[mb-users] "The need for free and open music metadata", but MB not good enough
Chris B
chris at whenironsattack.com
Mon Apr 28 10:12:13 UTC 2008
as with the recent discogs offshoot (go and have a look in the discogs
forums today to end any doubt that making music DBs "like wikipedia"
is a good idea - discogs is essentially ruined right now), it's beyond
me how anyone can take irritations with existing DBs and solve them
with making an entirely new DB!
if thats the level of commitment they have to their ideas i'm sure
they could change MBz to their liking. i don't think any of us here
would say that MBz's interface couldn't be improved - it just needs
someone to take it on.
2008/4/26 Jim DeLaHunt <from.nabble at jdlh.com>:
>
> Hi folks,
>
> I'm back at MusicBrainz after a couple of months paying attention to other
> projects. (Amazing, the mb-style list didn't clean up all the rest of the
> CSG while I was away. I still get to play.)
>
> I found an interesting blog post by a music web entrepreneur here in
> Vancouver, David Gratton.
>
> "The need for free and open music metadata" (February 19, 2008)
> <http://www.davidrdgratton.com/blog/the-need-for-free-and-open-music-metadata>
> "Non-profits are simply the stable entity for offering metadata, whereas
> private companies will be inherently unstable. Music metadata is factual
> content about known items. As such the cost of acquisition of this data is
> quite low and falling. The price of metadata, like that of music will
> approach 'near free'."
>
> Very validating for those of us contributing to MusicBrainz.
>
> But read on: "Why didn't Music Brainz make it as the default service?
> It was staffed by wonderful, incredibly smart, and committed people who
> understand the need for a free and open metadata service. However, in my
> opinion Music Brainz is simply way to complex, tedious, and time consuming
> to update. Wikipedia on the other hand is dead simple. End of story.
> However, the Music Brainz still has a lot to offer as we discovered."
>
> Hence, he intends to make his own: "So to solve this problem we have taken
> Wikipedia and joined it to Music Brainz to get structured Wikipedia music
> metadata. That's cool and useful. At least we think it is. We will be
> offering it as a free 'for commercial use' Web service in a few months...."
>
> David Gratton is a thoughtful guy. After I met him, I added his blog to my
> daily reading list. I like what he's trying to do with his Project Opus.
> Thus I was disappointed to hear that he thought the way ahead was to make
> something different from MusicBrainz instead of contributing to MusicBrainz
> itself. It made me stop and think about what it is about MusicBrainz that
> causes him to write it off as "way [too] complex, tedious, and time
> consuming to update".
>
> One of my ambitions is to make MusicBrainz a little simpler, easier, and
> faster to update.
>
> -----
> -- http://jdlh.com/ Jim DeLaHunt , Vancouver, Canada •
> http://wiki.musicbrainz.org/JimDeLaHunt
>
> --
> View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/%22The-need-for-free-and-open-music-metadata%22%2C-but-MB-not-good-enough-tp16910670s2885p16910670.html
> Sent from the Musicbrainz - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> MusicBrainz-users mailing list
> MusicBrainz-users at lists.musicbrainz.org
> http://lists.musicbrainz.org/mailman/listinfo/musicbrainz-users
More information about the MusicBrainz-users
mailing list