| May 15, 2001
Hi & thanks for stopping by to
read for a minute! I'll use this soapbox page to let
you know how things are going with Music Sojourn, changes
and improvements that we are making to the site, and other
things that might impact what we do to bring you the music
on Music Sojourn.
Topics:
- MP3 Streams .. going...
- Direct Support is keeping
us alive
- Think You are
supporting us through Amazon links....?
-
Questions about "Subscription" service and
"server overloads."
- Questions
about Windows Media Player vs. Real Audio:
- Misc. Topics
1. We are removing the
"Live365" MP3-HI Stereo streams on more produced Programs,
and the songs streams may have to stop also. As
you know if you use them, we run these streams on Live365, a
commercial service. However, the service is not free
to us, and Live365's new charges for hosting the streams per
month could be well over what our listeners have
Contributed to
support the entire site YTD. We are negotiating, but if
they insist on such a high charge, we will have to shut down
most or all of the streams. We are looking for economical
options for starting our own continuous streams again.
We will soon be adding in
Promotion spots for other programs on Music Sojourn.
These are not paid advertising, but a service by us for our
producers to help them promote their programs.
2. We are surviving
because of your
DIRECT
SUPPORT! IF we had not had a good initial showing
of direct support since we added this option in February,
Music Sojourn would have almost certainly
closed down
like many other internet sites. Internet
advertising CONTINUES TO BE ALMOST WORTHLESS, and we have
eliminated all but one banner advertising agency from the
Music Sojourn site. For the long term, it is probably
in our best interests to remain associated with one high
quality advertiser. We have eliminated all but a few
banners for "affiliate" programs which also don't work well,
with the notable exception of Amazon & CDnow for music
purchases - your continued purchases of music or other
items through our links also helps support our efforts (but
see the note in #3 below)!
If you have not considered a
direct contribution to Music Sojourn, we would encourage you
to do so, even at a level as low as $3.00! If everyone
who uses Music Sojourn regularly contributed only $3.00
every once in a while, we could expand what we do here
significantly. If you're a regular listener and
there's a specific reason why you would not contribute to
our efforts, Let me know.
SPECIAL THANKS to
those of you who have contributed directly by check or money
order! We realize that it is not as convenient, but it
provides us with an extra 16% that we would lose to the
credit card processing costs!
For more
information, click here.
3. Think You are supporting us through
using our Amazon & CDnow links....? Not always.
Here's a question asked by a supporter:
Q: Suppose I click thru your
Amazon.com link, place an item in my shopping cart
and hold it. Then when I'm ready to buy it, I return to
Amazon again thru your link. Will you get credit from such a
purchase?
NO! They will not give us
any credit if you do not purchase an item in your cart
before a 24-hour period elapses, even when you came throu
our link. We didn't realize, until someone else wrote us
about this recently, that so many people did this, but
obviously Amazon knows it. The only way it works in our
favor is if you empty your cart on Amazon, come back to any
link to Amazon on our site and put the item in again (and
then complete the purchase within 24 hours). That's very
inconvenient and most people won't do it, and I'm sure
Amazon knows it! Also, we don't get referral
fees from Amazon on items marked "hard to Find" or "Out of
Print" (if they do get it for you).
CDnow pays us a higher
percentage, but only gives us credit for purchases
during visits (called "sessions") "where no two pages are
delivered more than two hours apart." This means
that if you come back to finalize a purchase of items picked
through our links after two hours, we don't get credit for
the sale!
We have looked at other music
afiliate programs, but have decided against them for various
reasons including: If we don't think they will be around for
a while, we don't want to spend a lot of time, effort and
money to build all of the links to them (like we did with
Rock.com), or they reimburse even lower percentages than we
now get.
This kind of stuff is why we
really hope to move more away from the Affiliate programs
and more to direct support methods and other offers that
directly benefit our listeners and supporters.
4. Answers to questions some of you have
asked about "Subscription" service and "server overloads."
Some of you who have been coming by Music Sojourn for a
while remember when we were considering (& preparing) for a
subscription service for higher, FM Quality files, plus the
"server at capacity" problems we were having then.
This comment is typical:
"I see the pleas for
direct support and nothing about a premium service. What's
going on? I'm confused about the direction you're headed.
.... The main thing I want is not to get bumped off or
unable to access the streams in middle of the day, which is
when I listen. I'm not terribly interested in paying for a
service that runs out of streams when I want to listen,
which is what happened all last year."
A: You will no longer get
bumped off or be unable to access the streams in middle of
the day because we have moved off of that very expensive and
very limited Real Server and set up our own server for all
streams. The old service could limit the actual number of
users unless we paid more, which is why we had to get rid of
it. Our new server will not limit users, streams or access
unless we get enough use to totally use up the provider's
total available bandwidth (not entirely impossible, but
unlikely under current usage levels - probably only likely
if we run the Victoria's Secret show or worse).
We have abandoned the idea of
a "subscription" service because relatively few people
signed up for it, and we are using the standard public radio
model of asking people to voluntarily pledge their support
for the programming.
5. Questions about Windows Media Player
vs. Real Audio: We get this question in one form or
another every so often: "Please consider encoding your
streams for Windows Media Player. ... Do you have some
tie-in with Real?"
A: With respect to
Windows Media Player and Real Player, we have no tie
in with Real, and are not locked into using Real Player
exclusively. As an extremely small staff, it took us
quite a while to work out a method for displaying the song
titles with the programs that we could duplicate easily
enough to do on a weekly basis with programs like Timeless
Canyons, Ambient Caverns, Echoes, etc. This is
difficult to do with a "continuous" program like the
produced shows that we host. It requires creating files for
each song played on the program, and then timing out the
exact change point for each song, calculating that time in
seconds, and adding that time into each file so that it
changes at the correct time - like a very precise slide
show. It took a while to work out all of the details to be
able to produce this result on a regular basis.
Real has a product that allows us to do this somewhat easily
at this time. When we last looked at Windows Media player,
there was no way for us to do this process for a continuous
program. Maybe there is now, or soon, but it will take time
for us to research how to do it, and see how we can do it
easily on a regular basis.
With respect to sound
quality, I have listened to many different encoding schemes.
About 7-9 months ago, I observed that Windows Media at 48
kbps sounded pretty close to Real Audio at 64 kbps (which we
were using then) and we looked into using it. But Real's
next release of RA8 (update) brought the quality of the 44.1
kbps Real Audio to the same quality (it now gives a 16 KHz
audio range like the 64 kbps streams used to), which is why
we are now using it. It sounds the same or slightly better
than the Win Media of the same rate, and better than the 56
kbps files we use for the Live365 streams. at this time, it
is far more efficient for us to re-encode our programs to
44.1 kbps Real Audio and use the same, already done, real
text files and scripts for the song displays!
6. Thanks to so many
of you who provided feedback and suggestions on our
recent efforts to improve the page layouts for the Volume
Guides on the program series'. Our young interns,
David, Mike & Eric are now implementing the changes on most
of the other series. We hope that you find this new
page layout more concise, less cluttered, and easier to
navigate.
6. The WEB becomes a LESS
FRIENDLY place everyday. Remember cooperative
spirit and friendly exchange of links, etc? Most of
that is dissappearing as everyone promotes their own
interests. We always liked AMG - All Music Guide, and
in the past linked many of our album titles on the playlist
pages to them. We checked, by the way, and they had no
posted policy about linking to them or not. But you'll
find that any links on our playlist pages now just go to a
blank AMG page because they made another change in their
link structure. So we're removing all links to them as
we can. Sorry for the bad links until then. For
album info, we'll start linking to CDDB when we can.
more coming shortly ....
Let me know of any
additional topics or info that you would like to see
presented here.
Scott Ericson
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