Game Girl

Fiona is crawling now. She is still a bit tentative about it, and most of the time she prefers to wait around and let the world come to her, but she’s crawling.

She also clocked in at 74cm (29″) and 10.5kg (23lbs) at her 8-month (ish) check-up last week, which puts her in the 98th percentile for height and weight, or approximately the size of a small elephant. (For comparison, Alex is three and a half years old, and he weighs 15kg.)

And now she’s kicking my butt at Burnout 3, too. Bah.

Game Girl

Gadget Fever

It started at the end of last week with a mild desire to lift my old Mission 750 speakers out of the garage and plug them into my PC for an improved sound experience. The simplest way to hook them up to my PC is through an amp, but the amp I’ve got doesn’t fit on my desk. So on Saturday when Alex and I were in town, we stopped by Richer Sounds to see if they had any amps with a smaller footprint.

No such luck. What they did have, however, was a portable DVD player (Yamada PDV520) for a mere £120. Yowza! Just a couple of years ago, you’d pay a grand for those things.

That price got me thinking about our upcoming trip to the US. One of our planned strategies for keeping Alex amused on the 11-hour plane trip is to buy him a GameBoy. We have mentioned this to him, and he is now quite keen on the idea that he is going to get a GameBoy when he gets to California.

That’s interesting, see. He thinks he’s going to get it when he gets there–not on the trip over. So I was wondering if I could get the portable DVD player for the trip, and then postpone further hand-held buying until after 21st November, at which point the Nintendo DS will be available. I mean, really. Why buy a GBA just days before the next generation of hardware is being released?

Richer Sounds also had an iRiver H140 on display. It was the first time I’d seen one in real life. Mmmm. Definitely not as sexy as an iPod, but it has a radio, which is a must for me. It is making me wonder about the benefits of the H340, though. What do you get for an extra £130? It has a colour screen, it can recharge from a USB cable rather than from a separate adapter, it can act as a USH host device (for transferring photos from a camera, for example), it record directly to MP3 from the radio and from other line-in devices. Hmm. Nifty features, but would I really use them enough to justify the cost?

Right now I’m not sure if I’d use any portable music player enough to justify the cost. And I’m pretty sure that a portable DVD player would only ever get dusted off for long plane flights and car journeys. A GameBoy or NDS will keep Alex amused for a while, but I doubt if it would become his favourite toy. (And would I really want it to be?)

The problem with gadget fever is that it isn’t rational. It’s not real hunger…it’s just an appetite.

And as soon as I start feeding it, more and more new toys push themselves into sight. Our Olympus C-3000 camera is four years old. It’s a lovely camera, but it’s not exactly new and shiny any more. The Canon EOS 300D and Nikon D70 SLRs, on the other hand, are very new and shiny and pretty and I wants one, preciousss. Even though I know bog all about f-stops and shutter speeds. Even though I know it won’t make me a better photographer. But especially with the pound’s current strength against the dollar. ($1.82! I suppose it’s one thing to be grateful to president Bush for!)

And I’d better not get started on flat-panel monitors. The problem with these suckers is that I’m so used to a resolution of 1600 x 1200 that I don’t want to settle for anything less, and LCDs with that kind of resolution haven’t seen the same price crash that lower-res versions have seen over the last year. Plus, there’s no way I’ll be able to afford an Apple 30″ super-wonga 2560 x 1600 cinema display. In the face of that kind of pixel envy…is there really any point in trying?

(And once I start thinking Apple, I start thinking PowerBooks, and I have to pinch myself.)

For this week, though, I think I’ll try to satisfy myself with a simple audio cable. I think there’s a way I can mount my old amp vertically just to the side of my desk. I’d have to child-proof it somehow, but if that can satisfy my cravings for the moment, I’ll be a happy bunny.

Sarah McLachlan concert, Edinburgh Usher Hall, 18 Oct 2004

Sarah McLachlan is amazing live. Her voice is steady, strong, and full of emotion. She sent shivers up my spine with damn near every song.

The show was tight and well-rehearsed. On the one hand, this left little room for spontaneity, on the other hand it was polished to perfection, and made a beautiful showcase for Sarah’s songs. Where we were sitting (middle of the front row of the second balcony–great view), the sound was a little hollow, and the drums were very prominent in the mix, but that hardly distracted from a wonderful gig.

Set list:

  1. Fallen (Afterglow)
  2. World on Fire (Afterglow)
  3. Adia (Surfacing)
  4. Hold On (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)
  5. Perfect Girl (Afterglow)
  6. Drifting (Afterglow)
  7. Push (Afterglow)
  8. Answer (Afterglow)
  9. Wait (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)
  10. Witness (Surfacing)
  11. Fear (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)
  12. Train Wreck (Afterglow)
  13. Building A Mystery (Surfacing)
  14. Sweet Surrender (Surfacing)
  15. Possession (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)

(Encore:)

  1. Ice Cream (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)
  2. Silence (from the single with Delirium)
  3. Stupid (Afterglow)
  4. Fumbling Towards Ecstasy (Fumbling Towards Ecstasy)
  5. Angel (Surfacing)

Feeling REALLY stupid

My Amazon Associates ID is “legenofthesun-21”.

Not, “legendsofthesun-21″.

Which kind of explains why I haven’t been getting much click-through referral joy from the programme.

On the other hand, I’m not sure how it explains me getting any kind of click-through referral joy in the first place. (Scratches head.)

Google desktop search

Google has finally decided to hit the desktop. We all know it’s going to be good. The question is now, do I want Google to know what’s on my hard disk?

I’m getting the same kind of itchy feeling I had with A9. I wonder if it’ll go away. I’m happy enough with the way Lookout lets me search my mail and documents quickly. How much better is Google’s search, and how much privacy do I have to give up to get it?

The tool has only just been released; it’s going to be a few weeks before the dust settles.

I me a River

iPod, iPod, iPod, yada yada. They’re shiny and all, but until they come with an FM radio, experience shows that if I had one, it would just end up gathering dust in its cradle.

iRiver H340 portable music playerThe new iRiver H340, now… that’s a different question. 40GB of hard disk joy. FM radio, and the ability to record radio broadcasts. Built-in MP3 encoder, so you can record from other line-in sources, too. 16 Hours of battery life. 2″ Colour screen, and it also acts as a picture viewer. Nifty.

Okay, so it doesn’t integrate with iTunes, and it doesn’t support AAC, but my music collection is MP3 all the way, baby. And seeing as it plugs into my PC as an external hard drive, how hard can it be to knock together a little app to rip through my iTunes config files and recreate my playlists in Winamp playlist format?

Have I mentioned recently that my birthday and Christmas are just round the corner?

(It would have been fun to have been the first to come up with the “I me a River” title, but Ed Hawco beat me to it by a good year and a half.)