Disorganized fun

I don’t really like talking about music, but I will say this: I like Ronald Jenkees. I was first introduced to his stuff when Boing Boing linked to his YouTube channel. I bought his first album on iTunes shortly after, and since then have been following his progress via YouTube and his blog on his second album.

The second album, Disorganized Fun, was released on July 31st, and I downloaded it a little over a week later when it was released on iTunes. I actually didn’t like it that much the first time I listened to it, but I was sick and not even in the mood to listen to music. When I gave it a second chance a day or so later, I became a fan, and am now coming up on my 10th time enjoying the album.

You can preview the songs on his site or iTunes.

Open source toothpaste

When I was in fourth grade, my math class was assigned a book to read called The Toothpaste Millionaire. It’s an old book, originally published in the ’70s, but I thought about it for the first time in years recently when thinking about transparency, open source, and the disruption of industries. It’s a book about how to start a business, but written at a level even a kid (or perhaps especially a kid) can understand. I haven’t read it again, but I’m thinking about hunting down a copy for a second look.

Check out an embedded preview below:

Couple things…

I have a few better blog posts in progress but I just wanted to share a couple of things that happened tonight.

At the grocery store, I saw two people shopping in pajama pants and disapproved. At first I was mad at myself for feeling like a grumpy old man, but then I remembered that both of the pajama wearers were older than me Ai. So, they’re just weird.

Just a few minutes ago, I was sitting with the back of my head against my couch sans cushion, and the back of my head fell asleep. I didn’t even know that was possible.

How I used Google Voice today

I was in a meeting today at work, and my phone started buzzing. I knew what the call was for— my cousin was having a baby, and my mom was calling to tell me. My assumption was confirmed when she texted: “It’s a boy!” She tried calling again, but I had to just let the phone ring because it was a pretty big meeting, I was near the front of the room, and I didn’t want to disturb anyone by stepping out.

While I didn’t want to leave the meeting, I wanted to know what the baby’s name was, and didn’t want this unknown factoid to distract me for the next 30 minutes. I texted my mom back and asked her to leave a voicemail at my Google Voice number with the details.

My phone rang again and went to voicemail. A minute later, I read the transcript and was happy to learn that on July 17th, 2009, Marek was born.

Zubbles

I think I first heard about Zubbles in 2006 when I came across a link to an article about them in Popular Science. I have been waiting for them ever since. When I emailed them in April 2006, I was told that a toy company had signed an agreement with C2C Technologies, “the emerging leader in temporary color technology,” and that Zubbles would be released in 2007. That same day, I set a Google Alert for the query [Zubbles].

In January of last year, after 2007 had come and gone with no Zubbles, I contacted the toy company, who told me that they would not be manufacturing Zubbles. I tried contacting somone from Zubbles, and my messages bounced.

In February of this year, I was able to get through to someone who was pleased to announce that his company had recently acquired the rights to Zubbles and would soon be going into production with a “limited spectrum” of colors in the spring.

Finally, on June 24th, Google Reader let me know of a new item in my Google Alert feed for Zubbles. Dennis Williamson, who had been keeping an eye on the Zubbles Store domain, had successfully ordered Zubbles. I placed my order as soon as I could.

Today, after no shipping notice or order status update on their online store, my Zubbles arrived. I opened them up right away, and started blowing blue bubbles in the office. There was some brief concern that they would stain the carpet, but within about 15 minutes the dye had faded from where the bubbles landed. That’s part of the great innovation of these bubbles. The dye doesn’t stain. Inventor Tim Kehoe spent years trying to find such a dye using science, but the label clearly states his final breakthrough: He used magic.

I soon took the Zubbles outside, where it was a bit windy, but the bubbles that made it off of the wand did pretty well. As you can see in the video above, I also had fun with them after work on my balcony. I enjoyed my time in the fresh air, so I think I’m going to start a healthy bubble habit. As in, “Hey, you want to go chat outside? I need a bubble break.” A bottle of regular bubbles is like 60¢ at a party store, so it should be pretty affordable.

While I was waiting for the dye to fade from my shirt (I thought I would shoot a time lapse), I accidentally spilled a bottle of Presto Pink. It looked like a crime scene:

The liquid dripped down to the patio below, so I really hope nobody is living in that apartment right now. I don’t need the cops knocking on my door.

Yes, I’m the creepy guy from upstairs who blows bubbles on his balcony, dumps blood onto your patio, and then takes pictures of it.

Fortunately, the dye did fade after about an hour, so now it just looks like I over-watered my plants. Perhaps I should now actually get some plants to make this more plausible.

As you can see, it looks like my wood floor should be unstained as well.

By the way, the color didn’t fade from my shirt on its own like I thought it would, but after dabbing it with some water it was gone.

Overall, I’m pretty happy that I finally have Zubbles. The dye does collect at the bottom of the bubbles making them a bit bottom-heavy, and you don’t get as many bubbles per blow as you do with normal bubbles, but hey, they’re colorful! Now they just need to release them in more colors. I think it’d be really fun to have all of the Google colors. For now, Zubbles can only be used to mimic the Flickr logo.

Ok, gotta step outside and get my bubbles on.

Cover Flow and Quick Look

Sometimes features which first appear to be gimmicks end up being useful. When I’m sorting through a folder of pictures (for example screenshots for a blog post), I like to switch over to the “Cover Flow” view in OS X’s Finder and step through the list using the arrow keys. One way you can activate this view is by clicking on the Cover Flow button at the top of your Finder window:

You can also choose “as Cover Flow” from the “View” menu.

If I want to take a closer look at an image, I just tap the spacebar, which activates Quick Look. Here’s a video showing these features in action:

My 2009 video archiving strategy

On December 17, 2007, I announced my 2008 video archiving strategy. A year later, I drafted a revised plan. And today, with an even newer plan, I’m pleased to announce that I’ve commenced archiving.

Overview

VHS (and VHS-C) tapes go through an analog to digital converter and are imported directly to my hard disk. The video is simultaneously recorded on DVD-R using a dedicated DVD recorder.

MiniDV and HDV tapes are imported to hard disk in their native formats via FireWire.

All of the data on my hard disks is backed up with Carbonite, an offsite backup service.

Now, let’s get into the details.

Analog to digital conversion

My previous plans had me recording VHS to MiniDV and then capturing that, or recording to DVD and ripping those. The MiniDV process would mean two realtime tape transfers (doubling the time required for each tape), and the DVD ripping would have potential quality issues. I finally decided to do a one-time tape transfer, direct to the DV codec, which is more than enough quality for VHS source material to keep me from wanting to recapture it from tape at a later time.

I got a couple of recommendations for the Canopus ADVC110, which converts S-Video and composite video to DV (and the other way around), and it’s been working great. They have a cheaper model, the ADVC55, but the 110 was the only model that explicitly supports locked audio (the audio and video won’t drift out of sync during long captures), so I paid the extra money to make sure that everything remains in sync while capturing video two hours at a time. Plus, it’s pimped out with blue LEDs.

Let’s trace the connections.

The tape goes into the VCR.

The video out of the VCR is connected to the front inputs of the ADVC110.

The DV port is connected (via included FireWire cable)…

…to the computer. If you do not have a computer, a cheese grater from Jonathan Ive’s kitchen is a suitable replacement.

I also use the coax output of the VCR to pipe the video signal to my DVD recorder (for instant backup) and then from there to my TV for monitoring.

Of course with a couple of decades worth of memories to transfer, I don’t think it would be healthy for me to watch them with my full attention every night after work since any reminder of home triggers intense nostalgia. To help avoid this, I relegate the home video to a small picture-in-picture window while watching and listening to other content on the larger screen. Now, I miss home, I want to travel back in time, and I’ve formed a memory of Matt Cutts giving me a barcode scanner for Christmas.

The same process is used for my HDV and DV tapes; except they skip the whole conversion process and just go directly from camera to computer via FireWire.

Media management

As I mentioned before, iMovie is now designed to organize a video library, so that’s what I’m currently using to import and describe my videos. The process is easy.

For the VHS tapes, I don’t have device control of the VCR of course, so Ihave to go old-school and cue up the tape myself in manual mode. I click “Import” when I’m about ready to go.

I create a new event for each tape, and title it as whatever is written on the label. Then I click “Import” and roll the tape.

When I’m finished importing the tape, I mark it with a sticker.

What’s really cool is that iMovie appears to keep all of the necessary meta data encapsulated in an event folder, so you can move “tapes” from hard drive to hard drive without having to reconnect any media files or even re-add the events to your iMovie library. iMovie will just recognize them.

As you have probably already assumed, all of this video fills up a lot of hard drive space. Two hours of footage (one VHS tape) comes out to a little less than 25 gigabytes. Even the thumbnail files (iMovie generates a visual timeline that you can scan by mousing over) are over a gig for each video.

By the way, I know I keep referring to VHS, but you can assume that all of the video will run at about the same rate, since with my process VHS is converted to DV, DV is imported as DV, and HDV has the same data rate as DV. 🙂

Fortunately, storage is always getting cheaper. I originally picked up two Iomega Prestige 1.5 TB drives on Amazon for less than $150 each. I think the last Iomega product I owned before these was a Jaz drive. I had a single 1 GB disk for it and liked the cool sounds it made. It was also handy for transferring video files between school and home before the days of USB thumb drives.

I planned on using these external drives as my primary storage until I ran into a hitch (described below) which requires me to use my internal drives.

As you can see, 1.5 terabytes fits in a pretty small package these days.

I’ve only purchased one additional internal drive so far, since I figured it makes more sense to buy them as I need them, with prices on a steady downward trend. I went with a Western Digital 1 TB SATA drive, because it was in a green box and saves the Earth by decomposing or something. Perhaps I shouldn’t be choosing hard drives based on how well they rot, but it was only $120 at Best Buy, and I see it listed for a nice $99 right now on Amazon.

Adding an additional internal hard drive (or two or three) is ridiculously easy on a Mac Pro. You don’t even need to connect any cables; the data and power ports are lined up perfectly. You just open up the case (no screws, no unplugging cables), pull out a bracket, screw it onto the hard drive, and slide it back in. Seriously. To see for yourself, check out the excellent videos by Other World Computing embedded in this article. Once I turned my computer back on, all I had to do was click “Initialize…” on the somewhat scary “The disk you inserted was not readable…” message, and within seconds had a working hard disk.

Backup

The main idea behind this project was not to get convert our analog media to digital to make it accessible (we have plenty of VCRs laying around), but rather to make sure that there wasn’t just one copy of each memory. It’s really easy to copy digital bits (and there’s no loss in quality), so I figured once I had the videos in the computer, backing up would be easy. I was wrong.

For local backups, I simply copy over my files to a couple of 1.5 TB external hard drives. It’s dead-simple to set up a RAID 1 array in OS X, but since I’ll likely end up filling all of my internal drives, and I’m not recording a live feed that I’ll never be able to transfer again, the manual copying via USB be fine. Matt Cutts calls this technique a “poor man’s RAID.” For my non-video backups on my laptop and desktop, I use Time Machine.

My backup plan also needed to utilize offsite backup, since if my backup drive is right next to the original, both copies could easily be lost by the same theft, earthquake, water damage, etc. I originally tried signing up with Mozy, which is about $5/month for unlimited backup. To make a long story short, Mozy simply couldn’t get through a single large DV file (>20 GB) without giving up and failing. To be fair, this was probably due to my Comcast connection not staying completely alive during the entire upload, but you would hope that the software could accomodate for a brief loss in connectivity. I tried contacting their technical support team about this and was not satisfied with the quality of their responses (a “Sorry, a file that big probably won’t work” would have been fine), so I cancelled my account. I had prepaid for 2 years of service, and I’m still waiting to hear back from them about a refund.

A similar backup service, Carbonite, is also about $5/month for unlimited backups, and they offer a free trial. One drawback is that Carbonite doesn’t currently support external drives, but I’m not close to filling up my four SATA bays, so it hasn’t been an issue. Another minor annoyance is that any files larger than 2 GB need to be manually selected for backup, but it’s not a huge pain. Carbonite has already successfully backed up a 20+ GB test file (it took about 30 hours), so I’m sticking with them for now. (Update on 7/18/09 – I don’t know if it’s Carbonite or Comcast — based on other reviews I suspect Carbonite — but someone is throttling my upload. So, at this point, I won’t endorse Carbonite or Mozy for backing up large files.)

Update: Now I’m using LiveDrive.

Newer update: I had trouble with LiveDrive too and now I’m really not using anything. I’m open to suggestions.

Cost

Considering that I’m archiving priceless memories, I think this project turned out to be rather inexpensive. Here’s what it’s cost me so far:

ADVC110: $200 from B&H.
iMovie (part of iLife ’09): $80; free with new Macs.
Carbonite:  $130 for the three year plan, which is less than $4/month.
Hard drives: Let’s say it’ll be $100/TB

Total: Eh, around 5-600 bucks for about 160 hours of video (I’m not sure how much I have; that could cover it) and three years of backup. That’s how much the iPhone cost (and no, not with 3 years of service) when it first came out.

The Future

What’s my plan for new video? I think the next big step I’ll have to take is getting a camera that doesn’t record to tape; likely in the AVCHD format since I can work with it natively in Final Cut. When I record to a non-linear format, importing video will be as easy as clicking “import,” I’ll be forced to import it more often since I’ll need to free up space on the camera, and the clips will be a few minutes long rather than two hours. That last bit, the segmented clips rather than one long tape, is a key difference that will change how I deal with video in the future. Rather than treating video as separate from my still photos, I think that with shorter clips (which will all have timestamps), I’ll just keep the video clips in Picasa and have one big photo/video library that doesn’t silo images based on whether or not they move.

And my next big archiving project? Still photos. I plan on getting started when I go home later this month. Get ready, ScanCafe.

One more thing

I have one final thought to leave you with after I’ve watched a few home videos. I know that many people don’t shoot video. If you don’t, please try. Video is not just for people who have kids or who do exciting things on skateboards. The next time you’re somewhere with your camera, just try flipping it into video mode for 30 seconds. It doesn’t have to be something that justifies the use of video; just let it roll and capture the ambience. Years from now, you may be glad you did.

Sometimes

Sometimes after I’ve prepared some food, I put it on a plate before taking the plate out of the cabinet. I think it’d be fun if life really worked like that. Just open up a door, and there’s your sandwich, ready to go.

sandwich on a plate in a cabinet