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Say Hello to Bella Chimicles

Alright, so I usually don’t like to add posts about my personal life here, but I just got a puppy and she’s awesome so I’ll make an exception. Her name is Bella, she’s a Boston Terrier, she was born April 11, 2010. Here she is…

Licensing Music for Youtube Home Videos, Now It’s Easy!

A company called FriendlyMusic has begun offering a service that allows customers to legally license music to be used on personal Youtube videos.

Until now, licensing a track involves a lot of legwork – tracking down labels and rights-holders, negotiating rates, etc. Obviously nobody submitting a home video of their dog’s new trick would be willing to go through this. And the way it’s structured, it wouldn’t be worth a rights-holder’s time to license his track if it would only reach 50 viewers.

In my opinion this service or one like it could be a major revenue stream for artists in the future. People aren’t buying as much music for their personal collections, much of this music is being streamed for free anyway. At the same time, people are creating more and more content for their social media sites – their Youtubes, their Facespaces, whathaveyou. If someone can offer a cheap and easy way to legally add other media into your own media, that opens up a gigantic, and growing, customer base. It can even be a tentative solution to the “problem” of the mashup culture. Let the people mash up as many tracks as they want as long as they pay the minimal licensing fee for any track involved. If they start making actual money off of their work, other arrangements can be made.

Currently Friendly Music has about 35,000 songs in its library, none from any major labels. I wouldn’t doubt if the majors either utilize Rumblefish or create their own version of the company within the next year or two. Maybe Apple will offer a new “buy license” option in iTunes. This could be one of the gamechangers the industry has been looking for to start bringing in the profits again.

B-mac is Back!

One of my best friends, Bryan Mcgovern is back on the air on Sirius radio after being completely out of commission for over a year with Guillian-Barre Syndrome. B-mac offers a good explanation tribulations and triumphs in his blog.

Basically, he went from being a healthy guy, to being completely paralyzed in the course of a few days. Visiting him in the hospital during those months was scary – he couldn’t speak, couldn’t even move a finger, lost a lot of weight, couldn’t breathe on his own, was in a ton of pain.

Bryan is such a strong person though, and he fought through it. He slowly was able to move a finger, then a hand, then was able to sit upright. Each little step I saw made me immensely hopeful for a recovery. When he was able to whisper his first words he used to talk about how great it’s going to be when he can get back on the air. Well you did it buddy! Soon enough you’ll be back in the city and we’ll be rockin and rollin :D   Your hard work has been such an inspiration to me, and now that you are back on the air you are inspiring so many more. Case in point:

Bmac was named NY Daily News’ Dude of the Week

New York Post Honors B-mac

You can listen to Bryan on his Sirius Radio show, Late Hits, or read his new blog, The Takeover.

The Ride from Hell / The Schwinn and Target Customer Service Test

bike Last week I decided that since the weather’s getting warmer my newest hobby will be biking. I went up to Target in Westchester with my gf this weekend and bought me a shiny new schwinn along with all the cool (admittedly geeky) accessories – helmet, rear view mirror, lock, front and rear lights, pump, etc, etc. The whole shabang. Yesterday I suited up and rode the bike for the first time from my place in the East Village to work in Dumbo, BK. Went off without a hitch. Then I rode back home, in what I now refer to as “The Ride from Hell” Riding up the first half of the Manhattan Bride I hear some grinding gear noises. Then the chain pops off. I put it back on, but it promptly falls back off. Put it on again, falls off. At this point a friendly veteran bridge biker named Dave pulls over to help this distressed newbie. We flip the bike over, turn the pedals, and I notice that the back gears, which are supposed to be tight and flush on the wheel, are now loose and flopping around. Another biker sees the commotion and says, “you’re in luck, I have tools.” He takes one look at the 2 day old bike and says, “oh s**t, you need special tools for that, you’re screwed!”

andy chimicles the biker

you can't look much tougher than this

So now I’m on the midde of the Manhattan Bridge with a bike that doesn’t pedal. I managed to roll down the second half of the bridge basically with my legs pointing upward in a V so as not to touch the pedals so the gear doesn’t fall off again. People laughed and pointed. I was traumatized, but at least I could use the hill and I didn’t have to walk it on the bridge. Then came the bikewalk of shame through Chinatown, and up to the East Vil. I saw people riding 30 year old bikes by me without a care in the world as I walked my beautiful 2 day old bike with my shiny new helmet on my head. I walked all the way to the bike shop on 3rd and 1st to get the bike fixed (I wasn’t about to walk it to Grand Central to take a train back to Target in Westchester to exchange it). So now I’m going to prepare a nice email to Schwinn and Target’s customer service to see how they will remedy this situation. If they care at all about their customers they would at least pay for my repair bill. A little kickback for pain, suffering, and embarassment on the bridge would be nice, but I won’t hold my breath. I’ll post their response when I get it.

My 2sec of fame

I went to BO Concept’s free wine and pretzels party last week and my words of wisdom made it onto their promo video (fast forward to 1:50).

They cut out my line before that one where I said “I feel like I can make most of this stuff myself”. Can’t blame them I guess.

My Interactive Flash Resume – Standing Out in a Recession

To jump on board with all the bloggers writing about ways to make it through these hard times I am writing about how to make a flash-based interactive resume.

After spending the time building a flash MPC2000 drum machine that plays my songs [LINK], I decided I might as well use my new skills to build an interactive flash resume. There are many benefits to an interactive resume such as this:

  • Demonstrate your design skills
  • Show your creativity and “thinking-outside-the-boxedness”
  • Learn some new flash skills – it’s inevitable that you will pick up new tricks any time you do a new project such as this

There are some problems inherent in a flash-based resume. Namely, most prospective employers, if they are not hiring you for a design-specific job, don’t care to see an interactive resume. They want to see a traditional format resume, that fits in the pile with the other resumes. There is nothing wrong with this, they have job to do, to sift through the pile. This is why I recommend adding a link within your resume’s url to a .pdf version of your resume.

The other drawback, and as a search marketer I preach this often, is that flash is not a very search-friendly medium. It is getting better as Google algorithms improve [link]. It is still another reason to offer an alternative version of the resume based in html.

The Internet at Its Finest

Instead of posting funny/cool/intersting links as I come across them online, I’ll just post this link. Greg Rutter’s You Should Have Seen This is a great list of 99 things that, well, you should have seen. Some are weird but pretty much all are worth seeing. Check it out next time you’re bored

claymation and photography

So I found two new hobbies recently that have been keeping me entertained: Claymation and Photography. I guess I needed a small break from music to get back to the arts and crafts. Here’s a few samples for you:

Rooftop BBQs
rooftop bbq (hdr)

stop animation photography of jeff on our rooftop in the east village:

HDR picture of Julie at Esperanto, Alphabet City:julie hdr portrait at esperanto

Picture of an old guy soaking up the Chinese New Year, Chinatown, NYC:Soaking it in

Chinese Dragon on New Years:

Claymation Pink Elephant, w a DJ Chima beat, made with Jeff Campbell

A Great Solution to the Age-old Webcasting Problem

I can count on one hand the number of Webex or Gotomeeting web meetings I’ve been to that went without a hitch. It is to be expected that at least one of the participants isn’t properly configured or there is some other kind of technical problem. And the services aren’t cheap: both running you a minimum of around $500 per year.

Earlier this week I found myself having to host a web meeting and was determined to find the best free live webcasting solution. There are a few out there now but none seemed to have as many features as DimDim. I created an account in about 2 minutes. Created a meeting space and sent out invites in another minute.

Sending out invites asks the respondants to create a new account. This isn’t much of a hassle for them, however I figured out that you can just email them the meeting link they provide, allowing others to join the meeting without signing up. A nice bonus. Everyone was able to join the meeting quickly, without a single technical problem (a first in web meetings!).

Once you’re in, Dimdim allows you to share whatever is on your screen (after installing a small plugin on your computer). It also has a handy Whiteboard feature that allows all attendees to collaborate by typing, drawing, diagraming, doodling, etc. on a shared space. You can also use your computer’s built-in mic so they can hear you, use their free call-in number so they can call if they don’t have access to a computer, and you can record your entire session for later viewing or sharing. There’s a ton more features you can check out here.

The free version allows up to 20 attendees in a meeting at once, which I’d imagine is fine for the average user. If you need more there’s an upgraded version that allows up to 100 attendees at once for $99 a year, not bad.

Now lets just see how much longer the IT departments of the world will be able to handle the other options before they switch to something a little more “web 2.0ey.”

Gmail's "New" Features

If any of you logged into Gmail lately you would have noticed their announcement, “New! A bunch of stuff”

What strikes me as odd is that everything I saw on their new features list has been around for at least a few weeks, if not years.

  • Gmail welcomes your AIM friends – at least a few years old
  • Gmail has a new look on the iPhone browser – a month old
  • Group chat – a few months old – they had the button on there for a long time but it only recently started working

Granted, several of the features, such as new emoticons, are new as of the past week. I guess they are just trying to give the loyal Gchat users a page to forward to their Hotmail friends that’ll show them what they’re missing out on. Touché Googlé!

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