So here continues my report on my day At Warner Brothers Studios. Again most of this is behind the cutout to save space for people who don’t want to see my attempts at photography.
Tag Archives: life
A good day (Part 1)
I took more than two hundred pictures yesterday, but I will not be posting anywhere near that number. Still the number of pictures I am going to post from my day of fun will be sizable so the posts will be behind cutouts and it will be multiple posts.
For those interested in my day at Warner Brothers Studios and Medieval Times follow me past the jump….
Continue reading
Down and Safe
A DAY OFF
Tomorrow I’m not likely to post anything. I’m taking the day off from work and heading north to Los Angeles. For the daytime hours I will be at Warner Brothers studios taking their intense five-hours tour. Then in the evening it’s off to Medieval Times for jousting and dinner, then back home.
I plan to take lots of pictures and will share any decent ones.
Migrating to Migraine-Land
Plans are finalized and tickets are purchased
So I now have the ticket for my 5 hour tour of WB Studios on Friday, I also have my train ticket to take me from San Diego to Burbank and today I reserved two spots at Medieval Times for my sweetie-wife and I. (They are having a deal with $15 off for the off season, I got an upgrade at a vastly reduced price.)
I am looking forward to my day of fun next Friday and I hope to take lots of cool pictures.
9-11 2001
No, I will not be using any picture taken that clear, awful, morning eight years ago today. We have the images burned into our brains, the horror is scarred into our retinas. The world changed and we need no mementos to remind us.
The impact of that terrible attack has been vast, terrible, and the final effects are unknown. We are as blind to the final effect of that act as anyone in 1914 trying to foresee the effect of their terrible terrorist action the assiassination of the Arch-Ducke.
In the years that have passed since 2001 a lot of people have passed a lot of words tryning to assign blame for the three thousand murdered in New York and Washington D.C. that morning.
Clinton and his administration have been blamed, Bush and his administration has been blamed. Mistakes were made by all sides, but it is unseemly to seek to find Americans to blame for that particulart horror.
The blame rests solely and forever on the murderous fantaics who planned and carried out the attacks.
PERIOD
A tough story
My werewolf story, A Taste of Tears and Blood, is kicking my butt, however I refuse to give in and quit on the story. I am going to get all the words down on the page and I am going to edit it. Now, I do not know if it is going to be good enough to send off to any markets, but I refuse to let it simply fade away incomplete.
The most frustrating thing about being stuck finishing A Taste Of Tears and Blood is that I have two novels backed up behind it. My next novel-sized project is Phaeton’s Phoenix a story about a young man’s quest for immortality and sex, then after Phaeton’s Phoenix I have the novel Cawdor an SF novel about mutiny and murder amid isolated military units.
Some may suggest working on the short story at the same time I work on a novel. I know there are authors who can do this, but I’ve never been able to juggle writing two different stories at the same time. I have to finish A Taste Of Tears and Blood or abandon it.
Experimental Success
One of the reasons why I purchased an eBook reader was in hopes of being able to read while I rode the mass transit to my day job. I get motion-sick when I try to read in a moving vehicle.
A few years ago I discovered that with a large enough print/font size I didn’t get motion-sick. Yesterday while riding home from work — after a frustrating and annoying day — I increased the font size a couple of step and continued reading my current novel, Last Call, by Tim Powers. I didn’t get motion-sick!
Oh happy day.
A Review of the EZReader PRO
On August 31, Astak began shipping their EZReader PRO eBook readers. The EZReader PRO is an eBook reader with a 5″ e-ink screen. After the usual trials and tribulations of courier shipping I received my EZReader PRO on Friday.
Despite the image on the box, the reader I ordered is black in color. On the side of the box is the listing of the colors and a little sticker lets you know which color is in the box. I have been wanting to go over to eBooks for more than a year now, but I waited for the right eReader to come along.
I’m not a fan of the Kindle for a number of reasons. The two biggest reasons are that the Kindle is a closed format system and I have never liked being locked into a single format. I’m more of an open-source kind of guy. The other reason that Amazon.com is trying to hard to control the publishing industry from copyright thru sales and I do not think it is good for one company to control too much of the market.
I hesitated in going for eBooks because I like supporting independent book sellers but I finally took the plunge for ebooks when I learned my favorite local bookstore, Mysterious Galaxy, sells eBooks vis their web site. So now I have the best of both worlds.
WHATS IN THE BOX:
Moving from left to right here’s what came in the box.
1) USB cable for connecting to your PC or Mac.
2) User Manual in English and Chinese.
3) 1GB SD data card with 300 free eBooks. (Public Domain titles) [update – turns out on those who pre-ordered the EZReader PRO or who buy it during September will get the SD card with the 300 free books.]
4) 1 Crush resistance leather case with the eReader already inside.
5) AC adapter for recharging the device away from a computer.
6) Ear Buds, carrying strap, and small screwdriver for accessing battery panel. (All bagged together)
The packaging was not particularly environmental, but it was efficient and everything was packed securely for shipment. I do not know if the crush-resistant case is real leather or fax leather, but frankly in my book that doesn’t make much of a difference. I do like that the case is held closed by a magnetic catch and not a velcro or a physical snap. With enough wear and tear both of those options would fail far too quickly for my tastes.
So here’s the reader sitting in its crush-resistant case. You can see the display turned and even in this photograph is quite legible. The display is 5″ diagonally, has a resolution of 600*800 pixels, and has 8 levels of greyscale. Because this is an electronic paper display, it take no power to display the image but only to change the image. The reader has a Samsung Arm9 400 MHz process. This produces very quick pages turns, though turning a page is still slower than physically flipping a leaf in a book. I adapted very quickly to the pacing of the machine and now I hardly notice the pages turns. Accessing menus is a bit slower. Generally you hold a menu button for two-seconds and then several seconds after that the menu will appear.
The listed formats supported by the EZReader Pro are: ADE, PDF, DOC, RTF, HTML, TXT, MP3, WOL, CHM, RAR, ZIP, Fb2, DJVU, EPUB, BMP, JPG, TIF, PNG, GIF, PDB, PPT, and LIT.
I have not tested ALL of those formats, but I went online and downloaded several free eBooks in various formats. I also went to Mysterious Galaxy and purchased one book in the Adobe Digital Edition format. (ADE) I can say that the RTF, TXT, DOC, EPUB, and ADE all worked fine. Depending the format some functions changed. For example depending on the format changed how many steps of font increase were available. Most eBooks and all the PDFs were simply too small for be read on the device is displayed in the native size. An 8 1/2″ by 11″ pages squeezed down on a 5″ display simply cannot be read. Pressing the ‘8’ key on the device steps the users through increasing font sizes and at the larger factors the image or rotated into landscape for viewing.
There are three ways of flipping pages. A left-handed person — I am right handed — could simply use the left and right arrow buttons on the left edge of the device. For a right handed person there are page flipping buttons, the ‘9’ and the ‘0’ at the bottom of the device. There is also a lever on the right side, not visible in these photos, pulling down on the lever advances a page and pushing up goes backwards a page. Holding any of the page turning switches for two-seconds will advance or back up the display by ten pages.
Provided the format supports bookmarks, such as ADE, each title can have up to five active bookmarks. You place a bookmark by pressing one of the number keys 1-5 while on the pages you want to bookmark. (It must be a currently unused bookmark number or you will simply flip to that current mark.) To erase a book mark, simply be on the bookmarked page and pressing the corresponding bookmark number to reset it.
The device does a very good job of reopening a book to where you left off, but the bookmarks are most useful when you are reading more than one file at a time. Simply open the file, tap the bookmark number, and you’re right back where you left off.
I took me a while to get the hang of transferring files to the device. I understood mounting and ejecting a USB drive device, and the generic files transferred just fine, but I was stuck for a while with the ADE files. That turned out not to be the device but rather my inexperience with ADE.
If you get an eBook reader and want to read ADE files, but sure to get the software you need from Adobe first. It will make life easier.
I tested the text-to-speech on the device, but the electronic voice was too electronic for me. I often have a hard time with those sort of voices and my opinion on the matter may not be a very valid one.
I have not loaded up any MP3s to play on the EXReader PRO as I have an iPod and I am very happy with that as my main music player.
Overall I liked the EZReader PRO and given that it is the lowest costing eBook reader using e-ink technology, it should be near the top of your list if you are considering an eBook reader for pleasure reading.
{UPDATE – MY EZReader PRo has developed a fault. IT’s refusing to mount on either computer I own. I am currently working with Aztek tech support to clear the issue and I will let you know the final resolution.}
[Further Update: The device is mounting again as an ejectable drive. Tech support has been helpful and we think it may be a defective USB cable which they have offered to replace. At the moment everything is working again.]
For all those people stumbling in from Astek’s website, Welcome. I hope the review is useful and please do feel free to poke around my internet home.