August 2007
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Month August 2007

DAB digital radio prototype

The BBC’s Audio and Music’s R&D team are are currently working with Shulze & Webb to prototype Olinda. Olinda is a DAB Radio that as Matt Webb says:

  • “Radios can look better than the regular ‘kitchen radio’ devices. Radios can have novel interfaces that make the whole life-cycle of listening easier. At short runs, wood is more economic as plastic, so we’re using a strong bamboo ply. And forget preset buttons: Olinda monitors your listening habits so switching between two stations is the simplest possible action, with no configuration step.
  • This can be radio for the Facebook generation. Built-in wifi connects to the internet and uses a social ‘now listening’ site the BBC already have built. Now a small number of your friends are represented on the device: A light comes on, your friend is listening; press a button and you tune in to listen to the same programme.
  • If an API works to make websites adaptive, participative with the developer community, and have more appropriate interfaces, a hardware API should work just as well. Modular hardware is achievable, so the friends functionality will be its own component operating through a documented, open, hardware API running over serial.”

The physical radio is being designed and developed by Matt and Jack Schulze. However, clearly to deliver on these objectives there also needs to be a central repository to coordinate the network of friends and their listening behaviour. And this is being delivered by Radio Pop another prototype developed by Tristan and Chris which as Chris explains is:

“At its core is a database which stores radio listening, upon which we can build various views. By introducing friends lists, schedule information and the ability to simply bookmark, or ‘pop’, a particular point in time, Radio Pop generates a great deal of information about listening habits. We purposefully kept the database very simple and specified an input and output API so that the repository could be accessed using web and desktop widgets as well as through the Radio Pop web site.”

Radio Pop

Check out Tristan blog to find out more about Radio Pop and its development :).

10 Percent Time

10 Percent Time logoBit like Google’s 20% time and 3M’s Bootlegging Time (that resulted in the design of the Post-it note) we in the Technology and Design team at Audio and Music interactive have started ’10 Percent Time’.

The idea is to foster creativity by letting everybody spend 10% of their time developing their own ideas, as long as its got something to do with our work.

At last weeks kick-off meeting there were some really interesting ideas, as Tristan said we “… talk(ed) about websites for the Wii, accessibility – radio for the deaf and navigation for the blind – music recommendations and monkeys.”

Google and the evils of DRM

Last Wednesday Google shut down their commercial video service which let you buy or rent copyrighted videos. Unfortunately Google used a digital rights management (DRM) scheme that required Google to authorize, via the internet, the use of a video every time it was viewed – but since the service shut down this authorization can no longer take place leaving all videos purchased or rented unusable.

In other words closing the commercial part of Google Video has render thousands and thousands of purchases useless, unwatchable. And by way of compensation users only received a credit note which they can spend at any store that uses Google Checkout.

DRM

Ken Fisher at Ars Technica argues that the Library of Congress will now “have no choice but to consider the matter when they return to their triennial review and may granted exceptions to the anti-circumvention clause of the DMCA“. In any case it seems to me that if a heavy weight like Google has left their customers with a broken, worthless product because they pulled out of the market this presents a strong argument against DRM, since it leaves you, the customer, at the mercy of the retailer for access to your property.

UPDATE

Google have improved their refund policy: giving people a full cash refund in addition to the Google Checkout credit, plus letting people watch their video for another six months.

An improvement yes, but a solution no. It still doesn’t solve the problem that DRM is inherently anti-consumer – when a supplier decides to withdraw support, or goes out of business the video’s on your hard drive stop working. Google have demonstrated this wonderfully.

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