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Gadgetology Toiling In The Pixel Mines

Isn’t it Byronic, don’tcha think

I realized today that I hadn’t really offered the “more about the trip” thing that I promised earlier, so let me get back on track there.
The funny thing about Byron, Illinois is that, in years past when driving to Green Bay and back again, I had passed the exit to go to Byron about a zillion times. It used to be about a 3-and-a-half hour drive from me – not 11-and-a-half hours. The other funny thing about Byron, Illinois that didn’t occur to me until this morning is that the first guy I even knew who had his own video production business was named Byron (may have been Bryon though – it’s been a long time ago, as in a when-my-mom-was-still-around long time ago). I could go into a “Lucky Wander Boy”-inspired rant about how the signs are coming to pass in great numbers, but I’ll spare you.
The state highway to get to Byron had some beautiful foliage. The trees are already turning there (though as I write this, it’s not even 60 degrees outside my house, so I suspect that’s something Arkansas will soon be sharing with Illinois). The highway goes west for about 10-15 miles, and as you get closer to Byron, two big steaming towers show up in the distance – a nuclear power plant that’s just a little bit south of Byron itself. You come to a stop right next to a bridge over the Rock River, and go north, and you’re in town. … Read more

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Funny Stuff Serious Stuff Television & Movies

“Getting”??!?

A topic title seen on the Trekweb message boards:
Why is Battlestar Galactica getting so political…
Um…wow. I can only assume that before last week’s season premiere, the last Battlestar Galactica that guy had seen was in 1979. 😆 😯
I was saddened to see the news this week that Outpost Gallifrey is bringing an end to regular news page updates, citing a lack of manpower to keep up with the huge amount of news about both the new TV series and its army of spinoff properties in other media. I have nothing but good things to say about Shaun Lyon, the webmaster and editor of Outpost Gallifrey, and the stellar job he’s done with keeping up with the daunting load of keeping up with all of that stuff. (I’d much rather have the problem of too much news to sift through than the opposite.) However, when sites like Trekweb and theForce.net have taken on staff members to keep up with specific kinds of news without burdening any one person to breaking point, I really have to wonder if the BBC didn’t quietly ask Shaun to step back so they could become the go-to web destination for Doctor Who news. I hope that’s not the case; the end of Shaun’s news page means the end of equal time for Big Finish audio productions and books, Magic Bullet audios, books by Telos or Mad Norwegian Press, and announcements of countless conventions, get-togethers and fan-organized charity events that just don’t stand a snowball’s chance in hell of making it onto the BBC’s Doctor Who news page because they’re not directly tied in to the new show. I hope the BBC can see it in their heart to either start a separate news page in their “classic series” section for their licensees who are keeping the classic franchise alive, or loosen up their restrictions on what’s “newsworthy.”
Or maybe they should hire Shaun Lyon to run their news page for them.
Speaking of news, since the two tragic incidents that brought school violence back into the national spotlight recently, we’ve had a rash of scares in this area. And every last single damned one of them has made the news. I don’t know if we’re dealing with jumpy school officials, kids with a sick sense of humor, kids whose dark sides are seeing an avenue for expression, or a vulture mentality among the local news media, or a combination of all of the above, but today, our station covered two threats/incidents at two different schools, with an actual shooting in Joplin.
Now, I have to wonder: if we laid off the coverage, would there suddenly be a drop in the number of incidents? I’m not saying it would solve all of the school violence woes across the country, but by God, if the wanna-bes stopped seeing every incident get wall-to-wall coverage and recaps in the news for days afterward, maybe they might decide to reformat their cries for attention into something less destructive if they aren’t assured that they’ll get the attention they crave by lashing out. I understand there’s an obligation to inform the public, but let’s temper that with an understanding that what we put on the air does have an affect on the people who see it – sometimes with frightening consequences.
I lose sleep over this stuff. I’m not sure my management does – think of the ratings! I look forward to the end of my involvement with the news business.… Read more

Categories
Critters Gadgetology

The verdict is in…

…and it’s the motherboard! The replacement is already lined up. Apparently it’s a fairly unique mobo, so we’re having to order its replacement all the way from Canada. Hopefully I’m no more than two weeks away from having the Avid up and running.
Speaking of which, there’s another piece of equipment I haven’t devoted any blawg time to as yet: a 4-track studio cassette recorder that came with all of the gear. I don’t know what this was being used for in the original configuration of the equipment, but it’s a nice piece of kit.
Tascam 4-track recorder
It has serial ports on the back for automation control and, I’m presuming, punch-in pedals. The inputs come in both standard mic jack and XLR jack flavors. It’s quite a step up from the 4-track cassette recorder that a lot of the older stuff in my music section was recorded on. Put simply, this haul is making me want to re-energize a lot of my creative juices.
And my cats just want to wrestle next to all these Avid parts that are waiting for a nice safe motherboard to be plugged back into:
Othello and Olivia extreme kitten wrestling
My wife saw a calico kitten sitting on someone’s woodpile today while she was delivering their mail, meowing to get her attention (that is to say, the kitten was meowing to get my wife’s attention, not vice versa, though I’m not saying that it couldn’t happen), and wondered if it was homeless. Could there be another little furry mouth to feed in our future…? Would Othello stand a chance against two playful calico girl kitties? Would anyone in this house ever sleep again? Tune in next time!… Read more

Categories
Critters Gadgetology

Preparations E.

In the absence of an Avid to play with at the moment (Kent has had some work stuff going on, so he probably won’t get to take his first look at it until tonight), I’ve been testing out the Super VHS VTR that I got in the same package, as well as messing around with some 3-D software (of which more later).
Super VHS VTR
This is it – being on top of that tower of plastic shelves (my temporary solution to the lack of a rack) probably makes it look a bit smaller than it really is. It’s a bulky, heavy monster, and just getting it up there scared the hell outta me. (The thought of having to lift it off of there someday scares me too.) It delivers a very nice picture, and has both BNC and S-video output ports; I ran one of the S-video outputs to the S-video jack on Orac’s LCD screen, which will serve nicely as a playback monitor. It gives an awesome picture, even on stuff that I shot years and years ago with my plain old VHS camcorder.
Avid Manual
This is the documentation for the Avid, by the way. Note that it’s bigger than the freakin’ speaker!
Olivia snoozing
This is an Olivia I woke up while I was trying to get this picture, looking like she’s just been squished by all those pillows.
FlavH20
This is a flavored water drink we picked up at the store the other day – yummy apple flavor, though it turned out not to be sugar-free, so I don’t know if I’ll be getting any more. But at the very least I was completely fascinated by that container – it’s like a plastic drink bottle sliced in half with a pop-top can lid on the top. Maybe this is something that’s been floating around the rest of the country for ages, but I’ve never seen anything like it – pretty cool, actually.
I have to go back to work tonight, and I’m in no hurry to do so. That may be big talk for someone with a broken Avid, but it’s getting harder and harder to not just walk out of the place. (For those thinking “Well, that’s okay, but common sense would seem to dictate not blogging about it getting harder and harder to not just walk out of the place,” that thought’s occurred…but so has another thought: I don’t care. At the moment they need me more than I care to stick around with them. I don’t have to be part of that organization to make my soul and my life complete, y’know? Plus I’ve made no secret of my desire to leave, or the reasons why. The income helps, but even that can be replaced once I’m up and running. (And in any case, the money I’d save by not having to drive half an hour into town every day would almost cancel out the loss of income.)
Just gotta be patient…… Read more

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Television & Movies

Review: The Nine

ABC has been riding the horse really hard on this show, boasting about the huge amount of advance praise it got before its premiere. I finally got around to watching last Wednesday’s premiere, which I taped because I figured that there must be something to all that praise. Honestly, having seen the pilot episode, I now find myself saying “….what??”
The premise is simple: ten people are trapped in a bank when a robbery attempt goes down, and held hostage; only nine of them get out with their lives. One of the robbers comes out in a coma, and the other comes out saying it wasn’t his idea. And yet no one on the outside, even after intense interrogation of all of the survivors, can really seem to get a clear picture of what happened, how the one robber would up being so badly injured, and what exactly led to the killing of the bank teller. These nine survivors find themselves clinging to each other, feeling like no one else can understand what they’ve been through, and so on. The pilot starts to set up that they’re feeling distant from their everyday, pre-robbery, pre-hostage-situation relationships, some of them are probably going to have affairs with each other (this already happens with at least one couple in the pilot, with some fairly straightforward hints about at least a couple of other couplings forming in the future, and so on.
There are some problems with this basic setup that I’m seeing already. I’ll probably give The Nine two or three more episodes to see how things play out, but at the moment, I’m just finding myself ambivalent about the whole thing. One thing that the advance reviews nail on the head is that John Billingsley (formerly Dr. Phlox of Star Trek: Enterprise) is the breakout member of the cast. (Though I will say that, in the hour following Lost, in which former Party Of Five cast member Matthew Fox plays a doctor, it’s funny to see a show in which former Party Of Five cast member Scott Wolf plays a doctor.) Billingsley’s character, Egan Foote, isn’t the only sympathetic character in the group, but by the end of the hour he and Chi McBride (whose performance I always enjoy in just about any non-Secret-Life-Of-Desmond-Pfeiffer vehicle he shows up in) are just about the only two characters who haven’t displayed some serious flaws bordering on the unlikeable. Foote is a henpecked husband who has begun to feel as though he can’t get anything right, and in the opening act of the pilot is clearly making serious plans to commit suicide. (Granted, this too could be seen as a character flaw, but I feel for the guy.) During the hostage crisis, Foote shows a heroic side that he didn’t even know he had, and once the crisis is over, he lightens up considerably, clearly realizing that he’s been given a second chance. He’s still overly critical of himself, having grown accustomed to others being overly critical of him, but he seems ready to seize the day – he’s almost the only joyful character in the bunch by the end of the thing, to be truthful.
Why no joy for everyone else? Clearly The Nine is going to be a show about trauma. The American viewing public is well acquainted with this over the past five or so years, thanks very much. Now, the thought occurs that The Nine could deliver some interesting, character-led perspectives on dealing with trauma, where that coping can take you for good or ill, and possibly even on the uniquely western phemomenon that is declaring oneself to be a victim of something. That would be interesting. The trailer for the second episode, however, seems to show standard cop/lawyer show stuff. I could watch Law & Odor: Criminal Stench if I wanted to see that. (Note: I don’t dislike the L&O franchise, that’s just an amusing little title I came up with the last time I cleaned a litterbox.) I’m much more interested in the trailer’s scenes showing Egan stepping forward to claim his fifteen minutes of fame.
About the mysterious 52-hour standoff that will slowly unravel in flashback, that comes across as an extremely forced mystery. Sure, a lot can happen in that time, but the thought that we’re going to spend a whole season, maybe even more, slowly uncovering 52 hours just isn’t really anything that’s hitting my buttons. With Lost, at least, you have backstory to unravel – who are the Others, what happened to the Dharma Initiative, and so on; The Nine tries to twist Lost inside out, putting the mystery in the flashbacks and putting the character development in the present – which means that, eventually, you’re going to run out of mystery. Even Invasion didn’t limit its mystery element to the past.
Which brings me to ABC’s brag about the overnight ratings for The Nine:

Excluding only last season’s finale of “Lost,” which ran into the hour, “The Nine” produced ABC’s largest audience with regular programming in the time period since last September and its top Adult 18-49 rating since November – since 9/28/05 and 11/30/05, respectively.

So, in other words, the last show that did as well as The Nine was…Invasion.
When I’m seriously thinking that I’m going to wind up fast-forwarding through the next 2-3 episodes of The Nine just to get the scenes where I can see what happens to Egan and what happens to McBride’s bank manager character, I wonder why we couldn’t just be getting a second season of Invasion at this rate. (Before anyone accuses me of losing perspective here, re: Invasion, bear in mind that I do understand the cold, hard math that explains why that show is off the air – I’m just saying that the same numbers may soon apply here.)… Read more

Categories
Gadgetology

Preparations D.

Well, there’s always a catch.
Parts is parts
Whether that catch is the power supply or the motherboard is what Kent is working on figuring out now. (He got the two 22″ VGA monitors out of the deal – which turned out to be better than advertised, since they were both dual-input monitors with A/B source selector buttons on their front panels – since I’ve already got LCD flatpanels I’ll be using for this.) All I do know is that everything else powers up, but when the PC is connected to power, it just emits a whine, and can never seem to be turned on. I can’t wait to hear what it sounds like when it is up and running though – just the Avid Meridian module, the “QuietDrive” (HA!) and the VTR all turned on sound like a plane about to take off next to my head.… Read more

Categories
Gadgetology

For those avidly interested…

My wife and I made the trip from Arkansas to just south of the Illinois-Wisconsin border and back in one incredibly compressed trip lasting 26 hours. The whole process was made much easier by the fact that her vehicle has dual controls – two steering wheels, two brake pedals, two accelerators, etc. etc., you get the idea. (Now, never mind that one set of those controls is in the back in a tail gunner position…okay, okay, just kidding there.) So we didn’t have to do a Chinese fire drill for someone else to take the wheel. With only brief stops for gas, one five-or-six hour layover at a truck stop in a tiny little Illinois town (whose name I now can’t remember – Topica? Topeka? Tapioca? Kai Opaka?) for a nap, and about a half-hour stop on the return trip for a little bit of a “picnic” in the parking lot of a filling station, we were always on the move. … Read more