Hi John
Let me know what you need, I'm in Cardiff at the moment.
Can code a website and use only OpenSource to record with.
Would be nice to showcase our stuff
Cheers
Bob
John Mulholland wrote:
I am the person responsible for opensourcemusic.info.
Please allow me to introduce myself. I am twenty six, and a sometime
student living in Southampton, UK. I live and breathe music, and I
guess I would be referred to as a geek by most of my friends.
I registered the domain sometime ago. Until about two weeks ago the
site was actually quite broad. There was a glossary, downloads, a
reading lists, downloads (culled from sharewaremusicmachine) and lots
and lots of news items (creative commons, p2p, patents, stuff like
that.) I was working on getting the site to show in several different
languages (using a tool called mamblefish) when it all went badly wrong.
The server guys have kindly provided me with a backup with which I am
looking to rebuild the site. There is some truth in the sentence that
the site is run by a group of volunteers. In as much as that there are
one or two other people who have expressed an interest. However, I
have done the vast majority of the work on my own. And (as I am by no
means an IT ninja, so this stuff takes me a long time) ... there has
been many sleepless nights.
I was just thinking about the site when I saw these emails pop up in
Thunderbird.
I would love it to be a community run (not for profit) site. This was
always my wish for the site. I think a mambo powered CMS could be of
great benefit. However, I have not so far had much luck in attracting
help. (This really is my fault as I am not very good at asking for
help.) If people are interested in developing the site and making use
of it as a community resource I would be delighted. I dont think I can
do it on my own. I have neither the time, money or knowledge needed to
do it justice. So far I have paid all the server bills, and I will be
happy to continue to do so for as long as I can afford.
Should there be no interest in developing the site this way then I
think I'll do the following. Write an introductory piece for the front
page for those new to open source computing, and then suggest three or
four programs for each section. And then leave it that.
I would like it to be used in the best possible way that benefits
others. I guess this list is the best place to raise the question
about its use. It's up to you all. I am not looking for any money from
it. If you are interested in helping please do get in touch.
Thanks all for the oppurtunity to introduce myself, and I hope this
has gone someway to answering those questions. As for the programs in
the wrong categories, yep thats all my fault.
John
Brett McCoy wrote:
Jan Weil wrote:
Does anyone happen to know who's behind
<http://www.opensourcemusic.info>?
"The site is run by a group of volunteers who devote lots of time, and
many many sleepless nights." seems a little vague...
Why do they have Audacity listed under samplers and Ardour and Wired
under sequencers? Actually, Rosegarden shouldn't be under sequencers
either... it's far more than just a sequencer. I think 'DAW' would
be a more accruate category for these...
-- Brett
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Programmer by day, Guitarist by Night
http://www.chapelperilous.net
http://www.alhazred.com
http://www.revelmoon.com