Categories
Gadgetology Gaming

Goin’ kinda digital with the Magnavox Odyssey

Remember on MST3K when Dr. Forrester said “Somebody had to be the first to do this, and it might as well be me!” before unleashing some largely useless invention upon the world? Well, you might as well call my game room “Deep 13.” And here’s why:
Magnavox Odyssey...played on an LCD flatscreen
I may be the first person on the planet to send the direct output of the original Magnavox Odyssey to an LCD screen. 😆 Actually, the output of every system I have can be sent to that screen, but it just seemed amusingly incongruous to pump this poor old analog system’s signal through a display more accustomed to digital input.
Hey, somebody had to be the first to do this. 😉… Read more

Categories
Critters

Behold a dark cat.

To my surprise, one of my favorite hangouts at my new house is in a canvas deck chair on the back deck, with my best buddy by my side. Here’s Othello, surveying all that he commands from atop the deck railing.
Othello
Actually, this was on a Sunday morning as we were sitting outside watching a storm roll in – though I completely failed to capture any lightning with the camera.
Othello
Which is okay, because the first decent bolt that appeared scared us both right back into the house.
OthelloRead more

Categories
Should We Talk About The Weather?

Life In Tornado Alley

Eight years ago, I wrote a serious, melancholic diary about my own close brush with a tornado. And I was truly serious (and melancholic) about that at the time, and indeed about many things. But on the eve of a new storm season, having moved away from Tornado Alley and back again, it seems like an excellent time to revisit this subject.
It’s not that I’m no longer afraid of tornado warnings. Au contraire. Now that I’m a homeowner, I’m bloody terrified of them.
2003 was a uniquely bad weather year; May of that year saw my area blanketed with almost daily storm watches and warnings, and by the end of the month, my wife and our cats and I had hit the closet something like seven or eight times. “Hitting the closet,” in this context, meant corralling the three cats into their individual carriers, lugging those carriers down to the hall closet of our rental house, and cramming ourselves in there as well, with a battery-operated radio and a flashlight or two to boot. This can be a somewhat unnerving affair because neither the love of my life nor myself can exactly be described as svelte, and a tower of cats three carriers high takes up a lot of space in a coat closet. It gets warm in there very quick.
It also doesn’t help that the local broadcast media is loaded down with meteorological doomsayers. Far be it from me to suggest that an actual threat should be downplayed, but these guys elevate the art of being Chicken Little to a new height – or a new low. In Tornado Alley, an incoming severe storm is cause for interruption of programming, and in Tornado Alley – and I realize that the following may be a hard concept for those who don’t live here to swallow – a weathercaster, whether on TV or radio, can literally be on the air talking for an hour or two hours at a time until the most constant, persistent core of the storm has left the viewing area. There’s no shortage of information, storm spotter call-ins, and viewer call-ins, and there’s also no shortage of assumption that it’s the worst possible scenario. At night, it’s really a tough call, because you can’t see the damn thing as it’s bearing down on you. This, I know better than most. I don’t envy these people their jobs (indeed, I’ve done that job in the past), but I also don’t envy nerve-wracked viewers and listeners who don’t detect that there’s a wee bit of grandstanding going on. Make one call right, help people out, and you can become a local legend. Overplay it consistently, and you’re the boy – or girl – who cried wolf.
Now, imagine being in that closet on an average of four to six hours a week for a month. After the first three consecutive nights of closet sitting, we eventually left the stack of three cat carriers in the closet, with their doors open – the Kittycat Hilton. After a couple more nights of tornado warnings, including one night where we literally heard the airborne tornado go over the house with an unearthly, subsonic, howling, last-of-the-bathwater-going-down-the-drain-sound-pitched-down-nineteen-octaves moan, the cats learned that the sound of sirens meant that they should proceed in an orderly fashion down the hall and jump into their appointed carriers without us having to pick them up and shove them into the carriers anymore.
One really can get the impression that Someone Up There has it in for you after a few nights of that.
But there are warnings out there. Why, in my youth, I was fucking terrified by the sight of the Red Screen Of Death. No, not a fatal exception at 0EA22F requiring me to close my application and losing all unsaved information. The Red Screen Of Death was something that could cut into my cartoons, or worse yet into Buck Rogers, at any time, instilling true terror. In the 70s and early 80s, local stations all had a standardized “key slide” (a screen-filling still graphic referred to in modern television parlance as a “stillstore”) for weather warnings around here, and there was none of this urgent music and enough-time-to-remind-you-that-the-following-weather-bulletin-was-brought-to-you-by-a-local-Ford-dealership. No, my friends, it came without warning with the horrifyingly blaring tone of an EBS tone, and it looked like this:
TORNADO WARNING
To understand the inherent terror of this sight, one must understand that there was a hierarchy of such graphics, each progressively deepening down the warm side of the color wheel, yellow edging toward orange, orange descending into an angry red. The text got correspondingly larger with the level of threat being announced. Tom Ridge and John Ashcroft would have a field day with this kind of system in place.
Severe Thunderstorm Watch
To understand why these things – and, even to this day, to a certain extent just the color red itself – are so ingrained into my psyche as a Bad Thing, one must take into account one occasion when I was staying at my grandmother’s house after school. She had gone somewhere on a very brief errand on a rainy day, leaving me in the hands of Scooby Doo, a large glass of Dr. Pepper, and two deliciously soppy grilled cheese sandwiches.
And then the Red Screen Of Death had the audacity to interrupt my cartoon.
Tornado Watch And then, before Forrest John, the voice of Fort Smith’s now-defunct National Weather Service office, had a chance to give me further occasion to shit myself, an almighty thunderclap and bolt of lightning hit somewhere very close to the house. And then the power was gone and the wind picked up and the hail began pelting the house and I was under some piece of furniture crying, despite being six or seven or so – past the generally accepted age at which a child, especially a male child, is expected respond that way.
Yeah, somehow that screen permanently etched itself into my memory. I couldn’t really tell you how.
Severe Thunderstorm Warning (By the way, the screens you see above are very accurate recreations I cobbled together in Paint Shop Pro after failing to find any evidence of the real key slides anywhere on the Internet. If anyone out there, especially fellow or former broadcast professionals with experience of working in Tornado Alley, can point me toward the real things, please give me a shout. I’m enough of a bad weather geek to have the originals scanned, digitally enshrine them and return the originals to you.)
Nowadays, I scare the dickens out of myself, with much more technologically advanced means.
Between the months of March and mid-June, I make at least one daily visit to the Storm Predication Center page at the National Weather Service’s web site. They feature helpful graphic representations of their forecasts, accompanied by far more cryptic textual analyses of the conditions that might cause the sky to try to eat my house. With time, I’ve actually begun to figure out what some of these things actually say. Here’s a quick translation chart.
The Chart
The weather alert radio is a vital tool as well, especially now that I live, technically, out in the boonies. There are no sirens out here, and in fact my new home has no west-facing windows, which was really my biggest quibble with buying the place. Why? This stuff almost always moves in from the northwest or, more likely, the southwest. Death stalks the land, and he walks first through Oklahoma. (Fine by me, really. I just wish he’d get his belly full before crossing the border. But I kid the fine people of eastern Oklahoma, my dad and my older sister among them.) The weather alert radio, for those of you not accustomed to our backward ways here, emits a shrill signal when triggered by the National Weather Service’s radio relays. You have approximately 30 seconds to reach the radio and hit a button which will allow the actual Weather Service Signal to be heard, which will include the location, duration and nature of the warning or watch being issued. The Red Screen Of Death is the direct antecedant of this technology, but I handle it fairly calmly unless things are cookin’ in the atmospheric cauldron over my particlar tiny slice of this planet.
The Internet, if you can keep the damned computer online without frying it in its own fat (or yours, if you’re standing too near it when lightning strikes), is a handy tool because of live updated online radars. Sure, TV stations have these too, but the Internet makes it possible for me to just cut to the chase and look at the radar without the attendant histrionics. Green blobs are rain. Yellow blows are heavier rain. Orange blobs probably freeze the rain into little pellets of hail and chuck them at you violently. Red blobs deservedly conjure up all my old fears about full screens of that color. But little spiral galaxies of red and green intertwining into a vortex are the worst news, for that’s something small, fast-moving, and violently rotating. That’s the radar signature of the tornado – in technical terms, a “hook echo return.” It’s where the volume of airborne liquid at that precise location is moving away from – and simultaneously toward – the radar at such a velocity that it indicates very fast rotation. It may or may not be on the ground, and that’s where ground-based spotters come in. God bless these suicidal maniacs, they actually get out in front of the damned thing and keep an eye on it, so long as it isn’t actively trying to eat them. They’re often well-trained ham radio operators, but they also know that being in the wrong place at the wrong time could turn them into spiral-cut hams.
And ultimately, all joking aside, it’s still scary as hell. Now that I own my own home, the next time a tornado warning is issued for Crawford County, and the cities of Alma and Mountainburg are in the path of the storm, I’ll be torn between a panic (for obvious reasons) and a rage (that anything would dare to violate the sanctity of my home). And that really sums up the Tornado Alley experience. When you’ve been under one kind of a watch or another for days on end, it wears you down; even in the privacy and safety of your own home, you feel like you’re about as safe as someone sitting on a street corner in downtown Baghdad. It also often means long work hours for me and everyone else in the broadcast biz, which has its own unnerving effect (especially when, as was the case with the first tornado warning of the season this year, a warning is issued for the vicinity of my home, and something has been spotted on something other than radar, and I’m stuck at work and can’t do anything about it.
Those are the times when I would give anything to be at home, right in the path of it. Drinking Dr. Pepper and eating grilled cheese sandwiches. And at least knowing how bad it is. Because sometimes not knowing is even more nerve-wracking than the knowing.… Read more

Categories
Serious Stuff

Pamela Doesn’t Live Here

It's for youPamela doesn’t live here. Stop calling for her. Really. I mean it.
Oh, hi. Didn’t know you’d clicked through and started reading already. You see, I just got off the phone with this foreign-outsourced collection-agency phone-bank drone who calls my house every day. So you kind of caught me off guard.
Before I go any further, this isn’t really meant to be a catch-all indictment of foreign outsourcing. Though I will say that this increasingly common practice is something I find increasingly distasteful. I understand that outsourcing labor lets corporations bring their labor costs down. But when that labor is the task of communicating with your customers, it begins to get counterproductive.
Which brings me back to Pamela. This guy’s always calling for Pamela.
Pamela doesn’t live here. Pamela is not my wife. Pamela is not my girlfriend (ssshhhhh, don’t tell my wife). Pamela is not my cat, nor my dog, nor my horse. I have no idea who Pamela is. I can only surmise that her phone number is close to mine. And I can surmise that because this fellow is calling for her every goddamned day of the week except for Sunday.
I’m going to refer to this fellow as Victor. As in Victorola. As in skipping needle. He has the strangest elliptical speed pattern – sort of like those Hot Wheels race track loop-de-loop cars I had as a kid, he starts out speaking rapid-fire and in a higher, sing-song voice with quite a detectable Indian accent (which isn’t a problem in and of itself); and then he slows down, his voice seems to drop an octave (I’ll note this by stretching out select words accordingly)…and he speeds up again. That’s Victor.
The phone rings, and so it begins.
“Hello.”
“Hello, Mrs. [name omitted]?”
“Sorry, wrong number.”
“Hello, Pamela [name omitted]?”
“Sorry, no Pamela [name omitted] here. No such person lives here.
“Mrs. [name omitted], I am with [name of credit card company omitted], and you have an outstaaaaaanding baaaaalance of [amount in the upper hundreds omitted]. How would you like to paaaaaaaay that todaaaaaaaay?”
“I’m not Pamela [name omitted]. Pamela [name omitted] doesn’t live here. This is still the wrong number.”
“Mrs. [name omitted], I would remiiiiiiind you that your account is more than 90 days overduuuuuuuuuuue.”
Now, the first few times, I diverted the convseration down the following lines:
“Obviously you’re not understanding me. May I speak to your supervisor?”
“Iiiiiiiiiiiii am not a supervisor.”
“Can I please speak with your supervisor?”
“I am noooooooot a supervisor.”
Inspiration strikes. “Do you want to talk to my supervisor?”
“Iiiiiiiii am not a supervisor.”
Aha. So anytime I say anything involving “supervisor,” he’s going to tell me that a supervisor is, in fact, what he is not. I believe him on that, at least.
Now, let me just say that while I’m making the odd humorous reference to this fellow’s speech pattern, this is not a blanket slam on his ethnicity, or anyone’s ethnicity for that matter. I’m not here to debate on which President’s watch this flood of outsourcing started. I’m not here to lay out a master plan for how it can be stopped. I’m not sure it can. That’s not even what’s bugging me at the moment.
What’s bugging me is that, without making sure he knows who he’s talking to, he has repeatedly told me what kind of credit card this woman has, and how far into the red she is. And he has apparently been instructed that any attempt to go off-script – telling him he has the wrong number, telling him he has the wrong person, asking for a supervisor, etc. – is an attempt to be evasive.
There are so many things wrong with this scenario that I don’t even know where to start. For all I know, given the bizarre nature of these daily conversations, he’s not with a credit card company at all and is trying to scam money out of me. Whatever the case is, my friend Victor is (A) persistent and (B) annoying. But far be it from me to lose it and scream at the guy, I’ve tried having fun with him. I’ve told him that this is not the Pamela [name omitted] residence, but that it is the Pamela Anderson residence. I’ve told him, at various times, that I am not Pamela, but that I am in fact the Queen of England. Or Frank Zappa. Or Ren Hoek. It doesn’t faze him. He still gives me Pamela’s account balance and asks how I want to pay it today. It’s a little game we play.
And before you ask: Victor’s calls show up as “unknown name, unknown number” on caller ID.
Just remember, if this guy is for real, Victor’s employers know what kind of card you have, and what your outstanding balance is. And for all you know, he’s calling Pamela up everyday and telling it to her.
This is just another reason why I don’t have a credit card to my name.
.
In other news, remember a while back when I was ranting about Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corporation and their unsubtle tactics to wring more money out of their customers? It’s been two years now since I wrote that particular tirade, and things haven’t improved a bit. The public utilities commission in the state of Arkansas is still not accountable to the public, and the rates have continued to go up.
In January 2004, I moved into a new home which doesn’t rely one bit on natural gas. It’s all electric. Now, sure, that’s expensive too – my average monthly bill during a cold winter is around $250. But that’s not just the heat. That’s the heat and the fridge and the oven and the washer and dryer and the lights and my computer and my A/V gear and the hot water heater and the security light and the trash compactor. If I was still living in Fort Smith under the iron fist of AOG’s continually mounting costs, I’d be looking at a lower electric bill, but twice that much again just to heat the place. No thanks.
In recent months, Mac Steel, one of Fort Smith’s largest industrial employers and one of AOG’s largest corporate customers, declared its intention to drop AOG’s gas service and run a pipeline to connect with another natural gas provider. AOG cried foul – actually, that doesn’t really do it justice, they screamed bloody murder – and kept it tied up in court for months. Mac Steel upped the ante, outlining a plan to buy every piece of land that would be needed to run this proposed gas pipeline to another provider. AOG tried to turn public opinion against Mac Steel by saying that if Mac Steel was allowed to get its gas from another provider, AOG would have to make up for the huge shortfall by charging its customers more.
The response of the Sebastian County Quorum Court was a refreshing one: they allowed Mac Steel to buy the necessary land to run the pipeline. Even buying all that land and clearing all of the right-of-way needed to run a pipeline, Mac Steel will be saving a huge amount of money in the switch. (Remember, residential customers are being hit with natural gas bills topping $300 per month here. I can’t even imagine or calculate what Mac Steel was having to spend to keep the smelters hot.) AOG has carried through with its threat, asking the public utilities commission to OK yet another rate hike.
So in the short term, the public loses. (AOG is still up to some dirty tricks, however, trying to outbid Mac Steel for the land that it said it would buy.) And yet, this decision may help the public sooner than they think. By allowing a company like Mac Steel to open the door for another natural gas provider to service this area, the county officials have taken the first step in allowing competition – competition that could finally break to stranglehold AOG has over this area’s natural gas customers. Even though I’m no longer one of those customers and it doesn’t affect me, I’m rooting for the competition by default here. Hopefully it won’t take too long for another provider to make its presence known in the area and force AOG to play fair. Because apparently they’ll have to be forced.
.
Due to some recurring gastrointestinal problems that, according to specialists in at least two states, surgery would only make worse, I spend quite a bit of time in the bathroom. (I’m there right now as I’m writing this, in fact.) These visits are often prolonged and it’s not entirely uncommon for them to be painful. In my own way, I’ve tried to find some humor in the situation – if my wife calls me from work while I’m at home on the can, we have a number of phrases that identify the situation ranging from “hunting for poopapotamus” to “fighting the battle of Crappamattox”, depending on the amount of pain involved. (I’m sure you really wanted to hear this.)
Inevitably, this happens at work too, though I take steps to avoid it as much as possible (like doing all of my eating within a 10-hour period, none of which are the ten hours before I go to work). One night I recently wound up hunting for poopapotamus at work (not an easy task!), during which I wrote the “Victor” story you just read. (Thank God for handheld PCs, though I suppose I’ve opened myself to the inevitable criticism that everything I write is shit.) I heard my name being paged on the PA system outside the bathroom door. Not a lot I can do about it. Oddly enough, though, if I had been in the men’s room in the sales wing, there are phones in those bathrooms. Really. Can you imagine that conversation?
“I want to be three 30-second spots in Monday Night Football.”
“Okay, hang on just a second.” [grunt] “Big one coming here.”
“Excuse me?”
“Really big one. Hang on.” [grunt]
“Beg your pardon?”
“Oh boy.” [muffled splashing sound] “Whew. OK. Big one. Uhhhh…closed a big deal. So, 3 x 30 for Monday Night Football, right?”
In any case, the unisex bathrooms for the company’s proletariat have no such amenities. It was about ten minutes before I emerged. On my way through the building, I asked one of my co-workers if I had been paged. He admitted that I had, and then made the fatal mistake of asking where I had been.
“Sitting in the captain’s chair, making a log entry,” I said, and walked away before he had a chance to think about it. Just doing my part to keep Star Trek alive.
But more on that later.… Read more

Categories
Home Base

Moving in

Living room
Boxes crowd the living room.
Living room
The door at the tile entryway is the front door to the house.
Kitchen
Not really much moving going on here, it’s just a look at the kitchen.
Kitchen
There’s a monitor there because I had set up a temporary video dubbing station there so I could get some work done while moving other stuff in.
Dining room
The dining area contains a wood burning stove (!), and it leads into the kitchen, the utility room, and the back door to the deck.
Living room
The open door leads to the master bedroom.
Outside
The view from the deck behind the house. The pond isn’t on our property, although we do have a small pond behind our barn.
Outside
Most of the land in this picture is our property. And those black things on the hillside? Those are known as cows (not ours, though).
Corner
Around the corner from the kitchen is an empty space where we plan to put a china cabinet.
Corner
A little alcove leads into the master bath, a spare bedroom, and the magical place known as the game room.
Game room
My game room/office takes shape.
Game room
The consoles come out of hiding: you can see the 5200, Intellivision and Colecovision here.
Game room
In case you can’t tell by the fact that desk isn’t taking up the entire room, this is, in fact, quite a bit bigger than the old game room. So much so that there will now be two steel shelves: the one with blue rope lights that you’ve already seen, and this one with an unearthly green glow.
Utility room
At right, a peek into the unusually spacious utility room. Since arcade games and laundromats go together naturally, this looks like a fine space for a few coin-ops. If anyone can figure out how I could make a convincing case for that, please let me know!… Read more

Categories
Television & Movies

So…turn Gilligan’s Island into a reality show, will you?

I’ve been kinda half-watching this show tonight – haven’t turned the sound up once except out of curiosity to hear how they’d butcher the classic theme song – and it just looks like reheated Survivor leftovers to me.
Then I got to thinking…what other shows would be good reality programming?
And then it hit me.
The Prisoner
THE PRISONER.
Somewhere between Amazing Race and Boiling Point. Add psychedelia and metaphors (though probably miserably watered down from the original). There’s already a substantial music library.
I don’t know quite how one would do the Rover thing though. Unless you dress Joe Don Baker up in white sweats or something.
And admittedly, the whole brainwashing/torture/truth serum/gassing people into unconsciousness thing would be a bit troublesome.
But I could almost see it.… Read more