My Favorite Viral Videos

I was re-watching Weezer’s Pork and Beans video and am still impressed by the number of outstanding viral videos they managed to squeeze into it. In tribute to the YouTube stars, here’s a summary of my favorites:

Canon Rock by Funtwo

Diet Coke + Mentos by EepyBird

Numa Numa by Gary Brolsma

Evolution of Dance by Judson Laipply

Kung Fu Audition Gone Wrong by Afro Ninja

Chocolate Rain by Tay Zonday

T-Shirt Guiness World Record by Matt McAllister

Are cellphones safe?

Just when you thought it was safe to use a cellphone, along comes this video…

EDIT: I’ve been told that this is indeed a hoax. Snopes has the details (scroll to the bottom).

Very cool viral video compilation

I’ve never heard of Weezer before, but their music video for Pork and Beans rocks! If you’re a fan of all the viral videos out there, it’s really impressive how they’ve put them all into this video!

Pork and Beans - Weezer

iPhone Ringtones

I’ve had my Apple iPhone for awhile now, but what really irks me for all the music-power of the iPhone, is how incredibly difficult it is to get good ringtones for it!

Sure you can pay $0.99 to iTunes to download a ringtone, but that feature is really limited. I had already purchased the JXL Remix of Elvis’ A Little Less Conversation (regular iTunes), liked the song, and figured that it’d be a cool ringtone. So after paying another $0.99 to get the “ringtone version”, it turned out that the sound quality was crap. The ringtone (which sounds fine on my PC’s speakers) sounded tinny and crackly on the iPhone’s ringer. Technically speaking, the ringtone’s “range” was set too wide and too loud to be handled by the iPhone’s ringer. And because the ringtone was encrypted by Apple’s proprietary AAC encoding, there was no way for me to lower the volume (even though iTunes allows you to “modify” the default volume of songs on iTunes, it does not offer this feature for ringtones). Basically, $0.99 down the drain!

After alot of searching (there were various articles online which explains how to make your own ringtones for free, but all of these loopholes had since been closed by Apple), I discovered the best way to get around the problem was to create ringtones myself using a few simple tools. The process is:

  • Find a MP3 (or WAV or some other unencrypted music format) version of the song you’d like to convert to a ringtone.
  • Install Wavepad. It’s free, so you can’t beat that!
  • Using Wavepad, you can edit the song as you desire. Trim, increase/decrease volume, fade in/out, and a million other effects.
  • Install iPhoneRingtoneMaker. There’s a full-feature-but-limited-use free-trial, but it is really worth the money! Just make sure you read their home page, to ensure that the current version of iTunes is supported before you pay money!
  • Using iPhoneRingtoneMaker, load the song/ringtone you just created - two-clicks and viola it’s in your iTunes ringtones folder.
  • Sync your iPhone, and then set it to use your new ringtone!

For $14.95 (the price of iPhoneRingtoneMaker), there’s really no easier way to get ringtones onto your iPhone! You can download 15 crappy ringtones (at $0.99 each) from Apple iTunes, or just make great quality ones them yourself (with fade in/out effects so that it actually sounds like a real ringtone).

I fully support musicians and artists (the MP3s I have were purchased legally from places like Amazon MP3 Store and Music Today). I love my iPhone, and I’d also love to support iTunes, but until they get me a real way of putting quality ringtones on my iPhone, there is no other practical option available to me.

For the record (no pun intended), and to give my favorite band a bump:

  • I purchased The Eagles latest album (Long Road Out Of Eden, in FLAC lossless encoding).
  • Used WinAmp to convert FLAC to WAV format. And then used iTunes to import the WAV files as MP3. The instructions on how to do this bit can be found here.
  • Then I used WavePad to edit the MP3 (creating new files with the shorter ringtone version).
  • And finally iPhoneRingtoneMaker to import that new MP3 back into iTunes/iPhone as a ringtone.

Net result, I now officially own The Eagles’ latest album. And my iPhone has some ringtones that I really love!

Feargal Sharkey - A Good Lyric…

I was listening to an 80’s radio station today, and heard Feargal Sharkey’s “A Good Heart” (a classic song from the 80’s).

That was when I noticed that every single line from that song was a cliche:

  • Risk of getting hurt
  • I still have so much to learn
  • Real love is hard to find
  • My expectations may be high
  • I blamed it on my youth
  • I learned the painful truth
  • Please be gentle with this heart of mine
  • I learned a little every day

Which made me wonder, whether this song was so good that every line of it entered popular culture and became cliches we now use? Or did the guy just rip off every cliche in the book, to create this this song? Judge for yourself…