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Posts Tagged ‘iTunes’

Music Maestro, If You Please

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Yesterday morning I woke up, booted up the laptop, and when it was time to write, I wanted to listen to Tchaikovsky. How weird is this? Let’s just say that my classical music collection is practically nil and that that I had nothing by this composer at all. Anywhere.

BTW, I blame my vampire heroine for this. She was listening to Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake during her story. And in a second aside, I have a title for this short now. I don’t know if I’ll get to keep it, but it works so well for the story on a couple of different levels. I’ll share it when I know for sure I get to use it.

Okay, so back to Tchaikovsky. I needed him to write to and that was that, so I went to Amazon and browsed their MP3 collection. I ended up buying Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker Suite. Can I just say how much I love being able to buy MP3 music online and instantly download it onto my computer and iPod? In somewhere around five minutes, I had Tchaikovsky going in iTunes and I was writing.

I’m so into this instant gratification thing. :-) Whatever I’m in the mood for, if I don’t already own it, I can go buy it and have it in minutes. Too cool! I know people say it’s trading sound quality for convenience, but to my great sadness, I don’t have a good musical ear and I don’t hear an appreciable difference between CD and MP3 track. Not enough to ruin the experience for me. Call me a Philistine, but I’m good with it. :-)

Don’t Know Much Geography

Friday, February 6th, 2009

I didn’t get much geography education in school, but then I couldn’t see why I needed to memorize state capitols anyway. Who cares, right? Somehow I ended up with a fairly decent idea of geography despite this and it ended up being a good thing when I went to work for an airline. I’m still not perfect, especially on the continents that we don’t fly to–but I have a general idea of what’s where. And that’s what I thought geography was.

This summer, I downloaded a class from iTunes U (free!) called Cultural Geography from Stanford. I didn’t expect it to be too interesting–it was geography–but I was surprised. It was fascinating. The first half of the course looked at linguistics and geography and country borders in relationship to language. I learned a lot about some places of the world that I didn’t realize before and I was riveted while I was learning–two really important things for me. I love to learn new stuff, but I want to be entertained, too. I was.

The second half of the 10 week class was on religion and geography. I wasn’t quite as into this part, but it was still interesting and gave me a different, more knowledgeable perspective on the world. I was actually disappointed when we finished up the course and I wanted more. Off I headed to iTunes U and found the same professor had another geography class up–Geopolitics. The more amazing thing is that I already had 9 of the 10 weeks on my iPod. I downloaded the final week and the third geography class that was about geography and the elections. I started the geopolitics class this week.

Nerdiness–I have it. But I think this is part of what attracted me to writing–my interest in learning new things and finding the quirkiest things fascinating. Not that geography is that strange, but I did flip on an hour show on The Discovery Channel about container ships and watched the whole thing, riveted. :-)

I have always been like this even as far back as junior high school when I checked out every book the library had on sharks and read them one after the other. Or in college when the journalism school abetted my eclectic range of interests by setting up a program that required we take classes across the university. Makes sense since a journalist never knows what they’ll be assigned to cover and a little bit of knowledge helps, but it had me flitting all over the system. I graduated with 240 credits and I only needed 180. No minor. No second major. I was just that scattered in my course selection and I loved it! Astronomy, theater, political science, economics, American history, philosophy, you name it, I probably had it–unless it involved math. :-)

This is why iTunes U is such a wonderful thing for me. Now I can continue taking university classes without 1. spending money or 2. having to take tests. Yea!

School on an MP3 Player

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

I had a really cool discovery this week–iTunes has university classes and lectures available for free! I love learning new things and have a wide variety of interests, but I don’t have time to indulge them by going back to college, and to be honest, I’m way too lazy to return to homework and papers. Been there, done that.

These university classes, though, seem like an ideal way to get the education without spending the money, taking a test, or worrying about school deadlines. Heck, I have enough writing deadlines to worry about. I already have a degree, so it’s not like I’m looking for the credits from attending anyway. I already downloaded a class on the Roman Empire. I can’t listen to it right now, but it’s on my iMac, waiting for me.

The other cool thing is that I can hear lectures from universities I never considered attending–Yale, Stanford, UC Berkley, to name a few.

Okay, I’m sounding like a commercial. I don’t mean to, especially since I haven’t listened to a single file yet, but I didn’t know this existed, so I thought maybe others didn’t either. One of the really cool things I noticed is that they have lectures on topics I could use for research. Some of them actually touch on components that are in synopses that I’ve already written, but haven’t sold yet. See? It is a writing topic. ;-)

One drawback, I think, is that if you don’t have an iPod (and I don’t), you have to listen to it on the computer. Since I have a really hard time staying tethered that long unless I’m writing, I don’t know how that’s going to work out for me. I guess I’ll see once I have some free time again.


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