository

Internet

In one of the recent audio magazines over on Whole Wheat Radio I heard Jimbob discussing how he didn't know why people use del.icio.us, Digg or other popularity link sharing sites because when he wants to let people see what he's reading all he has to do is add the site to his Google Shared weblog thingy.

I totally agree with what he says about popularity based link and news sites. I really dislike Digg, reddit, Chuck Norris News and the like for reasons I could spend a whole week explaining. It could be because I'm a proud Slashdot guy and have used them as one of my main news sources for a long time ;).

ASIDE: Perhaps I distrust popularity-based sites because I never was popular myself. I may have just discovered something here!

I also just noticed that this weblog entry has the internal id of 1111. I could have created another useless Rubenerd Blog milestone post, but I chose not to. Aren’t you relieved?

So many links, so little time…
So many links, so little time…

For this reason, I don't use del.icio.us as a silly "site ranking" or "social standing" system, but merely as a simple online bookmark repository, which for my needs has advantages over using the little Bookmarks menu in my browser:

  • All my bookmarks are in the same place and are easier to manage
  • Every computer I use has the same bookmarks, so no worries over syncronising multiple lists
  • Works as an online backup system for links that survives for years
  • The ability to export my links as an OPML file and import them into another site or even back into my browser in the future if I decide to switch
  • And on the side, I can show people sites that I find interesting and useful

That said, there are advantages to using a Bloglines Blog or Google Reader's Shared Items features to show people what you're reading when said material is in the form of a weblog, podcast or other RSS or Atom syndicated material, but for one-off web pages that you just want to keep for later del.icio.us fits the bill quite nicely.

http://del.icio.us/rubenerd if you're interested :-).