You Can’t “Remaster” The Beatles, But It’s Nice To Have Them In MP3

The other day is doing my morning Twitter rounds, making sure that the world hadn’t imploded between 2:00 and 8:00 AM, when I came across a tweet about Botany Buddy from someone I didn’t know. Now, my personal tweetographic region isn’t full of people that I often know on a personal (as in “in person”) level. Those who tweet in my actual town are more prone to know me as a home-brewer than a horticulturist. However, in my brief stint in the nest I have definitely come to “know” some of you in the most cyber of senses, and I think we have developed some true bonds. But other than a few locals here in the mountains I think most of the getting to know that people do at this stage of my Twitter existence is still a matter of “Checking Me Out”. This tweeter was definitely checking me out. It went something like this…
“Watching a demo of @botanybuddy’s Tree and Shrub Finder. Not quite ready to get rid of my copies of Dirr and Hosie et al.”
Of course I replied…
“I still have mine and just bought the new one, but they don’t fit in my pocket and don’t have a search engine so I use both
”
For those who don’t know Dirr wrote the Bible of trees and shrubs and all subsequent versions.
Lets face it, I love books and always will, but I needed something I could use in different was. My father was a college professor and every house we lived in had at least one room that was wallpapered from ceiling to floor with books on Philosophy, Political Science, and History. As for my own, I replace the history with Gardening, Design, and Architecture. I live for the day I can wallpaper with them and I love nothing more than to retreat into the stacks and dig out the most precious nugget of theory or fact, but almost immediately take what I find and somehow put it on my computer. A little known fact is that after decades I have reunited with my high school debate partner to create Botany Buddy. As I wrote our original database surrounded by stacks of books and references till all hours of the morning for months on end, I couldn’t help but hearken back to endless nights in the local college library writing our note cards and scouring the stacks, microfiche and card catalogs.
This process has also brought me back to much of the music of my past, as the headphones have been vital to my ability to focus and get my work done. The scouring of data and compiling of collections has also coincided with the rediscovery of my music collection which is as vast and old as my collection of garden references. Burning all of my old Cd’s and converting to iTunes from Napster made me even more aware of what we were about to do with all of these plants and the people in print and in my life who had brought me too them. As I entered the plants and wrote the descriptions I relived my first reads and all of the people who I had planted them for. I was also reliving the memories of all the people and moments associated with the music I was listening to at the same time. In the greatest of all coincidences, the final submittal of the final version of the app also coincided with the long awaited release of the remastered collection of The Beatles.
Almost as much as I looked forward to the release of the app, I was also looking forward to the re-release from The Beatles. How great it was going to be to click one button and download every song they had ever written in chronological order and grouped by album. Having bought them all at some point in vinyl, put them into or bought them on tape (even some on real to real), and eventually bought them one more time on CD to honor their survival to the digital age, the chance to buy them one more time was going to be an honor. I was feeling the same about buying my own app. To have all the things I love digitally recorded and stored where I could save and use them for eternity without every having to hunt them down because I had lost or worn them out again was going to be a dream come true.
I may sound a little obsessive compulsive and I am. I even have every printed version of the Joy of Cooking and use them all. It seemed almost spiritual as I was going to get the Beatles on MP3 at as the same time as would launch my own creation. There was only one thing wrong…In the end (regardless of Amazon’s advertising) there were no MP3’s. Once again I would have to replace the Cd’s that I had worn out, and that was alright, because they are worth it. I also just bought the new version of Dirr. There are no full color pictures, there is no search engine, and I can’t freely share the contents with my Buddies. But I bought it again anyway even though it cost $70 to my $10 app. Why, because through his writing he has become a part of me, still has much to offer, and as in industry we owe where we are and where we are going to those who have brought us to this point.
To go full circle, as this new venture continually makes me do with my life, we are not trying to replace the Michael Dirr’s of the world, we are trying to honor their work. When I first heard the Beatles were being “remastered” I thought it was insulting to even use the term with their name. However, the thought of having them available in my pocket, with a search engine, and where I could share them with my wife in daughter excited me to all end. When I got married, A Little Help From My Friends and When I’m 64 were our wedding songs, it happens to be in my ears right now. When I bought the newly released collection, I didn’t buy the remastered version, I bought the originals and converted them to MP3. The Beatles, my friends, and the Michael Dirr’s of the world are what have gotten me to where I am today. I would never try to replace them, but I would love to have them all on MP3.



I have recently been recommending a series of apps to a few folks that is based on a long running series of books. I had only used one of these app extensively and really liked it. Some of you have given me feed back on another one of those and voiced it loudly. I have to admit, the one that impressed me I had not used the book version of all that much. The one that people have been disappointed with I have used the book version extensively.
I took the app and the book out for a ride in the woods this weekend, and have to admit you are all right. The book is way better and you have demonstrated the opposite of this post to me. For those of us who write and create, but want to embrace these new technologies we have to be careful not to give up creative license. I will admit when I built my first app my developer drove me nuts, and I gave up some things that I regret, but I am getting them back in. I was lucky to have a partner that knew the pitfalls of the industry and guided me through the process. For those of you who don’t be careful.
Mobile and internet technologies are nice and shiny these days, but in the end good products and good business are the same. Honesty, quality and a respect for the art or trade you are depicting is essential. There are tons of people out there pioneering this field who frankly aren’t used to dealing with people or customers on a personal level. In the end, a customer is a person and their purchases are personal to them. When I wrote this post it was to convey my desire to use technology to connect people with the place from which the information came. You pointed out to me this weekend what happens when technology tries to capitalize on the work of others and not honor it.
Thanks for the reminder and looking out for us,
Botany Buddy