All posts by Jim Trottier

Movie industry, meet the music industry…Please.

Who the he** came up with this “Ultraviolet Digital Copy” crap?!?!  It’s the new Digital Copy they included with the last two Harry Potter movies (or the one two-part movie, whichever you prefer).  It SUCKS!  You first have to register with some Ultraviolet website, which then has to be integrated with your Flixster account.  Then, if you manage to get THAT far–which isn’t a walk in the park–you can finally stream your movie using your Flixster app on your device.   Who would want to use yet another app to view a movie they purchased?!?  Not me.

The first thing I did after purchasing the final Harry Potter movie (part 2), was pull out part 1 and try to install the digital copy for Kevin on his iPod.  Guess what?  It expired already.  The expiration date was on the card in the “fine print”.  Nice.  I didn’t activate it on purpose when I got it, since we didn’t even want to watch it until the “complete” movie was out, so we could then watch it beginning-to-end.  Now I was screwed.  I tried to activate it anyway, and all I got (after I jumped through all of the Ultraviolet/Flixster hoops) was a message saying “your disc will arrive in the mail within 2-3 weeks).  Nothing saying it was expired or anything, just that a disc was coming.  I then went to the part 2 and activated that one at least, since it wouldn’t be expired yet.  I jumped through the same stupid hoops, and then got to the goofy decision–do I want to stream it on Flixster or download a copy?  I tried the “download a copy” option, but it requires special software installed on your PC!  What?!?!

I wasn’t about to give up though.  This simply isn’t acceptable.  Who, in their right mind, actually uses this worthless digital copy crap??  All others before this simply had us enter a code in iTunes and the digital copy downloaded–even if they provided a “digital copy disc” in the box, which is another bizarre thing–why the heck is the disc needed if it’s going to download the movie from the web anyway?? But it worked pretty good.  The movie was then in iTunes, instantly available on the iPod for playing.  This is how we want to access ALL of our movies downloaded to the iPod–from the Movies app, which works perfectly fine.  To accomplish this for these two movies, I had to convert the DVD using CloneDVD Mobile & AnyDVD–an awesome set of applications I’ve used on the PC for years.  These two apps work together, with AnyDVD removing the copy protection from the DVD automatically whenever I insert one into my PC, then I use CloneDVD Mobile to convert the unprotected movie into a file.  Once the file is created, I can use it wherever I want.  You can create the file for specific devices, such as the iPod, to make a smaller file size, or create a generic higher-resolution file that’ll play on anything (and looks good on a tablet or PC screen), but it’ll be much larger in size.  For Kevin I simply made smaller iPod-sized movies, then dragged them into iTunes.  I worked out fine, and now all of his movies are still in one place.

Now I’m waiting for some useless disc to arrive in the mail, just wondering how much additional junk mail promotions will be included along with it, as well as how much more junk mail this will add to my postman’s daily delivery.  Wonderful.

When are the movie companies going to realize–just like the music industry did–that they’re punishing their paying customers??? Apple finally eventually removed all of their copy protection from their music (but kept their goofy “registered” music format files for some reason) and now sell everything unprotected, and Amazon sells everything as bare MP3 files, which is awesome.  I can purchase a song or album from Amazon and put it on whatever I want to play it.  THAT’S what I want for my movies too.  If the movie industry would realize this, as the music industry did, I could stop giving my money to SlySoft (maker of AnyDVD and CloneDVD Mobile) and instead spend that money buying more digital movies.

$1 Subs

Thursday was Customer Appreciation Day at Jimmy Johns.  I hadn’t heard of it, but Sandy did… And so did all of the people in these photos!  She got us both a nice sub for a buck.  Yeah, Jimmy Johns sure is fast, but it still seemed slow for Sandy while she waited so long in line…TWICE.

Steve Jobs special

I watched the Steve Jobs special “One Last Thing” on PBS tonight.  Interesting, but most of it was the same as what I’m learning as I read the Walter Isaacson book.  I’m on part 2 of 3 of the audiobook.  One thing that probably isn’t in the book that was in the special tonight was the kid that came up with the modified Apple logo for Steve Jobs.  Now I know exactly who I’m apologizing to for this.

Steve sure was a jerk though.  He ripped off Woz, even while they were best friends and he was working at Atari, did a lot of LSD, told everyone their work was either genius or it was utter crap (nothing in-between), and was very very difficult to work with–not only because he always had to get his way, but because, being a vegetarian (and sometimes a fruitarian) he stunk really bad and refused to bathe.  He would even soak his feet in the company toilets!  I guess I know what kept me from making my millions now.

Walking the line

CardioTrainerI try to walk every chance I get during lunchtime at work (30 minutes), and I use Cardiotrainer.  It keeps me informed every few minutes by announcing my distance, speed and calories, and it also records my walk on a map, allowing me to see exactly where I walked. Over time I’ve noticed that these maps result in some rather interesting shapes, and I could see how it would be very easy for someone to actually draw things during their walks, much like those who leave giant messages that only something like Google Maps can actually see. I uploaded few of my recent walks, most of them 30-minute periods over lunch at work.  Take a look.

I find it interesting how some of them make me look drunk, zig-zagging back and forth a lot.  I think GPS measurements vary a bit more depending on cloud and/or wind  conditions… in ADDITION to my usually trippy walking style, that is…

Boofest & Peterson’s Pumpkin Patch

Halloween 2011We just got back from Peterson’s Pumpkin Patch (9210 63rd Street, Kenosha, WI) and wow, it’s pretty neat!  Hundreds of carved & lit pumpkins crammed into one frontyard… It’s a pretty cool display, with some great, spooky added decorations as well.  The yard right next-door is also “haunted” and well-decorated, including sound effects, lighting, and fog.  Check it out if you get the chance–it’s only lit October 29th-31st.  The pumpkin patch is done for charity – for the American Diabetes Association.

We also went to Boofest at the Kenosha Museum earlier this afternoon.  All of the photos from both events, as well as a final “lit” photo of our own pumpkin are right here.  The pumpkin patch photos are uploading right now, and there are 140 of them, so they should be done uploading in about an hour (around 10:00pm, 10/29/2011).

Halloween festivities

Our pumpkin for 2011This morning Kevin and I carved our pumpkin for this Halloween.  Sandy had to work (as usual) so we did it ourselves.  We used a carving kit that Kevin won from the Boys & Girls Club, which included a metal star and bat cookie-cutter patterns.  You punch them through the pumpkin with the included mallet.  It made it very easy to carve!  We used a nice pumpkin that our neighbor Michelle gave us, which is actually shown in the middle of my website banner this season.  We used the stars in the carving kit as eyes and 3 bats as the mouth, and carved a triangle for the nose.  Looks pretty neat!  I like how the connections between the bats actually look like teeth for the mouth!

Today we’re attending BooFest @ Kenosha Museum from 1pm-3pm and this evening we’re going to visit the Peterson Pumpkin Patch, which is supposed to be one of the largest carved & lit pumpkin patches in the area.  Maybe a pumpkin farm in-between too, who knows.  Tomorrow is trick-or-treating.  Kevin, Socks and I will be going, Sandy has to work (as usual).  Click here for our all of our 2011 Halloween Photos.

Xoom & Honeycomb Tips

Having had my Motorola Xoom for awhile, I recently sent Jay a bunch of tips and suggestions for his new tablet (also a Xoom).  I thought I’d post those tips here so they might benefit others as well.  Here they are:

  • My Movies Pro is awesome for cataloging your DVDs and Blu-Rays, and it’s designed for Honeycomb!
  • The Xoom takes 48-55 seconds to boot cold, if powered all the way off.
  • Hold the power button down for a couple seconds to power it all the way down or to power it on.
  • To force-reboot instantly, press the Volume-Up and Power buttons together.  Do this only as a last resort when frozen.
  • Download the free app “NVIDIA Tegra Zone”, it includes all the great games designed specifically for your chip.
  • The “Earthquake!” app is great on the Xoom, install it and set a nice, scary, notification sound as the alert.  15-20 times a day it will scare the crap out of you.
  • The Motorola Portfolio case was a let-down for me.  I ended up dropping it and getting a blue gel cover for it.  I use many different apps that are optimized for portrait orientation and others that look best in landscape on the Xoom, and also play several games (like Burn the Rope) that require you to rotate the tablet as you’re playing as part of the gameplay.  The portfolio case (at least Motorola’s version) drove me nuts trying to do all these things.  The prop was nice, but not worth the trouble for me.  It just didn’t feel right in my hands with the case being larger and the lid flopping loosely behind the tablet. So I went with the gel (feels great in the hand!) and also got a Casecrown Suede Xoom Sleeve for storage when I take it with me.  It’s cushioned, zippered, fits the Xoom perfectly, and has an additional zippered pocket for other things.  I keep a microcloth in there to clean the screen and a stylus for notes and drawing apps.
  • “HD Widgets” are a must if you like Weather and Clock widgets.  This one is specifically designed for tablets, and the “HD Tablet Header” widget is my absolute favorite, though there are several others included, all very customizable.
  • Reminder – make sure you’re checking the Amazon Appstore daily on your Xoom for the daily free paid app – now you can install ALL of them and try them out and never have to worry about space issues.
  • Act 1 is a video player that works great on the Xoom, and is the only video player I’ve found that lets you custom Zoom to the size you want when you’re watching any video.
  • Make sure you check out the “Staff Picks for Tablets” section in the Android Market.  You’ll see the edge of the title in the upper right corner of the Market’s home page in the Apps section.  Slide left to bring it on-screen.  They update it frequently, and all of these apps work great on the Xoom.
  • All of the apps by “GLU MOBILE” are a rip.  They’re free, and some of them even look really neat and visually stunning, but they’re the type of games like Zynga’s games that get you hooked, then make you install OTHER apps or “do other tasks” like purchase something from another vendor, to earn “credits” or “Coins” to progress further in the game.  Of course, as an option they always allow you to skip the tasks completely by paying real money for credits or coins!  GAWD what a racket they got going!
  • Beware of scams.  Someone actually recently put up “Angry Birds HD”, “Angry Birds Seasons HD”, and many others, made them look authentic and set the price at 99 cents and made a lot of money.  Turns out they were selling SCREENSHOTS of the actual games!  Just a single screenshot was all you got, but it promoted itself as being the new HD version of the game!  They also had the letters LWP in them, which should have been a clue—this means “Live WallPaper”.  I guess we’re supposed to know that if it says that, it just wallpaper and not a real app. 😦
  • When you’re ready to try a new launcher on your Xoom, the best one I’ve found for it (so far) is ADW Launcher EX.  They’ve done a lot to it to make it fully compatible with Honeycomb, including adding the top right and left homescreen links (which are changeable  too!) and an awesome scrolling app bar along the bottom (optional)!  I’m always trying out different launchers as well as apps, and this is by far the most Honeycomb-compatible to date.  You gain the following abilities with it, just to name a few:
  • Rearrange your homescreens
  • Add or remove entire homescreens
  • Plenty of effects to choose from for homescreen animations
  • Tons of configuration options, including custom grid sizes for your homescreens
  • Plenty of basic icon options like “rename”, edit, etc., that you’d think would have been built into Android already.
  • If you switch to ADW Launcher EX as your homescreen, before putting a lot of work into redesigning your homescreens, be sure to set the default launcher to ADW, then do a full shutdown and restart.  The first time you use it, if you don’t reboot after setting it as your default launcher, you can lose all of your widgets.
  • Also, switching  between multiple launchers on the fly isn’t a good idea.  I tried it, thinking I could gain the benefit of having double the homescreens that way using 2 launchers, but it doesn’t work that way.  I think it basically uses up all of the system memory and is unable to toggle back and forth quickly.  It resulted in everything just crawling and being very very sluggish.  This is another reason why you need to fully reboot after setting a new launcher as default.
  • There is a small bug in Honeycomb that you might run into occasionally.  I have 3.2.1 and it still happens once in awhile, so they haven’t fixed it yet.  Sometimes when a popup is supposed to appear  on-screen, the screen will dim, but nothing appears, as if it’s frozen.  It was very frustrating when this started happening and I didn’t know what was going on.  I scoured the web though, and eventually learned what was happening:  Sometimes Honeycomb can’t draw the popup properly, so it appears to freeze.  Easy workaround instead of rebooting or panicking: rotate the screen 90 degrees.  Once the screen rotates and redraws itself, the popup will then appear and you can continue normally.  Sheesh.  Yes, it’s annoying, but I guess no OS is 100% perfect.
  • As of last week, Netflix is now available for the Xoom (and all Android 3 tablets) in the market, and it works nicely.  I’ve been waiting for it since I got my Xoom, and even cancelled my Netflix account temporarily until it finally came out for the Xoom.
  • I actually like Google Books a little better than Kindle on the Xoom.  The way the pages turn (like a real book) is neat.  It’s pretty minor I guess, but the experience just seems nicer.  You sure can spend a lot of money on books though–I wish Google or Amazon would switch to the subscription method that Audible uses.  That would be awesome.  With Audible you pay a flat monthly fee and you get 2 credits a month.  A credit is worth 1 book–any book–no matter what the price is.  There’s also a lower-priced plan that gives you 1 credit a month.  You can still buy books at good discount prices as well, but I really like the credit model.  I can budget for it, and 2 books a month is a pretty good pace for me.
  • iOS 5

    I finally got iOS5 installed on Kevin’s iPod.  I must say, I’m not impressed.  Very little has changed.  And from what I can see, a bunch of it was lifted from Android!  Clearly Steve Jobs had little, if any, input about the iOS5 updates.  The feature that is most clearly lifted directly from the Android is the “window shade” status bar!  You can now slide down the bar containing the clock and status icons to view your recent notifications.  Is it better?  Of course!  It’s been working great on Android for years!  Apple’s finally getting a little closer to reality.  Now if they could just add something to their interface so users don’t have to stare that those worn-out “Chicklet” icons all the time… Hey, I know!  GADGETS!  WIDGETS! APPLETS!  (hey, that last one might just be a winner–it has the word apple in it…) Whatever, just some interface customization options.  I still think they’re new slogan should be “Apple: Yesterday’s Technology at Tomorrow’s Prices!

    Logo

    Steve Jobs 1955-2011I recently posted this image on Facebook without posting it here first.  Brilliant.  The story behind it is also posted with the image, but I’ll re-post it here:

    A modified Apple logo has been circulating the web with Steve Jobs as the original bite out of the Apple.  I thought about it, and realized Steve is a loss to Apple, and should therefore be an additional piece removed from it.  So I modified the image, moving Steve to the left side.  My apologies to the original artist.

    Yes, I am guilty of creating this version, I confess.  The original modified version–with Steve on the right side replacing the original bite mark–was on a solid black background.  I cloned that piece into a hi-res version of the logo I found in Google Images and reversed it, placing it on the other side, then I cloned a bit of the background fog into the black Steve Jobs silhouette.  Piece of cake.  Since the original one was posted, I have noticed a lot of the tech people I follow on Twitter are using it as their icon/profile image/avatar.  If I didn’t dislike Apple as much I do, I would use my version as my profile image.  Let me know if you see this version anywhere else.  Just curious.  Or jealous.

    And speaking of my dislike of Apple, I have been trying since yesterday to get Kevin’s iPod updated to iOS 5.  I didn’t know it would wipe the iPod’s contents, and his backup failed, so now I’m trying to restore his last successful backup, which was in September.  Nice.  Hopefully he didn’t lose too much.  We’ll see.

    Sour Apples and other things

    I was preparing a post ranting about all the shortcomings with the new iPhone 4S just released this week, then Steve Jobs died.  I’ll hold off awhile.  Everyone is busy posting their condolences and remembrances, so it’d probably be pretty bad of me to rant right now.  Sure…I post next to nothing on my site for months, and NOW I decide to write something??

    Anyway, I’m back.  Never left, really.  I’ve just been very busy with work (full time), work (side jobs) and family responsibilities.  Like leaving in a hurry so fast (yesterday) that I left my keys on the kitchen counter as I walked out and closed the back door.  A split second after it clicked shut it hit me.  I was in the backyard with a locked house and locked car in the driveway, late for picking up Kevin.  Luckily (on two levels) I hadn’t forgotten my phone!  I was able to call Sandy so she was able to pick up Kevin, and I was able to enjoy my current audiobook while I waited in the backyard for someone to come and let me in.

    Captain Hindsight reminded me later that I should have grabbed my Xoom before walking out the door–then I could have watched a MOVIE while I waited.  (No, Captain Hindsight didn’t bother to remind me that I should have grabbed my KEYS either–he’s not THAT good)  It wasn’t so bad though–I got the backyard cleaned up, built a pyramid of wood in the fire pit, and was even able to find a lighter to start a fire with.  It was in the 50’s last night, so I sat by the fire and listened to my book (Stephen Kings “Bag of Bones”) as I waited.  Sandy came home about an hour and a half later, got their chuckling and razzing of me out of the way, and then opened the back door so I could get back in.

    I’m going to start posting here more, I’ve decided.  Facebook’s posting size is limited, and they’re constantly changing it, adding more and more advertising, games and crap, so I’ll post all my stuff right here and maybe occasionally I’ll even post an article link on my Facebook page.  If no one reads my stuff, no problem.  I’m used to that already.  This is an outlet for my own thoughts.  A more stable page that doesn’t constantly juggle its contents and format.

    Oh, and I was once again forced to disable public comment posting on this site.  You must be a registered user if you want to add comments.  The spammers just start creeping in over time and they don’t stop until they’re fully blocked.  I still have to watch my registered users list now, because eventually they’ll start creating bogus users and creeping in all over again.

    More updates, rants, and daily musings coming soon…

    Galaxy Tab – Been there, done that, returned it

    I “rented” a 7” Galaxy Tab for a couple weeks recently.  As most people probably already know, it’s a small Android-based tablet.  After all was said and done, I was kinda disappointed.  After testing it with everything I could throw at it, I realized that it wasn’t up to the job.  Sure, it had a ton more memory than my phone does, and that kept me from running out of space (until I tried to stop using the “App2SD” option and move every app back to the main memory—then it fill up quick and the errors began coming), but that wasn’t the main issue.  The main problem, I came to realize, is that it’s just plain slow.  It probably has a faster processor than my phone, and that’s what I expected, except it’s just barely enough to get by, it seems.  With a larger display, of course it’s going to take more processor to run just as smoothly as a small device like a smartphone, but that’s what it runs like—a scaled-up smartphone.  It was still pretty sluggish when you wanted to move between apps or homescreens quickly, and if you try to multitask, forget it.

    One saving grace was a launcher I found while testing it—GO Launcher EX.  This thing is awesome, and completely blows away HTC Sense, ADW, and even Launcher Pro.  It’s fast and smooth, has almost all of the features of both those other launchers plus a ton more, including the ability to create as many or as few homescreens as you want!  There doesn’t seem to be a limit to it, except what your actual phone itself can handle.  On top of that, it’s FREE, while Launcher Pro and ADW both cost a few dollars.  Why I hadn’t found this one sooner is beyond me, but it did make playing with the Galaxy Tab very fun indeed.  I also discovered that GO Launcher is also the only Launcher for Android that scales well for tablets.  The modified launcher that comes with the Tab is nice, and it’s better than ADW or Launcher Pro, but it’s nowhere near as nice as GO Launcher.  In the end, I realized I can use GO Launcher on my phone too, so I now have it on there as well, and I don’t think I’ll ever go back to either of the other two launchers or the stock HTC Sense.

    But back to the Tab.  Asphalt 5 and 6 were the best-running games I played on the Tab, and they worked pretty good, actually.  For some reason though, some of the “basic” games (Angry Birds for example) would freeze up from time to time, with no hope of ever coming back.  It would completely freeze and nothing would respond, none of the buttons, nothing on the touchscreen.  On these occasions I have to hold the power button in until the power turned off, then restart it.  Starting the Tab from a power-off was also pretty frustrating.  After about 30 seconds it would appear to be ready, but many icons (those installed to SD) would still be missing and I guess it was still loading things in the background.  I could go into the app drawer and see only a few preinstalled apps, then site there another several minutes as the drawer populated with the missing apps one-by-one. Loading anything prior to this completion just bogged it down even more and slowed everything to a crawl.  It was best to wait about 5 minutes before using the Tab after a powerup.  Not something I looked forward to doing every time I needed to restart it.

    The Tab has a single smartphone-like processor and runs Android 2.2.  They say 2.2 wasn’t designed to run on a large-screen device though, and I can see that now.  Since returning the Tab, I’ve been looking at Android 3 devices and watching a lot of review videos and there’s quite a difference.  Android 3 was designed specifically for tablets, and it shows.  All of these Android 3 tablets run on a dual-core 1GHz nvidia processor, and it seems to work wonders.  Most reviews says it’s definitely an iPad 2 contender.  This alone says a lot.

    After much more thought about it, I realized the 7” Tab probably wouldn’t be getting an upgrade any time soon either.  It’s big brother—the Galaxy Tab 10.1—is already using Android 3 and the nvidia Tegra chip, and is supposedly a pretty nice tablet, so this, most likely IS the upgrade you’d get when you move off of the 7” Tab.  Don’t get me wrong, I was liking the 7” size—it makes the device much more portable that a 10”, I’m sure.  It’s like carrying a small notebook around with you (though it would be nicer if it even fit into a pocket somewhere, but it’s just a tiny bit too large for that).  So, for a couple weeks there I was saying “size doesn’t matter”, and “it’s the perfect tablet”.  Size-wise I still think it’s pretty nice, but size isn’t everything .  If it performed great I would still have it.

    I was given a 30-day unconditional “trial” period when I got it.  I could return it for a full refund within the 30 days and only pay for the data usage if I wanted to, otherwise it would have cost me $299 up-front with a $100 rebate after 3 months on a 2-year contract.  The contract requires a data plan to be added to the device.  The first 3 months must be at the top data plan, which is about $55/month for 5GB, but after that you can change to a $15/month plan that gives you 200MB of data.  That was what I planned to do if I had kept the device, so in the end it would have costed me the least over the 2-year plan.  That ends up costing a total of $679 over 2 years, which is quite a bit for an Android 2.2 tablet actually.

    So I decided instead to do my research as thoroughly and possibly attack the tablet market later on when I have enough money to purchase one up-front and plan-free.  A wi-fi only tablet would be fine, since I can tether it to my phone anyway.  I’d still be able to have internet on it any time I needed to.  Right now I’m heavily comparing these 4 models: Morotola Xoom, Galaxy Tab 10.1, Asus Eee Transformer, and the Toshiba Thrive.  I’m looking at all of these in their 32GB configuration.  So far, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 has no ports on it—a big negative for me, and it also costs $599, the same price as a 32GB iPad 2, another bad point.  The Toshiba Thrive is almost as bad at $579, but has a better front camera (5 MP) compared to the Tab 10.1’s 3MP camera.  The Thrive also adds a USB jack but nothing more.  The Xoom and The Asus, on the other hand, offer some interesting options.  The Xoom is Google’s official development device, for one thing.  This means when they release anything for tablets, it’ll work first on the Xoom.  This, in turn, means Google fully supports the device and trusts Motorola.  It also has HDMI, USB and microSD slots, and is only $499!  Last, but not least, is the Asus Eee Transformer.  It’s called the transformer because there’s an optional $149 keyboard you can get, and when you attach the tablet to the keyboard, it basically transforms it into a notebook!  It looks and acts just like a notebook, complete with a touchpad in front of the keyboard, along with all the ports like the Xoom, and additional extra ports on the keyboard half.  So NOW I guess I’m only seriously looking at the Xoom and the Transformer.

    Well, I guess I’ve waited too long to publish this article.  Now it’s Sunday, August 7th, 2011, and I’ve done some more research since the above paragraph.  When I get right down to it, we’re talking $499 for a bottom-line decent Android (or even iPad 2) tablet.  A bottom-line laptop is pretty much exactly the same price, but gives you a ton more processing power, dual or QUAD core, 3 or 4x the RAM, and 10x or more storage space, and a much larger display.  The negatives, compared to a tablet, are that it’s heavier, the battery doesn’t last anywhere near as long, and it’s not touch-screen controllable.  Neither a tablet nor a laptop would have cellular connectivity (unless you go with a contract), but I don’t have a problem with that — both can tether to my phone.  What to do?  I’m not sure right now, so I’m staying tablet- and laptopless for now, as I save up.  By the time I’m ready (probably early next year after the holidays, at this point) I’m sure the entire landscape will have changed dramatically and I’ll have to start researching all over again.

    A tiny video

    Kevin and I made a short stop-motion video tonight.  I wanted to show Kevin how easy it is to do a little video magic with the camcorder, so we made this short video.  It took a total of about 1/2 hr of time–which was perfect for his short attention span–going from auto-recording 1 frame every 3 seconds, to transferring to his computer, adding some music, and rendering it out in H.264 video, then uploading to YouTube.  It has a few bad frames where it caught me touching, but otherwise I think it turned out pretty neat for what is definitely the shortest video I’ve ever made.  Take a look.

    Wow, Déjà vu – Waukegan Windstorm 2011!

    As I parked my car in the hospital lot early this morning, the sky suddenly got darker and darker, the winds picked up a lot, and a tree branch flew through the lot and hit my back window.  It was all too familiar–and way too soon to be happening again.  I locked the car and started walking into the hospital when the sideways rain started, and along with it the tornado sirens started up, just as I entered the building.  I thought “here we go again!”

    Sure enough, there was a lot of damage, this time centered around the Waukegan area.  A lot of downed trees again, all of the traffic lights out, and our hospital was (and still is) without power all day today.  It was an interesting day for the IT Department, to say the least.  No damage at home though.  There were tree limbs all over the place on the ride home up Sheridan road this afternoon, and all of the traffic lights were out all the way from Waukegan through Winthrop Harbor.  Magically, once I crossed the Illinois/Wisconsin border, things looked normal again and our traffic lights worked fine.

    Mother Nature has a real attitude this season, and she’s moving SOUTH…in a hurry!

    Cars 2

    Fire KindlingKevin and I went to see Cars 2 today.  I was very curious about it, since Kenosha News shot it down, saying how horrible it was, how it’s the worst Pixar movie ever made, and how they trashed Kenosha-made vehicles in the movie.  Prior to reading that article, I wasn’t even going to see the movie in theaters.  I was content to wait for the DVD release.  But I knew, after reading such a horrible review, it just had to be skewed.  Pixar movies just aren’t that bad. Ever.  They pride themselves in taking years to work through every tiny detail, joke and frame in their movies.  So I just had to see for myself.

    Just as expected, the movie was great, and the Kenosha News article was a load of crap.  The Kenosha News complained that the “bad guys” in the movie were Kenosha-built Pacers and Gremlins in horrible never-seen-on-the-road colors.  Some were, sure.  What–a “bad guy” never came from Kenosha before??  Kenosha has never had an actor that played a “bad guy” in a movie before?? Oh the horror.  And gee, did Pixar really “mess up” when one of these “bad guys” says he’s from Detroit in the movie?? Duh.  Check Wikipedia for “American Motors”.  It’s headquarters was in Southfield, Michigan–a suburb of Detroit.

    Kenosha News’ writers really need to do a little research before they just bash a movie so harshly just based on a few viewers’ opinions.  I thought the movie was great, it had all of the Pixar touches and attention to detail I always love, and I was completely satisfied with it.  It’s a great animated movie about cars classic, new, and in all shapes and sizes (and reputations)–and even explains the value of dents!  There was also a great “Toy Story” short before the movie, which was a real treat for us.  And if it wasn’t for the little kid sitting directly behind me, constantly kicking the back of my seat until I turned around, gave her a mean look, and moved over a few seats, it would have been perfect.

    Oh, and we’re going to have a nice fire this evening… Guess what we’re going to use for kindling!  Click on the photo.  If you zoom in close enough using the “View all sizes” option in the upper-right corner of the Flickr page you can even see how they even slammed it with a big headline on the front page, see who wrote the article and even read a bit of it… Uh-oh, now I’m going to get in trouble from the Kenosha News (again) because I re-published something from their paper.  Burn the evidence! Quick!