Monthly Archive for March, 2007

R2-D2 mailbox

R2-D2 mailboxJust when I thought the Star Wars madness should have been coming to an end, I saw this on Yahoo! Photos today. That’s right: the US Postal Service will be covering their blue mailboxes in around 200 cities with R2-D2 "skins" to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Star Wars.

In the photo you can see the URL uspsjedimaster.com scrawled on the sides of the mailbox. If you go to that site now, you will see a teaser with footage from Star Wars. In it, an envelope is inserted into R2. I’m not crazy enough for Star Wars to know if that is new footage, but I’m guessing it is. Then the trailer ends with these words: ON MARCH 28 TWO POWERFUL FORCES WILL UNITE. According to this AP article, on March 28 a commemorative Star Wars stamp will be released. The article also says not to tamper with the R2-D2 mailbox if you come across one; it is a crime to do so.

iTunes 7.1

My Apple Update software just notified me that iTunes 7.1 is now available. This release is supposed to address some problems with iTunes on Vista. Apple’s support doc lists these specifics:

Compatibility with Windows Vista

iTunes 7.1 addresses a number of known compatibility issues with Windows Vista. Apple is actively working with Microsoft to resolve a few remaining known issues, including:

  • Ejecting an iPod from Windows Explorer or the Windows notification area (system tray) using the “Safely Remove Hardware” feature may corrupt your iPod. To always safely eject an iPod, choose Eject iPod from the Controls menu within iTunes. If your iPod becomes corrupt, selecting your iPod in iTunes and clicking Restore in the iPod’s Summary panel should return your iPod to a working condition.
  • iTunes may display text or graphics incorrectly on your screen. Resizing the iTunes window should correct this issue.
  • Contacts from Windows Contacts may not sync with iPod.
  • iTunes remains unsupported on 64 bit editions of Windows, including Windows Vista and Windows XP x64.

Luckily, I am running a 32-bit verion of Vista on my AMD64 computer. I’ll try out iTunes 7.1 over the next week and post whether or not my experience with iTunes on Vista is any better than before.

Update: Not even five minutes after I post this, I experience a new redraw problem in iTunes. In the middle of updating my iPod, iTunes started drawing funny. So, I tried to resize the window, per the suggestion in Apple’s support document (see above). Instead of fixing the problem, that made it worse! The iTunes window disappeared, and I can’t call it back up! wtf!?

Update: A week later, iTunes 7.1 has not really solved any of the problems I was experiencing. My window will still screw up its graphics if left open for too long ("too long" being an arbitrary amount of time determined by some as yet undiscovered force elsewhere in the universe). To top it off, I am having trouble adding some tracks to my library. iTunes claims to process the tracks, and then it just doesn’t add them. AAAARGH!

Blogs updated

With the recent discovery of hacked files in WordPress 2.1.1, I have been updating the blogs on ask-mark.com so that they are at the latest stable and safe version, version 2.1.2. All of the blogs have been updated, and I did not see any side effects from the upgrade. If you notice something, let me know.

New office

dining_room_12I found my new office space. The new dining room table, along with two laptops running different operating systems makes for a perfect office space. I just need to add a 42-inch HDTV to sit at the other end of the table, and I think I would be set.

Perhaps replacing the two desks in my office with the old dining room table and some file cabinets is a way to go? I’ll have to measure things out and see.

Best Buy cheating customers

There’s no big surprise here that Best Buy has been cheating customers. To some, what is surprising is the method. Best Buy has confirmed that it runs an intranet that looks and operates very similarly to BestBuy.com. When customers come to the store and ask about the cheaper prices they saw on BestBuy.com, they are shown a Best Buy web page that reflects the higher in-store price rather than the cheaper online price. However, that web page does not reside on BestBuy.com, or at least not on the site accessible from home. The higher prices are stored on an intranet site only accessible from the stores.

Misunderstood youth

Dr. Thiele comments on an Ars article regarding the gaming and violence connection. He sees the Ars article as the first of many articles fighting back against the "violent" label attached to video games.

Another thing to consider is that rarely have I found that those that label games as "violent" have actually spent any time playing those games. Rather, they see an ad for the game or hear about it loosely from someone else, and then they make their proclamation without any first-hand knowledge. They sensationalize their cause without any proof to support it.

It is very similar to those who call for the banning of books. For example, District 214 board member Leslie Pinney requested to have several books banned despite admitting to having not read them in their entirety. Thankfully, Board President William Dussling and the remainder of the board voted against the ban. Similarly, it is going to require individuals knowledgeable about video games to stand up against those who wish to blindly blame video games for the violence in today’s world.

Personally, as I have grown older, I have observed that society is no different today than it was fifty years ago, or even 2,000 years ago. Violence existed then, just as it does now. However, we are more exposed to violence now just because of the availability of news reports that both sensationalize violence and desensitize us to it.

While easy, it is inappropriate to blame just video games or movies or other pop culture for producing more violent youth. Some of the responsibility must be shared by the parents. Youth exposure to violence is inevitable, but it can be moderated. If you don’t want your kids playing violent video games, don’t buy them. If you are concerned about your kids playing violent video outside of the house, talk to them. So much energy is could be saved just by talking to your kids. We don’t need censorship. We don’t need legislation. We don’t need a small group of individuals with their own hidden agenda trying to spread FUD about video games, movies, music, etc. We just need to communicate.

Friendly Flickr sets

I uploaded a couple of Flickr sets today, er, yesterday, that were long overdue. The sets are of a co-worker’s and a friend’s weddings. They’re both from 2005, and I’m only finally getting the photos posted. You’ll have to be on my friend and/or family list on Flickr to see them.