On Fri, 24 Mar, 2006 at 08:23PM -0500, Dana Olson spake thus:
<snip - in the interests of bandwidth>
Hmm, what about a page at SourceForge? I don't know if they have limits
on something like this, but I remember seeing something on SF that was
not an application, but a website for free stuff. I can't remember
exactly what it was, but it might be possible that they would host it
happily?
Argh! I hate getting stuff off source forge simply because of how
many clicks it takes.
I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about using them for a web host
for a free software project... A big sample/preset library site. Where
you can download stuff through a webpage, not through SF's stupid file
management/CVS crappy stuff. I've seen projects that do just this thing,
without using the file/project management stuff.
Ahhhh. That's different!
Personally, I
was thinking more in terms of samples than complete
pieces and had this idea that we would have a common library, accessed
through p2p. Maybe a bit fanciful.
I understand. I just don't really think p2p is the best tool for this
job - aside from the bandwidth issue, an easy-to-use website is much
better suited.
Then what we probably want is something like freesound. I thought
that it would be great, but most of it just turned out to be people
making silly noises and then uploading hundreds of copies of it
through different filters.
If we could do something similar, with some kind of quality control,
it might be better.
And I don't mean complicated quality control. Maybe something like
having to submit a track you've made before you get an account and
then you're free to upload.
I quite liked the P2P thing, especially since Circle has a web front
end, too. It would solve Folderol's storage problem at the same time.
James
--
"I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated
Development
That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you."
(By Vance Petree, Virginia Power)