Slightly off of the conversational thread here but: Information on the specific output spectrum capabilities might improve transcoding of audio files into smaller file sizes. If there is no, or poor quality, auditory response below or above a given threshold, it might be worth snipping off various frequencies, or otherwise optimizing how materials are encoded to take advantage of this.
Is Jamendo, or anyone else, studying this? And Re: above conversation. Yes, I would love to see ethnologists get involved. The at the moment I don't believe is a lack of effort on anyone's part, but a lack of available material. Go to most university's music libraries and you will still find plenty of content in vinyl format as opposed to cd-audio or digital formats. Getting recordings made or existing recordings released into the public domain is an important project, and one of the main topics of a "What should Wikipedia do with $100 Million dollars" thread about a year back. I believe that just about everyone is on the same page here as far as what they would *like* to see on the OLPC. In the meantime I think that the current selections are far better than nothing.. Seth On 10/28/07, Jean Piché <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > If I may summarize, what you are saying is that: > > > > a) Given that this is about education, OLPC should be taking the > > cultural high road in terms of bundled music. > > yes. > > > > b) The perception that acceptable licensing terms will be difficult > > to impossible to obtain should not get in the way of a) > > yes. > > > _______________________________________________ > Devel mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel >
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