How to make money with linux...
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Mon Apr 5 20:58:48 EDT 1999
John Chambers wrote:
> Being
> able to download music on the fly and pop it up on a screen isn't too
> useful if the screen will only hold 4 bars of music, or is in a
> format that's only readable if you flop your head over sideways.
>
Sounds to me like sheet music is on it's way out the door. Perhaps
your musicians should learn to read bar-code :-)
Heck, fire the musicians and teach the instruments to read bar-code...
Well, such suggestions have been made off and on, and of course there
is a lot of computer-generated music about. But mechanical music has
always lacked something. Anyhow, even if you think musicians are
obsolete, lots of musicians don't think so, and they seem to just
bullheadedly keep playing even when you can buy recordings that are
"just as good". Sales of musical instruments are not falling off.
But some of us wouldn't miss sheet music, if there were a better way
to do it. This is especially true of the folk crowds that I hang out
with, who are generally contemptuous of musicians who need printed
music as a crutch. Many of them actually find a computerized version
more acceptable, probably in part because it's empemeral. So far,
like lots of marvels of modern electronics, computerized sheet music
is more promise than delivery. The day may be in view, however. The
only question is whether we can get all the pieces together in a way
that's actually usable.
(Very few musicians would feel sorry for the music publishers, just
as few musicians feel sorry for the recording industry's ongoing
fight against piracy of recordings.)
I'm reminded of the case study of the supposedly well-done document
processing system built on some IBM mainframes back in the 60's,
which failed because the publishing industry just wouldn't take
seriously a system that couldn't print out lower-case letters. It
didn't matter how good the software is if you have such a failure,
and of course the software guys had no say over it. Their software
could handle lower-case letters quite well, but if you can't get a
lower-case printer for your demos, it doesn't matter.
Similarly, I can download "sheet music" in a compact, easy-to-type
(and emailable) format, convert it to postscript, and pop up some
very nice "sheet music" in a ghostview window. But my desktop PC
would be laughed at in any of the music environments that I
frequently find myself, and rightly so. It's a physical package that
simply is so unusable (in this environment) that if you seriously
suggested using it, nobody would argue with you. You would simply be
considered too clueless to be worth even the smallest effort; lets
play another tune instead.
But I do like to check occasionally to see if the right stuff might
be available somewhere that I haven't heard of. Bleeding-edge folks
like a linux users group seem like the right people to ask. Wearables
are another area of potential, but their emphasis really is in a
different direction.
The best potential is probably with the palmtops. Now if they could
be persuaded to build one that's as big as a laptop ...
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