DF Pirate Radio – “Heartbreaking & Baby Making”

Title: Vol. 6 Episode 4 (Click link to play) Rel: 1/30/10
Description:Heartbreaking & Baby Making” – This episode may have arrived a few days late, but the theme is a few weeks early so it all balances out in the end (at least that’s what we tell ourselves so we can sleep better at night). Yes, it’s that time of the year again where we queue up some slow tunes about all things love from heartbreak to getting it on– we’ve got you covered in this Valentine’s Day mix that sure to set the mood. So dim the lights, pour some bubbly, and cuddle up close to your significant other (or pillow– if that’s how you roll). DJ digitalflood will be your tour guide as he takes you on a trip through his favorite acoustic love songs, R&B smooth grooves, crooner romance standards, power ballads, and smooth soul. There’s even a Rick Roll in the end that will warm your heart and get your libido going because God knows nothing turns on a woman like Rick Astley. At just over an hour this non-stop mix session is full of surprises. So if you’re ready for the soundtrack of love then click on the link and let the magic happen!
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Bug Hunting

No sooner did I back up the latest version of df.com this morning when I realized that comments where not showing up on various pages across the entire site. You could comment on blog posts though and that lead me right to my page templates where I noticed the blog template software I used left out one very important PHP array that coincidentally enough called comments on pages. A little cut and paste action to fix that aforementioned snippet of code and now we have comments again across the site. Joy!

While I was at it, I added two more links to the Links & Propaganda section. If you’re a personal acquittance of mine and I somehow missed your web site be sure to drop me a line so I can add you to the page. I think I got everybody I know who has some sort of band or project going on linked up, but I’m sure I missed somebody (and no– it was not intentional).

Well– what you waiting for? Comment away already! 😉

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Here Comes “Droid” for Verizon

I’m sure many of you have seen the prime time TV commercial for the upcoming Verizon Droid mobile device. The majority of you though have probably had no idea what the heck they were even advertising, much less what it does. As reported by CNet, the new Droid is nothing; but a relaunch of the existing Motorola Sholes mobile phone. The unit is a major upgrade to the cell phone that takes the existing T*Mobile Android phones called G1 and MyTouch; moving it to a more robust processor and memory level. So there’s the long and short of it– Droid is a cell phone/mobile device in the vein of the Black Berry Storm or Apple iPhone. I’m sure at this point you have two questions you’d like answered:

  1. So what’ the big deal with the Droid compared to the iPhone?
  2. What is an Android and how does it fit in with Droid?

Let’s first explain what Android is. Android is an operating system (software that runs a computer or OS for short) similar to Windows XP or Mac OS X. It lets the hardware (the Moto Sholes in this case) do things like make calls and connect with other devices. It also runs applications (or in cell phone lingo– apps) on the phone to make it more than just a mobile phone. The apps enable the phone to do things similar to computers or laptops like calculators, games, and office programs amongst other things. Android is free and built by Google. Its distribution model is similar to Linux in that it can be openly both added to and used without license fees.

This is different than the iPhone model, which uses open source (freely developed and freely available for use) components from its Mac OS X desktop OS; but relies on proprietary closed source applications to present those applications and run the hardware. The summary version is you can freely use and build off of Android, while with the iPhone Mobile OS X you need to pay license fees to do the same thing.

While iPhone does let anybody freely build apps and distribute them on their network they must be reviewed, as well as, approved by Apple to be offered to the general public. This allows things like the recent blocking of Google Voice’s VoIP service application from being available to the public at Apple or AT&T’s whim. AT&T and Apple claim this was to protect their network (Apple solely offers the iPhone on AT&T cellular service) from the saturation of phone calls that could freely occur on the network. Specifically they cited that the application would allow for a wholesale workaround of termination charges being paid to AT&T by local telephone companies for costly rural land line telephone calling areas. AT&T and Apple state this is the main reason for blocking the app. What it shakes down to is that having app approval allows Apple and AT&T to control what a user can or cannot install on their phone not to mention what they can or cannot do with the phone itself (including how they can or cannot call someone in this case).

The Android OS is different. Because it’s open source; anybody can build anything for it and release it through their own distribution channels including hacking up the underlying OS itself. The idea is Google plans to garner revenue from introducing hardware tuned for the core OS and to offer advertising within the browser through its Google Ads services that target users.

To get an idea on where Google is headed with this concept you merely have to glance over this Business Week interview with Google CEO Eric Schmidt.  To quote Schmidt on where mobile data usage is headed and how Google plans to reap revenue from Android (including the Droid handset itself):

What are the biggest challenges the mobile Web presents?
Let’s start with the fact that the phones are not fast, the networks are not as capable, the ad formats are not standardized. But on the other hand it’s very, very important to solve those problems because a phone is very personal. And so if we know a fair amount about a person, with their permission we can target a useful ad—you know, “It’s Eric. You had a hamburger yesterday, do you want pizza today? There’s a pizza store on the right.” That kind of ad is likely worth a lot of money to an advertiser because it will generate a sale.

In other words, you send a message to the person’s cell phone, saying: “Look, we know you had a burger yesterday. If you want pizza today, just go around the block”?
Right. It may sound creepy, but it might also be quite valuable. People could use advice as to what to eat and where the food is—and of course you can turn it off. So the important thing here is advertising that has value to the person is advertising that is a valuable business. That’s the business we’re in.

With that you can see that Android is not built for revenue generation within the OS itself, but the underlying applications and services Google plans to build into the OS as “must have” features to extend that OS into every day life. The hamburger scenario is just a smaller manifesto for a bigger plan that quickly builds with a little extrapolation on the overall vision and direction of Google expressed by Schmidt above.

Apple is reaping profits hand over fist on hardware and software from iPhone not the month to month service. By limiting the supply of iPhone to AT&T though the carrier can make up the service costs by shear volume. The idea is that the iPhone is so hot it will drive both customers and minutes of usage (on voice, video, or data including text SMS) through the roof. In short, with lack of true alternative you have to use the iPhone and because you have to use AT&T to get the iPhone you’re going to terminate information on their network. That means revenue for both parties.

Google and Verizon are using a different model. They plan to make the revenue off what Verizon does best, loading applications and services on top of the base service. Verizon does this by offering sheer service availability with top level saturation of signal. AT&T’s 3G (fastest speed network) is available in most metropolitan areas, but once you get into the suburban footprint that service quickly degrades hobbling the usefulness of mobile connectivity.

Verizon in comparison has near ubiquitous availability of 3G through the continental 48 states in the USA. The result is that the primary functions that people do on their mobile device work fast (web browsing, email, text SMS, and voice) and seamlessly site to site. This is where Droid comes in.

With a 600MHz CPU and 256MB of RAM, the Droid will reach the computing power of your average desktop in 1998 running Windows98. Granted you weren’t going to play DirectX 10 full screen video games, but you were able to play the likes of Doom and Hexen. More importantly you could multitask between two or three applications (check email, surf the web, and chat for example) with ease. This circa 1998 web experience is the exact target Verizon, Google, and Motorola are after. In short, with 80% 3G coverage and infrastructure scaled for broadband anywhere– they hope to make a huge dent in the mobile device market and finally bridge the gap towards Netbooks.

And this is where that second question comes in, Droid is trying to head off iPhone at the ultimate goal; which is to supplant Netbooks with true mobile in your pocket broadband connectivity to voice, video, and data. More appealing to Verizon is that it can leverage the same OS to deploy in home premise equipment as well (Verizon IP set tops and home phones particularly) so users can seamlessly move from phone to home TV using the same interface. That in turn will allow them to reach where their land line FiOS service traditionally cannot. All this with a platform OS not owned by Microsoft or Apple delivered to 80% of the population. The majority of that population that has some other TV or telephone land line service provider outside the traditional Verizon telephone footprint. All without the fees and regulatory requirements of other carriers to do so. It’s not about ubiquity of the hand set at this point. It’s about ubiquity of the service itself. Seamless service delivered from end to end. From home, to road, to work and back. All using one OS platform (Android) to pass that experience along during the trip. A trip not limited by wires, distance, or line of sight.

Now all they need is a media/content partner to provide them their video. Oh wait– Google owns YouTube… never mind. The announcement of YouTube partnering with the big content providers is only a hop, skip, and buffering message away. Then we play the waiting game. The rest is history.

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Test Drives

2010 Ford Taurs SHOIt’s been a rather interesting weekend. Went out with a few friends last night to GW’s in Chester, NY and got to drink a few nice cold pints of Guinness. It’s been 250 years since Sir Arthur Guinness founded the brewery in St. James Gate; which is in the city of Dublin in Ireland and brewed his first stout that would eventually evolve into the drink we consume today. To mark the anniversary of this momentous occasion we drank a few pints, told a few stories, and debated about music. Due to health reasons, I have restrict my alcohol drinking amount and that added a bit of extra air to the event. I feel that you always enjoy a good beer more when you consume it in moderation. This being a good example of why I feel that way. We ended the night appropriately enough with the infamous Chickenette sandwich at the Monroe Diner in Monroe, NY. A good time was had by all needless to say.

Skow and I managed to skip over to Washingtonville, NY and catch the Casket Architects as well during the course of the night. They were playing as the opening act for another band’s record release party. As usual, they were absolutely amazing live. We made sure to pick up their new album “Future Wounds”.

Today the local Ford dealer, Leo Kaytes, participated in the Ford Education Donation program call “Drive 4UR School” where you get a chance to test drive a Ford vehicle. Every test drive netted a $20 donation to the local school system in Warwick, NY from Ford and helps support the sports program. It’s a worthy cause (have to support the youth and help keep those kids fit) and how you can you go wrong with getting a chance to drive a Ford of your choice? I choose the brand new 2010 Ford Taurus SHO. Over 350bhp flows from a 3.5 liter direct injection dual turbo v6 engine to 19″ tires driven with AWD. The power delivery is smooth (I easily nailed 50 mph in about 4 seconds) though a six speed automatic. The roar of the engine is meaty and reminded me of my 2006 v6 Mustang on steroids in engine note. I was overall very impressed. So five minutes of incredible driving fun in a car that isn’t even available for sale yet, $20 to the school, and a win-win for everybody.

I also stopped by to watch my oldest daughter’s soccer game this afternoon along with my wife and youngest daughter, as well as, M’Weezy. She got to play goalie for the first time and made two nice saves. Her team lost 3-0, but overall they did pretty good (they won last week 2-0). The other team was a bit older and more seasoned. This is my daughter’s first year playing soccer and only her second game so she’s still a bit green, but she is learning fast. I noticed her defense skills were getting better and she actually played the whole game end to end without any rest (God knows I wouldn’t last 60 minutes). We’re all really proud of her in my family and I think it’s great she’s trying something new. She seems to really enjoy the game and is having a good time (which is the most important thing of all).

My youngest daughter has randomly (and seemingly out of nowhere) started saying the phrase “I’m nuts”. She must have picked it up on Noggin (she really watches nothing else). Nevertheless it was slightly funny to randomly hear her blurt it out without warning.

My wife, youngest daughter, and myself joined Skow, DJ SlipK, Aeryn Heather, and another friend at Cheryl’s Fried Fish and Soul Food in Middletown, NY. This was my first time up there, but Skow and SlipK have been raving about it for months. We were not disappointed. I had smothered pork chops, beans & rice, and potato salad. My wife had fried pork chops, mac & cheese, and beans & rice. My youngest daughter had the mac & cheese. The side orders filled a whole plate. Our pork chops were both huge. The food overall was amazing. The mac & cheese is the best I’ve had since my Mom’s homemade take on it. Outstanding. Definitely recommend it if you’re ever in the area.

M’Weezy stopped in today. We briefly talked about Pirate Radio. We’ll be lining up recording soon and starting to hash out a guest list. What’s holding us up is my orthopedist visit tomorrow. I want to know roughly how my schedule is going to look for surgery before I line a bunch of things up. Once I understand that time line I can start working on staging production around my downtime.

And that was my mundane, but very satisfying weekend in a nut shell.

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Classic DF – 4/7/01

Apr. 7, 2001: [•] A bomb has killed a boy and injured several people in Thailand. [•] Pacific Gas & Electric has declared bankruptcy. [•] The Hunley Confederate submarine crew apparently went down with the ship quite fast. [•] Russia wants its independent TV. [•] Filipino rebels have released their last hostage. [•] Growing food isn’t the problem in Angola; it’s getting to it without being shot. [•] Two students are being held in connection to a dorm fire in Kenya. [•] Security concerns have closed the US embassies in Paraguay, Uruguay, and Ecuador. [•] Indonesian separatists have bombed an Exxon Mobil natural gas field. [•] Vietnam’s school are under attack by chemical weapons, but no one why knows why. [•] 33 police officers were killed by Maoist rebels in Nepal. [•] This evening the Jewish holiday of Passover begins. For most Jews it is a joyous holiday, but not so in worn torn Israel. [•] Iraq claims that US and UK jets once again bombed them. [•] Meanwhile, Amnesty International has charged Iraq with massive human rights violations. [•] Algerian national Ahmed Ressam has been found guilty of plotting to bomb New Year’s Eve celebrations. [•] President Bush’s tax cut proposal has passed Senate (sort of). [•] About 100 college students have caught a respiratory infection from going to Spring Break in Mexico. [•] Roosevelt Junior and Senior High School has been closed as teachers and administrators try to figure out how to regain control over students. [•] A child escapes a kidnapper in New York City. [•] A man attacks the Liberty Bell with a ball peen hammer. [•] Four Spidey costumes were stolen from the set of Spider-man: The Movie. [•] The FCC has almost explained exactly what indecent or patently offensive programming is. “Almost” being the operative word. [•] Get your own brothel! [•] A shop lifter dies fighting security guards. Is it really worth a couple of chocolate bunnies and a box of Cheez-Its to die? I think not. [•] Beware of tumbleweeds. [•] Linux users beware: The Adore Virus is out and looking for holes in your system. [•] EMI has teamed up with HitHive to deliver downloadable music to wireless devices and PCs. [•] Microsoft is developing an add-on for Outlook that will sort your mail by preference and priority. Great. Just great. “Sigh” [•] SunBlade 1000 workstations have a data corruption issue. Downloading a patch will fix the issue. [•] Microsoft is licensing their text-to-speech software to third parties. [•] The last of ten Norway wolves has eluded hunters. [•] Baldur’s Gate: Dark Alliance brings half assed Dungeons & Dragons: Third Edition rules to the Playstation 2. [•] Once again, NASA is going to send another probe to Mars to poke around for two days and then break down when they realize they forgot to include that one vital component. [•] Houston, Texas is low on blood causing both doctors and vampires to worry. [•] Some anorexia may be genetic. [•] Smoking raises the risk of bladder cancer in women. [•] Two teenage girls are suing MTV after they were shit on (literally) during a pilot taping. Nice. [•] Now, I’m Mr. Pro-Life. However, the whole posting doctors’ home addresses on the Net thing just doesn’t sit right with me. Legally it is allowed. So why can’t you do the same thing with the Feds? It’s not right either way. [•] Linus Torvalds says Mac OS X sucks. [•] Nothing is safe. [•] Back Orifice gets a Middletown teen in trouble. [•] Roy Lee Elliott is sentenced to 15 years in prison for tying up his wife and beating her. [•] A child molester is caught, the usual traffic stop turns into drug bust story, Middletown Schools has its budget approved, a man falls asleep while his house is on fire, a woman hits a senior citizen, police save a girl’s life, and a cocaine bust. [•] Creed sends kids to space camp. [•] It turns out Weezer wasn’t on the Warped Tour at all. [•] MaximumPC walks you through how to build the ultimate PC entertainment system. [•] The PT Cruiser gets topless. [•] Other distributed file sharing systems are following Napster’s lead and blocking copyrighted material. [•] My wife so rules. [•] That is this week’s flurry of postings. Once again we’ll return next week with more furry fun! See you on Monday.

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