Wednesday Music

Here is the second half of our concert in Clearwater, Florida, on 6 December, 2005. Here is a link to the entry from that day.

OL – guitars
Jon Gagan – electric bass guitars, synthesizer + string-arrangements
David Bryant – percussion
Carla Ecker – violin
Alexis Velasquez – violin
Carla Lehmeyer – cello
James Shaw – viola

You can download the 320kbps mp3 file here.

Yesterday’s Tweets

  • http://is.gd/cRZiG funny headline…. #
  • AT&T claims 13 million visitors to website Tuesday to check eligiblity for iPhone upgrade. http://bit.ly/aG7blz – or 130,000 tried 100 times #
  • RT @anjkan: If you want to have clean ideas, change them as often as your shirt ~ Francis Picabia /via @GreatDismal #
  • Auf die Frage "Wie viele Liter passen in einen Golf" haben VW und BP sicherlich sehr unterschiedliche Antworten parat. /via @fechnerk #
  • http://nyti.ms/9AwxmF NYT on disclosing mobile radiation in San Fran. I agree that info should be displayed on packaging. #

Wednesday in Santa Fe


Visited friends who have been building their unusual home themselves. This is a photo of stairs and ladder leading to a raised sleeping platform:

This is a beautiful curve that starts out as a wall and turns into a ceiling:

Yesterday I visited the beaver pond in the Canyon Preserve again. I love observing the seasonal changes there:


AT&T quits taking iPhone 4 pre-orders due to high demand
AT&T said Wednesday that there were more than 13 million visitors to AT&T’s website Tuesday to specifically check whether they were eligible for a phone upgrade. That’s 3 times more than any previous day.

Notice they did not claim 13 million unique visitors! Most likely it was just 130,000 visitors, each trying 100 times!! (((thanks for the link SD)))

Tuesday in Santa Fe

The new album Petals On the Path was released today. It’s now available from the LIsteningLounge. I checked and it is available from iTunes and from Amazon. The High Def 24/88.2 files are available from HDTracks.

I added links and previews (low bit-rate and mono) on the webpage for the album. I have mentioned this before, but we put up a special Journal about the process of creating Petals On the Path – with rehearsal recordings and photos.
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The Guardian has a piece on why unlimited mobile plans are being killed by providers everywhere.

Why file-sharing has killed ‘unlimited’ mobile data contracts | guardian.co.uk
So: 200MB average; 97% use less than 500MB. Plus those numbers into a normal distribution calculator and you discover that those 0.1% who are annoying O2 so much consume more than 690MB of data per month. That’s about 23MB per day – roughly a megabyte every single hour. What, you think, are those folks doing? In fact, one network tells me that those people are downloading many gigabytes per month. That’s quite hard to do on a smartphone.

Hm, what could they be doing…

So those wary folk – put by one network as numbering “in the few hundreds” out of millions – have signed up on “unlimited” plans, taken the SIM out of the phone, and then use it in a 3G dongle to download stuff. Because it’s unlimited, they can get what they want. And as they don’t mind how quickly it arrives, the speed isn’t a particular issue; they’re just after volume. O2 says that 0.1% of its smartphone users – that’s about 2,000 people – are consuming 36% of its data. Other networks indicate the same.

It seems that file-sharing is almost a religion for some, or maybe more like a cult… must.download.music.and.film.for.free… even if it takes days to download anything sizable via cellphone!
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This looks like a very interesting book: Through the Language Glass: Why the World Looks Different in Other Languages. The Guardian has an interview with the author:

My bright idea: Guy Deutscher | Science | The Observer
What’s your new book about in a nutshell?

It’s about why the world can look different in other languages. I try to explain why in the race to ascribe to our genes all the fundamental aspects of language and thought, the immense power of culture and nurture has been grossly underestimated.

How has it been underestimated?

For example, I argue that the mother tongue has considerable influence on the way we think and perceive the world. But there’s a great deal of historical baggage attached to this question and so most respectable psychologists and linguists won’t touch it with a bargepole.

It’s like being a historian and talking about national character, isn’t it?

Exactly. But I think we are grown up enough now to look at this question in a scientific way.

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Alex Ross on applause:

Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise: Applause: A Rest Is Noise Special Report
To recap: Up until the beginning of the twentieth century, applause between movements and even during movements was the sign of a knowledgeable, appreciative audience, not of an ignorant one. The biographies of major composers are full of happy reports of what would now be seen as wildly inappropriate applause. Mozart’s famous letter to his father in 1778:

Read on here and here is a link to a PDF of his lecture at the Royal Philharmonic Society in London.

Read it following David Byrne’s talk at TED regarding music vis-à-vis architecture for a complete meal.