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Inexpensive digital music TIP (was: Streaming My John Abercrombie Collection Now)
On 6 mar 2006, at 15.42, Kris Hartung wrote:
> Unfortunately not. I would have to upload all of the songs to my
> server and stream them from there, which would take up a lot of my
> server bandwidth. That's the nice thing about streaming to
> Shoutcast....you just stream to the public from your own hard drive.
Aha, now I understand why the listening link doesn't work: you have
to keep your Bois computer switched on and online. Stupid me thought
the files were uploaded to Shoutcast because that's what I had to do
when I put on two internet radio channels at Live365.com, and as I
recall they were using the shoutcast protocol.
Anyway (look out - here comes a great tip...), besides searching iTMS
podcasts, I just found a Russian site to buy music digitally for
around USD 1.49 an album! That price is for files encoded at 192 kbps
and if you go for 320 kbps ("CD fidelity") it's a little more
expensive, but still cheap. For many years I have been wanting to
digitize my old vinyl records but now I just bought many of them as
320 kbps AAC files instead, saving the cost for the ripping,
digitizing and encoding time as well as the cost for buying an analog
turntable. Found no Abercrombie though, Kris ;-) but lots of
Garbarek and Laswell stuff.
I wonder how those ruskies can get away with selling music that
inexpensive? MP3.com once got sued for a similar activity (digitally
duplicating CD's they had bought, forgetting about the fact that
buying a CD only gives you license for personal use of copy of the
particular audio recording) and lost the case, so it can't be legal
according to American law. But I guess Russia is not yet part of the
US... ;-)
Greetings from Sweden
Per Boysen
www.boysen.se (Swedish)
www.looproom.com (international)
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?
id=128679560&s=143456