RKO uploads are back...
Posted: 20/11/2004 - 9:42
<Prof Farnsworth> Good news everyone... </Prof Farnsworth>
Thousands[1] of engineers have worked laboriously day and night to ensure that you, the public, once again will have the opportunity to get a fresh dose of your favorite c64 remix drug. "How is this done?", I hear you ask. Simple - using smoke, mirrors, the odd dose of brain-fuel (aka "beer") and the latest advancements in squirrel-driven technology we're once again able to accept uploads to everyones favorite mp3 outlet. And not only that - cleverly constructed PHP scripts now automate the procress of checking the submissions for properly filled in forms and proper mp3 encoding. Stuff not in compliance won't be added, as our patented "Shock Therapy" business logic checks things upon upload-completion. Yes, this does mean that you'll be able to spend time uploading something only to have it canned straight away - which should teach you to get the details right in the future.
All that's left for the good administrative people at the other end of the ether is to check whether the submitted tunes sound good or not and whether they cover real-world music. Thus speeding up the arranger-to-public rate no end. We'll all be replaced by robots in the end, I tell you. Run for the hills.
[1] Well, two. Yours truly, with a bit of help from Skitz.
Thousands[1] of engineers have worked laboriously day and night to ensure that you, the public, once again will have the opportunity to get a fresh dose of your favorite c64 remix drug. "How is this done?", I hear you ask. Simple - using smoke, mirrors, the odd dose of brain-fuel (aka "beer") and the latest advancements in squirrel-driven technology we're once again able to accept uploads to everyones favorite mp3 outlet. And not only that - cleverly constructed PHP scripts now automate the procress of checking the submissions for properly filled in forms and proper mp3 encoding. Stuff not in compliance won't be added, as our patented "Shock Therapy" business logic checks things upon upload-completion. Yes, this does mean that you'll be able to spend time uploading something only to have it canned straight away - which should teach you to get the details right in the future.
All that's left for the good administrative people at the other end of the ether is to check whether the submitted tunes sound good or not and whether they cover real-world music. Thus speeding up the arranger-to-public rate no end. We'll all be replaced by robots in the end, I tell you. Run for the hills.
[1] Well, two. Yours truly, with a bit of help from Skitz.