Trek Torch

Paul Sibbald has created a great video mash-up about the passing of the torch of Star Trek to a new generation.  All of the fun schematics and technology remind me of how Trek nurtured my fascination with technology, and how the garish drama enlivened my childhood.  But I’m most glad that he included the best lines from the original series, when Doctor McCoy tries to encourage a discouraged Captain Kirk.  DeForest Kelley’s delivery of these lines still tears me apart:

In this galaxy there is a mathematical probability of three million Earth-type planets.
And in all of the universe, three million million galaxies like this.
And in all of that, and perhaps more, only one of each of us.

The new movie premieres on May 8, 2009.

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Recommendations

favthings

I’ve posted a variety of recommendations for your perusal:

Book Recommendations

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Boyled Over

Susan Boyle surprises everyone

Susan Boyle surprises everyone

She’s not as humble as Paul Potts, the cell phone salesman who sings opera, but unemployed and professedly unkissed Susan Boyle packs just as much surprise in the British equivalent of American Idol.

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Loving it Live

Performed live in 2009

Performed live at the Albert Hall in 2009

Show Me

Where are the diamonds?
Where are the pearls?
Where are the things that you took from this world?
These are the ribbons
These are the curls
These are the things that you took from this world

One of my happy memories is from the summer of 1983.   I remember spending a few days sunbathing in the backyard of my parents’ home in Oklahoma City, enveloped in the embrace of three loves.  I was 16 going on 17 and in love with a girl I had dated for the past year.  I was immersed in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s debut novel, This Side of Paradise.  And I was listening to what remains my favorite album of all time, The Lexicon of Love by ABC.  This post was prompted by the surprise of that album being performed live at the Royal Albert Hall in London a few days ago.

Poison Arrow

Right on the target
But wide of the mark
What I thought was fire
Was only the spark

Critically acclaimed upon its release in 1982, The Lexicon of Love by singer Martin Fry, guitarist Mark White, saxophonist Stephen Singleton, and drummer David Palmer was chock-full of witty lyrics and rhyming couplets, had great theatrical musicality, showed attention to detail, and featured magnificent string arrangements by Anne Dudley.  She would later help form the avant-garde group The Art of Noise with the album’s producer, Trevor Horn.

Many Happy Returns

When she’s gone, all I’ve got to learn
Is the law of diminishing return
When she’s here, one thing I’ve found
Things get better second time around

People my age may remember seeing some of the well-made videos for the album’s best songs: Poison Arrow, The Look of Love, and All of My Heart.  Like the songs, the videos were stylish and romantic with a touch of class and theatricality.  The entire album held together, without a clinker in the bunch.

Tears Are Not Enough

Yes you’ve shown your feelings
Yes you’ve shown you’re tough
Said things worth believing
Tears are not enough

I was delighted to discover that this week Martin Fry and David Palmer performed the album live with Anne Dudley conducting the BBC Orchestra.  BBC Radio 2 broadcast the performance on April 11 and I was able to record the audio stream.  You can listen to it via the internet, but I should note that the BBC player kept crashing my Firefox browser, so you may need to play it in a different browser.

Valentine’s Day

If you gave me a pound for the moments I missed
And I got dancing lessons for all the lips I should’ve kissed
I’d be a millionaire
I’d be a Fred Astaire

The new live performance was surprisingly true to the original recorded album, only shifting one song to give the performance a more romantic send-off.  The audience of 4,000 fans was enthusiastic, audibly singing along in parts and having fun clapping along to augment the instrumental coda. The orchestra did a great job bringing back the sound and feel of the original, with some of the original recording used when needed for effect, such as in the challenging 4 Ever 2 Gether.

4 Ever 2 Gether

A mathematical equation
Won’t describe my liaison
The stars in the sky might try persuading
But you can tell me, I won’t hear you
You can’t tell me, I gave up on listening
Years ago

Martin Fry was in good voice, with skilled female backup singers augmenting his falsetto parts.  The instrumentation was lush but not overbearing, and accurately recreated most of the sonics of the original songs.

The Look of Love

If you judge a book by the cover,
Then you’d judge the look by the lover
I hope you’ll soon recover,
Me I go from one extreme to another

I enjoyed the performance enough to know I will want to hear it again.  I did not want to break up the hour-long show into individual tracks, but I also wanted to be able to quickly step through it to a song of my choosing.  Having recorded the audio stream with my sound card’s software, I saved it in MP3 format and imported that into iTunes.  Then I had iTunes convert it to AAC format and did some internet research to find out how to change it into an enhanced podcast using Slideshow Assembler and some helpful instructions.  That allowed me to insert chapter breaks between each song, assigning a different graphic to each part for playback on my iPod or iPhone.

Date Stamp

I get sales talk from sales assistants
When all I want to do girl, is lower your resistance
Everything is temporary, written in the sand
Looking for the girl that meets supply with demand

It has been over 25 years, but this summer you can probably find me reclining in my backyard, reading a great book on my Kindle 2 and listening to that new live performance of The Lexicon of Love on my iPod.  As Meatloaf would say, two out of three ain’t bad.

All of My Heart

Once upon a time when we were friends
I gave you my heart, the story ends
No happy ever after, now we’re friends

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WebPad

CrunchPad Concept

CrunchPad Concept

I don’t read TechCrunch, so I wasn’t aware of Michael Arrington’s CrunchPad project – building a web tablet for portable surfing.  But photos leaked on the web this week of a possible unit have certainly caught my interest.

I like my Asus mini-notebook computer since it is tiny, has long battery life and a cramped but practical mechanical keyboard, can output video to my HDTV, and thus is a full-fledged computer that can run any of the applications I routinely use.  However, the 1024×600 screen is annoying for web browsing since most sites are formatted for 1024×768, and I don’t like using the mini-notebook’s touchpad for scrolling, even with its two-finger-to-scroll function.

My Asus is great for travel, especially since my iPhone can make up for poor hotel WiFi service.  But couch surfing with it isn’t terribly comfortable due to its clamshell design and weight.  Thus a web tablet would be quite appealing to me for home use if it offered these features/advantages:

  • cost below that of my Kindle 2, which was $360
  • weight considerably less than my netbook, which is 3.2 pounds (14.2 newtons)
  • battery life of 4 or more hours and easy recharging with a wall wart and preferably also USB
  • a mechanical scroll wheel (not gonna happen) or at least iPhone-quality accelerated touch scrolling

Ideally the unit would also include its own mobile 3G networking for short trips.  (Or a bluetooth tether to my iPhone for 3G networking, but I doubt AT&T and Apple would ever cooperate.)

If this product appears, I’d consider buying it even though it would add to my multitude of semi-dedicated devices:

  • iPhone 3G for ever-present occasional internet/email/phone service
  • 2nd-generation iPod Nano for music/podcasts/audiobooks on day hikes (due to iPhone’s limited battery life)
  • Kindle 2 for e-books and reading long-form web articles (E ink is far easier on my eyes than backlit screens)
  • CrunchPad for house web surfing (less cumbersome than a mini-notebook)
  • Asus Eee PC 1000H for portable computing and vacations
  • Dell Dimension 2400 for desktop computing
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