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I don’t know how I missed this before, but this is simultaneously the coolest 1990s era Macintosh software story ever, and the best explanation yet why Apple lost its way in the 1990s.
Programs of concerts past
Some new features on the Virginia Glee Club wiki. Pages have been added for selected Glee Club seasons which list the concerts, tours, and other events known for that season, and include information about the conductor and officers of the group, where available.
The most fun part of this section of the wiki has been the old concert programs. The administrator of the Virginia Glee Club has scanned quite a few concert programs, including the one from the premiere of the Testament of Freedom, and I was inspired to do the same, starting with programs and posters from the 1993-1994 season (that’s the group photo from the spring of 1994 above, as used on the poster for the Tour of the Northeast).
As always, contributions of information from other alumni are welcome as we build this record of the Glee Club’s history together.
Moving iTunes libraries from one hard drive to another
For the love of me, I don’t know how I ended up here again. The last time I moved my iTunes library to a bigger disk, I was able to use the Consolidate Library command and let iTunes do all the file moves. This time… not so much.
I was trying to do two things at once with this move: put all my music onto a larger external drive (a 1TB MiniStack from OtherWorld Computing. Can’t recommend the enclosure enough for form factor, ports, and reliability; my older 500 MB drive is in the same enclosure), and move to the new iTunes library layout, where there are separate top level folders for music, movies, podcasts, etc. This didn’t work, because partway through the process writing to the disk errored out. I quickly realized that the problem was that I was doing it over the network (the new 1TB drive and my older drive were both connected to my AirPort Extreme). So I directly connected the new drive via FireWire, left the old one on the AirPort, and tried to consolidate again. Only this time, it told me I didn’t have enough disk space. On the new 1TB drive.
What?
Then I realized what was going on. The restructuring of the library wasn’t moving files, it was creating another copy of the files on the same drive. I had started consolidating before I did the library restructuring, so now it was trying to write a second copy of all my music on the drive. Since I probably have about 515 GB of music to work with (some resident on my MacBook Pro’s internal drive), two copies weren’t going to fit on the new drive.
So now I had: a full copy of my library spread across the old drive and my hard drive; one partial copy at the root of my new drive; and another partial copy in the proper location in a Music subdirectory. I didn’t want to delete either of the partial copies because songs in my library were mapped to both locations; I couldn’t reconsolidate on the old drive for lack of space. But I still had over 160 GB free on the new drive, so I could probably copy over the missing files by hand.
So I’m going the manual route to clean up. First, I went to the Terminal and ran the comm
command, which compares two text files line by line; I fed it the directory listings of the old external drive and the new final destination, and it spit out about 165 differences, directories that didn’t get copied from the old drive to the new one.
Second, I’m going line by line through the results of the comm listing. For each line, I:
- Copy the missing files from the old drive to the new one.
- Delete the old files from the old drive.
- Go to the matching tracks in iTunes and do a Get Info. Amazingly, since I’m copying the new files into the correct directory structure, a lot of the time I don’t have to do any more work and the library automatically finds the files in the new drive. Sometimes I have to browse one file at a time to link up to the new files, which is a drag.
I expect I’ll be done with the process sometime next week. Painful, but at least no data is lost. Then I can repeat with any files from my laptop’s disk, a much shorter list.
The final cleanup may take some XSLT fu. I will need to triple check the final library to make sure no tracks point to locations on the old drives. I’m going to try using XSLT on the iTunes Library.xml file to see if I can cull out the problem tracks that way; if not, it’ll be a matter of trial and error, because there’s no convenient way to find the file system locations of iTunes tracks from within iTunes itself, other than one at a time.
I’d love to have this be a more error-free process. I’m beginning to think that iTunes libraries on external drives simply isn’t a well tested scenario by Apple.
Grab bag: Rights, Neely Bruce, and LOC
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I love it–Neely Bruce set the Bill of Rights to music, and made the movement for the First Amendment freely available including free performance rights.
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Nice though creepy (particularly the dude in bed with all the puppets).
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Biography of Neely Bruce, composer and friend of the Virginia Glee Club.
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Brilliant summation of the challenges of static analysis by Coverity researchers. For what it’s worth, Veracode gets around a fair number of the build related ones by analyzing binary, but there are some common challenges for all of us.
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Free download for members of Peter Gabriel’s online fan club.
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Peter Gabriel’s new project is a covers album–two covers albums. The first, called “Scratch My Back,” is due out in March in the US and features PG covering songs by Radiohead, David Bowie, Arcade Fire, Talking Heads, Elbow, Lou Reed, Bon Iver, the Magnetic Fields, Regina Spektor, Neil Young, Paul Simon, and Randy Newman. Yes, seriously.
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Charlottesville at its finest: philosophy, violence, trains, drunkenness, and parking lots. With quotes (and possibly screen time) by Tyler Magill.
Blast from the Past: Young TJ
I have quite a few updates to post about the progress of the history of the Virginia Glee Club on the wiki, but today’s item deserved a jump to the head of the line: the resurfacing of a lost recording of the 1993 Virginia Glee Club singing our commissioned work to commemorate Thomas Jefferson’s 250th birthday, Young T.J.
Some background: Thomas Jefferson is a Big Thing at the University of Virginia, the school he founded and one of only three accomplishments on his tombstone. When the 250th anniversary of his birth rolled around, there were a lot of stops pulled out to celebrate: Mikhail Gorbachev came to speak at the University, the Today Show did a remote from Monticello, Bill Clinton spoke at the Jefferson Memorial…
And Judith Shatin wrote a setting of the Declaration of Independence that proved what the Testament of Freedom had hinted: setting Jefferson’s writing to music was full of pitfalls.
The Glee Club had begun commissioning new works for men’s voices in the 1991-1992 season, and for Jefferson’s birthday we wanted something special. So our fearless director John Liepold reached out to his old professor and mentor Neely Bruce for a Jefferson-inspired composition. They decided that, since the Glee Club had already gone down the Jefferson words path with Testament, the smart thing was to choose texts that inspired Jefferson instead. Bruce selected ten texts from Jefferson’s Commonplace Book and set them to music that Jefferson might have heard in his youth, songs heavily inspired by the Sacred Harp and other shape note music. The result was Young T.J., a group of short settings that try to imagine what influenced the young Jefferson.
The Glee Club performed the whole work a few times that year, notably at our spring concert, and used a short set of the works on a number of occasions, mostly notably during our trifecta of performances on April 13, 1993. We began the morning at Monticello, shivering in the pre-dawn light on risers, and using Young T.J. to provide music for the commercial cutaways during the broadcast. I also remember standing at a urinal under Monticello next to Willard Scott, and of course Katie posing for pictures with Tyler Magill, Paul Stancil, Scott Norris, Denis McNamara, and Mitch Harris (above). We also performed portions of the work at the Jefferson Memorial for Bill Clinton and a capacity crowd (after a frantic drive from Monticello to DC at top speed followed by a sprint across the grass to get to the stage on time). A final performance at the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond that night was the capper.
So, the lost recording. This page, linked from Neely Bruce’s publisher’s site, has a full set of recordings of all ten movements. When exactly they were recorded is subject to dispute–the page claims they were recorded at Monticello on April 13, 1993, but there’s no background noise and we didn’t have time to run and record everything that day, I don’t think. But they are unmistakably a document of the 1992-1993 Glee Club under John Liepold’s direction. And since none of Liepold’s recordings have ever been transferred to digital release (only three tapes, the 1991 Christmas Concert, a concert at River Road Baptist Church, and the Dove in the Hall recording surfaced from his time with the group through the summer of 1994), this is a nice present to have, even if it’s not available for download.
Grab bag: Idiots and others
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Don’t call your users idiots.You’re not doing yourself any favors.
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Glad Comcast is spending its money so effectively.
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This is what I don’t understand about the idiots who are calling for Holder’s head for trying to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed: what else would they have us do with him? “Without exception…every previous terrorist suspect apprehended inside the country had been handled as a civilian criminal. Even so, critics such as Krauthammer were denouncing Holder for failing to send Abdulmutallab directly to Guantánamo. As a senior national-security official in the White House put it, ‘It’s a fantasy! Under what alternative legal system can Special Operations Forces fly into Detroit, and take someone away without court oversight?'”
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Root certificate vulnerabilities to attack the phone.
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Buried in the Outlook Shortcuts > For All Items list (hidden away behind disclosure triangles) is a most useful Inbox Zero tip: Use CTRL+SHIFT+V to move one or more selected mail items. If like me you only have one mailbox to which you move items once you’ve tagged them (my archive), the popup that comes up always has the right mailbox selected, so the workflow is CTRL+SHIFT+V, then Enter. My mouse was getting in the way of fast email processing and this is a good alternative.
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Interesting tips for making a headless Mac headful.
Grab bag: Miniature models, small resignations
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Incredible miniature photography and models.
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First tweeted haiku resignation?
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Dave writes about use of your Google Profile information to personalize search results. To which I reply, Yes, and what took so long?
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And it’s about time.
Grab bag: Surrender, strip, Dubai
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Okay. So you’re the world’s biggest book merchant, and you completely pull physical and digital inventory of a publisher’s books out of circulation because you have a pricing disagreement with them. I mean, they’re totally gone from your website. Then you reinstate them after reconsidering your position. Would you choose to use the word “monopoly” in your post explaining the situation? Would you, seriously, use the word ABOUT THE PUBLISHER? What on earth are they smoking at Amazon?
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Somewhat to my surprise, strip croquet is in the “frequent” category as of this writing (n>1.44%). (I forgot about the strip croquet scene in “Heathers.”)
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There’s something refreshing about the thought that there is no longer any point to trying to get the “world’s tallest skyscraper” title. Maybe now we can refocus attention on the streets.
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“Millions of ads use Flash. Get used to the blue legos. You’re welcome.” <—Hahaha.
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A more cogent take on the Flash evangelist’s “blue Legos” picture, using actual Mobile Safari screen caps. Only two sites are completely inaccessible without Flash.
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Nice cogent discussion of the possible impact of the iPad (and iPhone) on Flash market penetration. I’d add: the other major reason for falling Flash usage rates is the annoying uses to which Flash is put. Animated ads, splash banner pages that you have to wait through to find out something about the site you just visited…
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“The Republicans are better at questioning the President than you are.” Does an “articulate president” who engages in “substantive” discourse spell doom for the media? Maybe for the media we have now.
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Watterson is sharp as ever and proves he still knows which end is up in this reply to a human interest interview question: “Q: How soon after the U.S. Postal Service issues the Calvin stamp will you send a letter with one on the envelope? A: Immediately. I’m going to get in my horse and buggy and snail-mail a check for my newspaper subscription.”
On winning a Grammy
Last night, the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Tanglewood Festival Chorus, James Levine conducting, won a Best Orchestral Performance Grammy for our 2009 recording of Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloe. I blogged our nomination a while ago but am still delighted that we won. All the hard work seems worthwhile today.
Not that my work, as a member of the chorus, is onerous. In fact, I feel like one of the luckiest guys in the world today. We all come from our day jobs to Symphony Hall or Tanglewood, rehearse, and perform, and get to be part of something great together with musicians who train for decades to take that job.
So today, I’m grateful to the musicians of the BSO for letting us come along for the ride, and to our maestro James Levine for leading us down paths of excellence. (Even if, during the concert run for this recording, he did get mistaken for Keith Lockhart.)
iPad answers: file handling, PDF creation
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This article answers one of the questions I had about the iPad, namely, file handling in iWork. New iPad applications will be able to indicate that they can support files and then you can drag and drop files for those applications while the iPad is connected to the parent computer. Plus support for registering apps to handle file types and PDF creation on the fly.
Apple iPad: first reactions
Four reactions that I agree with (parts of) in response to Apple’s iPad announcement yesterday:
- Doc Searls places the iPad in the context of vertical integration (apps all the way down to CPUs) and horizontal playing fields and says, “What you have to appreciate, even admire, is how well Apple plays the vertical game. It’s really amazing. What you also have to appreciate is how much we also need the horizontal one. The iPad needs an open alternative, soon.”
- Dave Weinberger says that the iPad is the “future of the past of books” and says it’s missing interactivity and collaboration as key features.
- John Gruber says that the iPad user experience feels like it’s all about speed, and says that Apple’s vertical integration play (the aforementioned Apple A4 chip) is responsible, and that “this is Apple’s way of asserting that they’re taking over the penthouse suite as the strongest and best company in the whole ones-and-zeroes racket” ahead of Sony, Nokia, and Samsung.
- Michael at Cruftbox sums up the reactions of the rest of the world and says, “You’ll bang on about features, data plans, DRM, open source, and a multitude of issues. You’ll storm the message boards, wring your hands, and promise you won’t buy one till ‘Gen 2.’ The din will grow and grow as time passes. And then one day, in a few months, you will actually hold one and use it. And you will say, ‘I want one. Iwant one right now.'”
I think what disappointed me about the launch was not the device but the position it occupies. Jobs sees the iPad as occupying empty space in the consumer world between a PC (laptop) and phone. And there is probably room in that position. But the iPad seems also to be firmly positioned, at least for now, as a companion device. You sync it to another computer over iTunes. There’s no USB port or optical drive. It’s not going to be replacing anyone’s laptop any time soon.
And, frankly, that’s what I was hoping it would do. Because while it looks like it blows away its target use cases (web browsing, mail, calendar, gaming, music, book reading, even office apps), there are some very real use cases it doesn’t handle. And not just being a development platform. Like:
- Preparing taxes (though Intuit could probably do a tax application for it)
- Scanning documents (no USB port…)
- Printing (ditto–though I wonder if it supports network based printing?)
- Videoconferencing (no camera and no ports)
- Organizing photos
- Making a calendar or Christmas card
Additionally, I have question marks about some of the use cases that it seems to handle well otherwise. Like: can I point its version of iTunes at my 500 GB network drive and play music from there? How do the new iWork apps manage their files? (Remember, there is no user visible file system on the iPhone OS, on which the iPad is based.)
But, my quibbles aside, I have to confess that I’ve already talked with my wife about getting one. We’re pretty excited for the brave new iPad future. Because for most of what it does, it does beautifully.
Grab bag: MacMillan Passion reviews
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Matthew Guerreri’s always satisfying review of the MacMillan Passion.
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Blog reaction to the MacMillan St. John Passion, with particular notes about the attendance.
1911 UVa Football Songbook
A quick post from the depths of Virginia musical history tonight. As part of a lot of miscellaneous University of Virginia memorabilia I got from eBay recently, I got an unusual item: a University of Virginia songbook that was handed out at football games. (Scans of the whole thing are available on Flickr.) This particular instance dates from 1911, and probably from the November 4 game against Wake Forest. (The attentive among us will note that in 1911, six games into the season, Virginia was 6–0, while the uncharitable will note that the games were played against Hampden-Sydney, William and Mary, Randolph-Macon, Swarthmore, St John’s, and VMI.)
Football songs? Sure. All those fight songs and team specific songs that appear on Songs of Virginia really were current at one time, and sung at games. Even “Oh, Carolina.” (“They can manufacture rosin, but they’ll never, never score.”) Almost as much fun are reading the ads, for a bunch of businesses that are no longer around (the Jefferson Shaving Parlor, anyone?) As the house ad in the back exhorts, “remember the advertisers,” indeed.
The book was published “for the benefit of the University of Virginia Band,” and I suspect that—aside from contributing the text of “The Good Old Song” and maybe others—the Glee Club had nothing to do with the book, as all evidence is that the group was on hiatus in 1911. But it’s still fun to look at, and to imagine the modern attendees of Scott Stadium swaying as they sing 115-year-old words to the tune of “Auld Lang Syne,” never quite realizing the depth of the tradition that they are, however inadvertently, keeping alive.
Grab bag: MacMillan reviews
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On the importance of fixing potential security bugs, whether you think they’re exploitable or not.
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Berkshire Review reviews the London Symphony Orchestra premiere recording of the Passion.
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Would have been a good night to catch a game at BC.
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Jeff does a review roundup of the MacMillan St. John Passion.
Grab bag: Google, good fonts, bad jokes
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Nice to see Microsoft start to put some meat in their requests to get users to move off IE6. Now we need to start to see some teeth. Wonder if we could start a movement to actively block IE6 users from getting online until they upgraded, or forcefully redirect them to a page where they could download a real browser.
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Really nice rundown of good font releases from 2009.
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As Conan burns the rest of his bridges with NBC, he gets funnier and funnier.
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Oh, this is going to end in tears. And the jokes that could be told: “What’s the difference between the All American Basketball Alliance and the NBA? About six inches and forty points per game.”
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Amazing what you can do with HTML and CSS these days.
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Something is up in Baltimore! Where is the Poe visitor?