darkoshi: (Default)
I don't have any ATSC 3.0 television stations in my area and didn't realize it is already fairly widespread in the U.S. (map).

CNET: Free antenna TV is getting an upgrade and it might be in your town already Jan. 20, 2022
4K, HDR, 120Hz refresh rates and better indoor reception are coming to US airwaves for free thanks to ATSC 3.0, aka NextGen TV. ...

I Reviewed an ATSC 3.0 TV - Built-in DVR, More Channels, HDR10+ Video - YouTube video by Antenna Man, 2025/06/13.
Conclusion: Paying extra for ATSC 3.0 is probably not worth it. unless TV reception is bad in your area; the ATSC 3.0 channels may have better reception than the 1.0 channels.

The Downfall of ATSC 3.0 NextGen TV - What Went Wrong? - YouTube video by Antenna Man, 2025/10/24.

Robots + AI

Saturday, March 30th, 2024 03:45 am
darkoshi: (Default)
Read/watch this first:
Video: GPT-enhanced humanoid speaks and reasons as it works


This goes much more into the topic:


Video title: The Race For AI Robots Just Got Real (OpenAI, NVIDIA and more)
Posted by: ColdFusion
Date posted: Mar 25, 2024



After watching the first video, I got to thinking about robots doing things like walking dogs and entertaining+teaching children.
darkoshi: (Default)
M, the 5-year-old, was watching videos on TV via the Firestick. I don't know if my niece turned it on for her or if M already knows how to turn it on herself. I'd be surprised by the latter as it involves plugging in a power cord, turning on a power strip, turning on the UPS, waiting for the UPS light to stop flashing, then turning the TV on and changing the TV to the correct input Source.... or maybe pressing the button on the Firestick remote does that last part automatically*.

However, M seems perfectly familiar with using the Firestick remote to search for and navigate videos in its YouTube app. She mostly uses the voice-search option to search for specific things**, but also scrolls thru video thumbnails to select items that look interesting or familiar to her.

There were a few videos that came on which didn't seem geared to or appropriate for a kid her age. So I started looking up how to set it up to only show kid-friendly things.

After M left to go get ready for bed, I installed the "PBS Kids" and "YouTube Kids" apps on the Firestick.
I tried them out and found that doing a voice-search (via the mic button on the remote) from within those apps searches content from all the apps rather than just the current app, letting one jump right back out to non-kid content.

So next I created a new "Kid" profile on the Firestick and set it up to have access to a few kid-specific apps including the 2 mentioned above. I connected the YouTube Kids app to one of my YouTube accounts, so as to have access to more settings for it, but I don't see much extra you can do that way vs when not connected to an account.

I've got a PIN set up on the Firestick so the child can't simply switch back from the kid's profile to an adult profile.

Now that I have gotten all that done, I'm unimpressed with the results.

In the Firestick Kid's profile, the voice-search option does not work. You have to search by using the remote and on-screen keyboard to type in the words. I don't think M knows how to spell most of the things she would search on, and even if she does, she would probably have trouble doing it via the on-screen keyboard. Even when typing the searches in, the results don't seem to include content available in the PBS and YouTube Kids' apps. Maybe it only shows content from Amazon? I don't know.

Likewise, the home screen for the Kid's profile seems to only display Amazon content. (I'm not certain as it doesn't say where the content for each item is hosted.) To get to the other apps' content, you have to scroll down and find, select, and open the app.

Within the YouTube Kids app, I don't see a way to set up favorites. This page: Subscribe to channels on YouTube Kids says you can tap on a "Subscribe" button... Okay, some videos do have a Subscribe button. But it's not there for the "Kiya & the Kimoja Heros" videos - those looked good so I wanted to favorite/subscribe them so they'd be easy to find next time. But no luck.


*I just tested this, and while it switches to the correct input Source, now I can't even get the Firestick input on the TV to work again. It seems to be switched off. The power button on the Firestick remote only seems to be turning the TV on and off, not the Firestick. Argh.
Is it that once you reach 45 years old or so, TV and audio technology magically knows it should never work for you on the first or second try, only after multiple tries and/or hours of frustration? I remember how when I was in my 20s, it all made sense, and it usually worked as I expected. Now it's a mess of cables and inputs and switcheroos and switching from the regular TV to something else never works right off anymore.

Earlier today I got out what I thought was a DVD to play an animated movie for the child. It's one I'd bought last year but hadn't watched yet. (The Secret of Kells, part of the Irish Folklore trilogy. In retrospect, it doesn't seem so great for a kid her age. Rather scary and grim.) The disk didn't work in the DVD player. So I thought maybe it had a non-U.S. region code and needed to be played from VLC on a laptop. But VLC locked up trying to load it. I finally realized it was a BluRay disk, not a DVD, so it needed to be played via the BluRay player.

Sigh. I guess the Firestick won't work again until the next time the youngsters come out to use it.

**It seems to work better for her than it does me; it recognizes the things she says better than it recognizes what I say.
darkoshi: (Default)
How cool is 21st century technology!

YouTube live stream of a drone flying above a volcano which is expected to erupt soon:

Video title: LIVE 09.07.23 New volcano eruption expected in Iceland! Drone live stream 10
Posted by: Isak Finnbogason - ICELAND FPV
Date posted: (live) 2023/07/09


816 watching now Started streaming 105 minutes ago ICELAND

Tonight I will be doing a volcano drone live stream scouting the potential eruption are near Keilir & Meradalir here in Iceland.

Hopefully I find a spot with a good connection so we can have a smooth first volcano drone live stream in a long time!

More information on what is happening here below:
The magma is nearing the surface between Litli-Hrútur and Keilir on the Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland. Ongoing seismic activity suggests a high chance of a volcanic eruption occurring soon. The seismic activity remains concentrated in the same area.

Based on past volcanic eruptions in the area, there are indications that the eruption could happen within a few days. The shallow depth of the magma further supports the possibility of an imminent eruption.
...
darkoshi: (Default)
Yay, it's the weekend, and I finished my work for work before midnight today!

It's been very much Spring here the last couple weeks.
Daffodils are yellow.
Pink magnolia blossoms bloomed but they're already gone and replaced by small light green leaves.
Yellow jessamine is yellow.
Bradford pear blossoms are pungent.
Little fig tree leaves are light green and fuzzy.
I wore knee-shorts today and sat outside working for a while. Can do that for now still as the mosquitos aren't out in force yet.

..

Catchy headline: Busted Plug Towed Away

I didn't know the giant fire hydrant art installation was called "Busted Plug". I'm saddened to hear it's been moved away... but hopefully it will be put up somewhere else in a good spot.

It had been here since 2001: Busted Plug Plaza, in the same parking lot as the iconic Tunnelvision mural and the haybales mural. I enjoyed seeing it whenever I drove downtown.

Here's a short video showing it from multiple angles: Roadside Buzz - Busted Plug, Columbia, SC
.

This "Ra Obelisk" is an artwork here in town I'd not heard of nor visited before. About the hieroglyphs painted on the sides, the article states:
Some of the symbols translate to the titles of Beatles songs “Here Comes the Sun” and “All You Need is Love.” The artist would not give the meaning to the message on the right side, only saying it was an ancient concept and invited others to try to translate it.

That prompted me to try deciphering the right side. The best I could come up with is this:
Peace | The angels are real | They love you

I am not certain that is the message the artist intended; I didn't find a decipherment of the message posted anywhere on the web. I did find that the artist, Richard Lane, died in 1998. That is mentioned in this booklet: Sarah Leverette : South Carolina lawyer, teacher, mentor, ground breaker.

.

Another catchy headline: “Flying car” company to enter US market in partnership with Columbia Metropolitan Airport (CAE)
darkoshi: (Default)
A couple years ago I watched a funny German movie via FireTV and a German TV app.
It was one in a series of movies. The other movies in the series aren't available anywhere online to stream (for either free or pay). So I ordered the 7-DVD set from a German seller on Amazon.de (I was surprised how easy doing that was), and it was delivered today.

While opening the package, I belatedly remembered foreign DVDs might not play in an American DVD player. I was thinking of the video format being different, like PAL/SECAM vs NTSC. But no, the problem is actually with the region codes embedded on the DVD and with DVD players programmed to only play discs from a certain region. Luckily I have a region-free DVD player which I bought a long long time ago for just this purpose. (I'm curious what foreign DVDs I watched back then; I don't even remember.)

Indeed, the first DVD of the set did not play in our American DVD player hooked up to the big TV. It does play in the region free player. But I couldn't get the subtitles to display. When I watched the movie online, it had subtitles. The movies feature characters speaking a Bavarian dialect with heavy accents (which is part of the fun), but I need the subtitles as otherwise I can barely figure out half of what is said.

I'd prefer to play the DVDs on my laptop too, as then I could play them either at my house or Qiao's without lugging around a big DVD player.

My laptop does! have a built-in DVD drive which I'd half-forgotten about. After having some initial difficulties, it seems that VLC (the program) can! (or sometimes can?) play DVDs regardless of their region code. But the subtitles weren't working in VLC either.

I finally see on the back of the DVD case where it says that Discs 2-7 have closed captioning, but apparently the first disc doesn't. Weird. But that's ok, as Disc 1 is the one I saw already.

So now I want to try playing the 2nd DVD to see if its subtitles work.

But now I CAN'T EVEN FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET IT OUT OF THE PLASTIC DVD CASE!!! AAAAAAARRRGGGGGGGGHHH.

The first DVD on the left side of the case had one of those buttons in the middle you can push to release it. The other 6 DVDs in the case don't. I tried prying the DVD up from the side, but that made it bend dangerously. I don't want to break it. Jeez. The case doesn't have any instructions on how to get the discs out. Is there a special tool for this? I don't see any tool included in the case.

And now it is after 3am and just GAH.

..

OKAY. I got it OUT:
The center holder part has a hard plastic cylinder surrounded by 5 hard plastic tabs and a gap on one side where there is no tab. You need to put your thumb on the gap side and put your fingernails under the opposite edge of the DVD (and pull upwards a bit on the same-side edge of the DVD with your other hand too) and pry it up that way.

And FINALLY, I have the subtitles working. YAY.

Now I just have to deal with my laptop's audio issues, and finding time to actually watch the movies someday.
darkoshi: (Default)
When watching things like the Olympics opening ceremonies (and also various music competition TV shows with a lot of special effects) in the last decade or more, I can't tell how much of it (if any) is computer generated graphics which are only visible on the TV screen, versus what is being shown and seen by the participants in person.

The giant LED screen on the field of the birds-nest stadium, I can understand. I still wonder how much more (or less) wondrous it looks in person. How clear is it? How real? Does it look pixelated up close? Is it real enough to seem like you're looking over a cliff?

But other parts like the "ice cube", I can't even figure out. Is it something physical or not? What do the people in the stadium see? It is a cube of LED screens that rises out of the floor? Is it a cube of glass that has images projected into/onto it? Or is it only a 2-D image on the floor which looks like 3-D from a certain angle? I need to know, in order to be able to appreciate it! Otherwise it seems like just any other special effect in a movie.

Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony: One World, One Family
A virtual ice cube emerges from the stadium floor, where 24 laser beams carve and engrave the names of the 24 previous Olympic Winter Games hosts before projecting the name of Beijing 2022.
...
A projection display shows previous Winter Olympic games information during the Opening Ceremony...


What does that mean? What is a virtual ice cube? Are the laser beams real or virtual too? If they are real, what are they pointed at, and how does it work? The next part calls it a projection display, but still, where is the video explaining how it is all done? Maybe I should be doing YouTube searches.

Even the Olympic rings leave me guessing. I guess they are made of some kind of translucent plastic or glass, and are hanging from wires? They are at least a real physical object, right?
darkoshi: (Default)
Some interesting tidbits I came across.

Team GB's Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics kit is made from recycled ocean plastic


Winter Olympics 2022: Team outfits and the brands who designed them
Regarding the U.S. team's outfit:
The most interesting feature of the jacket is its Intelligent Insulation technology, which is battery or wired tech that expands or contracts the fabric with temperature change. This allows the wearer to extend the use of the anorak.

(But see below article which indicates the jacket does *not* require batteries and wires.)

Regarding the Chinese outfit:
China also unveiled a uniform with self-heating thermal underwear

What is that?, I wondered. Here is one page that explains it:
SKIINCore, the self-heating underwear that is going to revolutionise winter


Of all the outfits shown in this article, the Kazakh one looks the best to me, a nice light blue/white/black color combination and neat design across the chest. It looks very stylish and pretty to me!
For that matter, the Kazakh flag is pretty too, with a yellow sun and flying bird on a light blue sky, and that same neat design on the edge.


Here's how Team USA's Olympic Opening Ceremony outfits were made
The jackets include a built in smart, honeycomb-like fabric layer that expands or contracts in response to temperature changes — all without the use of a battery or wired technology, they said.

The fashion company said this allows the apparel to have the ability to transition through three-seasons, and from indoor to outdoor environments, which eliminates the need for multiple garments.



Here's what Canada and Mexico wore during the Olympic Opening Ceremony

Mexico's jacket has a (candy) skull image on front which was striking enough that after glimpsing it, I rewound the DVR to see it again.

Canada's outfit includes a puffy-sectioned insulated scarf which looks like it must be very nice and warm. But seeing it worn by the athletes along with their jackets and all else, it looked bulky and awkward to me. But gotta say, they did look warm! And from the group photo shown on this page, it looks like they have a lot of choices on what to wear.

of bugs and balls

Saturday, October 2nd, 2021 04:34 am
darkoshi: (Default)
Errant thought from a while back:

"I remember when mice used to have balls."

.

I'd been trying to remember this word: Boggart, which I once learned from a Susan Cooper book, as I could imagine a boggart being behind the weird bug-related mystery I've been trying to solve.

After a while, the supernatural explanations seemed as likely as any others I came up with.
"These bugs must have the power of invisibility!"
"Maybe they aren't invisible bugs; maybe they are ghosts."
I remembered a mischievous supernatural creature that was a boggart, but it took me a while to remember the word.

Fittingly, it turns out that boggart and bug even share the same etymology!
darkoshi: (Default)
I thought I had switched out most light bulbs in my house to LED bulbs by now.
But I just counted them and was surprised by how many CFLs I still have.
I wonder if I should replace them with LED bulbs even though they're still working fine?

And I wonder if I do replace them, should I take the CFLs to a recycling drop-off, or ask if anyone around here wants them? Doing the latter might just shift the higher energy consumption from me to someone else. Or are there people still using incandescents who might appreciate "upgrading" to CFLs for free?

I may even still have a few incandescents in use myself, in 2 ceiling light fixtures where the glass shade covers the bulbs, so one can't easily tell. Too much of a bother to check, and they are in the hallway and washer-dryer nook where I don't usually leave the lights on for a long time anyway. But I really ought to get out the step-stool and check them sometime.

behind the times

Wednesday, March 24th, 2021 12:15 am
darkoshi: (Default)
I still haven't yet used or installed Zoom. However, one of Qiao's nieces is having a Zoom wedding event in a few weeks (they already married a few months ago, but for some reason the virtual event ended up being scheduled for later...), so I'll probably get to try it out then. But I keep thinking "virtual event = I can watch online", forgetting the "Zoom = they can watch me too" part. I guess that means I should dress up a bit, or something? And that maybe it will be a bunch of individual conversations between people I mostly don't know, and it will feel like a real live social event where I just sit quietly listening to people talk? Although with his family, it will probably be a ton of people, so I don't even know how individual conversations could work. Maybe it will be a few people speaking and everyone else listening. I suppose I should get Zoom working on Qiao's laptop, so he can join and I can just look over his shoulder now and then. Hmmm. I wonder if his laptop even has a webcam?

For work, I've still only ever had one video call this last year.

I still haven't tried out any video chat apps on my phone. My mom tried out Google Duo a week or two ago, with her friend. When she'd mentioned wanting to try out a video chat app, I'd almost installed Google Duo on my phone, but upon seeing the permissions page I decided to wait, as I wanted to look into other options first. But really, I don't have any particular urge to video chat with anyone. That's why I don't get around to it.

I used video chat on my computer about 15 years ago, with Qiao on Yahoo Instant Messenger. And with my brother on Facebook once long ago.

Skype used to be a thing. I installed it on my computer to try out, but don't remember ever using it with anyone else. At work, we used Skype, but for texting, not video.
darkoshi: (Default)
I've set up one of my Wyze cams outside on the porch. Its power cable connects to the porch's lamp fixture. The lamp fixture has 2 candelabra-sized bulb sockets. I screwed a candelabra-to-regular-size socket adapter in one of the sockets, and into that a socket-to-outlet adapter. Into that, I plugged the Wyze cam's power adapter, which converts the 110V AC power to the 5V USB used by the camera.

With this setup, the lamp's power has to be kept turned on so that the camera can work 24/7. I'd like to have a bulb in the lamp's 2nd socket, but don't want the bulb on during the daytime.

I could use a daylight-sensor adapter along with a regular bulb. If the light were to be on all night, it should be a yellow bug-light to reduce the number of flying insects attracted to the porch area.

There are bug lights with candelabra bases. But when one adds a light sensor adapter to it, which also requires a socket adapter, they might not all fit into the lamp fixture. And daylight sensors haven't worked well for me in the past, especially under a porch roof which limits the amount of light that gets to the sensor.

I don't really want to keep the porch light on all night anyway. There's enough light from the nearby street lamp for most purposes.

So I instead tried out a remote-controlled color-changing light bulb. I can set it to an orange-yellow color, and can turn it on and off with the included remote. But I found that the remote control has to be fairly close to the bulb to work, and it doesn't work through the house wall.

If there's someone on the porch whose face you want to see more clearly before opening the door, having to step outside with the remote to turn on the light isn't practical.

Then I started thinking about smart bulbs controlled by wi-fi. Wyze now has smart bulbs, so I bought one of them to try out. These bulbs can be adjusted between warm & daylight whites but not to other colors. Therefore I wouldn't put it on the porch and leave it turned on all night, as that would attract insects. But it should suffice for intermittent on/off porch use.

To control the bulb, one can use the Wyze app on one's smartphone. That should work through the house wall just like the Wyze cam does. But I'd prefer a simpler and quicker way to turn the bulb on & off.

Qiao had bought an Echo Dot a long time ago, but for whatever reason never set it up. Lately, I've been curious to try it out. If I were to keep the echo dot near my front door, I should be able to turn the bulb on and off with voice commands without needing to touch my phone or have the phone nearby.

Setting up the Echo Dot requires using the Alexa app. I'm not sure I want to install Alexa on my phone, because of all the permissions it requires. Maybe I could disable some of the permissions that bother me, before it gets a chance to download all my contact info and texts to the Amazon servers somewhere, but I'm not sure.

I wouldn't mind installing Alexa on the iPad as I don't have much personal info on it, but the iPad is v9, and Alexa requires v11.

So now I'm looking if there's a way to set it up without having Alexa on my phone... Per this page, it may be possible: Can I set up and use an Echo without having a Smart phone?

I got to wondering if this approach would still work when the internet is down but my wi-fi is still up. My voice would activate the Echo Dot... would the Echo send a command message directly to the bulb? Or would it send a message over the internet to the Wyze servers or to some IFTTT server, which would then control the bulb? I'm not sure yet. (For that matter, does the Echo need to send my voice command to a server somewhere, to decode it and determine what command I am giving? I think it does. Otherwise Amazon's servers wouldn't have recordings of your voice commands, but from what I've read, they do. That would explain this report where all of a home's smart devices stopped working during an internet outage.)

All this because of that cam on the porch, and I'm not even sure I like it out there. It's too easy for someone to steal or vandalize. Pointing down from the soffit, it's field of view isn't even very good. I'd really like to install a few more cameras outside in other locations, but those aren't as well protected and don't have as easy access to a power supply, so would require more work.

But still, it is some fun trying these things out.

Wyze keeps coming out with neat new things. They're working on an outdoor camera that will be battery-powered. That will make things like this a lot easier, maybe.

..

Update, 2019/12/09:
Yesterday I also mounted a Wyze motion sensor above the front door. That lets me get a notification on my phone (if desired), or a video clip to be saved to the cloud when motion is detected in that area. The cams themselves have motion detection based on analyzing the video stream, but that gets triggered too often to be very useful (from branches moving in the wind, cars driving by, etc.). The motion sensor is triggered by body heat, so should be more discerning.

I had already mounted a contact sensor on the front door a week or so ago, which also lets you trigger events.

So last night I realized I could set up an IFTTT (if-this-then-that) trigger so that when motion is detected, to turn on the light bulb for a few minutes. I could also include conditions to only do it when it is after sunset, or only when the door is currently closed.

Then I realized I could mount another contact sensor on the inside wall by the door, with another trigger set up for it, and thereby have the sensor be a pseudo-light-switch (to be able to turn the light on without first opening the door), controlled by me manually moving one half of the sensor away from the other half.

But only as long as the internet and wi-fi are up and working.

Update, 2019/12/12:
I have discovered that the Wyze app lets you set up simple rules/triggers, so having an ifttt.com account isn't even necessary. The rules can be like "when motion is detected and it is between 8pm and 6am, turn on the light" or "if the light has been on for 5 minutes, turn it off", and so on.

shoe shopping

Wednesday, August 7th, 2019 12:58 am
darkoshi: (Default)
K-mart and Payless Shoes are no longer in business here. I haven't found any acceptable* shoes at Target or Walmart or Kohl's lately. My everyday pair of shoes has been getting increasingly worn out. I put Shoe Goo on the worn out parts of the soles to make them last longer, but the Shoe Goo comes off after a while.

Shoe Carnival, a store I hadn't been to before, sent me an ad. It didn't say where they're located (I've noticed that with paper ads before; what's up with that??); I had to look it up. I stopped by their closest store after work yesterday. Browsing the aisles, none of the shoes struck my fancy, but I made note of a few possibilities to come back to if I didn't find anything better in the rest of the store.

In the back corner of the store, I found a pair that did strike my fancy - black & grey with bright red accents. But it wasn't available in my size. I found a few others that looked good, met most of my criteria, and were the right size. Then I saw that this whole section of shoes was on sale for $20 or $30 dollars each pair. Yes! I ended up getting 3 different pairs. None of them are a perfect replacement for my current shoes (2 have mesh on top, not waterproof. 1 has a non-mesh fabric; TBD how waterproof it is), but they'll keep me going a while longer.

*My criteria for acceptable shoes:
Athletic style; must be comfortable on my feet.
No white rubber on the bottom; that will get dirty-looking too easily.
No real leather; synthetic is fine. The shoes' material must be specifically labelled. (This rules out Nike and New Balance and several other brands).
No high(ish) heels; I find them uncomfortable to walk in.
Must have at least some contoured arch support inside.
Should be mostly water-proof - not having only mesh fabric across the toes like so most athletic shoes nowadays have. Should have thick enough rubber soles so that if I step in a shallow puddle, the water won't soak into the shoes.
Not having skid-resistant/work-style soles with the very narrow grooves in them; they are too hard to clean out after stepping in gunk.
Must look good to me.

This morning while re-lacing a shoe, it occurred to me how hard it would be for a machine to do that. I wondered if there are people whose only job it is, to lace up new shoes. Apparently there must be.

https://qz.com/966882/robots-cant-lace-shoes-so-sneaker-production-cant-be-fully-automated-just-yet/

World’s First Automated Shoe Lacing Machine (posted Sep 26, 2017):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1oeXw3awuaM
The shoes in this video have solid white eyelets; most shoes don't so they would be harder for a machine to handle.
darkoshi: (Default)
I had my headphones on a few days ago at work, listening to my music, and the Muppet Show Theme Song came on. It had a strong effect on me, a sudden welling up of emotion. It was like I suddenly felt what things felt like when I was a child. Feeling content, maybe happy, anticipatory, cozy. All the feels instead of hum-drum monotony. It brought tears to my eyes.

It's like when I'm driving in my car with the radio on, and the radio reception improves so that it switches from regular stereo to HD radio. Until you hear it, you can't really fathom what you are missing. But the moment you do hear it, the regular stereo version sounds so very inadequate.
darkoshi: (Default)
Lately when texting or typing someone a message, rather than just typing an emoji, I'll sometimes click to see what emoticon gifs are available. And there are so many smiling, laughing, crying, etc. faces, but *none* of them look like the simple smile I had in mind. Then I have to decide whether to use one of those sort-of-creepy-looking smiley icons, or not to insert a smiley after all.

Sometimes, I want to add a cute image to the end of my message, because there are so many available, right? So I start scrolling through them... oh that's a nice palm tree, I could use that maybe... oh a cute elephant.. a crab... a fox... a heart with stars in it.. But then I wonder, will the other person appreciate the cute image, or will they wonder why I'm sending them an image of a palm tree, or of a fox...
darkoshi: (Default)
They seem to be more often called "thumb notches" or "index notches" than "thumb guides" - I couldn't find any other references to the latter other than the original XSL-FO article I had been reading.

This page has a photo of a person cutting out the notches by hand:

https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/394251/name-of-the-cut-outs-in-the-side-of-a-printed-dictionary-at-each-letter

This page has more details, along with a video of notches being manually cut with a tool:
https://printinghistory.org/about-thumb-indexes/

I thought they used machines for cutting all the notches at once! But I guess it would be hard to get the notches cut out to the exact right pages with a machine, after the book was bound. Or even if a machine was used, a person would still have to mark all the right dividing pages for the machine to cut to. For books like my big red dictionary*, which wasn't overly expensive, I wonder if they cut out the notches on each individual page, before the binding. That way they'd only need to set a specific size and position of the cut for each page, and the cutting could be done automatically by a machine as each page was printed.

*I'm not at home right now, and can't even be certain that my dictionary does have the notches like I was thinking it did.

Found some videos:

This machine requires someone to find the right pages to cut:
MSDIXER Duo, semi automatic index cutting machine:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xoiYQTYF6Gk

Ah well! If the machine can count pages, then it can be fully automatic:
IND-X45 fully automatic index cutting machine:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKMfz6hPdOE
darkoshi: (Default)
I hesitate posting anything related to Michael Jackson, because of the child abuse allegations that were brought against him. I still don't know what to think about them. I haven't read or heard anything compelling enough to make me think that he was most likely guilty (or at least not without also reading other things that made me think he was most likely not guilty). But I can't be sure that he was innocent either. I would like to think he was innocent. But anyway, he is dead now (it's been 9 years already), and I still admire the skill and talent he had, and still feel awe when watching some videos of him. Even if he was imperfect and flawed in other ways, it doesn't wipe out the amazing things he did.

This post is about this song:
Slave to the Rhythm - lyrics. The song is catchy, but the lyrics are sad. They seemed somehow specially poignant to me when I first read them, but it's been over a month now, and I don't quite remember why.

Here is a video of Michael Jackson "performing" the song at the Billboard Music Awards:


Video title: Michael Jackson - Slave To The Rhythm
Posted by: michaeljacksonVEVO
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDRTghGZ7XU


When I first watched that video, I thought it was a live performance. Then I found out it was after his death, and that it had been a "Pepper's Ghost" illusion that was put on for the show. Wow. Watching the video again a few times, I wondered how it could have been done, and decided that the video at least, must have been real, and must have been taped before his death. And that they must have just made it look like he was there on stage, even though it was just a video of him. But no.... According to this page: Michael Jackson Hologram Rocks Billboard Music Awards, the whole video must have been created after his death. I still don't know how. Is it a computer animated image of him? Is it a composition of various snippets from performances he had done in the past? A mixture of both? It looks so real. But apparently the real Michael Jackson never performed it.

Related video about these kind of "performances":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w0L8YlgnGpc
darkoshi: (Default)
I missed the first broadcast of the opening ceremony last night. When I checked the NBC website, it wasn't yet available for streaming. But the TV schedule showed that it was being re-broadcast at 12:30am, so Qiao recorded it for me.

About half-way through watching the recording tonight (I fast-forwarded through some of the parade of athletes), one of the announcers said that what was being shown had some parts edited out, but that the full version would be available online "in the morning". Also, the online version wouldn't have the narration from the announcers.

Yay, because I really don't like hearing announcers talking over everything. And I did want to see the full version of the artistic performances. So at that point, I switched to the online version, streaming it to the TV with an HDMI cable. (I had tested out using MiraCast last week, but it didn't work well for me.) The NBC site lets you watch 30 minutes for free, and after that you have to login with a satellite or cable TV account (luckily Qiao has one of those too) to watch more. It seems the IOC is blocking other sites from showing any videos of it.

I rewatched the part with Kim Nam-Ki's haunting rendition of the song "Arirang" (it starts at 1:18:30 in the online version above); it was much better without the announcers talking over it.

After the part with the synchronized lighted flying drones, I temporarily switched back to the TV version to find out of those really were drones (they were, over 1200 of them!), and not just an edited video effect (because the announcers had earlier said there was some of that too). This part of the broadcast was pre-recorded, but it was still awesome. This was a part of the drone segment, but not the whole thing. A scaled-down live version of the drone show did not take place as had been planned.

The ceremony had a lot of fireworks and other dazzling light shows, very pretty to watch. (Though I wonder how long the fireworks smoke will linger in the area, and if it will affect the athletes.)

The best moments from the 2018 Olympics Opening Ceremony - this is a 3 minute clip with highlights from the ceremony - worth watching if you can't watch the whole thing. It doesn't have the original music, but shows a lot of the fantastic visuals.
darkoshi: (Default)
Over the last few months, I've been randomly using the latest version of Firefox for some browsing, and Firefox ESR (without the Quantum changes, with the Status-4-Evar add-on for displaying the status bar) for the rest.

My main issue with Firefox Quantum remains the lack of the status bar. If there were no other choice, I could live without the status bar, but I really prefer having it. Once the ESR version of Firefox gets updated to Quantum in the next few months, using the ESR will no longer be a work-around for that.

So yesterday I installed Waterfox v56, which supports both XUL and WebExtensions. I've got Status-4-Evar and various Quantum-level add-ons installed, and so far everything has been working fine. I'm not sure what the future will hold for Waterfox, but at the moment it has everything I want.

I haven't had any further issues with the uMatrix add-on, and I really like it, especially being able to easily set site-specific JavaScript rules. That is my main reason for switching from NoScript to uMatrix.

..

I occasionally use an HDMI cable to stream video from my laptop on the big TV screen. I recently discovered that by using "extended display" mode on the laptop, with the TV set up as the 2nd screen, I can stream video to the TV, while at the same time doing other stuff on the laptop screen.

Yesterday, I found out that Windows 8.1+ supports MiraCast, for mirroring the computer display to another screen using wi-fi. So I may even be able to stream video wirelessly, without the HDMI cable. My TV doesn't support MiraCast without a dongle, but Qiao's may.

missed bits

Saturday, January 9th, 2016 03:16 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
I've added some additional impressions about the new Star Wars movie to the end of my prior post.

One thing has bothered me lately, both after watching Sherlock: The Abominable Bride on TV and after watching this new Star Wars movie. It is the inability to simply look up the movie's official dialogue/screenplay online afterwards. They aren't freely available online, which is understandable, as they are copyrighted productions.

But still, it feels weird in this day and age not to be able to simply look stuff like that up. Not to be able to verify that the dialogue you remember hearing was actually what was said. To not be able to look up bits you missed. Watching movies over-the-air or in the theater is so *ephemeral*. If you miss something, then you've missed it. There is no rewind, replay, or pause. All movies and TV were like that in the past! How did we ever manage? Answer: We *had* to go watch the movie multiple times, in order to catch all the things we missed the first times. Or we had to go on living, without knowing what we missed.

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