blogs tagged "archive"

Introducing noise-arch radio

Sun Dec 03 2023 19:10:00 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)

tags: noise-arch noise radio streaming audio archive

Introducing noise-arch radio. It's a thing I created.

It's a long-form audio stream of the items in the noise-arch cassette archive collection on archive.org.

Not everything in the collection is great, and some of it is obnoxious, but there are some real treasures in there as well! I find it fun to randomly "tune" in now and again to hear what's playing.

I calculated the total runtime from the metadata in the collection -- it's just over 2 weeks. In other words, the playlist will get re-shuffled about every 14 days. It's a lot of content.

I have no idea how many listeners it can support on such a small cloud instance, and I have given zero thought about scaling it. I assume nobody cares or actually wants to listen to this stuff, so whatever.

Sorry Vimeo

Wed Feb 22 2023 20:54:20 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)

tags: video vimeo archive deathoftheinternet

Many years ago now (a lifetime in internet years), this really fun, accessible, site called Vimeo sprung up, allowing creative folks to post video content. It was kinda like YouTube, before Google really made YouTube into whatever the hell it is now. Vimeo had a lot of polished, intentionally artful content, and it also seemed to be friendly to makers and hackers and stuff. I dunno. Apparently it struggled to find itself, to find its niche or place of sustainability in the world of fledgling video streaming sites. Back when sites didn't have to be services. Back before everything was trying to demand subscriptions for bemusing, mundane or purely educational content.

Anyway, it seems that Vimeo has probably been on its last leg for several years now, presumably sold off and passed along to whoever is trying to save it from itself. To maximize profits over people. Same shit. Different company.

These things happen. One "important" expensive person makes a "tough decision" and then entire communities of content disappear, sometimes overnight.

I don't know what has or will happen with Vimeo per se, but it seems to be on the way out and I don't wanna stick around to find out. In fact, I haven't for years.

So I pulled my old content down and have it archived here in a personal vimeo archive now. It's not that big, hosting it should be fine.

WCSB Noise Rotation archive

Sat Nov 17 2018 15:55:50 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)

tags: wcsb radio noise freeform cleveland archive archive.org

20181117-wcsb_logo_1024.png

TL;DR - I archived 78 episodes (~150 hours) of a radio show and you can listen to them here.

It was probably 19 years ago that I discovered the FM station WCSB streaming on the internet. It was a special time, those Napster days when the internet still felt like something new...and most people were still on dialup or at best a home DSL connection. 1999 held all kinds of new opportunity to discover exciting things in a newly connected world...like finding an mp3 of a rare/hard-to-find b-side or having your head melted by stumbling into entirely new genres of music.

For me, listening to audio streams on shoutcast/icecast and direct from a few misc sources was a crucial part of that exploration/growth/discovery.

The "Noise Rotation" (sometimes fondly called the "noise rot") on WCSB was a 2-hour block of specialty programming that rotated its DJ/host each week. I have no idea when it started or ended, but I can say that it was alive at least from May 2000 through May 2002. I enjoyed listening to it because I could catch bands that I was familiar with (like Negativland and Foetus, for example) followed by a 40 minute wall of droney noise and shit that I'd never heard of. The freeform nature of the programming was really inspiring, and completely different from the college station I volunteered with. It seemed like they could get away with anything!

These days, many radio stations keep archives of their shows, and you can listen to them on your own time. Hell, some shows are just podcasts now that happen to also be broadcast on the FM band and the internet at certain times. But back then, storing and indexing and making a nonstop rotating archive of material was rarely feasible. Also, storage was expensive (a 20GB hard drive might have set you back about $120). For me, I just wanted to listen to shows on my own schedule...so I began recording.

I'm sure that I had a cron job set up to just begin recording the cbr stream and dump the output to a file (probably using wget or curl). Due to the somewhat chaotic nature of college/community radio and computer time drift, I started recording a few minutes before and let it run a few minutes late. Even then, I'm sure that I missed content.

I blogged about the Noise Rotation back in early 2001 and hadn't thought much about it since. At that time, I was excited to have edited down 24 hours of material by trimming and removing ads/commercials. I'd listen to a show every few years, but mostly since access to everything is so plentiful and the quality is greater, I didn't revisit it much.

I'm pretty sure that I stopped recording the show in May 2002 when we moved back to Oregon and just never set it back up.

This year I found the recordings again and decided that enough time had passed that others might now find them useful/fun/important/historical. I spent many many nights trimming the rest of the episodes and normalizing/preparing them for upload. I decided that in the interest of historical preservation and to expedite editing, that I would not remove any host chatter and I would leave all the station IDs and event announcements and disclaimers in place. I removed dead air a few times though. :)

In the process of working the recordings, there were a few interesting times...like the time where the prior (blues?) show just continued because the Noise Rot person didn't ever show up. I'm pretty sure daylight savings bit me on a couple of the recordings, and one of the hosts just talked more than he played music. I think the station went off-air at least one time as well.

The final result wasn't that much data by today's standards (only about 1.6GB), but I couldn't imagine creating each item by hand using the web interface on archive.org. Luckily, tools exist to help with this stuff, so I hacked up a script to help automate things. The first attempt at upload/archive failed after about 3 or 4 files due to automated spam throtting...but a quick email to a support admin at archive.org fixed things up and I was able to complete the process the next day.

I ended up having 78 usable recordings, which comprise about 157 hours of noise. Click here to enjoy or just click the logo above.

Noise and the future is now.

Sat Feb 28 2009 01:20:28 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)

tags: archive archive org internet

MySpace has always sucked...so fock MySpace. Well fine, it has it's place, so do the other social nets... Not only is archive.org officially and formally a nonprofit with library status, they are also classified as the bee's knees, the good stuff, what's good, what matters. Although this is nothing new, I have to keep reminding myself (and you!) just how fundamentally RAD it is that I can listen to an amazing recording of a noise performance in Estonia a mere day after it was made. The future really is now. This is what radio should be, or at least will be...once we all work around the restrictions. I keep coming back to this idea...about ditching the restrains of monetized networks, for-profit tools, and encouraging people to seek enlightenment. Seek answers through knowing the potential of your tech..... Learn what's out there, what can be done freely, truly freely, let's build tools to help people get free...