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Borges on iTunes. Sort of.
grant balfour | Dec 27 2007
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For one of those gnostics, the visible universe was an illusion or, more precisely, a sophism. Mirrors and fatherhood are abominable because they multiply it and extend it. For Christmas, I was quite pleased to get a Zen Stone Plus in my stocking. I'm one of those people - the ones who exist between platforms. (I lost my true allegiance decades ago, and have been a switch-hitter ever since.) One of the things this means is that I do some things by hand that other people - the loyalists - are used to having done automatically. So there I was, Christmas afternoon, moving playlists from the iTunes on our Windows machine onto the cute little non-iPod. Grab, drag, copy. The process immediately reminded me of Jorge Luis Borges' riffs on mirrors. He was simultaneously fascinated and repelled by them because they duplicated the world. There's something obscene about acts of reproduction. It didn't help that I was, at the time, staring at a particularly large chunk of clutter that wound up in the middle of my dining room. It was a rack large enough to hold all of the family's CDs. We have quite a lot of them. A friend was getting rid of it. The problem is, though the storage would (will?) be vitally useful, we haven't been able to find a place where the rack actually fits. And I like looking at CDs. The covers contain lots of visual information - each one reminding me of something I liked about that album (or single, or mix) in a way that the plain text of mp3 file names doesn't do. Sometimes, I can't search for that song I need - sometimes, I have to be reminded. So, there I was, copying files from one drive onto another, portable, drive while looking at, well, another, much larger, kind of drive, and it struck me that I was doomed. Here I was, duplicating duplicates of songs most of which I had on disc, in the middle of trying to de-clutter my life. I was replicating more items. I was filling more space. Mirrors are monstrous because they duplicate images of things. And iTunes - and any other mp3 ripper/filer/CD burner - is a kind of mirror. What I need is a protocol for deleting mp3s. Not just minimizing the footprint of the collection (erasing artwork is just the beginning) but actually putting the music back on the discs. Where I can see it. Oh, I thought. That's it. Instead of thinking of iTunes like a library, maybe if I thought of it more like a mirror - that doesn't display an image after I'm done with it. I'll still use it to burn mixes and load things onto the player. But if it's on a disc that fits on the rack - or if it can be burned onto one - then it's leaving my hard drive. Now, if only I could find a wall where the rack will fit.
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A Stack Pointer/Springer Spaniel cross.Submitted by grant on January 8, 2008 - 8:20am.
The advantage of the shelf, for me, is partially the stacking of the visual information, and partially the ability to see titles I'd forgotten about in proximity. Not just "titles" as in words, but also the covers of mix CDs and typography on CD spines, and even meaningful cracks and stains from cut-out bin stickers and road trips. It might be possible to emulate something like that using clouds of tags or something, but I respond to CD cases for more reasons than just the artwork. I'll have to look into that Coverflow business, but I tend to accumulate lots of mp3s without lots of disc space, so cover art is often deleted for the sake of space. Part of my clutter problem is clutter in the virtual realm - files I sort of keep around thinking I might listen to 'em once or twice... sometime... maybe put on a mix CD for someone who'd like it more than I do.... The same reasons, or similar enough, to the rationales I maintain for keeping so damn many books. Only these computer files seem to replicate much more quickly. » POSTED IN:
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