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Journal

So the Songbird sings.

City 17

I have reinstalled Half-Life 2 to relive some of my best memories. Nothing quite like feeling like the saviour of the world against a remarkably effective rendition of a dystopian police force while wearing the good old HEV suit.

No More, I Swear!

I got quite frustrated with iTunes yesterday. I’ve basically been putting up with all the tiny faults because it was convenient in a way since it went with my iPod. You might know of course that I’ve been having issues. Well, recently, it’s become a bit more erratic, and after the recent update, I lost complete albums. It appears that they were completely corrupted because I couldn’t play the files in other media players either. (Thankfully they were albums that I had backed up and it was convenient to restore them. I didn’t have to dig out CDs or anything like that.)

There have a few other varieties of splicing corruption, but I’m too lazy to talk about it here.

Yesterday, a random error sprang up and kept springing up and refused to go away. I read a bit about the problem after a Google, but realised that a line had been crossed.

So I decided to give Songbird a spin and quickly went to download it. [via Songbird] So far it seems reasonably functional, with a few problems here and there. It lacks a couple of things I feel like I should see but don’t, although that must surely be attributed to its youth. After spending an hour or two with it, though, I’m reasonably happy. It runs faster (of course), is more well-organised, and hopefully won’t be giving me any of the headaches of iTunes.

A few quibbles, though: I noticed first of all that some songs (that play completely okay in other media players) end up with some awful distortion. I also was unable to navigate within a few tracks; I tried jumping some twenty seconds and the whole song became silence. There were rare occasions of skipping and noise, and it wasn’t as if I was doing anything memory-intensive. And it starts up slow sometimes, but that’ll probably be a memory issue on my computer’s part.

I haven’t done much else but play a few tracks, so I can’t comment much. I’ll be trying to load up my iPod with it soon, and will mess around with the library management too.

In any case, we’ll see where this goes. I’m sure I’ve had enough of iTunes, though, and am lucky that I’m using the non-Touch iPod, which is syncable in Songbird.

Kuwata!

Keisuke Kuwata performing Clapton’s Change The World. [via YouTube]

Lists

2666 has been named as TIME‘s book of the year. [via TIME]

Just so you don’t have to click through the whole fiction list…

  1. 2666, Roberto Bolaño
  2. Lush Life, Richard Price
  3. American Wife, Curtis Sittenfeld
  4. Anathem, Neal Stephenson
  5. Unaccustomed Earth, Jhumpa Lahiri
  6. Personal Days, Ed Park (which has a cute cover that I thought was difficult to read)
  7. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
  8. When Will There Be Good News?, Kate Atkinson
  9. The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman
  10. The Widows Of Eastwick, John Updike

I’ll definitely be picking up 2666, and if I can fit it in to my tiny budget, The Graveyard Book.

I was also a bit surprised not to see The Dark Knight on the movies list considering the hype and the fact that the film was actually relatively competent. It was good to see Synecdoche, New York at No. 2 since I intend to watch that as soon as I can get my hands on it.

On another note, 30Rock and The Colbert Report both made the list for TV Episodes (at 8 and 7 respectively). Elsewhere, Vampire Weekend made it to the Top Albums list at 5.

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