. So, you have five hundred tapes and albums of the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and the like, and want then on your computer? Well, you could spend hundreds of dollars replacing music you already paid for once with CDs. Or, instead of paying twenty bucks per album, you could spend twenty cents per album to convert your tapes and vinyl to CD and rip those. Read more for how. Also, the instructions below will allow you to defeat any copy protection. Period. Just substitute "cheap CD walkman" for "stereo." Caution- doing this in the United Statesor other parts of the world may be a felony. Those in less corrupt, more civilized parts of the world need not fear. Or alternately, you can make CDs of your own band. [
< 10:54:57 AM
>
Rather, not. There isn't a smoking gun on the Dan Rather/CBS case. It's more like a firing squad of machine guns that barely stop to re-load. Dan Rather's career death is starting to look like Sonny Corleone's.
The first shots I heard were from talk radio, whose entire left wing is comprised of a few hosts on the likes of KGO, and the tiny, barely audible Air America (which, predictably, has nothing about the CBS Matter on its prose-packed Web site).
Then I began to read around the right-led blogosphere that the documents on which CBS based its offending report (regarding George W. Bush's service record) were likely forgeries, and that CBS in any case failed to show its sources were originals. Or something like that. (Spare me the quibbles. I'm agreeing with you.) To make a long story (about my own reading) short (which it in fact is), it now seems clear to me, long after it became clear to pretty much everybody else, that CBS' fucked up rather (pun intended) royally. Look up Dan Rather on Google News, or Rathergate on Technorati, and you'll find approximately zero support for the poor man. (Sheila Lennon, whom I respect enormously, is a rare exception. I'm sure there are others; but damn few.)
Andrew Sullivan sums it up with his usual pith and vinegar:
How do I put this to Rather: it doesn't matter if the underlying story is true. All that matters is that CBS's evidence is fake. Get it? End of story. For what it's worth: I believe Bush got into the Guard because of his dad's connections. I believe he probably didn't perform his duties adequately in his final two years. When I first read the CBS story, I thought the docs were "devastating." I'm not backing this president for re-election. But all that is completely beside the frigging point. Journalists are supposed to provide accurate evidence for their claims. CBS didn't. And its response to the critics is to stonewall and try and change the subject. The correct response - the one they'd teach you in kindergarten journalism class - is immediately to check the authenticity of the documents as best you can, and if the doubts persist, to apologize immediately and yank the story. Can you imagine what CBS News would do if a government official found to be peddling fake documents refused to acknowledge it? And kept repeating his story nonetheless? They'd be all over it. But, you see, they are above politicians. They are above criticism. And they are stratospheres above bloggers who caught them red-handed.
But the machine gun post that blows the most holes through Dan and what's left of the Tiffany Network is Ernest Miller's Incompetent or Unethical? The Story of CBS News' Response to Criticism Over the Killian Memos. Ernie has put his legal training to good work here, drawing even the most reluctant among us (including myself) to the same, unavoidable conclusion.
Where I differ with him is not with any of his facts, or his arguments, but around this statement here:
This story is important because the blatant flouting of basic and fundamental journalistic practices by one of the largest and prominent news organizations in the country is undermining the credibility of journalism as a whole.
That credibility has never been better than every good journalist's commitment to do the best they can, under the circumstances (which usually involve constrained time and resources). Which is to say compromised, though understandably so. What's changed is the involuntary outsourcing of fact-gathering and -checking to a growing assortment of amateurs and professionals who are largely external to the profession. What we need isn't competition between blogs and mainstream news outlets, but a working symbiosis between the two.
Which I think is inevitable.
What will survive, ironically, will be the flag Dan Rather holds high while his voice is reduced to bubbles on the water: a commitment to The Truth behind whatever it is we say in our reporting.
As important as the Gotcha! game has always been to journalism, I've always been uncomfortable with it.
In 1990 D. Patrick Miller wrote a piece in The Sun called "Toward a Journalism of consciousness." In it he wrote about how, with investigative journalism, the reporter sometimes needs to gain, then betray, the trust of his sources, always for a greater good [~] a story the world needs to hear. Early in my own career I did an investigative report on rural poverty that led me to the same conclusion: that we sometimes employ dishonest or morally compromising means to serve what we believe to be honest and morally justifiable ends. However we put it, rationalization is involved. Such is also often the case with the Gotcha! game. Yeah, we win, but what, besides the exposed butts of those whose pants we pull down? In some cases, big things, sure. In others, not much.
Ironically, winning at Gotcha! was what put 60 Minutes on the map in the first place. It's also why I've never liked the show, and why I agreed with Hal Crowther when he called the program "America's public executioner," or something like that. Hal wrote that back when Mike Wallace wore an honest hair color and grilled a fresh victim every Sunday evening. (It was a routine perfectly lampooned once on Saturday Night Live by Martin Short and Harry Shearer, who played Wallace expertly.)
Right now Dan and CBS are losing the same Gotcha! game they've played for decades on 60 Minutes. I don't think that's any kind of poetic justice, or karma, or anything to cheer. It's a tragic story.
Because the truths we need to know aren't just the one Gotcha!s expose. And getting to those will take another kind of journalism: one we won't copy off TV, and we won't need to save [~] because we still don't have it yet.
[The Doc Searls Weblog]
< 10:52:53 AM
>
Defense Tech. GPS airdrop system. Very cool. [John Robb's Weblog]
< 10:50:13 AM
>
Electoral Vote Predictor explains how polling works. It's not very scientific. [Scripting News]
< 10:49:06 AM
>
FAA Radio outage affects flights throughout the western U.S.
FAA had to put gate hold procedures in to effect, literally ground
aircraft throughout the western U.S. due to a radio system outage. The
radio system automatically shuts down if it does not receive requred
maintenance (Is that a good design?). The FAA forgot to do the maintenance...
[Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
< 10:47:29 AM
>
NTSB Chair: " She
said there still are no definitive studies showing that talking on a
cell phone is more dangerous than any number of other motorist
activities, such as eating, applying makeup, reaching for a drink,
adjusting the radio or "telling the children in back to be quiet.""
(Since accident rates are flat to down, the only way celphones can
cause a lot of accidents is if they substitute for some other
distraction. Instead of adjusting and listening to the radio, drivers
talk on the celphone. Thus, celphone bans have little to no impact on
overall accident rates.)
[Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
< 10:46:44 AM
>
You would never know from our "news organizations" but a
hurricane is about to strike Baja California and continue on in to
Southern California and Arizona. Really. CNN does not even mention Hurricane Javier, but its right on the National Hurricane Center web page.
Those
of us who live on the West Coast know that if it happens in the West
and its not in either San Francisco or Los Angeles, then it did not
actually happen. TV news people are too busy creating and pretending to
check their forged memos to fly out and report on conditions in the
primitive west.
The issues with "See BS" just keep getting worse.
Their alleged "unimpeachable" source for the forged See BS memos turns out to be "Dubious Diss from a Disgruntled Dolt", says NYPost. The source writes in an online
posting that he had "reassembled" lost memos ("Reassembled?"). He boasted online that the Democratic National Committee "was afraid to do what I suggest"
(Like duh?) See
BS insists they have authentic "memos" written in 1972 using Microsoft
Word -6.0 because Dan Rather says so.
Why do I follow this story here? How is it related to technology.
First, I am an expert in word processing technology (developed two #1
best selling word processors) and could easily spot the hoax. Second,
the Internet is the key technology that busted See BS. (A related story
has to do with the military records of Bush and Kerry but I'm not
following that. I'm following the technology side and the failures of
See BS.)
Of interest: Pajama-brigade intelligence agent spies Dan Rather on Saturday morning, Sep 18th flight to Dallas, Texas (really).
[Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
< 10:46:00 AM
>
Nice article on upcoming dual-core processors.
All the CPU manufacturers (including Intel, finally) are moving to
dual-core processors. In effect, that is like two CPUs in one big chip.
[Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
< 10:44:51 AM
>