BREAKING MY NECK I broke my neck yesterday. Well, not really, but it feels like it. I spent all day, just about, looking for free music sites to use as resources for my audio drama projects. I know, you immediately think of Jamendo and the like for this sort of thing. I know about them, and value them for what they are, but they're more than a bit of trouble for me to work with in this regard. Sure, it's all Creative Commons goodness, but, as you know, not all CC licenses are made alike. I license my own stuff under Attribution ShareAlike 3.0. Now, notice the lack of an NC clause there. I require that all the music and sound effects I use to have a similar or even more permissive license, so as not to restrict any further (theoretical) distribution methods that may be used by others. And I need very specific pieces to correspond with the scripts and characters I've written. This is a challenge, to say the least. If I was writing a different kind of show, it might be very simple to find appropriate music. "Eddie K", though, requires that "big band/nightclub/Rat Pack" sound, and, I have to tell you, finding music like that, with a license I can use (or, really, under almost ANY license) is not easy. So I broke my neck yesterday, sitting in the living room, using my eeePC to search out links. I found a fair number of them (each of which only have a few pieces of music that I MIGHT want to consider, but collectively, it's not a bad haul), but the pain it ended up costing me from sitting in that position for hours on end, squinting over this tiny netbook, has proven excessive. It's almost comical, in fact -- like I'd survived a cartoon throttling -- but it's entirely my own fault: I didn't HAVE to sit there all day, after all, and I've had enough experience with this machine to have known better. The contrast between sitting comfortably and otherwise relaxed, and the excessive tension put into one's hands, neck, and eyes, for hours and hours on end, using a machine designed for a wide variety of functions (but definitely NOT comfortable use), certainly makes for some very real pain and suffering. On the flipside of this, the convenience factor of working in the living room yesterday seemed to trump everything else. Looking back, I realize that my main machine would have been much easier and faster to utilize, and I wouldn't now be in such pain had I done so -- but there were logistic issues at play, since my desktop unit is in another room, and Little Bronx seemed to need me close. His machine is in the living room, as you've doubtlessly deduced, and there are days when he requires that corner-of-the-eye proximity out of me. So, I'd like you to remember how I'm suffering now. If you listen to my audio efforts at all, it might not be apparent how much time and effort went in to such inane stuff, but I assure you that there is pain and even some heartache connected to them. I mean, I can be as dismissive as the next person about things I encounter online which hold no interest for me, and I don't necessarily need to consider someone else's efforts when doing so -- but it doesn't hurt to stop once and a while and consider just how much labor most of us put in to present content of one stripe or another for the planet's collective enjoyment and/or offhand dismissal. It's entirely willful, of course, and not, in the least, a one-way street, but, in this regard anyway, I reject for myself the category of "Consumer". It makes it sound like I'm giving nothing back. Regardless of what you might think of my personal endeavors, it's a fact that I'm working hard to present them. And YOU are doing the same for your own stuff -- blog posts, active conversations in social media, or other work that might require even more time to produce. People use their Internet connections in order to experience and participate in the kind of give-and-take that happens here. GIVE and take. By simply reading this, you are giving it your time -- and never forget how irreplaceable that is. Distributing my silly audio stories may well be the least that the Internet has to offer me, but it is a part of it that I hold dear. The the social connections we form and dissolve in this environment are likely far more important. And we are all content producers in that regard -- even if that content is consumption; after all, without someone to read our posts, to look at our photos or fine art, or even to listen to our ridiculous audio nonsense, none of it has value beyond the personal. Now, don't get me wrong, the strictly personal is of TREMENDOUS value. But it is only one part of the give-and-take process -- the genesis of the give, as it were, the motivation of the take: just one part of the purpose, function, and result of an online life. So, I'm giving you my pain, right now -- and you can take it or leave it. Either one's cool. It all works. Sunday, November 20, 2011 (c) 2011 lostnbronx CC BY-SA 3.0 lostnbronxATgmailDOTcom