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6
Sep 11

Unexpected home day

The phone has one of those customized ringtones that I prefer to make by hand. Oh, sure, I could download an app, stream a snippet of a song off of Telstar 6 and make everyone thing I’m contemporary. I could pull a file off of some site designed in 1996 and retrofitted to look like 1999 — please make it look like Angelfire! — and have a great Family Guy punchline as my ringtone.

Interesting, there’s a significantly large paragraph on Wikipedia’s Family Guy page for criticism. None of it has to do with how every one of their jokes is ripping off someone more clever.

Anyway, I could do those things with my phone. But I like to find songs no one has ever heard and edit the entire thing down to a 30 second snippet. I do this in Adobe’s Soundbooth, save it as an mp3 and then undertake the software steps necessary to convert the mp3 into something my phone will recognize. These steps are almost as complex as what launched Telstar 6 in 1999.

Rest assured, when I invent my time machine, the third trip I’m making is back to 1980. We’re going to have a talk about the old Apple slogan. I’m changing it to “Soon there will be 2 kinds of people. Those who use computers, and those who can’t people you have made such a ridiculous mess of iTunes.”

But I digress. The ringtone is important. Sets the tone and all of that. Also it tells you when your phone is ringing. I had a great De La Soul track from which I distilled an entire narrative into 30 seconds. Loved it. Everyone loved it. I grew self conscious of it, however. This is fits into the constructs of the person I imagine myself to be, but may defy the vision you have of me as independent, abstract character.

So I searched for new songs. I have another I love, a Fitz and the Tantrums song you’ve never heard. It is terrific, dramatic and soulful. It has to do with a metaphorical wind, and how this is going to change everything, and the intended target must simply deal with it. Great bass line, nice chorus, the perfect fade. It stands out when the phone rings. I may have to change the thing again.

I say this because it woke me up this morning, the ringing phone, from the other room. The Yankee said “Your phone is ringing.” After careful analysis we later concluded I said “Hrmmmmfarple potato sack race phone.”

The call went to voicemail. And then it rang again.

Fine. I’ll answer the farple potato sack race phone.

Turns out there were several message, most of them text alerts. The central portion of the state had been hit in a less than gentle way by the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee. There were trees down on roads. Water covered roads. Hundreds and thousands without the pleasant hum of power that keeps you living a few milliseconds up from Little House on the Praire. These things I new when I retired last evening.

This morning I learned that campus also had no power. The place was closed. Class was canceled. I made a call to the boss. We decided there would be no paper tonight. Various other phone calls and text messages were shipped off into the early morning.

“I’ll be working from home today.”

So I did that, watching as a grimly light, overcast morning turned into a drab, chilly afternoon. We turned off the air last night, opened the windows and let the cat enjoy bird sounds. This was the first day you could have the windows open since mid-May. This is unseasonably cool — I marked the evening with the first long-sleeved t-shirt of the year — but not unwelcome, and brought on entirely by the clouds from that storm.

Oh, we got some rain, and our temperatures dipped into the 50s, odd for September in Alabama, but that was the bulk of it here. We needed the rain and that was plenty. We also had four tornado warnings yesterday, but nothing came of them.

So I read and tinkered at home today. I watched a bit of television. I fell asleep so hard on the sofa the cat thought I was dead. The cat was not overly disturbed. (She knows the next three days of Catember are auto-posted. So long as she has food, water and is famous on the Internet, she’s fine.)

Linky things: If you are looking for me a $60-70,000 birthday/Christmas combo gift, I’ll just point you in the direction of the Switchblade, a flying motorcycle, or any of the comparable competitors out there. If that’s a little more than you want to spend on me, that’s fine. I have ideas in every price range.

But a flying motorcycle? Sixty-three miles to the gallon on the ground? An 800 mile range at about 155 miles per hour by air?

You could chip in with everyone else that has me on their shopping list and I would send you all the best individual thank you cards. If you are with a 400 mile radius I’d hand-deliver them, by air.

Time is now running two new Tumblr accounts. The first, Lightbox is based on their similar photoblogging efforts elsewhere. The second, Time on Tumblr, “aims to be a digital scrapbook of (Time’s) vintage work, its indelible cultural influence and our own anecdotes on the work we do.”

You think of all of those archives and you just want to say “Publish faster, guys!”

I can note this: A few weeks ago, I guess it was, I noted on Twitter that a squirrel had walked up onto the back porch and stole the grill’s cleaning brush. The brush is much larger than the squirrel, has no redeeming value (barely serving at that level as a grill brush) and would have presumably been too much plastic and heft for a rodent to carry in his jaw. But as was pointed out on Twitter, the squirrel heart what the squirrel heart wants.

We noticed over the weekend, while grilling, that the brush was gone. I gave a cursory glance around the yard, focusing on where the squirrel ditched the brush the last time — he’d escaped to the trees by way of the side of the house, and he could not leap, climb and hold his bristled friend. But the brush was not to be found.

Found it today. The squirrel carried the thing halfway through the yard, finally giving up his prize when he reached the neighbor’s fence.

I’m tying the brush to a hubcap.


10
Mar 11

All cafeterias should have choral accompaniment

Billy Kim and the Korean Youth Choir performed at the Convocation at Samford. They had lunch in the campus cafeteria and then serenaded students with an impromptu show featuring Oh Susanna, God Bless America, Jesus Loves Me and more.

And then this cute little moment, right at the end of their show …

Otherwise, my comps defense got rescheduled. That was supposed to be tomorrow, but external frustrating things sometime happen. So now they’ll be in another week-and-a-half, four weeks after taking the comps. They are supposed to be defended within two weeks, but what can you do?

Made a great deal of organizational progress in the digital video center today. Taught a class. Had a meeting with the boss. Cleaned off two of my desks. (I have four surfaces in my office with stuff to do. Lately the notes are crawling up the side of a filing cabinet, too.) All of the grading will get done this weekend, though.

Something new on the LOMO blog. One addition to Tumblr today. An update to the Glomerata section is on the way.


26
Jan 11

“An expression and sentiment that has aged very well”

Spent the full day in the office staring at the computer. There’s this to work on, that to read, the other to write and so on.

FamilyPortait

I did make this and uploaded it to Tumblr at some point in a small break this afternoon. Spencer Hall ran across it and offered up the warmest bit of pop analysis that a blog can offer on a 40-year-old freelance postcard design.

The problem was that things have changed since 1969. So I made the additions in that family portrait gimmick. Now all of those stares seem to make a lot more sense. Interlopers.

I’m steaming ahead through Robin Hood, the BBC version, as it plays along in the background while I do other things. This series is perfect for that. You watch the first six minutes, get the gist and tune it out until the resolution. There’s the problem, the fighting, something is stolen from the rich and the capture of someone. Then comes a moralistic dilemma, the rescue, the “curses, you evildoers!” moment and then the laugh at the end. Add in a little more fighting when necessary, move a few of the elements around to keep it fresh and have a nice day.

You know it is serious when he’s aiming his bow at someone. The guards here are more predictable than red shirts. They get almost as much dialog and they seem to fight just enough to allow the good guys to get away or are far enough away to take the occasional arrow.

I’ll finish the series up this weekend. It ran for three seasons, which is not unusual in the UK, where television programs are built shorter. Many of your favorite shows here would have benefited from that decision, too.

I’m watching this on Netflix, which is another of man’s greatest recent inventions. No longer does one need to get emotionally invested in a television show. Just wait until it comes out and watch it all in a rush. Chew it up as pastiche, especially in Netflix’s streaming format, and move on. The biggest thing is the HBO problem. They’ll license their programming for discs, but not for streaming.

HBO Co-President Eric Kessler went on the record as saying “there is a value in exclusivity,” and that people would “pay a premium” for it.

Co-president? Is that why they’re seeking to make their customers pay for their programming twice? HBO has their own service, still trying to gain market penetration. It seems they’re having the same fight they had in the 70s and 80s.

I grew up with HBO. I mean HBO and I grew up together. When we first picked up the channel on our cable system the churn rate was still high and they were celebrating becoming a 24-hour channel. The movies were still awfully repetitive, though, but hey, it wasn’t the Big Three. There were no commercials. It was novel. They had the coolest pre-roll maybe ever.

That still makes me want to watch a movie right now.

At the end of my days in undergraduate, though, money got tight and I just dropped my cable altogether. When I could afford television again I just went the basic route. I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve missed HBO. And, happily, those have been supplemented by the inevitable DVD releases of their (usually quite good) original programming.

Netflix, meanwhile, has 20 million subscribers, as of today. It is an experimental way to watch movies. For the small monthly fee we can see everything, which really removes the risk. I’ve watched some dreadful things on Netflix, at least the first few minutes of dreadful things. I’ve also watched guilty pleasures as background sound. The Philadelphia Experiment did not age well, friends.

So now I’m watching Robin Hood on a computer. I can also watch it on my television. Next week I’m going to sit on a spin bike and watch a movie on my phone. We live in the future.


12
Jan 11

Can you spot what’s different here?

Woke up in a foul mood. There was a bad dream filling up my morning. And the blogosphere wants for nothing less than someone pecking on about their dreams, but something bad had happened in the dream. It was at least indirectly my fault. In that way of dreams that doesn’t make any sense later, nothing was done to resolve the problem for three days.

It took a while to shake all of that today. It is one thing for someone to be mad at you for something you’ve done in their dream, but another thing altogether to be mad about something that happened in your own. So there was that.

Read some. Window shopped some. Walked around all day thinking it was Thursday. Changed a few things on the site. There’s a new picture across the top here. The historical banner page has been updated. I streamlined the links on the rest of the site. I took out two slow moving widgets from the right rail on this page.

I added a picture something to the Tumblr site. I deleted, from here, three paragraphs on why the Tumblr app dislikes adding asterisks. Apparently that is code for italicize, when it should be code for an Alan Alda reference.

(Next week I’ll try to get back into the habit of the regular features around here.)

And now, to put you in a reflective mood, the library at sunset:

library

More tomorrow. I’ll start the day with a brighter mood and do some more interesting things than site maintenance.


28
Oct 10

Where I do another phone experiment

That’s my first ever attempt at time lapse photography. This was done on my iPhone using the free Gorillacam app. I learned two valuable lessons.

First, you need a stable mount. No, this didn’t interfere with the drive — promise — but wrapping the phone up in a Gorilla tripod isn’t the best solution. If anyone has an iPhone tripod idea, I’m listening.

The second lesson is shooting a drive isn’t the most dynamic choice. I didn’t expect it would be high art, but I got a lot of trees on a beautiful day. Somehow my time lapse managed to just miss every interesting thing — produce shacks, abandoned buildings, oncoming traffic, bridges with character — along the way.

But, I can now make a time lapse project. With the Gorillacam you can choose the number of pictures and the time increments. You get a bunch of pictures on your phone that you have to produce yourself. So, import, add to iMovie, edit the clips and add some music.

I went into Garageband and threw some beats together, made a few subtle edits and put it all together.

Once you get the workflow down this wouldn’t take long. The art, aside from the subject selection, is how long to make each image. And I’d guess that varies. Obviously, I don’t yet have the deft touch required for that.

Critiqued that study I mentioned yesterday. Here were my observations: the terms “young” and “old” were poorly conceived, the terms short and long (story length) were poorly defined and some of the hypotheses were more intuitive rather than conceptual. Essentially the study was about how story length and pacing impacted comparative recall in the case of young adults and older adults.

Young adults were defined as 18-22 — typical for an on-campus study where college age students are easy to draft as participants. Older adults were defined as 25-81. First of all, by this study’s definition I am old. And while I take playful exception to that, I argued that the idea of pacing and length in stories doesn’t vary that much between these simple measures. The median age in the older adults category was 44, but the remote control has been ubiquitous for most of those adults lives and their viewing habits have been conditioned to contemporary pacing, cuts, edits and story lengths just like the younger viewers. I’d buy the 81-year-old’s experience was difference, but not that the 25-year-old had that much of a marked change than a 22-year-old.

The idea of story length had some overlap. Stories were short if they were between 15 and 83 seconds. Long stories were defined between 40 and 185 seconds. Story length is an important consideration when you discuss cognition, recall and cognitive overload, so it is important to the study. But I can’t think of any good reason why a story that is 46 seconds could be called short, but a story that is 40 seconds could be called long.

And so on. It is a good paper and the results are compelling and practicable. It is one in a series by the Indiana scholars of which I’ve read several papers, so following the progression of their research is interesting.

The rest of the day was more reading, more writing. There was a trip to the grocery story, where I met a young man who was very excited about the football game this weekend. I looked for a business card I’ve hidden from myself. I’ve run out of places to search. Took a late evening nap — one of those drift away during the commercial break and wake up later in the same show affairs — which was wonderful until the 10 minutes after waking up where nothing made much sense.

Naps are funny that way. I seldom wake up disoriented in the morning, but a good nap leaves me confused. But it was refreshing, and now I’m wide awake. That’s always good.

And so I made the time lapse project. But that’s not all. I added a few more pictures to the Tumblr feed. That site is making a comeback and you can follow it there or see it on the right side of this page. The Glom covers will be added momentarily. And, of course, there will be something interesting tomorrow, too.