23 Nov
I heard a song being played as Best Week Ever came back from commercial. It was a catchy tune, but I had no idea what the song’s name was or who the artist was. Technology to the rescue!
First, I rewound the episode a bit, since I was watching it on the DVR. I fired up the free Shazam application on my wifi-connected iPhone so that it could sample the music. A 30-second sample showed this result:
The artist’s name is actually misspelled there. There is no space between the two Honeys, and they are all lowercase. I grabbed my Zune and searched the Zune Marketplace (via my home’s wifi network) for honeyhoney. This is what it found:
I selected the Loose Boots album and played Little Toy Gun from there:
I was able to stream the track directly from the Zune Marketplace (ZMP) because I pay for their $14.99/month Zune Pass. This gives me access to most of the ZMP’s music (tracks that are marked as Album Only cannot be accessed using the Zune Pass). After verifying that I had the right song, I added it to the cart, which allowed me to download it to the Zune. Later on, when I sync to my PC, the song would transfer to the collection on my PC.
While I’m away from home, the Shazam app works just fine since I usually have at least an EDGE connection. However, the Zune is limited to wifi, so I couldn’t download anything from the ZMP until I returned home. This makes me hope that a Zune app will find its way to Windows Mobile.
On a related note, the Zune team is now giving 10 free downloads a month to Zune Pass subscribers. So if I really like Little Toy Gun, I can permanently add it to my collection. It should be available as a 320kbps MP3 or a 192kbps WMA (the latter is still DRMed, but I believe I can just burn it to a CD and then rip that CD to get it as an MP3).
Thanks to Jordan, I learned about imeem. Using their service, I can embed the tune that caught my attention and prompted me to write this post about how I use these two mortal enemies together.
20 Nov
Nadia and I have a lot of media around the house. Some of it is in disc format, and some of it is in digital format. Since we each have a computer, we both handle the storage of media differently.
Photos
Nadia’s 25GB collection of photos lives on an external 125GB Maxtor connected to her desktop. She uses Picasa 2 to manage her library.
My 9GB photo gallery lives on the hp MediaSmart Server, and I interact with it using Windows Live Photo Gallery Beta.
Music
Nadia’s 44GB DRM-free music library is stored on an external 150GB Western Digital hard drive connected to her desktop. She uses Windows Media Player 11 to manage her music collection, and syncs her library to a 30GB Creative Zen Vision:M.
My 20GB music library is stored on my desktop’s 320GB hard drive. I use Zune to manage it and to download new tracks. Since I subscribe to Zune Pass, the majority of my music is DRMed.
Video
Aside from the handful of ripped movies on our desktop hard drives, our movies are all in VHS, DVD and HD DVD format, scattered in boxes all over the living room.
Our television shows are in DVD boxed sets, purchased from Amazon Unbox or iTunes Store, trapped on our Motorola DVR provided by Baja Cable, or on our desktops (both have Media Center installed). Nadia’s PC can record two shows at once, while mine can only record one at a time.
The Goal
I want to find a way to bring all this media together in a way to make it easily accessible from any device we currently own, excluding obvious incompatibilities (like getting my Zune Pass music onto Nadia’s Zen). Regardless of the computer used, I want to see the same music library and playlists. I want to stream all of my movies to the 360 in the living room, and I want the same files to work on our portable media players. When Nadia imports new photos, I want to see them in my library. When one of us wants to get to our media collection when we are out of the house, I want to be able to do so (assuming an internet connection is available, of course).
This is a pretty tall order. As I work my way toward a solution, I will document everything I learn here. Feel free to throw in your suggestions.
20 Nov
Well, those aren’t the only reasons. I’ve been overloaded at work after announcing my decision to leave. I will be working at a technology-focused online retailer by the name of Tech For Less here in Colorado Springs. It is going to be very different from Virilion in that I will be focusing on a single system, their internal inventory system, instead of working on a handful of sites. While I will no longer be able to dip my toes into all of the different technologies and languages that Virilion utilizes, I will also no longer need to carry a pager or play part time system administrator. So I lose some, but I gain some too.
Part of me can’t believe I gave up working from home full time.