On Fri, 2006-03-24 at 15:50 +0100, Ismael Valladolid Torres wrote:
Rob escribe:
Or we could adopt a "when in Rome"
approach and stick [LAU] in
the filename like pirate groups do. That might actually help
eventually in establishing a "brand" and getting lots of people
to help seed this stuff because they'll know it's good.
I like this but we should be sure if it works, I mean, if searching
for "[LAU]" would return a list of our shared files.
We should agree a server all our P2P clients should be connected to so
searches return all available files.
Why not doing this? Simply announcing here when a new file is
available so interested people can go and downloading it.
Cordially, Ismael
I think this is a great idea... Can we expand this to include anything?
Like ZynAddSubFX patches, AMSynth, Om, etc.. All that stuff? If there is
such a site for those types of files already, please feel free to pass
it along. :)
Maybe posting to the list would become pretty busy... Perhaps a website
where you can add entries with filename/contents/description would be
good? That way we don't get 500 emails a day. :)
I would be willing to work on that website if you all think it's a good
idea. I could put checkboxes too for file contents, and have icons to
show what each file contains, like check off if it's a MIDI file, WAV
files, DLS, SF2, etc. I think it'd be a really good idea, and I have the
time to do up the site, and I can host it on
UbuntuStudio.com (unless
someone more generic, ex:
LinuxAudio.org, wants to host it).
As far as networks go, is there a good command-line client that we could
use that will run in a screen session and not take up a gig of RAM?
Ideally, IMHO, the FrostWire/LimeWire clients are great, but I'd prefer
a screen session to leave it running in the background.
Dana