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Movies
JVJ (RIP):
--- Quote from: John C on June 16, 2011, 05:24:37 AM ---
Was there a pogrom and nobody invited me? (Sniff) Isn't that always the way...
--- End quote ---
It's really sad, John, when we don't get invited to our own obsolescence pogrom. Sigh... Nobody remembered to ask us and we are SO out of the loop. It was all over Twitter and Facebook!
You're probably still using cellphones and email, aren't you? Or posting on message boards? Ewwww!
Peace, Jim (|:{>
John C:
--- Quote from: JVJ on June 16, 2011, 08:44:01 PM ---You're probably still using cellphones and email, aren't you? Or posting on message boards? Ewwww!
--- End quote ---
No, no cellphone, actually. I never like phones to begin with, so the idea of carrying one around and paying for the privilege of taking care of it? Blech!
Roygbiv666:
--- Quote from: John C on June 17, 2011, 04:57:28 AM ---
--- Quote from: JVJ on June 16, 2011, 08:44:01 PM ---You're probably still using cellphones and email, aren't you? Or posting on message boards? Ewwww!
--- End quote ---
No, no cellphone, actually. I never like phones to begin with, so the idea of carrying one around and paying for the privilege of taking care of it? Blech!
--- End quote ---
I will only listen to music recorded on a wax cylinder. It retains the warmth and intent of the artist best.
Books are too new-fangled, I only read from papyrus scrolls.
Maybe Louis Pasteur believes in these new "vaccines", but leeches are where it's at!
I'm 42 and I only have a mobile phone, no home phone. Which is problematic in an emergency when the battery is dead, but hey - live on the edge!
As long as people remember that "technology" is only fancy talk for "tools that do work", then we should be ok.
John C:
--- Quote from: Roygbiv666 on June 17, 2011, 05:41:21 AM ---I will only listen to music recorded on a wax cylinder. It retains the warmth and intent of the artist best.
--- End quote ---
I...uh...actually have a wax cylinder coming to the house later this year. The first professionally-produced one since the 1920s, as far as I know:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/337503446/2011-cylinder-record-to-tape-to-vinyl-all-analog-r?ref=live
Still ten days and quite a few left, if anybody wants to be as dorky as me...
And yes, I didn't mean to suggest other people shouldn't have cellphones. They're just not for me. Other people have very different tradeoffs.
JVJ (RIP):
The project seems very "arty" to me, John. It's a challenge to create some things the old-fashioned way, that's for sure, but I'd like to hear of some sort of improvement using new technology. I understand that's not the point of the project, but, for instance, a better wax compound that is truer to the input seems like it might not be out of line and would be maintaining the original tech, wouldn't it? Proving that you can still do something 100 years later doesn't ring my "oh, wow" chimes.
I agree with you about cell phones, John (Karen agrees with about phones in general - says she hates them, but I have noticed that she actually uses them more than I do). I have one that I put $25 on every 3 months and rarely, if ever, go through the minutes that buys. As a backup, emergency, senior moment/goof rescuer it comes in handy, but I hate the extended use of them in public and, even worse, in drivers around me.
When Karen's sister came to visit us in Paris and she and I were out sightseeing (Place Saint Michel/Notre Dame), she was wandering around, quite literally, taking cell phone pictures of everything and virtually watching the scenery on her cell phone's display. Mindboggling. Rather than look at the magnificence of Notre Dame right in front of her, she was opting for a 2"x3" digital image. Bizarre. Cell phones distract and detract from real life and I am happy to use them when real life makes them necessary or handy, but "virtual-ness" has little appeal to me.
So how did you ever find out about the cylinder project, John? Is that something you're specifically interested in, or a chance encounter on the web? Curious minds want to know. I'm constantly amazed at how much time members of this group seem to have available to them. By the time I get through half the daily goals I've set for myself, I'm ready to defocus for an hour so that I can actually get to sleep. That's generally reading a book for me (last night was "Genius Isolated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth"). How one finds time to learn the many things you seem familiar with is daunting to me. I guess I work too slowly. Speaking of which, I best get back to it...
Peace, Jim (|:{>
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