Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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Jim is back, my own go at philosophy

If you haven’t checked your Whole Wheaty pages in the last few days, Jim Kloss has returned from his mother’s funeral in Ohio. He’s back on the air in Alaska, is receiving parcels at home for Esther, and is even having fun with domain registration scammers according to his latest audio magazine!! It’s great to hear his voice again, I’m glad those really, really difficult weeks are over, and that his family was there for him. Now if only people would stop sending him damned hate email he’d be well on his way to recovering!

ASIDE: As with my post on Ed Craver, I’m finding it hard to figure out what to say let alone how to say it, so I get the feeling this will be a post that’s just one disjointed thought after another. I decided not to create a Rubenerd Show about it because right now I’m in the typing zone instead, plus it’s easier to delete, rearrange and clean up all the nonsense!

In particular I wanted to talk about a few of the ideas he brought up.

For me it was interesting to hear how he perceives the human body as largely a vessel that merely contains the soul or essence of a person, and how disconnected they really are at times of great hardship or when they eventually pass on. The inevitable result of which is being able to see a close person to you in said periods of time or at those inevitable milestones and not feel so upset or hurt.

Despite my best attempts and my own journey to understanding perceptions and spirituality, I’d say for the most part I’m a still a materialist; not in the sense that I value possessions over humans or the other negative connotations people have with that term, but just simply that I don’t see the difference between life force and physical objects.

The way I see it at my own current level of personal exploration, when I see a flower I don’t think of the energy contained within as being distinct and the plant is merely the object we see and use to interact with it, I see a breathtakingly complex organism that has been the result of an incomprehensible time period of natural selection that has given its own species’ unique physical characteristics and abilities. When the flower dies, the cells in the flower stop dividing and the organism no longer sustains its own existence. What I mean is: without the flower there is no flower life, nor the potential to evolve to something even higher or more beautiful.

Perhaps this was what Jim meant by a container. In this case the flower is merely the container that has evolved to support the flower’s life. My issue is that I see a container as more of a apparatus that just happens to hold a particular substance. Water in a bucket when spilled on the floor is still water; its properties and characteristics haven’t changed. Again harking back to my limited materialistic perceptions, as a human being I feel intimately attached to my body to an extent where I couldn’t feel as though I could exist without it. My body is not a container that could easily be swapped for another one, this body is me. In a sentimental way, this body has been with me though various iterations throughout my whole life, when I think about it it’s the only thing in this entire universe that has.

I also feel as though my body is more than a container because it defines what I can and cannot do not only physically, but also in how I perceive things, remember things, feel emotions. The human brain, for all it’s breathtaking complexity is still made of physical material that when changed chemically or physically affects what I feel, see and do.

To be very cold, unromantic and blunt (here we go!), I’d say if I were truly just being contained in this vessel, my thoughts shouldn’t be affected by what happens to it. Quite the opposite, I know that if I drink a few Red Bulls, a cup of coffee or a few pints of Guinness my thoughts and perceptions change drastically. I’m not independent of my container, I am my container!

As Jim said himself, we might see things in this huge world in very different ways, but it is fascinating to hear how others perceive such life fundamentals, and damned f*cking comforting to know that no matter what we all do in this life, that we all have each other and that there are other people who can and do feel the same things we do. Just sometimes though (I know I speak from my own view especially): we need reminding of that fact.

And at the end of it all, the mortality rate of all humans is a perfect 100%. Well, unless Duncan MacLeod was really onto something. Black humour, both Jim and I are entitled to it right now. ;-)

ASIDE: Is it any wonder why I couldn’t bring myself to look at mummy and we needed a closed casket at her funeral? Perhaps I’ll grow, change and mature as I get older. I just wish I had been given the time to do so before she left.

Message to James Kloss

James Kloss Taken from the current chat page over on Whole Wheat Radio:

I’m so sorry, hugs from Elke and I. I’ve read what you posted on this site about your mum over the years, she sounded like a upstanding, warm, beautiful and very special person.

Having just lost our mummy recently we know probably the last thing you want to read is sad words, so all we’ll say is that we know you’ve damn well done your mum proud. Have a safe and speedy journey to Ohio, we’ll all keep the Wheaty fires burning until you get back.

Peace and love to you and your family James.

Love Ruben and Elke

Setting up MediaWiki for registered user edits only

UPDATE: The Whole Wheat Radio wiki is back online again.

With the Whole Wheat Radio outage in effect I decided to create some mockup pages outlining some ideas over on my university intranet’s [sic] MediaWiki installation, but after some vocal opposition I decided to whip up a temporary WWR wiki testbed over at http://rubenerd.com/projects/wwr. Feel free to mess around there with WWR related whatnot while the mothership is offline and you have a Sunday morning to kill as I do right now!

If you’re using a wiki under similar circumstances and you don’t need or want anonymous edits compared to a bigger, more collaborative effort like Wikipedia, all it takes is appending one line to your ./LocalSettings.php file:

# Block edits by anonymous users
$wgGroupPermissions['*']['edit'] = false;

I know, I know… that was actually TWO lines, but the point is only the last line actually invokes the functionality described, the first is just a comment… which you should always include. Okay, okay I see your point.

They paved paradise, put up a parking lot

Isn’t it oh-so-human-nature to only notice how important something is, or how much it shaped and affected your life, when it’s gone? And isn’t it a shame when some people can’t see it at all?

Case in point for the former, the current outage over at Whole Wheat Radio has forced me to temporarily consider other music sources I can listen to over the period of a day in the background while I do studies. It’s a pickle of a dilly.

Whole Wheat Radio

I tuned into three different terrestrial radio stations: one was playing Fergie (what an insult to ears everywhere!), the second the two DJs were discussing an up and coming concert by a group who can’t sing, and the third was playing a Glenn Miller Orchestra song. At the risk of sounding like an old fart already, take a guess which one I stuck with!

If you’re in Singapore, Gold 90.5FM is a poor substitute to WWR, but they do play some good stuff. Even if their website sucks harder than an industrial vacuum cleaner! Damn I miss the Wiki.

For some smooth evening chill, also check out An Evening with Dadaist Cabaret. The shows are long enough to be interesting and full of good stuff, while still being a manageable enough size to fit on an iPod, or whatever other portable audio device you may be using. I’m still waiting for a music wristwatch that’s also a coffee machine. That would be sweet.

For the time being too I’m also listening to my Whole Wheat Radio iTunes playlist which includes all the CDs I’ve got so far from it including Kevin So, Greg Brown, The Philadelphia Jug Band, The Renovators, Guy Clark and hopefully soon Marian Call when the latest parcel arrives! There’s only so many times I can listen to these fine folks mashed up together and on random before it starts to feel like a scaled down WWR though. And what if I want to say hello to Jimbob, Kelli, Atuuschaw, RubenBot5000 (he’s my robot who chats after midnight Singapore time), Sparkit, FlyingTrout and more… damn I feel like some of my family has gone!

Here’s hoping Whole Wheat will be able to get back up soon. Give ‘em hell Jim!

Unnecessarily verbose WWR post

This post took just under a week to type because of constant distractions such as studies and work. (isn’t that always the case?). Because of this, it may seem a bit disjointed. Then again if you’re used to reading my ramblings, this probably will seem normal.

My beautiful late mum always said to start everything you write by setting the scene. Considering I’m typing this and not writing it I’m not entirely sure if this rule still applies, but for the sake of posterity I’ll indulge in it here. I always thought the word posterity was funny because it looks like posteria. I’m sitting at a coffee shop in Singapore in the early morning; the sun has just recently risen and (at the risk of unintentionally sounding risque) so have I. I’m enjoying an Americano and a slice of Tiramisu, a cute Japanese girl at the table next to mine just winked at me and I said ohayo gozaimasu which made her blush - which made me blush - and for some reason am feeling intrigued, a little confused and quite excited - but wait, it’s for another reason!

A warped bookshelf impending doom!
A warped bookshelf impending doom!

Due to a particularly disastrous night sleep involving a bookshelf falling on my head (note to self: use all the screws Ikea gives you in the box, and don’t stow a copy of The God Delusion high up because that’s just tempting the powers to get back at you) I found myself at 3am listening to Jim Kloss’s 11am Shoe (sic) despite promising myself I was going to try to realise a regular sleeping pattern again. I don’t understand why one of the most entertaining and interesting people on radio and the intertubes does a show at such a bizarre hour of the day; I’ve been told it has something to do with time zones, but I can’t shake this feeling that somehow he’s involved in a conspiracy to turn me nocturnal, or to use the biological term: nocturnal.

ASIDE: I studied biological in high school, but I was mush better at chemistryical and enjoyed it much moreical.

In retrospect though I wish I had built that bookshelf ever so slightly worse than I did so it could have whacked me in the head twenty minutes or so earlier, because when I tuned into the 11am shoe at the misleading time of 3:24am I was downright fascinated by what I heard. Mr Kloss proposed that Whole Wheat Radio could be the world’s first truly community driven radio station!

The idea infuriated me as I had not thought of it myself first, but as the initial anguish subsided I realised: Jim was absolutely right. Whole Wheat Radio is a community powered radio station.

Whole Wheat Radio

To get a feel of why I thought Jim was right, consider regular, traditional terrestrial radio:

  • It exists for the sole purpose of generating advertising revenue (a business model that I’ve never been a fan, or indeed even an air conditioner, of).
  • Playlists of songs are generally created in advance
  • The music itself generally conforms to only a select few genres and stays that way
  • Music can be chosen by listeners only through request shows, and even then the chances of your chosen tune being played are lower than my doctor’s opinion of my coffee intake

And now consider Whole Wheat Radio:

  • It exists for the purposes of creating a community of people who listen to, appreciate and support independent music
  • Playlists of songs can be created in advance, but not by the "management", but literally by the listeners themselves.
  • The music conforms to no set genre, meaning the community can choose what music fits their mood at any particular time
  • Individual tracks can be requested and are almost certainly played

To put it as bluntly as possible, it’s a friggen damned eye opening comparison! But there’s even more to it than that: not only do wheatheads listen to and request the music that’s played in Whole Wheat Radio (a fact that in itself would be enough to distinguish it from traditional radio), we are also directly involved in the music playing infrastructure itself.

  • We rate songs which determines what music stays and what music gets the boot. We tag songs depending on mood, genre or any other arbitrary categorisation scheme we can think of, which can be used to create shows and make the tracks easier to find
  • We purchase music which supports this artist as well as the site, not just a record label.
  • We engage in heartfelt discussions on the state of world affairs, the global music scene, what coloured socks Jim should be wearing, the draconian copyright laws that make our lives so much more complicated and less rewarding than they could be.
  • We create, update and maintain the information on (hopefully eventually) every song, album, artist on the collaborative wiki system.

Esther Golton: Unfinished HousesRuben Schade: Five and Fabulous!

For these reasons I can’t help but agree that not only am I fortunate enough to be part of this beautiful community, but that I’m also a part of possibly the first truly completely community driven radio station. I’m positive there have been other radio stations that can boast community driven elements, but I doubt there’s been one that’s been driven by real people outside "management" to the extent Whole Wheat is.

ASIDE: I tried being community driven myself once.

I posted on Twitter that I would do whatever people told me to. After five minutes of hopping on one leg in public wearing three sandwich boards, a clown shoe on my left hand and a saucepan in the other, a tea cozy over my head and shouting "THE IRISH ARE COMING!!" in a faux Russian-Africaans accent while riding an imaginary flying hexagonally-wheeled bicycle, my self preservation instincts kicked in and I abandoned the project.

For what it’s worth, my therapist says I’m making admiral progress.

It does present an interesting problem though; what do we call such a phenomena?

  • Collaborative Radio?
  • Community Driven Radio?
  • No BS Radio?
  • People Powered Radio?
  • Listener Powered Radio?
  • Shared Direction Radio?
  • Cheese Steak Jimmy’s?

And those phrases don’t even account for the international community behind it! Since Jim encouraged us to come up with our own ideas though, and given the fact I’m a fan of FLOSS software, I also propose this name which is 100% Rubenerd:

International Open Source Radio

Think about it: the term "open source" implies we are allowed to see how software works and take an active or passive role in it’s future direction. As a community of people from around the world constantly changing, adding to and improving Whole Wheat Radio, and who know how it works from the top end, the term seems to fit perfectly. Considering the wiki software that powers the website is open source too, and the fact that everyone who listens to Whole Wheat Radio is either a computer programmer or someone who’s obsessed with electronics, it’s a great choice. To use an Elke phrase: “… uh, yeah!”

Not impressed? Okay, what about this?

International Free and Open Source Independent Music Distribution and Collaboration System… Thingy

You could call it IFAOSIMDACST (pronounced eye-faw-sim-dak-est) if you wanted a catchy acronym too!

I think I’d better just stick to programming. Hey, it’s the thoughts on the subject that counts right? If not, I just wasted a lot of time :-)

ASIDE: How much Whole Wheat Radio could a woodchuck Whole Wheat Radio, if a woodchuck could chuck Whole Wheat Radio?

I’m not good at telling jokes either it seems.

Back to you, Jim.

587 more reasons to like Whole Wheat Radio

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A Whole Wheaty birthday!

With my birthday in less than a day, my dad gave me his credit card to buy some music from CDBaby with the Whole Wheat Radio affiliate links. I didn’t have to pay for the CDs, he gets to give me something I like without having to work too hard, we both win. Plus it makes at least a small dent in my music to explore list!

  • Kevin So: The So Must Go On!
  • Greg Brown: Milk of the Moon
  • The Philadelphia Jug Band: Self titled
  • The Renovators: Rhythm and Blueprints

The best thing about buying from CDBaby though is the email receipt they send you afterwards :-).

Ruben -
Thanks for your order with CD Baby!

Your CDs have been gently taken from our CD Baby shelves with sterilized contamination-free gloves and placed onto a satin pillow.

A team of 50 employees inspected your CDs and polished them to make sure they were in the best possible condition before mailing.

Our packing specialist from Japan lit a candle and a hush fell over the crowd as he put your CDs into the finest gold-lined box that money can buy.

We all had a wonderful celebration afterwards and the whole party marched down the street to the post office where the entire town of Portland waved “Bon Voyage!” to your package, on its way to you, in our private CD Baby jet on this day, Monday, March 24th.

I hope you had a wonderful time shopping at CD Baby. We sure did. Your picture is on our wall as “Customer of the Year.” We’re all exhausted but can’t wait for you to come back to CDBABY.COM!!

Thank you, thank you, thank you!

Sigh…
Derek Sivers, president, CD Baby

Ed Craver and Esther Golton make my Monday!

“It could feel as overwhelming as standing in a room with too many masterpieces”

On Monday morning at 07:01 here in Singapore I wasn’t tucked in bed asleep, I was plugged into the computer listening to Ed Craver reading some of his brilliant prose and works on Whole Wheat Radio!

Ed Craver and Esther Golton at the Wheat Palace in Talkeetna, Alaska, USA
Ed Craver and Esther Golton at the Wheat Palace in Talkeetna, Alaska, USA

I was expecting to type up a short review of Mr Craver’s readings shortly after hearing them, but as I sit here listening to how much Esther Golton would love to grow lots and lots of sweet corn, I’m absolutely, completely speechless. It’s as though anything I attempt to put into words here would be hopelessly insufficient, if that makes any sense at all. I’ve rewritten this entire post now well over a dozen times, and it still seems inadequate!

Mr Craver took us to the rich farming land in Alaska, to his Island with his livestock, even to a sticky situation he found himself in involving a gigantic boar and a certain sensitive operation! The imagery he conjured up with his brilliant grasp of language was intoxicating and transported me right to frigid Alaskan winters as I sat on my balcony on the seventh floor of our apartment block in hot, humid downtown Singapore.

Ed Craver and Esther Golton on the other side of the planet on an early Monday morning
Ed Craver and Esther Golton on the other side of the world on an early Monday morning

As a young man who grew up entirely in cities around Australia and Asia, Mr Craver’s stories of farm life and living out in one of the most isolated places on earth particularly touched me, and his wicked and witty sense of humour literally had my laughing out loud, much to the dismay of my sister trying to sleep in the room next door!

And to top it off, we had Esther singing Shadu during intermission… what’s the technical musical term I’m looking for again? Oh yeah… YAY!

I’m hoping Jimbob will upload this as an audio magazine so that if you couldn’t catch the performace you can listen later. Heck I want to be able to hear it again myself!

ASIDE: Corn corn! Sweet corn! I’d grow lots of corn!
Corn corn! Sweet corn! All I’d grow is corn!

So there ends my hopelessly inadequate review of Ed Craver Live at the Wheat Palace with Esther Golton. Thank you guys, you were brilliant and made a usually dull and depressing Monday morning into the high of my week! Cheers :-D