Archive for December, 2010

How do you find new music?

// December 26th, 2010 // 18 Comments » // Free Software, Music, Project Mayhem

Losing Touch

In a few months I’ll be turning 29. That’s old. I don’t care though, I like growing older. I don’t want to be back in school without money to buy new computers, etc. If you’re doing things right, things should generally get better as you get older, in my opinion. But growing older sometimes makes it harder to stay current with how things work. Last week I put a new MP3 disc together to listen to in my car and realised that it’s pretty much the same stuff I’ve been listening too… forever. I also realised that besides the same old stuff they play on the radio, I don’t really know any new music or artists from 2010. How did this happen? Having seen so many people grow more stale and clueless as they get older, I promised myself that it would never happen to me. I decided to do some investigation.

Last.fm

This is the first site I turned to. I’m not a very active user on the site, but I know it has a big community and lots of people scrobble their songs to it. They have a top 40 of most scrobbled artists of 2010. Out of that top 40 list I only know 12 or so of the artists well or well enough to recognise them, and around 7 of them I either have just heard of or know that I don’t particularly like them. That means that that I know less than half of the music that people have been listening to this year. Eek. I went ahead and downloaded the latest albums I’ve never heard of via bittorrent. If I’ll like it I’ll go buy the album, if not I’ll just delete it. That’s how I roll, deal with it you stupid Americans.

Last.fm playground also has a list of the most unwanted scrobbles for the year. It was amusing to see how dominated it is by Lady Gaga. I don’t mind her though, while I admit that she is often over the top, I’m not afraid to say that I listen to her and enjoy some of her music. She’s one of the few artists today not ashamed to fly the freak flag and she has some very good ideas.

The playground also has a chart that lists whether the music you’re listening to is closer to what males or females would typically listen to and the age range that you fall into. This isn’t entirely accurate since I haven’t been scrobbling all my devices (some, like my car CD player, doesn’t have the capability). My results lean to the male side (shew that’s close), I was quite surprised that The Beatles, Good Charlotte and Panic! At The Disco and Violent Femmes have more female listeners, but that’s not at all a bad thing and I’m not complaining. My scrobbled music puts me in an age group of around 22 years old and I’m ok with that. The chart range is from 22-30, I guess you also have to take the average last.fm user age into account.

There are many tools available on that site, some more useful than others. I’ll certainly be making more use of Last.fm in the future. It might be interesting being able to compare my musical tastes with past versions of myself as I get older.

And then?

Well, I already found more music that I could listen to over the next 2-3 months, and have looked at a bunch of blog posts with titles such as “Top 25 Albums of 2010“, etc to see if there’s something that I missed, but the problem with those kind of lists are that they usually just list all the stuff that’s being over-marketed and played on every radio station anyway. That’s also not a great way to get to know music, because you’ll only discover artists way after they’ve become popular. Nothing wrong with being on the trailing edge though, it’s just not where I want to be, and besides, I want to get to know a lot of lesser-know artists that are really good too.

So if anyone’s reading this and have some tips that they can share, please do so!

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Fonts in Edubuntu

// December 21st, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Education, Free Software

Every now and again, educators ask me where they can get more fonts for Edubuntu. We include great desktop publishing software (scribus-ng, inkscape, gimp, etc) in Edubuntu, but our default font selection is rather dry and uninspiring. A few weeks back I looked whether there are some nice fonts in the Ubuntu archive that we could include. I figured that even if there’s one or two good ones available that we could ship, then it would at least be some improvement. The results were quite surprising, there are a wealth of fonts available in the archives.

I added many of them that seemed useful at face value to the edubuntu-fonts meta-package now available in PPA and soon in Natty. It installs quite a lot of font packages currently. The idea is to cut it down a bit and probably split it into 2 to 4 meta-packages, possibly in the categories I listed below. I’ll include some excerpts from package descriptions, and a few examples too. I can’t possibly list them all, it would make this post way too long.

Educational

Font packages currently included: ttf-essays1743, ttf-junicode, ttf-levien-typoscript, ttf-linex, ttf-marvosym, ttf-oflb-asana-math, ttf-oflb-euterpe, ttf-sil-andika, ttf-ancient-fonts, ttf-inconsolata, otf-stix

ttf-sil-andika

Upstream Homepagehttp://scripts.sil.org/Andika

Andika (“Write!” in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of  beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that  will not be easily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching  people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues.

ttf-linex

Upstream Homepage: http://gata.linex.org/trac/browser/ttf-linex/

A collection of fonts including hand-writing simulation typographies, ancient Greek and Roman typographies, institutional fonts from the Extremadura regional government and other elegant fonts.

otf-stix

Upstream Homepage: http://www.stixfonts.org

The mission of the Scientific and Technical Information Exchange (STIX)  font creation project is the preparation of a comprehensive set of fonts that serve the scientific and engineering community in the process from  manuscript creation through final publication, both in electronic and print formats.

Substitutes for popular Non-Free fonts

Font packages currently included: ttf-liberation, ttf-century-catalogue, ttf-mgopen, ttf-beteckna, ttf-droid, ttf-ecolier-court, ttf-ecolier-lignes-court, ttf-bpg-georgian-fonts, ttf-adf-verana, ttf-goudybookletter, ttf-levien-museum, ttf-linux-libertine, ttf-adf-universalis, ttf-adf-tribun, ttf-adf-switzera, ttf-adf-romande, ttf-adf-oldania, ttf-adf-libris, ttf-adf-irianis, ttf-adf-ikarius, ttf-adf-gillius, ttf-adf-berenis, ttf-adf-baskervald, ttf-adf-accanthis, otf-freefont, ttf-symbol-replacement

ttf-liberation

Upstream Homepage: https://fedorahosted.org/liberation-fonts/

This is one of the most well-known sets of substitution fonts. It’s sponsored by Red Hat and includes a set of fonts that are metrically similar to the Times, Arial and Courier fonts. It’s great for document compatibility and can act as a drop-in replacement without requiring the installation of Microsoft fonts.

ttf-symbol-replacement

This is a replacement for the Symbol font as commonly found on Windows systems. It’s from the Wine project and should work as a drop-in replacement.

Desktop Publishing

ttf-engadget, ttf-okolaks, ttf-opendin, ttf-radisnoir, ttf-rufscript, ttf-sil-gentium, ttf-tomsontalk, ttf-atarismall, ttf-breip, ttf-staypuft, ttf-aenigma, ttf-fifthhorseman-dkg-handwriting, ttf-isabella, ttf-sjfonts, ttf-georgewilliams, ttf-femkeklaver, ttf-adf-mekanus, ttf-dustin

These are all font packages that might be useful for desktop publishing in a school or educational environment. The ttf-aenigma font package alone includes more than 450 thematic fonts that could be used for posters, brochures, etc!

Enhanced Usability or Accessibility

Font packages currently included: ttf-tiresias

ttf-tiresias

Upstream Homepage: http://www.tiresias.org/fonts/

This is a family of realist sans-serif typefaces that were designed for best legibility by people with impaired vision at the Scientific Research Unit of Royal National Institute of the Blind in London. This is a family of realist sans-serif typefaces that were designed for best legibility by people with impaired vision at the Scientific Research Unit of Royal National Institute of the Blind in London.

Oh, is that all?

Nope, that’s the beginning. Once we have a good selection of fonts in Edubuntu based on what’s in the archive, we should also extend and find more good fonts to include in the Ubuntu archives.Getting the fonts from the Google Font Directory packaged would be a good next step. If you know of any other sources that we should look into please comment here or on one of the usual Edubuntu communication channels.

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