Back Home and All is Well

It was a long journey home from Las Vegas yesterday.  Due to the fires, the 15 through the Cajon Pass was closed so we were stuck in Victorville/Barstow overnight.  We looked for alternative routes to LA, but there’s the San Bernadino forest that separates Victorville from LA and parts of it were on fire too.  We were able to see the Arrowhead fire as we drove around looking for a place to rest for the night.

This morning’s drive back home up the 15 alternated between hopeul and somber.  The good news is that the fires are quite isolated and there are large swaths of S. Cal under relatively blue sky.  The bad news is the parts that were hit by fire, were hit badly and we did see the remains of houses and some lingering flames as we made our way down the 15 through Fallbrook.

The news say the Santa Ana winds will last through today, tomorrow, and possibly through Thursday.  I am hoping, as is everyone else that no new fires start up.

Looking at the blogs, Wiki’s, and e-mail, I’m so happy to see that my co-workers are safe and that there is an out-pouring of help within the office community.

Well, until we can return to the office, I guess I’ll be here remotely.  Everybody in SD, take care!  And I will see you when the site reopens.

Santa Ana Winds, Fire, and I’m Away from Home

I always joke that in October the Santa Ana winds comes and the fires bugs come out and set S. Cal on fire.  October was looking good so far.  The weather was mild and the winds hadn’t come, but as soon as my husband and I leave town, the Santa Ana winds start up and areas around our home burst into flames.  The most frustrating thing about being out of state when there’s an emergency local to home is getting accurate and timely news.    I’m worried about my co-workers.  Are they okay?  Are their houses okay?  Where are the fires with respect to my house?  Is the electricity still on?  Is little Snowball okay?  He’s stuck in a cage and can’t run.  To compound the situation my parents are out of town and they are usually our back-up.  There’s fire in San Marcos, where I live and the fire line is about 2-miles away from my house.  Steve wants to punt on his business trip and head home, but the freeway to home is jammed or closed, so even if he did leave now, he couldn’t get home.  I’m leaving for Vancouver tonight from LV and not returning until Thursday, so I will have to wait and monitor the news, whatever news I can get.  Steve is on the phone now, remotely activating IT emergency procedures for the company he works for …

Well, here is a  picture of an overturned truck that didn’t heed the high wind warnings: yesterday.  The driver was able to get out the truck.  He looked shaken but not injured, which was a very good thing.


12:36PM

We’ve decided to head home to, hopefully rescue our guinea pig, Snowball, and then head over to my parents house.  We are at least 5-hours away from home and I’ve just learned that our house and my parent’s house are now in the evacuation zone.  My Dad is flying back to SD tonight.  He and my Mom are on route to Atlanta to get him on the plane.  According to the local news, the water drop planes have been grounded due to high winds and poor visibility and the firefighters are concentrating on getting people out of harm’s way instead of suppressing the fire.  The mayor of SD has told everyone to leave work and for those in the evac area to pack their cars and prepare to leave.  Steve is still on line at his workplace, furiously transferring data to servers outside of SD (or something like that …).  My stomach is in knots and I just want to go home to make sure everything and everybody is okay.  According to the list of confirmed destroyed houses, the fire is about 1/2-mile north of the SD site and heading west.  According to the weather forecast, the winds and heat are expected to continue for the next couple of days, which is horrible news … they expect the fires to burn all the way to the ocean.

Movie Review: "Michael Clayton"

It’s clear now that Oscar season has begun, so rejoice, for there are good movies to see!  “Michael Clayton” is one such excellent movie, along with the previously reviewed “3:10 to Yuma.”  This movie is so good that it has taken me 3-1/2-days to get over the emotional impact of this film.  The villains in this film really cheesed me off!  But onto the film.  “Michael Clayton” begins with a long rambling voicemail sent by a genius lawyer whose conscience crisis has caused him to have a mental breakdown.  Michael Clayton is sent to retrieve the sick lawyer and clean up the mess caused by his meltdown.  From there the story moves forward and backward through a series of flashbacks.  The evil corporation in this movie is very evil and their lawyer has “certain moral flexibilities” that make her think that murdering people is an acceptable way to enact cost controls.  For me this is a movie about a bunch of souless people who have sold their humanity for wealth and position.  What’s sad is that the one person who regains his humanity is declared insane.  This hit me hard and it made me very angry to think that there are corporations out there that are knowingly selling deadly products and fighting legal cases to continue to sell these deadly products.  My feeling on this is always, what are these companys fighting so hard to protect? 

Anyhow, “Michael Clayton” is an excellent and stylish movie.  George Clooney is soulful and relays his sadness very effectively through his eyes.  The evil lawyer lady — well it hard to explain — she is shown in very human moments like in the restroom where’s she upset and sweating profusely and at a hotel getting dressed, the lumps and bumps of her body highlighted — and during these scenes she’s constructing the inhuman fascade needed to get her through the moments when morality needs to be left behind.  These scenes are very effective in conveying just how twisted the world of this movie is.  I recommend this movie highly, so go see it!  5/5

500GB and Still Cranking — Jen Needs an Internet PVR Now!

Yep, I have 500+ GB of entertainment and pictures scattered across 3 computers on 5 hard drives.    Last weekend I spent ~6-hour shuffling files and burning files off onto DVDs to make room for more stuff.  It’s insanity managing this stuff manually and my husband can’t really navigate the network to find stuff because the non-sense file structure I made up is all in my head.  Sigh … try searching through 500+GB of stuff to find the one file you want!!!  Oh and then cleaning up the temp file mess created after I’ve moved Gigs of data from one location to another.  There’s got to be a better way and if anyone knows a way that’s doesn’t require any special technical knowledge, please tell me.

So here’s how my entertainment life goes.  I have two ways of getting entertainment from the Internet.  I either do a direct file download or I use a bittorrent program.  Each method downloads to different hard drives.  The bittorrent program downloads to a “working” directory and then automatically moves the files to an “inbox” directory when the downloads are completed.  From there it’s up to me to move the files into the appropriate directories with the rest of the episodes of that particular show or manga.  I used to keep things separated by whether it was a current series or a series which we had captured and watched all the episodes, but given that we have run out of HD space several times, which initiates the purchase of either another hard drive or a furious reschuffling of files onto hard drives with extra space accompanied by burning off onto DVD, things sorta got outta hand.  There are files everywhere with episodes of a series sometimes fragmented across two or more hard drives :(.   All hell breaks loose at home when we have a hard drive failure, as you can imagine. (Oh!  lesson learned:  never place an external hard drive on a sub woofer.  When you think about it, it seems obvious — big magnetic field —  but when you have limited shelf space a subwoofer seems like a good shelf — Doh!)  We have 3 computers that handle this horrible system.  One laptop (HP 6000 series) we use to do the downloading (it has 2 external hard drives attached), one  that is connected to the TV so we can watch the content (HP 7000 series Pavillion Media laptop), and another that has a high capacity hard drive to store more stuff (a Jen-built gaming rig for her lucky husband).  All are connected by wires running through the walls of house because a wireless network could not support the bandwidth we use. 

Sigh … so what would make my life easy?  Well, I’ve had my eye on one of those Media Servers, but it looks like I still have a little bit of wait and I don’t want to upgrade to Vista yet.  Plus, I don’t know whether it will make my life any easier.  If there’s someone out there who knows more about the Media Server, hear my call and set me straight on its capabilities and how I might integrate this into my computer mess.

The thing that would help me the most is a better way to manage my downloads as they come in.  As of now I am using the lousy filter that comes with the bittorrent software I use.  The filter is a simple name filter so it downloads everything with a certain string pattern from the RSS feeds I get regardless of its source, file format, the series episode number, or language.  Consequently, I end up either downloading or having my download cue littered with many versions of the same series that I have to go through and sort out manually.  After it’s downloaded it would be nice if it automatically went into a folder with the other episodes of the shows.  Then I would love to have an interface for when I actually want to view the content that would show me what new episodes have been downloaded that I haven’t watched yet, and from that interface I can view the content rather than having to root around on  the network to find my content.  I guess that sounds like a PVR, but for the internet and that’s what I want.

Oh, and another thing.  With respect to the Media Center storage capacity — whatever is thought of as reasonable, double it.  In the past few months, more of the shows I have downloaded are huge HD files at upto 1280 x 720 (widescreen) resolution (I’m sure 1920 by 1080 is coming soon) with 5.1 sound.  These files are roughly 2x the size of files I was downloading a year ago.  They are also using encoding that require more processing power so RAM has now become very important when playing these big files.  Take note :).

Entertainment vs Selling Ads — Short run vs Long Running Series

As you all well know, I’ve given up on watching American TV shows in favor of programming I download from the Internet that is mostly from Asia.  A big difference that I’ve noticed is that many of the shows from Asia are scoped to last a finite number of episodes, vs. an American TV show, where the ending is dictated by advertiser support.   I enjoy the scoped shows better because it feels like the show has the intent to tell a story with a defined beginning, middle, climax, and conclusion.  I feel that in the US, shows are more about coming up with a compelling premise to draw an audience and thus advertisers too, and, then the story has to keep cranking until the advertisers pull the plug.  This leads to great first and second seasons for many TV shows, and then a decline as the writers struggle to come up with fresh new scenarios.  It all feels very contrived to me and it makes me wonder whether a pitch for a TV show starts:

“I’ve got a great idea!  Let’s make a TV show that appeals to single males 18 – 34 with and average income of $30K/yr.  These guys are into video games, adventure trips, and hot babes.  So all we have to do is string together a show that has action and violence, exotic locations, and a hot babe.  It will be like “Tomb Raider”!  Oh, but we shouldn’t leave out the women, so the babe will need to have some girl friends and a love interest”  and voila we get something like “Alias.”

Granted, “Alias” was a good show the first 2 seasons, but then it got very repetitive as it lingered on.  And then there are the clones that spring up in the aftermath of a successful show — think about “Survivor” and all of its past clones and the new clone coming up on the Discovery channel.  It seems from season to season everything is the same and that the networks are grasping to make old formulas work again — how many times have you heard of the prospect of a “Friends” reunion.

The same thing happens too outside of the US.  There are many anime series that keep going well passed their freshness dates like “Inuyasha”, “Bleach”, “Naruto” and “Konjiki no Gash Bell” (“Zatch Bell” in the US) to name a few of the current worst offenders.  All of these series employ multiple story resets to keep them going (oh, spoiler:  yes, Inuyasha eventually kills Naraku and then series ends after 168 episodes, but the manga still goes on …  Sesshoumaru Forever!!!  Wooo!!!!).  These shows, too, seem to be driven to sell kids toys and advertising in Japan.  Often, I feel the most connection with shows that have a defined story arc and visible character development.  Within the confines of a 12 or 13 episode series, the commitment for the network is less, so it seems that the makers of these shows are able to take more risks and makes some shows that may not appeal to everyone.  It really feels like storytelling and entertainment for the sake of entertainment without necessarily having demographics and advertisers in mind.  I wonder if this could happen in the US with short run series.  I wonder if a story was hit, would it be forced into sequels like movies.

I think though, the real thought for me is about advertising and its direction now that the intention of everything is to get you to buy something.  I heard lots of about “advertainment” and it is cool with me because I will ignore those things that seem contrived and watch those things that are entertaining.  In the end, though, there has to be some artistic integrity to keep people from straying away.  I also believe this is true as advertising enters video games.  At the heart, the advertisers and the video game makers have to keep in mind that people play the games to be entertained and not to be sold to.  I can guarentee that gamers will not play a game in which the advertisements detract from or hinder game play.

About Nothing in Particular