Quote of the day

Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall: March 19, 2006 – March 25, 2006 Archives:

“The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country.” from Lincoln’s second annual address to Congress, December 1862.

Reminds me of this thought by Einstein:

“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”

Now playing: Because You’re Frightened by Magazine from the album “The Correct Use Of Soap” | Get it

another chapter in the pinhole saga

I took the old folder out for an airing this weekend. I found out (duh) that it takes 6 x 9 images, meaning I only get 9 on a roll. I guess if I was at all clueful about these cameras I woulda realized the innards were not set up for square images. Since I managed to overwind at the start and waste one, I only got 8 images. But even with:

  1. a small light leak in one corner of each frame
  2. a slightly fudged development process (I don’t have any graduates that hold enough developer, so I ended with a strip of under-developed film: next time, I’ll use two with half the right amount in each); I didn’t realize the tank was not the same size but I guess the graduates are big enough to cover two rolls of 35mm.
  3. a double exposure

I’m pretty pleased. The exposures seemed OK — starting at 6 seconds in full daylight to 20 in overcast — and the negatives are enormous when you are used to 35mm.

I have a roll of Fuji RVP in there now so I can see what color images will look like. If I can find a way to scan these, I’ll share them. I also want to find a local shop that sells B&W film cheap (even dated film).

Now playing: Burnin’ and Lootin’ by The Wailers from the album “Burnin'”

recent acquisitions

Been spending money like a drunken sailor, it seems.

  1. I bought a set of Shure E2c headphones for my iPod. So far, so much better. I can hear more at lower volumes than I could with the standard earbuds. They are heavier and somewhat hard to manage, cable-wise, so I am still getting used to them.

    More important, they come with 9 — count ’em — different sets of ear inserts. You get three different sizes of three different inserts: clear plastic ones (kind of firm and too slick/inflexible for me), some squeezable foam ones (look like earplugs for use in a machine shop, but with a hole through them), and soft black rubbery ones. My ears being small, I found the smallest one of this last type to work best so far. They sound good and as noted at lower volumes.

    I need to try the soft foam ones, just to see if they fit just that little bit better. The best thing about these is that they fit in the ear and block most of the ambient din. So cycling with them might be a bad idea, but walking or sitting up late reading/writing is OK.

  2. At the urging of the family, I am taking exercise more seriously. To that end, I bought a pair of horrifyingly expensive cross-training shoes. Thoreau said it best, perhaps, but I may have to differ with him on this.

    I did a circuit of Green Lake today and felt more comfortable, with less pain than usual (I guess Merrell Mocs don’t offer as much support), and now I feel some evidence of exertion in various parts of my legs. Slipping on the Merrells afterwards — it’s Merrells in the winter, Tevas in the summer — I felt like I was wearing slippers.

  3. I have bought but not yet received a Linksys WRT54G access point to replace my aging Airport base station. I use the network here a lot — my iTunes music lives on a different system and is mounted over the network, I backup over the wireless network, etc. — and 11 Mbits is just not cutting it anymore. Also looking into Power over Ethernet, though I want to use the built in switch: all my stuff is connected with hubs and I expect that’s not helping all that much. Putting in some inaccessible place will make that difficult. There are kits to add PoE to various access points, carrying the power over some of unused pairs in CAT5 cable, but there are ways to build your own if you’re so inclined. I could see doing that with the Airport if I wanted to contribute it to the SeattleWireless cloud.
  4. Also got a Mighty Mouse via eBay, my first optical mouse. We have some others here (both iMacs have ’em) but I have never had one. And my old ones with actual rolling ball thingies are too crufted up to work apparently.

bookmarkable: Tips ‘n Tricks (One Liners)


Tips ‘n Tricks (One Liners)
:

This page is a collection of various tips and tricks
that fit into one line (more or less). Theres no specific
topic – just a collection of things that needed to be solved
at one time or the other

Some handy stuff here. I was misremembering the syntax for Mplayer to dump a RealAudio stream to a file. He has that and more . . .

an outlet for obsessives

Even before the need for physical exertion arose, I had been curious about adding beat per minute info to my iTunes library to help keep a good pace when walking or riding. There are plugins etc for WinAmp but nothing that automagically sorts out the BPM and adds it to the metadata for iTunes.

iTunes-BPM:

iTunes-BPM adds a simple floating window to iTunes that allows you to set the beats-per-minute value for the currently playing song by tapping along to the music.

This seems to work well enough, though. Create a new playlist (called ‘unbeaten’) and shuffle through it, tapping along for a few seconds to set the count.

Now playing: We Were Both Wrong by Dave Edmunds from the album “Repeat When Necessary” | Get it

bleg: exercise that doesn’t suck

My cardiac report came back clean, as I expected. We’ll call it a cramp until we receive any evidence to the contrary.

But part of the report indicated “low exercise tolerance.” Not sure I would pay anyone for that diagnosis: I knew I was an outtashape lump when I went in.

So I want to find some exercise regime that will fit into what passes for a day-to-day routine, with low cost and time investment (ie, the time invested goes into the actual exercise, not travel or messing about with facilities).

Running is out. Never cared for it, and my knees wouldn’t take it. Cycling is OK but I don’t ride in town so it requires some logistics/time I may not be able to get regularly. Walking is a favorite of mine but I think it lacks the intensity required. I’m looking into it, all the same.

Rowing is one I would like, but cf logistics issues. Swimming would be OK if I swam any recognized stroke đŸ˜‰ but that also entails a commitment of time I don’t think I can make.

Looks like someone has structured a walking program around what I want (fitness and weight loss). The time commitments are an hour and a half max (I think I would be able to start at the 3rd or 4th week of the 10 week program: I can already do a 3 mile walk quite easily in about 45 minutes).

But what do you recommend?

The Season of Optimism

That would be the summer gardening season here in the moody and capricious Pacific Northwest.

Today I:

  • removed the black permeable covering from my garden
  • turned over all the surface dirt, down to a 3-4 inch depth
  • re-arranged one of the two borders (lined with these funky concrete cylinders: formerly laid horizontally along the edge, now sunk into the ground at a 30° angle, leaning on each other)
  • started some tomato seeds (ultra-early types) and a full packet of Kong sunflowers, all in those little peat pellets that allow transplanting without exposing the roots.

I have some more seeds to get, since I have a pretty good amount of space to fill (180 sq ft or so). And the tomatoes don’t count against it, since they are moving to a new location this year.

Sunny and bright today (deceptively so. Here’s what my local weather station registers:

Temp:46 Wind:3 Barometer:29.95s Humidity:70% High:48 Low:36)

Now playing: Waka by Camper Van Beethoven from the album “Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart” | Get it