Archive for May, 2009

Electronic Organs: the old school analog synths

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Conn 580 Organ

Conn 580 Organ

Conn 580 Organ side view

Conn 580 Organ side view

Because indulging impulses and ridicu­los­ity are both things that are fun­da­men­tal to my being, I pur­chased, off of the craigslist­net­ter­tubes, an elec­tronic organ. Most specif­i­cally, I pur­chased, for my apart­ment place-thing, a used Conn 580 man­ual organ. There was a won­der­ful alcove in our apart­ment that was the per­fect size for an upright piano or sim­i­lar; I was brows­ing the inter­web­worknet­tubes and went to the craigslis­ter­net­ter­tube­web­works and hap­pened to find this won­der­ful organ for sale. To my advan­tage, the man I bought the organ from was nice enough to deliver it to our apart­ment. Of course, haul­ing the organ up two flights of stairs was quite a has­tle but it’s here now and it’s not mov­ing again for a very long time.

Conn 580 internals

Conn 580 internals

This organ, much like most other elec­tronic organs, is a com­plex device com­posed of gobs and gobs of ana­log elec­tron­ics. It would be accu­rate to describe the device as an early ana­log syn­the­sizer. Amongst the many other awe­some things about this organ, the top can be flipped up expos­ing the crazy mass of wires, oscil­la­tors and other cir­cuit crazi­ness. The num­ber of switches, but­tons, keys, and such on this organ is rather mind-boggling and I’m only start­ing to fig­ure out what half of the stuff does. That said, I’ve been pretty suc­cess­ful at toss­ing out some pretty awe­some sounds with­out know­ing what I’m doing.

With luck, hav­ing a key­board in the house with pro­vide me suf­fi­cient impe­tus to get around to relearn­ing how to play a key­board. I feel like I want to get back to know­ing how to play the piano (or, in this case, organ). Failing that, though, I’ve got the poten­tial to make some pretty fun sounds.

TCHO

Friday, May 29th, 2009

A while back, I was intro­duced by a boing­bo­ing video series (1, 2, 3) to the choco­late man­u­fac­turer TCHO. Sometime after watch­ing the video series, my friend Josh showed up to one of our poker nights with a block of TCHO choco­late. That, beta bar that Josh brought was fan­tas­tic and TCHO has fur­ther per­fected their recipes in the interim. Having recently dis­cov­ered that TCHO has opened a retail store at Pier 17 on the Embarcadero, which is quite close to where I work, I decided to pop over and grab some choco­late on my lunch break. I grabbed a TCHO-A-DAY 60-pack and have thus far tried the “Citrus” and “Chocolatey” fla­vors, which were excel­lent. This may well be the best choco­late that I have ever had.

If you would like a lit­tle bit of truly won­der­ful deca­dence in your life, I highly rec­om­mend get­ting your­self some TCHO choco­late. The engi­neer­ing, qual­ity and fla­vor to this choco­late is truly top-grade.

Theme caught up for WordPress 2.7

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Took me a bit of doing but I’ve updated my old theme to work with the lat­est ver­sion of WordPress. Most of the effort and time was taken up because I decided to do it in as much the, so to speak, right way as possible.

Other than chang­ing two lines of functions.php, every­thing is accom­plished using CSS.

If you want it, you can grab my theme.

Influenza Influence

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Arising from a nap taken while sprawl­ing across three seats on MX976 from Guadalajara to San Francisco, I am reminded of a desire to com­ment on the so-called swine flu. Of the five flights taken dur­ing my trip, none have been at capac­ity and two have pro­vided me with full rows for myself. The true uti­liza­tion is in stark con­trast with the near full planes that were described when I pur­chased my tick­ets; I under­stand Mexicana was allow­ing refunds of some sort on account of the flu.

Cancun was, I have been led to under­stand, empty rel­a­tive to other years at this time. The resort at which I stayed was likely at no more than 30% occu­pancy; near full capac­ity is the norm. Other resorts and hotels were closed due to a lack of guests. This, of course, meant that we large­ley had the resort to our­selves but, self­ish­ness aside, it also means that the local econ­omy is suf­fer­ing an absolutely hor­ri­ble col­lapse and any locals with­out suf­fi­cient sav­ings may need to seek other work. Compounding with the gen­eral global down­turn, there will likely be a pro­foundly neg­a­tive effect on Cancun and other Mexican resort areas.

The response of the Mexican gov­ern­ment is rather inter­est­ing as well. The gov­ern­ment had health check­points set up at air­ports and state bor­ders. Individuals are required to fill out a ques­tion­aire as to whether or not they are suf­fer­ing any flu symp­toms and then have their tem­per­a­ture checked by ther­mal cam­era or infrared probe; nei­ther of which I sus­pect is par­tic­u­larly accu­rate. What they would do to one who fails such test­ing is unclear as they did not seem set up for any sort of quar­an­tine. Furthermore, a few tylenol, aspirin and lies ought to be enough to get any­one through. The whole exer­cise reeks of secu­rity the­ater, a topic which I fear rais­ing lest I rant far beyond your patience.

Frank Herbert’s deeper meaning

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Having just fin­ished Heretics of Dune, I am, once again, wowwed by Frank Herbert’s skill as an author. There exist very pow­er­ful thoughts within his writ­ing that seem to plant them­selves in the psy­che as Leto II planted him­self in the worms of Rakis. As I sit here, I can’t help but react with a desire to bet­ter myself men­tally, phys­i­cally and socially. I feel as though this is a moment of open­ning and from here my choices are to pass through into the chapel per­ilous or step back, allow­ing the doors to close.

As to which path I shall take, I can­not say but it is my great hope that I will have the strength to push forward.

Dreams have flowed like sand down a beach dune

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Something that I have been acutely notic­ing is that I have had extremely vivid dreams every time that I have slept or napped. The dreams have been vivid to a degree that might be described as bor­der­ing on hul­lu­ci­na­tion. I sus­pect that the dreams have been present on account of the ade­quacy of the sleep that I have been receiv­ing. I am inclined, how­ever, to attribute the vivid­ness to the potency and des­i­ca­tion of the sun and heat. It is, per­haps, as if I had ven­tured into the desert to under­take a vision quest of sorts.

I am enjoy­ing this dream­ing to an extent that strongly sug­gests the adop­tion of a decent sleep regimen.

myStress = 0; myEnlightenment += 1;

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Today, shortly after spend­ing ten or twenty min­utes fol­low­ing a sea tur­tle and lis­ten­ing to another thirty min­utes of the Heretics of Dune audio­book, I found mirac­u­lously that my per­sonal stress lev­els had reached zero. This stress level turns out, as one might sus­pect, to be wholely pleasant.

I am inclined to sus­pect that this state is not dri­ven purely by the vaca­tion; the Dune books tend to put me in a par­tic­u­lar philosophical/spiritual state. In this case, I blame the com­bi­na­tion; that is, I sus­pect that some trig­ger was pushed whilst I was in a recep­tive state.

There exist other aspects to my cur­rent state, which extend beyond a lack of stress to a calm clar­ity. This clar­ity and calm may well be of greater import to me than the pleas­ant lack of stress. The ques­tion that I find arises for me now is, how can I make myself recep­tive and inten­tion­ally self-trigger; this will, hope­fully, serve as a con­tin­ued avenue of self-inquiry in the future.

Cancun trip thoughts, so far

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Today is Wednesday of my Sunday through Saturday week in Cancun. It is cur­rently the evening, about 11p and, before I go to sleep in prepa­ra­tion for tomorrow’s activ­i­ties, I thought that I should check-in with y’all. I think that Im going to struc­ture this as a sum­mary of some of what’s been going on and fol­low with some more gen­eral thoughts that have been crystalizing.

It being Cancun, the oblig­a­tory sun bathing, swim­ming and strong, frozen bev­er­ages have been hap­pen­ing but, as that is largely not inter­est­ing in any detail, I’ll leave it at that. I have been stay­ing with friends at the Royal Sands, a time­share resort. This is one of five time­share resorts owned by this com­pany and I have to say, it’s pretty sweet; hon­estly, if my fam­ily didn’t have prop­erty on Cape Cod, I would strongly con­sider sign­ing in to this whole time­share thing. The ameni­ties are nice, the weather is fan­tas­tic and, let me tell you, the water is amaz­ing. Evenings here have pri­mar­ily fin­ished off with games of Dominos, Fluxx and Set,which has been a wholely pleas­ant expe­ri­ence, and makes me want to play more casual games with friends.

This morn­ing, we trav­eled to the Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza, which were truly fan­tas­tic to see. The degree of engi­neer­ing, archi­tec­tural and astro­nom­i­cal knowl­edge expressed by the struc­tures of the ruins is truly impres­sive. I am cer­tain that the expe­ri­ence was greatly enhanced by the qual­ity and char­ac­ter of our tour guide. One of the major things that caught root in my mind as a result of the expe­ri­ence is the imper­ma­nence of every­thing that I am doing with my life. Even a rel­a­tively mod­est Mayan dwelling still exists and expresses some­thing about its inhab­i­tants; what mark have I left on this world that will not be gone two gen­er­a­tions from now? For that mat­ter, what mark am I really leav­ing now?

Certain, deeper things seem to be gain­ing focus for me as well. One that seems truly clear is the degree to which I have missed the Atlantic Ocean and Woods Hole. Hopefully, my plans to work remotely from Woods Hole this sum­mer will suc­ceed and I shall get some sub­stan­tial time there.

Another thing that occurs to me is that I need to spend more time with my good friends and, per­haps, make a few more.

Leg two: ugh, customs

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Today, for the first time, my travel was slowed down as a result of not check­ing bag­gage. With a two hour shift, it is now 4:00p, and I am eat­ing a so-so ham and cheese with a freely pro­vided Tecate. Having just left Mexico City, I feel as though I almost didn’t make it.

So, I debarked my first flight, passed through immi­gra­tion and pro­ceeded in the direc­tion of “Connecting Flights”. Before reach­ing my gate, I encoun­tered a check­point where I was asked how many bags I had checked. Having checked no bags, with the intent of expe­dit­ing my jour­ney, I said as much and was told to go back through immi­gra­tion and go to cus­toms. Passing immi­gra­tion again, I was told to con­tinue as I had the first time. Please real­ize that my inabil­ity to speak or under­stand Spanish was not to my advan­tage. Returning to the check­point, again, run­ning out of time to catch my flight, I was turned back once more. This time, ask­ing for very pre­cise instruc­tions from the quite com­pe­tent English speak­ing head of the check­point. It turns out, what I had to do was go through immi­gra­tion, again, ignore “Connecting Flights”, and pass through cus­toms as though Mexico City were my des­ti­na­tion. It was then nec­es­sary to turn around, pass through a dif­fer­ent entrance and find my gate as a domes­tic flight. With about twenty min­utes before depar­ture, I was very pleased to catch my flight.

All is now well and that was a mighty tasty Tecate.

Mexicana Air, a positive review

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

As I write, I am sit­ting in seat 20E on a Mexicana Airbus A318 en route from San Francisco to Mexico City. It is 9:30a; I am writ­ing on my Nokia N810 (a device, which I will have to tell you of some other time); I have just con­sumed a wholely decent omelette; and, I it is my inten­tion to pub­lish this as soon as I next encounter Internet access. The omelette has arrested my atten­tion and is what prompted this post.

Though the omelette fell some­where between edi­ble and pass­able, this really is more of a “thought that counts” sort of thing. I have become so accus­tomed to the nickel-and-dimeing of bank­rupt United States air­lines that I was aston­ished to be offered food: “omelette or enchi­lada?” It took me two tries to under­stand through the Mexican accent, but that’s prob­a­bly a fail­ing on my part. Not only is there food but there appears to be free beer, though, it being 9:30a, I opted for milk.

Based on my expe­ri­ence thus far, I’m lik­ing Mexicana and feel­ing rem­i­nis­cent of British Airways. If you’re read­ing this, as is, noth­ing has inter­fered with my opin­ion suf­fi­ciently to jus­tify revision.

Striking “intellectual property” from my lexicon

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

I just read two fan­tas­tic pieces from the Free Software Foundation. The first, a guest post on TorrentFreak, addresses the ques­tion of Why the FSF cares about RIAA law­suits and is a very insight­ful view into the dan­gers involved in the direc­tion that copy­right, patent and trade­mark laws seem to be headed. The sec­ond arti­cle, which was linked from the first, is an arti­cle by Richard M. Stallman on the term “intel­lec­tual prop­erty”, and the dan­gers of con­flat­ing copy­rights, patents, trade­marks and phys­i­cal prop­erty. I find the arti­cle to be both inter­est­ing and insight­ful to a suf­fi­cient extent that I have decided to strike the term “intel­lec­tual prop­erty” from my lex­i­con. Henceforth, I will dis­cuss such mat­ters in the frame of what they are, not the frame that major rights hold­ing orga­ni­za­tions would like to phrase them in.

I feel that these arti­cles are both extremely well writ­ten and make strong points on the nature of copyrights/patents/trademarks. I also feel that these arti­cles give me a bet­ter van­tage point from which to dis­cuss the jux­ta­po­si­tion of copy­rights and phys­i­cal prop­erty rights. There are cer­tainly some sharp peo­ple, doing some very impor­tant things at the FSF.

Battlestar Finale == ugh luddites, religion

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

I finally got around to watch­ing the end of Battlestar Galactica (sure took me long enough) and I have to say that I was some­what dis­pleased, to say the least. Don’t get me wrong; the series, as a whole, was quite pleas­ant and I did enjoy watch­ing the end but, still, some­what displeased.

SPOILERS FOLLOW:

Points of contention:

  • Luddism: We had lots of tech­nol­ogy and lots of war so let’s throw away all of our tech­nol­ogy. Seriously? Going one step fur­ther; you think that you can actu­ally just throw away all of your knowl­edge. It’d be zero to super-polymers age in one day. Oh, le sigh.
  • Religion: God this, des­tiny that, mag­i­cal know-how the other; ugh, give me a break.
  • Starbuck: What’s the deal with her? Just going to write her out with no expla­na­tion at all? Talk about sloppy. Talk about cop-out.
  • Prehistory: If that’s sup­posed to be Earth, how do you explain lin­guis­tic evo­lu­tion? Where are the records of ships and tech­nol­ogy? What about the super fancy mate­ri­als? I bet they didn’t degrade in the past 150 thou­sand years.
  • Matrix Architect: Didn’t we get the this has hap­pened a bunch of times before idea out of the way in The Matrix Reloaded? It was a so-so idea then and it’s even more so now.
  • etc.: Those were the big ones, at least.

Seriously, you guys couldn’t come up with a bet­ter way to write a con­clu­sion to this thing? I guess mediocre clo­sure is still bet­ter than no clo­sure. Thanks for the four/five sea­sons of pretty great, Battlestar Galactica. Oh well, time to catch up on Lie to Me and Dollhouse, I guess.

Updates and hopefully a return

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

I have finally got­ten around to updat­ing my blog to the lat­est ver­sion of WordPress (I used to be hor­ri­bly behind). As you may have noticed, I am back at the default theme; I will likely do some­thing about this even­tu­ally; you may have to bear with me until then, if you haven’t already left due to my extended silence.

Speaking of that whole silence thing; I’m hop­ing to return to post­ing more often than I may have in the past (not that I haven’t said that before). For right now, I’m focus­ing on being in flux and get­ting things back to where they were; with luck it’ll just involve writ­ing some new css to go with the default theme. To get those square boxes, bor­ders and the like back; per­haps fit to width as well.

Anyway, just wanted to break silence and let you guys know that that’s my intent for future times.