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Me and Sylvia (April 4, 2002)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Language speaks, because speaking is its pleasure and it can do nothing else.

Penelope Fitzgerald


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Thursday, July 24th, 2008

🦋 iPod bleg

Dear Internets,
I have a problem, which is my young daughter was listening to my iPod and went messing with the settings (I told her not to, but does she listen? She does not), and set the maximum volume to quite soft. When she was doing that, she put in a 4-digit password, which she promptly forgot. What can i do? Google-found pages advise me that I should use windows explorer to navigate to the iPod's "IPod Control\Device" folder and delete the file called "volume locked" -- I did this to no avail. (Somehow the iPod is only available via explorer while iTunes is synching its content, then it disappears. Google also tells me there should be a way of enabling it always to show up in Explorer but I'm not getting anywhere with that.) I'd be happy to do a cold reboot of the iPod if only I knew how. Pressing the Menu button and the center button together for a few seconds appears to do a soft reboot, and not to affect the Max Volume setting.

Help please! I want to listen to my music loud!

posted morning of July 24th, 2008: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Music

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

🦋 Huckleberry Finn Intertextuality

Sylvia comments that the King and the Duke's plan to perform a Shakespearean exhibition (featuring the balcony scene, with the King as Juliet, and the sword fight from Richard III, and the King doing Hamlet's soliloquy) reminds her a lot of Moominsummer Madness. And I think she's on to something; Jansson could very well be referring directly to this scene. That's assuming Huckleberry Finn was translated and available in Finland in the early 20th C., which seems to me like a reasonable assumption.

An interesting moment was explaining to Sylvia why it would probably not be a good idea to read Huckleberry Finn out loud while we were on the airplane flying to California.

posted evening of July 23rd, 2008: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Huckleberry Finn

🦋 Beach Reading

Coincidence: the two times this year I have gone to the beach, I've taken along a book by Saramago -- he works really well for a relaxed read, lying in the sun. I'm not sure what it is exactly -- he's very "heavy" -- it takes a lot of thinking and re-thinking for me to get it. But the sun and the sand seem to help that along.

A couple of nice bits from this weekend's reading, below the fold:

posted afternoon of July 23rd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about The Cave

Friday, July 18th, 2008

🦋 A little vacation

So after a spate of short and varying-degrees-of-silly posts, I'm going away for a coupl'a days -- my cousin Andy is getting married! So Sylvia and I are jetting off to San Diego this evening. Be back on Wednesday or thereabouts.

posted morning of July 18th, 2008: Respond

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

🦋 Dr. Horrible

I did not know until today about Joss Whedon's new movie (movie? I don't see any indication that it will be in theaters -- it is an internet phenomenon but it sure looks like a movie), Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog. Just now I watched the first episode -- what a great thing this is! Nothing to say about it yet other than, go take a look.

...Oop, well, you can't go take a look any longer, not without paying at any rate.

posted evening of July 17th, 2008: 2 responses
➳ More posts about The Movies

🦋 Little square robots

Tonight we went to the local park to watch a screening of Wallace and Gromit -- the three shorts, "A Grand Day Out", "A Close Shave", and "The Wrong Trousers". Wonderful movies, and nice to watch them outdoors on a hot summer night. I was wondering if anybody had noticed the resemblance between Pixar's character WALL•E, and the robot that lives on the moon in "A Grand Day Out".

...Yep, well, A.O. Scott noticed the allusion in his review of WALL•E -- which I read a couple of weeks ago! I didn't catch that at the time... Google tells me a lot of other reviewers caught it too.

posted evening of July 17th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Wallace and Gromit

🦋 Bayesian detection of stupidity

This is an idea whose time is long overdue.

posted afternoon of July 17th, 2008: Respond

🦋 Stanford Superconducting Supersocializer

Dr. Healy proposes a particle theory of social interactions, featuring up, downer, top bloke, charm, strange, and asshole varieties of Quirk.

posted afternoon of July 17th, 2008: Respond

🦋 Briefly noted

Today's Achewood contains, among Beef's notions of how it's going unpleasantly to end up, one of the best lines I've ever seen in that strip: "Guy from the county comes and checks the Yes box after Is It A Shame"

...CortJstr notes that it could be worse: "He could check the Yes box after Is It For The Best"

posted morning of July 17th, 2008: Respond

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

🦋 The Jesse Helms Memorial AIDS Prevention Bill

This is just twisted. Absolutely down the rabbit-hole and out the other side weird. (h/t Apo.)

posted evening of July 16th, 2008: Respond

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