Doug's AppleScripts for iTunes

Doug’s AppleScripts for iTunes

If you’re extremely thorough (anally-retentive) like me, your iTunes library is probably in pristine shape. And if you happened to have spent a couple of weeks downloading the entire catalog of a certain dead composer, you may need to clean up the ID3 tags a bit to fit your needs. About 15 GB of rar files.

At such an epic proportion, I couldn’t help myself but to seek a better solution to my problem.

Here’s a link to just a few of the tools I found extremely useful.

There are plenty more on that Top 100 download list which I’ve been messing around with. Hit up the comments if you find anything more useful.

Quick Twitter Review and Other Ponderings

Twitter Logo

I’m beginning to like Twitter more and more. The only thing that’s stopping me from using it as much as possible is: the lack of pertinent users. I’m not talking about the awesome developers/leaders of their field people that I “follow”, but people that I actually know in, you know, real life. Outside of my nerdier friends, I don’t know of anyone that use Twitter. Yet.

But this situation is making me think about social networks in general: each network seems to create a culture of its own. This is not a new view on social networks, but it’s interesting I’m seeing it now with Twitter.

Facebook with their college crowd, Myspace with their musician/high school crowd, and now Twitter with their tech crowd.

Of course, this doesn’t mean that these social networks won’t grow into other groups of users. It’s just that certain networks tend towards a faster and wider adoption with the general population than others. And Twitter, at face value, just doesn’t seem to be a service that can grow very quickly.

I would never use the texting feature (thanks to the iPhone, I don’t have to), but I feel like this feature will help Twitter gain a wider appeal with the slightly more techie crowd.

I do like the 140 character limit, and not because it has to do with the limitations of the texting protocol, but because it puts some creative limits on what I am able to “tweet”. Also, the inability to edit an existing post makes you double check yourself before tweeting.

You know, I never thought about it, but there’s probably an iTunes to Twitter Applescript. The Twitter API is so freeing. But also… this can lead to information overload.

So much power. So much responsibility.

And that ends my rambling on Twitter.