WINE + MP3 Gain

I haven’t found a lot of use for Wine, Ubuntu’s Windows Emulator, in the past because I have been able to find open source alternatives for most of the programs I use. MP3 Gain is a program I haven’t found an alternative to use yet so I decided to try it out via Wine.

Getting the program up and running with Wine is easy. Once Wine is installed on your system you install programs via an .exe file as you would in Windows. My only problem is that MP3 Gain runs really slowly on my system. I’ve had a lot of issues with freezing and lag. I don’t know if this is just my system or a general problem, Wine gives the emulation high marks, so I am curious if others have had the same problem.

Weekly Reader

  • New York Times on Orwell’s diaries being blogged on WordPress.
  • Christopher Sorrentino reviews John Barth’s new novel in Bookforum.
  • A book of letters between Bernard Henri Levy and Michel Houellebecq will be published soon.
  • An interesting “first person” piece in The Guardian about asexuality.
  • Alice Ferrebe’s Digital Orientalism: Japan & Electronic Literature.
  • Ubuntu Music Players

    For the first year or so I was running Ubuntu I used Amarok for my music player.  It’s simple, integrates with last.fm really well, and has a clean interface.  When Ubuntu 8.04 came out a problem arose. Whenever I ran Amarok for a decent amount of time my computer would overheat and/or slow down to a crawl.  Not wanting to burn out my computer or deal with lag, I decided to check out other music players for Ubuntu.  Here is a quick look at them:

    • Rythmbox’s interface was probably my favorite, similar to iTunes, and easiest to use. However, there was a big problem: while I found it pleasing that Rythmbox automatically updated my library when I added or subtracted files, it did not pick up newly retagged files.  In other words, you needed to get it right the first time or make sure everything is tagged before you add them.  Bogus.

    • Songbird seems to be very popular but I found the version I used to be buggy and prone to crashing.  Once I stop groaning at the newest version being code named “Fugazi” I might look into it again.

    • I am satisfied with using Banshee on a day to day basis.  The newest version, 1.2, has a nice library based interface that integrates with last.fm and radio stations/podcasts really well.  I use this player on a daily basis.  While it does not incorporate automatic updates for your library, I am content to remove and readd once in awhile for now until they do add that feature.

    Childhood Gaming Narratives

    Jane McGonigal’s recent post about her trip to China to run an alternate reality game on the site of the Olympics also discussed her first Olympic gaming experience in 1988 with Summer Games on the Commodore 64.  McGonigal goes on to describe her experience gaming that summer:

    During the real Olympic games that 1988 summer, I held my own Summer Games for myself on my Commodore 64. I would start up the computer game and enter 8 players. They were all made up versions of myself from different countries – you could play with 8 at a time — “Jane” from USA, “Juana” from Mexico, “Janelle” from France, “Jana” from the Netherlands (I don’t know why I thought that was a Dutch name), “Enaja” from Australia (Jane backwards, plus an extra “a” because it sounded prettier, ha ha thought my clever 10 year old self), etc. I would run every Summer Games event as all of my different Olympic Janes. The game was asynchronous multiplayer, rather than synchronous multiplayer, so I could try to do equal justice to each avatar. I would keep track of medals in my pastel pink Cool Shades notebook, and then after all the avatars ran every event, I would see which country had won the most. I was extremely methodical about this. And this would take pretty much an entire day. And THEN I would start over, and run the “simulated Jane Olympics” again, doing exactly the same thing with 8 more international Janes and see how THAT medal count went. And on and on and on.

    I had a similar experience over on the Apple IIC with Summer Games and also Winter Games.  I would create forms using Bank Street Writer with different countries and names.  I created brief backgrounds for each character and had them compete against each other for glory.  I did this for both Winter and Summer games and had the medal tallies combine to see which country would be champion.  I think I brought this over to other games like RC Pro Am for further events.

    As the years went on I did this in other games.  Track & Field II was a more developed game that allowed me to use more events and countries.  I remember a week long tournament I did in Nintendo World Cup where I came up with the idea that whatever team won would have their plan for world peace implemented.

    The big gaming narrative moment for me however came a few years later when EA introduced their NHL series for the Sega Genesis.  The first few years not only did not include real player names (which caused me to spend hours watching ESPN and hockey games to memorize them) but did not have the season modes gamers are familiar with these days.  I spent the entire thirty game season making my own schedules (I forget the formula, but I think I just made sure the number of home games was even and then randomized who each team played) with all the team represented  (I played a handful of games each day after school) and then a playoff tournament.  I created my own schedules and kept detailed scoring notes and standings on the computer.

    I also did this in other games like Baseball Stars (still the best Baseball game ever), Super NES Play Action Football (where I spent an entire fall doing a tournament of all the college teams, since the real NCAA didn’t seem keen on it even back then) and some others.  Baseball Stars was especially fun because not only could you create your own teams but you could create players.  There was a way to add female players to the teams.  I always made the girl I had a crush on all through middle school the star of my team.

    I created my own leagues and narratives in real life play as well as a child.  More on that in a future post.

     

    Weekly Reader

    Meanwhile…

    • The New Yorker piece on Obama’s early years in Chicago politics is another indicator he is just as scummy and slimy as the next politician.  Making the right friends, the right votes, the right influences; you might counter by saying “that’s politics” but I say that if you take part in that crap, I blame you.  I’d rather have no government than one filled with slimeballs.  None of the above…yet again…in 2008.

    • Alexander Solzhenitsyn recently passed away.  When we moved to Manahawkin, I remember the first friend I made was reading The Gulag Archipelago at the time.  We started to bond while discussing that and other books.

    • Io9 offers a guide for fans of the modern Doctor Who series who wish to get into the classic series.

    • Veronica Esposito comments on the amazing ending of The Mill On The Floss and links to a review of the novel from a 1860 issue of The Atlantic.

    • PETA still sucks as much as I remember.

     

    Sources For Ubuntu Information

    • Whenever I have a problem that a Google search cannot solve, my first stop is the Ubuntu Forums.  The user base is friendly, mostly, and very helpful with any number of problems you throw at them.  I have found solutions to many issues via these forums.
    • Ubuntu Tutorials is a useful site that offers…tutorials on various aspects of Ubuntu.
    • I am not a big fan of this site in general, but the Linux portion of Digg offers useful links from time to time if you can stomach the endless TOP 20 REASONS LINUX IS BETTER THAN WINDOWS $$#$@$##$^^&^&*#$@#@ style posts.
    • Lifehacker also has a surprising amount of Ubuntu and more general Linux news, links, and tips as well.

     

    Weekly Reader

    • Also, from The Quarterly Conversation, Grant Bailie’s new novel looks interesting, Bolano receives a lukewarm review for Nazi Literature In The Americas, and Daniel Green covers Donald Barthelme, an author I have wanted to check out for a number of years.

    Meanwhile…

    On Twitter….

    • WordPress 2.6 came out this week. Everyone should upgrade their blogs as soon as possible. The best way I have found is to install this plugin, which takes care of the upgrade rather seamlessly.

    • Dr. Kinsella has finished uploading his student’s readings of Paradise Lost from this past semester. I am going to give these a listen soon.

    • I am really impressed with the new version of last.fm that was opened up for the public a few days ago. Add me on there. The “neighbors” stream is quite impressive; it gave me artists as varied as Devo, Eric Dolphy, Negative Approach, and The Birthday Party the other night.