A picture named GoldenGardens1.jpg



  A picture named MacchiatoPortrait.jpg Perils of Caffeine in the Evening
Ill-advised insomniac ruminations.
Last updated:
6/9/2005; 4:18:22 PM


October 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
Sep   Nov

My Categories:

Blogs I Read:


 

Wednesday, October 22, 2003

Subterfuge and Skulduggery

Last week, Apple announced the release of iTunes for us benighted souls in the Windows universe.  They have 350,000 to 400,000 songs available for $.99 apiece.  I downloaded the software out of curiosity and purchased a couple of songs.

The music you download is not in the .mp3 format you might be familiar with from your carefree days of music piracy (a period that may rival the pre-AIDS era of free love in terms of nostalgic sentiment) – it’s in a proprietary format that can only be played by the iTunes software and Apple’s iPod portable player.  Since I don’t have an iPod (I have an Archos Recorder 20), I need to find a way to convert the Apple tunes to .mp3 format if I’m going to use the service.

Apple’s software will rip someone ELSE’S  music on cd to .mp3 without compunction, but refuses to convert its own downloaded music.  It will, however, allow you to burn the tunes to cd up to 10 times, I think.  So, I decided to try this just to see what file format ended up on the cd.  Turns out, it’s the normal .cda format, so my next step was to open up my Musicmatch player and see if I could rip the files on the cd to mp3.  Worked like a charm!  (The Apple software, as I mentioned, will also rip cds to mp3, but I was afraid it might catch on to my ruse and shut me down.) 

I never thought that it was OK to steal music on the internet, but I thought the Napster and Audiogalaxy services were great ways to sample music before purchase, and also to obtain live performances and bootleg stuff that were never available commercially in the first place.  I will aver that I have purchased nearly all of the music in my possession.  Still, I imagine that Apple and the RIAA in time will find a way to convince Ashcroft that what I’ve done with my iTunes songs is a terrorist act punishable under the Patriot Act, but right now it’s still a way to obtain music online and use it legitimately.  If anyone knows an easier way to go about this, I'm all ears.

 


1:23:32 AM    Speak to me! []  TrackBack  []

A picture named clamato hornitos.jpgSeparated at Birth?
12:14:55 AM    Speak to me! []  TrackBack  []

A Kind Word for Free Trade

The Wall Street Journal today had an article proclaiming that Mott's Clamato juice, moribund in the US for the last decade, has a surprisingly strong Hispanic following, owing to a previously undetected regard they have for the beverage as an aphrodisiac:

Shellfish are rich in iron and zinc, minerals that may marginally improve sexual performance. But Carmen Boullosa, a Mexican writer and visiting professor at Columbia University, says many countrymen believe in clam's libido-boosting properties, and that might explain why they consider Clamato some kind of aphrodisiac.

Mott's, of Stamford, Conn., makes no claims to Clamato's powers. Still, the company understood that it could leverage that perception among Latinos to sell more of the beverage it describes as a "light and refreshing, zesty drink with a blend of tomatoes, onions, celery and spices with a dash of clam."

I don't believe I've ever tasted Clamato on purpose.  I love shellfish, including clams, mussels and raw oysters.  I guess because I can obtain them fresh pretty much whenever I desire here in Seattle, Clamato has simply been beneath my radar.  Even though I took 4 years of high school Spanish.

It may be a cross-cultural coincidence, but MY idea of an aphrodisiac very often involves some incarnation of Sauza tequila.  In this regard, the perfect fulfillment of the NAFTA promise would be the untrammelled flow of Clamato south, in exchange for a concomitant surge of Hornitos north. 


12:11:43 AM    Speak to me! []  TrackBack  []



© Copyright 2005 MacchiatoMan. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Last update: 6/9/2005; 4:18:22 PM.
Powered by