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DJ Ripley “To The Party Members” DJ Mix | Mashit

DJ Ripley

My friend DJ Ripley just released an awesome MP3 mix which you can download here. DJ Ripley and Kid Kameleon are going on tour through Chicago and more next month (JUNE).

Here is the tracklisting:

  1. Mutamassik - We-Do Featuring Cyra Unique
  2. Stumble - Wuz Up Break (Sb2 Version)
  3. 8 Frozen Modules - Stagnating The Process
  4. Frikstailers - Dabadaba 05. RS-232 - Ping
  5. Grievous Angel - Move Down Low (feat. Rubi Dan)
  6. Bird Peterson - Broke
  7. M.I.A. - XR2 (Tigerstyle Remix)
  8. Lil Mama - No_Music (Starkey Refix)
  9. Rustie - Diwali Boom
  10. Monster Zoku Onsomb - Pump It Hottie
  11. Bird Peterson - Bring The Noise
  12. DJ Donna Summer - Push It (Dj DS Remix)
  13. TS7 ft.Tdot - Ding Dong
  14. Basement Jaxx - Jump ‘N’ Shout (Stanton Warriors Remix)
  15. Bombaman - Alter Ego (Fuckingham Palace)
  16. Cruel Culture - Fuck The Truth
  17. Kode9 - Magnetic City
  18. Timeblind - Buzzed
  19. David Last - Track 04
  20. Wor thy - Crack-el (Justin Martin’s Stoopit Crunk-Ill Hyphy Mix)
  21. I.Cube and RZA - Deal with that
  22. Smalltown Djs - (Mu) Strike a Badman
  23. Mz. Thang - Club Muzik
  24. Yo Majesty - Club Action (Chris Bagraider’s Sailing to Baltimore Edit)
  25. [S] Mann - Summer In the City Dub
  26. Com.a - Ghetto Magic
  27. Mochipet - Hyphee Step Remix
  28. Erbs - Mysterious
  29. Sunship feat. Warrior Queen - Quits (Sinden Remix)
  30. Rustie ft. Dem Franchise Boys - Lean Wit It
  31. Dude n Nem - Watch My Feet (Pop Rawkus Let Me See You Juke Remix)
  32. DJ Q - Shottas
  33. Math Head - Do Damage (Passions remix)
  34. Christina Aguilera - Aint No Other Man (Blaerg Oral Fistfuck Remix)

Audio Junkies: Overlap Salon 01 Max/MSP/Jitter Wednesday May 21 2008 - San Francisco

I think this new ongoing Overlap Salon that we are putting on through Overlap.org is going to be nice and fun. If you are into cutting edge music, audio performance, and the technologies related with these, I urge you to come out to this new regular event. Christopher posted more on Overlap.org about this:

This first Overlap Salon event brings together users of Cycling 74′s legendary “build-it-yourself” software universe Max/MSP/Jitter. Cool Max/MSP/Jitter nerds will be able to meet, exchange knowledge, advice, and software patches. Max/MSP/Jitter patches covered in the Salon will also be shared on Overlap.org following the event. All participants are required to bring your their own laptop, beer (if u want) and thinking cap. WIFI provided.

I will bring beer. I wonder if we have any more free beer at Creative Commons actually :) Anyone interested in coming to this and/or presenting? Let us/me know! If I talk about anything, it will be the anti-max/msp/jitter called PD which I used to hack on back in the UCSD-aze. Also, if you show up, maybe I will talk more about why Lil Wayne is so brilliant and use my Eeepc as an awesome DJ’ing platform.

ccHost 4.5 Out and Liblicense 0.7 Too!

Mike blogged about the ccHost 4.5 release for all you to update your sites to for stability right before the massively updated 5.0 arrives on the scene. If you have forgotten, ccHost is the engine behind Open Clip Art Library and Open Font Library (which both need developers). More info below:

Two new releases of ccHost today, the remix-oriented media hosting software that drives ccMixter:

4.5, the final release from the 4.x tree. 4.0 was released March 6 last year.

5.0beta is the code that has been running on ccMixter for several months (5.0alpha was available in February.) The missing piece needed to make 5.0 final is updated administrator documentation.

The software is licensed under the GPL and downloadable from sourceforge or our source repository.

Also, Asheesh packaged up liblicense 0.7 which is useful for all wanting to add licensing to your application. I want to get liblicense into a couple of applications like Eye of Gnome and something else fun. Any ideas open source developers? There are resources to help work on this at Creative Commons if you are interested in something fun:

I just released liblicense 0.7.0 on SourceForge. It fixes the Python bindings. They’ve been broken since the 0.6 release, it seems. Some functionality in them probably worked between 0.6 and 0.7, but (read on for more)…


LL_LICENSE and other constants were “extern const char” arrays before. Now they’re just lousy old #defines. This way, even though the strings might appear more than once in memory, it’s very simple for the IO modules like exempi.so to refer to those constants.

Before, due to dynamic linker loading order issues, if liblicense.so were added to a process’s memory memory map at runtime, if liblicense then tried to dlopen() its modules, the modules wouldn’t be able to find those constants. What a drag! That broke the Python bindings’ ability to use the modules.

Now, I guess that’s still true, but the modules don’t need actual symbols from liblicense anymore.

I noticed this issue in the process of creating and testing RPMs for Fedora. I had to bump the SONAME because this removes symbols from the library.

You can grab it on SourceForge, and perhaps soon in Fedora Rawhide.

Call for Parcticipation: First Interdisciplinary Research Workshop on Free Culture

I’m re-blogging Mike’s post to hopefully hit a bunch of other eyes in the free and open source community about some real research on free and open source/content culture. That’s right! I’m not talking about that research-I’m-a-spammer-sourceforge-fill-out-my-questionnaire-type-ish! This is real talk! Giorgos is a good friend too so hopefully all you academics out there even slightly interested in this area will join into this pile up. This will make iSummit worth the trip.

Submissions are due April 26. This track should make iSummit 2008 the most exciting so far. Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Studies on the use and growth of open/free licensing models;
  • Critical analyses of the role of Creative Commons or similar models in promoting a free culture;
  • Building innovative technical, legal or business solutions and interfaces between the sharing economy and the commercial economy;
  • Modelling incentives, innovation and community dynamics in open collaborative peer production and in related social networks;
  • Economic models for the sustainability of Commons-based production;
  • Successes and failures of open licensing;
  • Analyses of policies, court rulings or industry moves that influence the future of Free Culture;
  • Regional studies of Free Culture;
  • Lessons from implementations of open/free licensing and distribution models for specific communities;
  • Definitions of openness and freedom for different media types, users and communities;
  • Broader sociopolitical, legal and cultural implications of Free Culture initiatives and peer production practices.

The iSummit overall will be the most diverse yet. Submissions for other tracks are due April 18, more info here.

Previously: commons-research list announced.

ACIA Commons Follow-up

ACIA photo by Rebecca McKinnon
Photo by Rebecca McKinnon

Its hard to follow-up when others have done it much better than I could :)

Reports are pouring in from ACIA: the International Workshop on Asia and Commons in the Information Age, held on January 19-20 in Taipei, Taiwan. The resounding conclusion: it was a phenomenal success!

The workshop, organized by CC Taiwan and hosted at Academica Sinica, focused on bringing together members of the “Asia Commons” to meet and discuss regional strategies and initiatives. The program opened with a keynote by Terry Fischer on “Solutions to the copyright crisis,” in which he sought to combine legal reforms and business models with digital technologies that compensate creators while enabling cultural and economic benefits. Both Ts’ui-jung Liu, VP of Academia Sinica, and Der Tsai Lee, director of the Institute of Information Science, Academia Sinica, were at the opening ceremonies and delivered greetings to the workshop participants.

CC Vice President Mike Linksvayer chaired a session featuring plans for “The Making a Totally Open Phone”, Sony’s integration of CC licensing for their eyeVio video sharing service, techniques in musical collaboration with “Jamming with Machines”, and “Making Creative Commons Common in Asia” by CC’s Jon Phillips (slides).

Later in the day, CC Australia Project Manager Jessica Coates presented open licensing compatibility in “Playing Well With Others” at a panel with Chunyan Wang from CC China Mainland and Alina Ng from CC Malaysia. The CC Team from Australia and the Creative Commons Clinic also announced the release of the Asia and the Commons case studies booklet, a fantastic collection of reports on individuals and organizations engaged in the commons in the Asia-Pacific region.

Their work was followed by Lawrence Liang and his debate about concepts, “How Does An Asian Commons Mean.” The ACIA workshop drew to an close with Chu-Cheng Huang’s final remarks on the changing phases of property in “From res nullius to res communis,” a session chaired by the event’s organizer, Tyng-Ruey Chuang from CC Taiwan.

The social program picked up as the sun set with the CC Asia Mega Mix Concert featuring acts by Monbaza; Pig Head Skin; MoShang (video), Kuo Chou Ching, Chang Jui-chuan, and André van Rensburg, Bust This, Sudev Bangah, and Lisa Diy.

There are plenty of pictures here and here. Formal proceedings from ACIA are available for download, and of course the case studies and discussion summary are well worth a read.

aatcbanner.jpg

Asia and the Commons Case Studies 2008, presented at the ACIA workshop. The project, initiated by CCau and the Creative Commons Clinic, represents an effort to uncover exemplary individuals and organizations engaged in the commons in the Asia-Pacific region.

Media Exchange 2 Photo by Rebecca McKinnon
Photo by Rebecca McKinnon

And, Rebecca McKinnon posted some great insights into Asia and Isaac Mao’s concept of “Sharism” and the place of CC in Asia:

Many people attending the meeting in Taipei wondered whether Creative Commons in Asia is likely to be more successful as a social movement than as a set of copyright licenses (as Peter Yu has pointed out in the past). There was also a feeling that in order to be truly relevant to the globe, the CC movement’s central message needs to undergo a shift that would incorporate more non-Western approaches to the idea of “commons,” content creation, and sharing.

And, then she offered through Isaac Mao’s concept, a conceptual framework for moving this forward:

During Sunday’s discussion, Isaac Mao raised his idea of "sharism" as a framework for promoting the goals of Creative Commons that is more likely to gain widespread acceptance in Asia, in contrast to Lessig-esque terrms like "free culture." The problem, as Liang pointed out, is that the words "free" and "freedom" have been irreparably polluted by American geopolitics and tainted by perceived agendas of regime change, making anything labeled with those words a hard sell in the developing world. Riffing off the expression "free as in beer," he remarked: "free as in America is unhelpful." There was a widespread sense among people in the room that an emphasis on "public good" and "sharing" will enable the movement to have a much deeper impact, ultimately.

Hopefully by having myself in Guangzhou, China over the next 6 months and Catharina Maracke (CCi Director) in Tokyo more regularly over the next 6 months to a year will hopefully place some emphasis on asia beyond the already super-active CC affiliates in the region.

ACIA Commons and VT Art Salon in Taipei Today

I’m presenting about Overlap.org, Fabricatorz.com and the soon to be updated Scalejournal.org under the umbrella, “Models of Collaborative Art Production, or Dispelling the Myths of Sole Authorship”.

Tomorrow I’m presenting about, Making Creative Commons Common in Asia: Effectively scaling Creative Commons community and business development strategies internationally in 2008 at ACIA: Asia and Commons in the Information Age at Academia Sinica in Taipei. Come on out if you are in the area! The entire conference will be brilliant. Tyng-Ruey never dissappoints.

Lu posted on here blog here about Taipei Tomorrow! 台北,明天出发!:

We are heading to Taipei tomorrow. In this five days trip, we will attend ACIA (Internationl Workshop on Asia and Commons in the Information Age) 資訊時代之亞洲與公眾創用國際研討會. On Friday night January 18, Jon Phillips, Christopher Adams, Wang Chunyan and I will be hosting Media Exchange 2 at VT Art Salon. Media Exchange 1 took place last winter, with a big group of artists and students lead by our artist friend Huang Xiaopeng in the new mega university town of Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts campus. The initiative of the event was to present and discuss projects. Now it’s already one year! So to me it will be an “annual report” on my work.

Here is more information on Media Exchange 2. Sorry it’s a last minute call. But if you are in Taipei. Show up with your friends or your work!

Media Exchange 2: Open Call

Location: VT Art Salon
Address: Yitong St., #47, B1
Map: googlemaps , vtartsalon
Time: January 18, 2007 Friday 9:00 - 11:00 PM
Contact: christopher.lee.adams@gmail.com
Tel: 09-53-036-630

Open Call to Exchange Media: come and present your project this Friday at VT Art Salon in Taipei. Media Exchange 2 is a night of presentations about art projects, models of art practice and art communities. The set presenters of the night are Christopher Adams, writer and critic based in Taipei; Jon Phillips (www.rejon.org), Open Source Developer and artist from San Francisco; Deer Fang (www.deerfang.org), media and video artist from Guangzhou and San Francisco; and, Wang Chunyan, project Lead for Creative Commons China, and a Professor at Renmin University of China Law School.

If not presenting, come to have a drink and discuss the topics throughout the night. And, if you want to present, contact us as soon as possible. Otherwise, show-up the night of and we’ll have a projector and sound system to plug you in. (Email: christopher.lee.adams@gmail.com, Tel: 09-53-036-630)

Christopher Adams - CRUFT: The generative and procedural artwork of Robert Spahr (digital images)
Jon Phillips - Collaborative art models with Overlap.org and Fabricatorz
Deer Fang - Straight Outta HK and Panda Express. (video screenings)
Wang Chunyan - CC Photo Contest in China

媒體互換 2:公開召集

地點:非常廊
地址:伊通街47號B1
地圖: googlemaps , vtartsalon
時間: 2007.1.18 星期五 晚上九時到十一時
联系:christopher.lee.adams@gmail.com
电话: 09-53-036-630

“媒體互換 2”公開召集:我們邀請您這個星期五來 “非常廊” 展示您的作品和項目。“媒體互換 2” 是一次展示藝術作品,藝術工作和藝術團體模式的活動。預定展示者包括Christopher Adams, 駐台北的作家和評論家;方力中Jon Phillips (www.rejon.org), 來自舊金山的開放源發展者和藝術工作者;方鹿 (www.deerfang.org), 廣州和舊金山的媒體和影像藝術工作者;和王春燕,中國人民大學法學院教授和創意共同體中國大陸項目主任。

如果您不打算展示作品,請來一起參加我們的討論。如果您希望參加展示,請盡快和我們聯繫。(christopher.lee.adams@gmail.com, 09-53-036-630)

Christopher Adams - CRUFT: Robert Spahr 的生成和程序式的藝術作品(數碼圖片)
方力中- 合作性藝術模式(Overlap.org和Fabricatorz)
方鹿- “直出香港”和”熊貓快遞” (錄像播映)
王春燕 - 中國CC攝影比賽