Interesting Thoughts on Net Music publishing
Did anyone see this?
It's rather long, so I'll post a link to it, to save download time here http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20021205.html Snark... (I'm still alive, just busy) |
SNARK!
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...good to see you m8. :W:
- js. |
Cringely's always interesting, thanks for the link, hope things are good.
- js. |
Hi Snark :W: and thanks for the link - a good follow-up to a good essay (discussed also here).
Quote:
- tg ;) |
Affinity groups...
Hello all! :W:
The article raised some interesting points about customisation, word of mouth and personal interaction and hinted at the power that fan-communities have when in direct collaboration with the artist. ;) Quote:
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Re: Affinity groups...
Quote:
Where should an artist be, how should she connect, what should she do to be heard and found at the age of p2p? The answer is so obvious: she should be right there among her fans, on the same p2p networks, same p2p groups, being their friend and one of them; providing the freshest original high-quality rips; streaming out an occasional live performance from a living room or from a stage; inviting fans to the concerts; selling genuine fan items for a fair price; etc. Some artists are already taking their first experimental steps to that direction: being present on p2p networks, sharing openly their new production etc. And some p2p developers are similarly taking their own first steps to implement a socially more advanced p2p environment where such group interactions and artist-fan bondings can take place naturally and easily. The way to go. :ND: - tg ;) |
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