Viewing posts in the category of Technology

Was on ChurchCrunch and I saw this post on the Catalyst Music Project.  I got all excited about it.

[ Catalyst Music Project | Aaron Keyes from Catalyst on Vimeo ].

So here’s the deal.  The music industry is changing.  No, it already has changed.  Not everyone knows it yet.

The Web is empowering the artists and the listeners.  People who would have never made it into the mainstream 20 years ago can make a living.  And people can find just that right band even if their taste is a little off the beaten path.

Pandora gave me a band I would have never found otherwise.  (It’s Tokyo Rose, if you’re wondering)  I bought a few songs from iTunes once I found them.  It was awesome!

We need to take heed, my friends!  The change is upon us!  Okay, all poetic verbage aside, there are awesome ideas just waiting to be used.

What will the future be?  How has the web changed music for you?

wplogoblue-stacked-rgb

As a new theme builder myself, I had to ask around on what I needed to know to build a Wordpress theme.  So, I made a short list.  Here are the basic things you need to build yourself a Wordpress theme.

CSS

Cascading Style Sheets are awesome.  They make your whole site look great (and uniform), and can even quickly make another site or project blend in.  (for example, ChurchCrunch and its forums)

You need to get familiar with this code because it will style everything on your site.  Setting up columns, the width of your page, what color your text is, the background, it’s all done here.

CSS is probably the easiest way to start with themes.  I used a stock theme and tweaked the .css file until I got something of what I wanted.  Once you get the hang of that, you’ll be ready for more. [Continue reading...]

movingtruckJoshua Wagner Online now has a new home.  The blog is now being hosted on DreamHost and is powered by Wordpress.  I’ve been working on the new theme for about three weeks now, and I think it works pretty well.  I’ll be adding to it here and there for probably a few weeks.

I’ve called the theme SlateBlue (for obvious reasons).  I’m considering releasing the theme in some form, but I’m not sure yet.  Any suggestions are welcome as well.

Enjoy!

[Image by NeitherFanboy]

I sat down and watched Michael Hyatt’s presentation at O’Reilly Tools of Change Publishing Conference on “Blogging as a Tool of Change.”  If you haven’t watched it, you should.  And it got me thinking on how we use all this new tech.

One thing that he said in the presentation really struck me.  “You’re not going to find the future unless you engage it.”  That seems so simple, but so elusive.  We can’t sit on the sidelines and expect to leverage these new technologies for our own good.

Change will come.  It always has and always will.  If you want to be a part of the change, you need to be involved.  Get dirty with it, try it out.  I have been finding out lately that the more tools I try, the more incredible the landscape becomes.  I see more opportunities and think of more ideas.

And make no mistake, the future is on the internet.

Just a few thoughts today.

Posted via web from On Life, Stories, and Music

Balance of Control

January 14, 2009 | Music | Technology

After seeing much news about copyright control, the RIAA, and others, I am getting frustrated.

I just read this article from Mashable that YouTube is muting audio to respect copyright.

Okay, hold up a second.

You’re saying that you’re going to force places like YouTube to coform to the old rules about copyright in a completely new medium?  I think these folks need to read the writing on the wall.

First, a disclaimer: I understand the spirit of copyright.  I am a writer and musician.  If a song I write gets out into the mainstream, I want compensation!  I want to receive something for the effort I put in to the song.  People who put effort into construction receive something.  Why shouldn’t artists?

That said, art is (and has always been) a place where imitation, copying, and using are good for the whole.  Let me explain.  When you contribute art to the community, other people get ideas.  Other people use your ideas to inspire their own.  They inspire you, and the cycle continues.  If we place too harsh restrictions on music (i.e. You can’t even use one bit of my recording or I can sue you for everything you have), then creativity is stifled.  The art as a whole is diminished.

If someone wants to make their own crazy video of themselves doing a “music video” to to your tune, why is that so bad?  People know who you are, people want to know what that song is.  It just might get you another fan, you know, the one who buys all of your special edition albums?

This is the crux of the new music culture we are in.  And we are there, it has arrived.  As this post from earlier this month points out, people come to you because of your music.  It is incredibly too easy to aquire music for free.  DRM doesn’t work all that well.  It’s also kind of annoying.  I can’t take my iTunes music to another computer without first authorizing it and maybe deauthorizing another computer.  Wait, I bought it.  They are my copies of the song.  Why can’t I move them to my own property?  Thankfully, iTunes is removing DRM (but you get to pay for the priviledge of being a part of the new medium before they removed it, article here).

All ranting aside, here’s the point: music is no longer about the physical recording of the song.  It’s about the music and the people who create musical art.

Once again, I’m not advocating anarchy in the music biz.  I want artists to be rewarded for their efforts.  But I also want to be creative without being stifled.  This is a balance we must find soon, or the music business as a whole may be in for a seriously rough time.

Posted via web from On Life, Stories, and Music

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