Archive for the ‘-Not Sorted-’ Category

Migrating my movies -or- the trouble with moving pictures

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

There were many things I wanted to do with my spare time during the month or so I spent sitting on the sidelines.  As with most of my best laid plans in this day and age, they were hijacked by the TV screen.  The glorious, high definition TV screen.  But while I relished collecting those shiny new components in my entertainment center, they were severely under-used — those solemn red power indicators burning holes into my sub-conscious.

My relatively new Samsung HDTV and Playstation 3 has received some use, though certainly not to their full potential.  While I didn’t go crazy and spend way outside my budget for either piece, I sure wasn’t getting my money’s worth out of them.  Add to that the stacks of DVDs that I still haven’t watched years after getting them — taking up valuable real estate in my cluttered little apartment — and I started to get downright depressed with the situation.

You already know the solution to this problem

While watching a DVD has historically been a once in a blue moon kind of activity, you’ll find my TiVo constantly cleaned out of shows.  When everything is just a few clicks away on the remote, it’s quite easy to get sucked into watching more and more.  For a long time I’ve toyed with the idea of ripping all my DVDs onto my computer, which would not only give me easier access to the videos themselves, but would allow me to pack up the discs and shove them in the closet, right next to my CDs.

In fact, those CDs are the best example of what’s in store for this project.  Back at the beginning of the decade I was dealing with over 500 CDs.  No place to put them and I would only listen to a handful at a time.  When I started ripping my CDs onto my computer, how I dealt with music completely changed.  It honestly improved my quality of life.

With the TV, the PS3, and my iMac awash with ample storage space, I finally have the parts to try the same thing with my video collection.

Notes from the lab

While I have the hardware to try, it wasn’t until very recently that all the software needed to pull this off decided to straighten up and fly right.

Just like when I made the move from CDs to MP3s, I had to do a lot of experimenting to see what worked and what didn’t.  I tried a multitude of ripping programs, tweaking settings all the while.  In the end, I chose to go with two programs:  Roxio Toast and Handbrake.

Why two?  While Roxio is the easier one to work with, it’s set to recognize the CSS encryption the studios put on some of their discs, and won’t rip them.  Considering I paid about $20 a pop for each of those discs, that really pisses me off.  Thanks, Hollywood!  I feel so loved right now.

That’s where Handbrake comes in.  Couple it with VLC on your Mac and those CSS encrypted discs become an open book.  Its almost enough to make me choose Handbrake outright.  But while the program gives you many more options — almost too many — its user interface leaves a lot to be desired.

Considering how many discs I’m going to have to go through and how long each of them is going to take to rip, a simplified interface is key — if for no other reason than my personal sanity.

A shaky bridge gets solidified

Once you have the videos, you still need to get them from one place to another.  On the Mac to PS3 front,  this is handled by Nullriver’s MediaLink: a preference panel software that bridges the gap and exposes your computer’s file system to the PS3.

But while things worked fine with videos and podcasts I downloaded, it seemed like nothing that I ripped myself would play.  At most the video would play for a minute or two before an error screen would rear its ugly head.  I kept tweaking settings and re-ripping movies, but nothing I did seemed to make things any better

Then the MediaLink’s 1.7 update showed up.  Suddenly everything that the PS3 could play, did.  No network issues.  Everything was solid as granite.  That was my green light.

The saving graces and looking ahead

While this is no small task, it’s certainly not as large as my CD project — 500 discs versus 160, at most.  I’ll also be aided by the fact that a recently purchased MacBook has given me a second machine with enough horsepower to rip discs, and I can it with me to work so I can take care of some there.  This will speed things up considerably.

And once I’m done with all of that, I have a stack of old VHS tapes I’d like to try and import.  Lets just say the research has already begun on that front.

Viva la digital!

Missing inaction

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Well this place has certainly been a hub of activity in the last month, hasn’t it?  ^_^

Usually when things go dead up here its because things have gotten too busy in the real world.  But for once, the level of inactivity on my blog was actually doing a good job of mirroring the level inactivity in my life. Considering my last words here revealed I was out looking for work, you’d think that would be a horrible, terrible fact.

The anti-search job search

In a manner of hours of going live with my updated portfolio and writing about it here, a former Lime alumnus contacted me about a job opportunity.  After a relatively quick interview I accepted a design position at WePlay, a startup focusing on social networking for youth sport leagues.  This past Monday was my first day, and so far, so good.  Certainly refreshing to be diving into a new project, that’s for sure.

To be honest, I was always confident that my search would be short once I started looking for full time employment.  But I thought I would at least have to open up craigslist at least once or twice.  Seriously, it was a no-hunt job hunt.

Catching up on my slacking

I did have some freelance work to keep myself occupied, but I also had serious amounts of down time that I used to catch up on slacking off.  I slept strange hours.  I ventured on day trips when the rest of the world was chained to their desks.  I watch many movies and caught up on a lot of gaming.  Yep, the good life to be sure.  If not for those nagging human needs of shelter and sustenance, and the need of money to pay for such tripe things.

And if pigs could fly, blah blah blah.  Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to readjust myself to reality.

A Special Comment

Friday, November 14th, 2008

I totally endorse the show that this clip makes fun of.  What’s more, I heard about this from the very show in question.  Keith Olbermann is good for television, I say. And humor is good for me.

Election Affection

Monday, November 10th, 2008

 

One of the pictures posted on ze frank's From "52 to 48 with Love"

One of the pictures posted on ze frank's "From 52 to 48 with Love"

Yes, it was historic.  The largest number of registered voters to cast their ballot in an election since JFK in ’60.  Historic enough that the New York Times broke out the super-sized font for the front page headline for only the 4th time in history.  It will be a moment in the history of our nation that we will tell our children and grand-children about.

Did you enjoy that?  Good, because that’s over now.

It’s time for the new administration to get to work, and for the rest of us to act like civilized adults and treat each other with respect and — dare I say, affection?  That’s why seeing things like ze frank’s From 52 to 48 With Love makes me smile.  It’s a place where of the divide send messages to everyone in photos like the one above.

Sometimes my fellow citizens make me smile for all the right reasons.

An Everyday Tool in the Real World

Friday, November 7th, 2008
Photoshop in Real Life

PhotoShop in Real Life

Love this ad idea that someone came up with for advertising PhotoShop in Indonesia.  Boing Boing came across the photoset on Flickr.