Lisa_4.8











{February 25, 2008}   #125

This is very interesting

They’re right when they say that the studios are only assessing and distributing movies that they can make a buck off of; the same as every other business out there. Movie-making is a business, it’s not about creativity.

I, and friends, have a similar issue with the publishing industry.

The music industry is exactly the same.

This is the beginning of something interesting and new; the net has given us a way to communicate ideas and our creativity — be it good or bad — to the entire world (other than those countries being actively censored of course). The concept is revolutionary, and totally circumvents the business models which have worked for the last 100 or more years.

Now the key is to keep-up the momentum, so here are some additional links:

These aren’t the be-all and end-all; there are plenty of other ways to get music, movies and books out there into the wide world; the next stage is getting it known.

And that’s where HTML metatags come in handy. You have to capitalise on the bots by working out the best search terms which will get your content to the top of the search results…

Ultimately, this is open-source for everything else. We’ve got open-source software, there’s the potential for open-source hardware, but open-source music, movies and books is a new development…  And like everything else that’s happening in the world, it’s making big-business very very scared.

Good.



{January 23, 2008}   #63

Not so-much country as a variation on a theme:

Root!

Thinking I recognise the vocals and general ambience of this bunch…



{January 8, 2008}   #27

RIAA sues someone else. Surprise, surprise. Recording Industry Association of America? I think not: Reprehensible Idiotic Anal Arseholes I would suggest. But wait… what’s that sound?!

Wibbly wobbly… timey-wimey!

…we find ourselves in a strange future… where we find an RIAA approved CD case.



et cetera