Thursday, April 2, 2009
Monday, March 16, 2009
First Step, Spend $250.00
Was all excited to look at this cool tutorial on animated type in After Effects, until I ran across this instruction, "Use plugin 3D Invigorator". I thought it was some sort of standard plug in, but noooo......it's a $249.0 piece of software! Some tutorial.
To build a super fast car:
1. Buy a Maserati
etc.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Bah! by Okapi
I found this a while back in the great Comfort Stand site which has ceased to be updated. It is really good slice/dice mixology. I think the piece "Intro" is a work of art, but the rest of it is good as well. Call it "challenging" if you like. I think I found where Okapi released an CD as well, but I haven't been able to track it down.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Norton 360 Is a Virus
Okay, my friend bought a new laptop last week. He needs Internet Explorer for his work, because that is the only thing that the web applications he uses support.
I will spare you the whole Windows Vista rant (it isn't that bad, just slow) but as you would expect it came with a ton of junk installed on it, including a 90 day trial of Norton 360 (antivirus, firewall etc etc). Every time I booted the machine up, it would come up and ask for me to register for my free trial, but there was no way to quit out of it. I finally got the the license agreement screen, declined to agree, and it then quit. I uninstalled it.
I found then that Internet Explorer was the only application that could access the internet. Firefox, iTunes didn't work.
I stayed up to midnight last night trying to figure this out. I found a reference to a Norton Removal Tool, which I couldn't download from Symantec's web site because Internet Explorer had quit allowing me to download stuff.
I had to download it on my Mac, copied it to a flash drive and then ran it on my friend's laptop. It removed some stuff, and then everything worked again.
I pity someone who has little or no understanding of how computers work. They are so screwed in this situation. Here is a piece of software that is supposed to protect a computer from hacking, and uninstalling it screws the computer up. It behaves like a virus.
Oh, and one last thing. I fished through the box to find the restore CD for this laptop, and there isn't one. It seems that this is pretty common now. What are you supposed to do when the machine gets really screwed up (this is windows we are talking about) or when the HD fails? In the case of an HD failure -- am I correct in assuming that what happens is the user has to buy a new Windows license in addition to the new harddrive? It is almost like the manufacturers are encouraging people to either throw away the laptop (by the time the HD fails, the laptop will be almost worth the price of a Windows Vista License and HD) or install a different operating system on it (which is exactly what I would do).
I will spare you the whole Windows Vista rant (it isn't that bad, just slow) but as you would expect it came with a ton of junk installed on it, including a 90 day trial of Norton 360 (antivirus, firewall etc etc). Every time I booted the machine up, it would come up and ask for me to register for my free trial, but there was no way to quit out of it. I finally got the the license agreement screen, declined to agree, and it then quit. I uninstalled it.
I found then that Internet Explorer was the only application that could access the internet. Firefox, iTunes didn't work.
I stayed up to midnight last night trying to figure this out. I found a reference to a Norton Removal Tool, which I couldn't download from Symantec's web site because Internet Explorer had quit allowing me to download stuff.
I had to download it on my Mac, copied it to a flash drive and then ran it on my friend's laptop. It removed some stuff, and then everything worked again.
I pity someone who has little or no understanding of how computers work. They are so screwed in this situation. Here is a piece of software that is supposed to protect a computer from hacking, and uninstalling it screws the computer up. It behaves like a virus.
Oh, and one last thing. I fished through the box to find the restore CD for this laptop, and there isn't one. It seems that this is pretty common now. What are you supposed to do when the machine gets really screwed up (this is windows we are talking about) or when the HD fails? In the case of an HD failure -- am I correct in assuming that what happens is the user has to buy a new Windows license in addition to the new harddrive? It is almost like the manufacturers are encouraging people to either throw away the laptop (by the time the HD fails, the laptop will be almost worth the price of a Windows Vista License and HD) or install a different operating system on it (which is exactly what I would do).
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Blackbird Camera
I've been looking a film cameras of all things -- but the stuff like the Lomo. I have CameraBag for the iphone which emulates many of these cameras, but it isn't the same.
This is a nice looking camera. Uses 35mm instead of medium format film, but gives you square pictures. The orange one is for me.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Apple A/V Connection Kit $44.99
Best Buy has Apple's A/V Connection kit for under half of what it cost new. You get a dock, A/V cable and remote. The A/V cable itself is normally $49.00 at the Apple store. I've read some posts and I'm confident enough now that it will work with my 3G iphone that I just ordered one. The only catch is that it wants to turn on airplane mode (which I would do any way), and not all buttons on the remote work on the iphone (I would guess pause/play might work). In any case a great deal if you want to hook your iphone up to a display.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Crispin Glover quote on Cinema Verite
Realism is always subjective in film. There's no such thing as cinema verite. The only true cinema verite would be what Andy Warhol did with his film about the Empire State Building - eight hours or so from one angle, and even then it's not really cinema verite, because you aren't actually there. As soon as anybody puts anything on film, it automatically has a point of view, and it's somebody else's point of view, and it's impossible for it to be yours. (NYPress, 2002.)
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