SeeqPod Music beta - Playable Search - Find. Discover. Watch. Listen. Share.
So it was! The first WebCamp in Lisbon. Got little attendance however. But still we had FUN! Basically we now know better how to share RSS feeds, use twitter and twitter-bots, discovered the Yahoo Open Shortcuts, and last, but not least, elected the best music searching engine unanimously: it's called Seeqpod. It basically does exactly what I expect a music search engine should do: it finds exactly the music I wanted; it allows me to store it (or its reference at least) in a playlist. I can instantly create as many playlists as I want. If I don't find some music I have or know where it is, I can submit its url. I can share my playlists with my friends (by email). I can easily embed my playlists in webpages. I can develop more on top of Seeqpod with its API. Finally, it's free as in Freedom (and as in free beer as well, which is nice). Five stars to these nice folks :)
It's been years that I've been searching EXACTLY for this service. Kasian Franks, if you're reading this, you're da man bro!
Below is a screenshot of the most interesting article of 2013, period. Written by one the most-influentials "good" guys of world, Julian Assange. The article deals about the promiscuity between Google top-notch executives and the White House, and how it affects both institutions policies, at the expense of the people's freedom and will. Below the article I share with you some notes I've taken.
Assange sums it all up to us in two words: "Jared Cohen", and a question "Who is he? ". It's worth it to check him out. I googled him to find out he's a futurist thinker, thinking about the disruptive reach social networks and, now, context networks can attain, world-domination-wise. A megalomaniac thinker surely, with the wits, the will, the intuition, the perception and the goal. He happens to play ball - real hard - both at the White House AND at Google. He's playing with fire though, and it could easily backfire on his employers.
The new Jean-Jacques Rousseau of the XXIst century, a prototypical example of the lacquay that out-wits the masters of the house he serves. This article, and the Edward Snowden case, are a glympse iMHO to a silent-war going on, mostly between the future world-dominating nations (or corporations???), US, China, ..., but also Facebook, Google, Baidu, etc ...
Scenarios outcomes? I would bet on political borders to become obsolete, and on social-network based new nations (or tribes?). Alexander, Julius, Napoleon, Adolf and Benito, they all had big plans, but they just missed the right technology to make the entire world yield into whole "Gaia Pax". Today, technology is almost ripe, almost, to make it a breeze to administrate over 100 billions of citizens, within the blink of a byte. Not only there CAN be only one, but I'd wager, there WILL be only one. It's only a matter of WHEN, and it's definitively not an IF.
For those who fight on good side of the force, I have only one word for advice (or is it three?): "peer-to-peer". Stick with this notion deeply incepted in your mind and we'll be safe enough. NrÂș1 enemies? Anything that qualifies as a "walled-gardens" ;-)
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