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Agriculture, skepticism, politics

Aaron’s tweets for the week

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  • @dreamnotoftoday too bad she doesn’t have a sexy name. Sapphire Smith would be better. On the main stage at @FoxNews. #
  • Finished up a new theme install for https://aarontraffas.com. One of these days, I’m going to make my own. #
  • @scbidcaller I use WordPress. It’s very simple to install on your website so long as you have access to the MySQL databases. in reply to scbidcaller #
  • @scbidcaller My – and many – web host has a control panel with Fantastico so I can actually install WordPress with three clicks. #
  • @scbidcaller I don’t use Fantastico because WordPress is sooooo easy to install as stand-alone, but it’s possible. #
  • Week: begun #
  • I’m not really liking the green on the new https://aarontraffas.com. I’m probably going to try to hack it to blue or red soon. #
  • Done with meetings for the day at #purplewave and now ready to go to work. #
  • @stbain Was it malwarebytes.org that you endorsed a few weeks ago? #
  • @stbain Thanks! Going to fire it up now and see how it does on a coworker’s zombie. in reply to stbain #
  • Here’s the antidote for the poison of motivational speakers: http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4096 #
  • @dreamnotoftoday You have to give up the URL for the generator. in reply to dreamnotoftoday #
  • I’m looking forward to buzzword bingo at the next meeting. I’m going to get a dobber. #
  • I just learned from @traffase that if you put dishes in the freezer, nothing grows and you don’t ever have to wash them. Genius. #
  • Blue carries the day on https://aarontraffas.com – thoughts? Comments on the color scheme? A few bugs in the pages-with-subpages to fix. #
  • http://twitpic.com/17p1j – Watching House with @dpoe and @traffase #
  • Booking flights through NAA Travel – the auctioneers’ official travel agent. Charleston and Indianapolis. Up up and away. #
  • @mayoauction Congratulations, Director Mayo! in reply to mayoauction #
  • I’d bet AuctionServices could install WordPress for you…all it takes is for them to connect it to the database, then it’s self-sufficient. #
  • @scbidcaller That last tweet was at you. #
  • I realize why Twitter doesn’t want threading, but it would sure make it harder to forget to hit the reply button. #
  • Updated the coverage of the KAA convention with pictures using a new picture gallery system. #
  • Chelsea Handler > Bill Maher > David Letterman > Craig Kilborn > Conan O’Brien > Jay Lenno > Jimmie Kimmel #
  • Getting ready to settle in for some coding after two days of meetings and administrative tasks. Auction Podcast tonight with Kurt Aumann! #
  • Prepping for episode 15 of the Auction Podcast. New recording system is so slick and reliable. Kurt Aumann is my guest tonight. #
  • I’m going to try to stream the recording of the Kurt Aumann auction podcast episode live on auctioneertech.com…we’ll see how it works. #
  • Live broadcast for Auction Podcast 15 with Kurt Aumann – http://www.auctioneertech.com – come chat! #
  • Done recording tonight’s Auction Podcast. Posting soon! #
  • Good morning from smoggy, downtown Manhattan, Kansas. #
  • Watching #Diggnation in HD on 50 inches of plasma. Anyone know of a good podcast plugin for Windows Media Center now that TVTonic is dead? #
  • I got Chromium running on Ubuntu. Piece of cake! http://www.codeweavers.com/services/ports/chromium/ #
  • http://twitpic.com/1a8ak – Sunday morning web development. #

Alleged Junction City Police Department corruption nets raids

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Rumor has it that last night three Junction City, Kan., police officers had their homes raided on suspected money laundering and drug trafficking charges. Supposedly, over the course of the last several months, they facilitated “ride-alongs” to persons they believed to be officers from neighboring counties which were in fact undercover FBI agents investigating the actions of the officers.

Again, this report is based on nothing but an unsubstantiated rumor. However, I’ll be watching the papers over the course of the next few days to see if anything develops of this rumor.

My last.fm review from AuctioneerTech

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Image representing Last.fm as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase

I posted this article recently over on the other blog. I’ve recently become a fan – nay, a fanatic – of social music site Last.fm. It could be described as Internet radio, but with several twists that make it also a music recommendation engine. I started using the service several years ago, but only recently figured out how to truly integrate it into the day-to-day routine.

The service can be used a number of ways. At its most basic level, you can login to the site with a browser and simply play music from the website. You tell Last.fm an artist you like, and it generates a “station” that plays music similar to that artist.

Last.fm knows what’s similar not by someone making arbitrary associations but by the millions if not billions of plays from users who then rate the songs with either a love or a ban. When you click the love button, you tell Last.fm that the song it played is a match to your musical tasts. When you click the ban button, you tell it that you don’t like that song and not to play it again. Last.fm uses this preference information, in addition to the artist you picked at the beginning, to build an enormous database of music relationships.

Using Last.fm at this level is novel and entertaining, but I always found myself reverting back to playing music with the Amarok, Zune or, recently, iTunes music players because the sound quality was better for locally-stored music than that streamed over the Internet. A few weeks ago, I learned how to use Last.fm to scrobble music and everything changed.

Here’s the definition and explanation of scrobbling from the Last.fm website.

Scrobbling a song means that when you listen to it, the name of the song is sent to Last.fm and added to your music profile.

Once you’ve signed up and downloaded Last.fm, you can scrobble songs you listen to on your computer or iPod automatically. Start scrobbling yourself, and see what artists you really listen to the most. Songs you listen to will also appear on your Last.fm profile page for others to see.

Millions of songs are scrobbled every day. This data helps Last.fm to organise and recommend music to people; we use it to create personalised radio stations, and a lot more besides.

With the Last.fm program downloaded and installed, every song played on your iPod, iTunes or other supported music players is recorded on the Last.fm website. This data mining means that the user profile records all music played locally and adds it to the user’s Last.fm library to generate reports and charts, which can be embedded on websites or other social networks like the one at the top right of this post, showing the users preferences.

Last.fm is a music recommendation engine in that it learns what you like and then exposes you to other music that you should like, based on the algorithms and database of music relationships. The accuracy of the system is amazing.

Finally, Last.fm is a social network. What good is music if it can’t be shared? Like Facebook or MySpace, users can associate their profiles with other friends. Once you have a friend on Last.fm, you can actually stream his or her music library. Last.fm also ranks your musical compatibility with your friends on a graduated scale, so you can know how well you would get along with someone on a long car ride.

With Last.fm competitor Pandora releasing a new version of its iPod application within the last 24 hours, it seems like the game is afoot for Internet music. Last.fm wins with its scrobbling abilities, but there are services that will actually allow a user to scrobble Pandora songs to Last.fm. I say just use Last.fm.

If you’re a Last.fm user, add traffas as your friend. Here’s a link to the profile. www.last.fm/user/traffas

Are you a fan of Internet radio? Do you like Pandora more than Last.fm? Tell me about it in the comments.

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Blue carries the day

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Finalizing the newest WordPress theme to carry the Aaron Traffas Band through 2009, I’m getting ready to watch an episode of House and then 24 with Diane and Erica.

Lucas “Booker” Maddy has lined up several more shows that helped fill up the new shows block on the home page. Look out, Manhattan. We’re going to saturate.

We welcome your comments and suggestions. Click the “comments” link for any post to leave comments. Through the new Disqus plugin, you can now leave video comments if your laptop or desktop has a video camera. Cooler things coming. Stay tuned.

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Aaron’s tweets for the week

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Walking Douglass

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I bought a guitar amplifier today. It’s a little Vox practice amp. I realized that I never, ever perform without running the amp through a microphone and, indeed, spend most of the time trying to figure out how to keep the performers on stage – including myself – from hearing the amp rather than the guitar signal in the ear monitors. With this regard, the purchase of the little – some would mistakenly say cute – amp made perfect sense for portability and price. Now I have to learn how to use it.

I purchased the device from Phil Uhlik Music in Wichita. I was distributing flyers for an upcoming auction of guitars, folk instruments and other like-kind items. I entered and was waiting to talk to Nick Uhlik when Phil walked out from the back. It was very good to see him – I hadn’t in the last several years. He’s always remembered my name since I started buying instruments and equipment from them over 10 years ago in high school, and it always felt good to be called by name when I walked into a store in the big city, even if it was by a guy who has a freakish ability to remember names. His kindness and friendly nature more often than not served to cause me to buy something more or something better.

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New comments system

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I’m finally installing the Disqus comments system on the site tonight, and it may be a a short while before the comments are processed and put back. Don’t worry, I didn’t delete anything.

I’m winding down after a long auction tonight and one hell of a past few months. Developer sprints are tough when you’re the only developer. We implemented a fairly complete overhaul of the way the Purple Wave bidding system handles auctions in order to accommodate some of the overstock auctions we’ve been doing recently. The work is finally winding down, and I sincerely hope to be more of a presence on the website.

Chris “G” Goering had one hell of a blog post, and I hope you take the time to read it. Mason and I are excited about the new year and what musical possibilities it may hold. Trevor Burgess is activated again after having been off the grid for the last few years. Look for an acoustic show with the two of us at Bobby T’s on V-day in a few weeks. Lucas Maddy moved to Wichita and will be playing with us as much as the schedule will allow.

I’ve been a blogging fool over at auctioneertech.com, and that’s where I’ve been doing most of my writing lately. My auction tech blog was recently featured in the January 2009 edition of the Auctioneer magazine. I also started a podcast where I discuss what’s new and exciting as well as interview auctioneers and industry experts about auctions and auction technology.

I’m getting ready to head to Wichita tomorrow to the Kansas Auctioneers Association convention. It should be a fun time. I’ll be doing a fair amount of tweeting during the experience. I’ve become a huge fan of Twitter. Sign up for an account at www.twitter.com and follow me at twitter.com/traffas. The real-time updates and picture postings from the phone is pretty impressive.

That’s it for tonight. Hopefully this post will go through before Ubuntu Studio 9.04 resets my DNS settings again.

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