Archives for: 2009, week 38

09/25/09

Permalink 04:11:43 pm, by Michael Email , 360 words, 242 views   English (US)
Categories: Tolkien Research

Where to look for old Tolkien radio shows and other things

People occasionally contact me or the Xenite.Org administrators and ask us if we can help them find Tolkien collectibles. Most often people are looking for audio books or recordings of the old radio adaptions.

There were three radio adaptations that I know of: two by the BBC and one by Mind's Eye Theater. Most people tell me they prefer the second BBC adaptation (the first was not recorded, to the best of my knowledge).

Although I cannot recommend which audio or video resources you want to acquire, I can share some suggestions that may help you in your quest.

First, if you're looking for printed materials, especially older volumes, you should check Forodrim's Chronological Tolkien Bibliography. It may not be the most thorough and complete bibliography out there but it is extremely well-researched and organized. I doubt it omits many major books (it was last updated a few years ago, however, so it doesn't yet include The Children of Hurin or The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun).

For other media there is an old document I worked on in the 1990s, the Middle-earth WorldFAQ (don't ask why I don't have that on one of my sites -- I have no idea of why I don't). It's a starting point, no more.

Peter Collier maintains the Tolkien Library site, where you'll find a lot of information about Tolkien books.

And if you're in to collectibles, you have to check out (Joe) Mike Williams' Tolkien Collector site.

But before you buy anything from anyone, run a few searches on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and eBay. You may find they have what you're looking for in stock.

Finally, if you're not ready to buy anything, but you want to track down a band, musician, album, or song that is connected to Middle-earth then Middle-earth Radio lets you browse a huge catalog of Tolkien music (look in the right-hand column for "Playlist/Requests").

In the future when people contact us for help I will probably just refer them to this blog post. I should have written it a long time ago, I guess.

Enjoy your quest, and may you find what you seek!

09/21/09

Permalink 01:21:39 pm, by Michael Email , 378 words, 78 views   English (US)
Categories: General

FCC ruling cheats consumers with fake Net Neutrality

Net Neutrality is one of the greatest lies to be perpetrated on the American public. You've been told it would mean fair access for everyone. The truth is that Net Neutrality reduces the costs of making money for large corporations by shifting those costs to American consumers who won't benefit from the technologies that need more infrastructure.

In other words, you and I don't use the Internet enough to justify paying for additional Internet capacity that is only required by a small minority of Internet users -- users who in some cases are engaged in illegal activity.

Today the FCC cheated consumers by supporting the Net Neutrality lie -- forbidding Internet carriers from policing their own networks to ensure that small numbers of users don't steal bandwidth from the rest of us.

There is only so much bandwidth to go around, and while we all enjoy media-rich content on the broadband access that we have, some people enjoy it one or two orders of magnitude beyond what the normal broadband user needs. These people have used the courts to cheat their fellow customers of fair access to the Internet. Now these bandwidth hogs are using the Federal Communications Commission to cheat us again.

The FCC ruling will drive Internet carriers to develop new bandwidth, but since they cannot charge the heavy bandwidth users to pay for the infrastructure upgrades, we'll all have to bear the burden. This FCC ruling is so anti-consumer that it means companies like Google and Amazon, who have long supported the Net Neutrality lie, will be able to roll out highly profitable applications without having to pay the costs of developing the infrastructure to support them.

You and I get stuck with that bill.

A group of Senate Republicans hope to challenge the FCC's ruling through legislation. Although I've not been happy with the Republican Party lately, this is one time they are acting in consumers' best interests. Americans should be contacting their Democratic Senators and Congressional Reps and urging those people to work toward reversing the FCC ruling.

American consumers deserve better than to be forced by their own government to pay for the development of resources they won't use.

You're welcome to comment here or discuss Net Neutrality with me at SF-Fandom.

Michael Martinez

Michael Martinez shares thoughts and information about Tolkien Studies and research on the World Wide Web.

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