Archive | August, 2004

My Hi-MD Almost Here, but May Not Be All That’s Promised

I just received word from Minidisco that my long-pre-ordered new Hi-MD recorder is just about ready to ship. I bought the top-of-the-line MZ-NH1 because it has a docking port, good battery, and I want to really leverage it for audio production.

Hi-MD was first announced back in January, with the promise of units to arrive in April. Then in May, Sony said units would arrive in July. And, of course, now it’s August and some of the entry-level units have been available for a month or so and the high-end units are about to ship, at least to those who pre-ordered.

The one disappointment I’m anticipating is that the ability to upload recorded audio from MD to PC is apparently not yet ready for primetime. It looks like the SonicStage software that Sony uses to interface with the MD is not ready to support exporting uploaded audio into an editable format. This support is promised to be resolved in a free app called “Wave Converter” that Sony says will be available in the Fall.

However, one thing that confuses me is that Hi-MD is supposed to be able to record into uncompressed WAV format in addition to the compressed ATRAC format — shouldn’t audio recorded in WAV be editable and not require conversion?

I’ll guess I’ll find out very shortly when my unit arrives. One guess I have is that unless some kind of evil DRM scrambles the data, using an uploaded audio file recorded uncompressed in straight PCM is just a matter of stripping out the file header and loading the file into an wave editor as straight PCM. Again, we shall soon see.

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Radio and Reference Against the RNC

Organizing against the Republican National Convention in New York City at the end of the month is going full-steam, and from my outsider’s persepctive, the planning seems to be very together.

One of the most interesting and innovative efforts is Radical Reference, in which a team of radical librarians around the country will help answer reference questions posed by independent journalists and other activists at the RNC protests.

Research is an important element of good journalism. Mainstream media giants typically have fact-checkers and in-house librarians to help with this task (even if the mainstream media bosses often choose to ignore said facts and research). It’s great that indie journalists will have someone to help them get background and double-check facts for the stories they report.

It loooks like there will also be some well organized radio coverage of the protests and the convention, assembled by the No RNC Sound Coalition, a collaborative project of independent media organizations in partnership with free103point9 Online Radio. From their website:

The goal is for local New York sound artists to create a welcoming and supportive structure for visiting sound groups and activists to plug into during the RNC. This will include workshops, editing workstations and airtime on a coordinated webstream with microradio broadcasts.

There will be all sorts of reporters covering what takes place in the streets, and interviewing artists and activists involved in the protests. nycwireless is coordinating wi-fi graffiti bikes, neuroTransmitter is microcasting portable FM, and others will report with cell phones and walkie-talkies.

They have already invited web stations to rebroadcast their stream, and I suspect that many a micropower station will also pick up the feed.

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On Friday’s Mediageek: Public Access TV

Mark you calendars, I’m trying to post show topics ahead of time! On this forthcoming Friday’s edition of the mediageek radioshow, we’ll be talking to Greg Boozell, who is a member of the Urbana Public TV Commission, which oversees public access TV in Champaign-Urbana, and who is also the technology director for Chicago Access Network Television.

We’ll be discussing what pubilc access TV, as well as explore some local issues, such as controversy over recent efforts to get Urbana Public TV to air the TV version of Democracy Now, carried by Free Speech TV.

The mediageek radioshow airs live Friday at 5:30 PM on community radio WEFT 90.1 FM, Champaign, IL, and is archived here after it airs.

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