Category Archives: thoughts – incensed

Yossarian should have it so good

I have one of the best coaster makers in the world. And it only cost me a couple hundred bucks.

Today’s adventure begins, amazingly enough, today. I have been realizing that my CD burner wasn’t getting much use lately. To justify its initial purchase by reducing its variable cost per CD burned (man, that MBA education’s getting good use), I decided to make a “compilation compilation” CD. This term refers to my favorite songs off of what are known as “compilation” CDs, all put onto one CD all their own.

Now, recently, I had been getting irritated at RealJukebox. It’s free and all that, but there’s a lot of problems that I just can’t overlook:

  • It’s a real memory hog.
  • On my computer it’s got a crash rate of approximately every 3.2 minutes.
  • In addition, no matter how many boxes I uncheck during the installation process, no matter how often I change the preferences to not make it my default CD player, it reclaims CD-playing abilities.

Sigh. So I deleted it.

Anyway, I picked out the songs that I wanted, and recorded them as WAV sound files using the “Easy CD Creator” software that came with the CD burner. What the “Easy CD Creator” people don’t want you to know is that “Easy CD Creator” doesn’t seem to think that if skips happen during the recording process to a WAV, the user might like to know about this and recopy the song. Oh, no…the program just happily copies the files to the hard drive.

So I get all of the files copied to the hard drive, and start recording the CD. I even put it through “testing” phase (read: wasting another 10 minutes in the name of ensuring the success of the copying process). 20 minutes later, my CD is ready.

I note that in my haste, I misspelled compilation in the title. Twice. My CD is now known as “The Compliation Complilation” to Windows CD Player. No biggie, I say to myself…I’ll be the only one to see that. So I make the jewel case covers and everything (changing the title there), and I pop the CD in the drive.

Two minutes, 32 seconds into the first song, the CD skips.

Now I’m somewhat irritated. So I go and listen to the original WAV file that I copied earlier, and I find out what I told you earlier…those two WAV files were copied badly, but “Easy CD Creator” didn’t think that was important. I guess it would have been too difficult to prompt the user to copy the song over. And “Hard CD Creator” just isn’t as catchy a title.

This is when I remember our friend RealJukebox. For all its flaws, I remember that it does a great job of recording WAV files. I jump online and grab a copy of RealJukebox, all the while listening to my now destined-to-be-under-a-glass CD for problems with other songs. Good thing too…song seven is also messed up.

Eventually the RealJukebox installer is downloaded. I go through the install process, unchecking all of the boxes, telling it I do not want it to be my default CD player, etc. Finally, that whole process is complete. Time to try again.

I get the two CDs that I need to get the songs off of, and copy them using RealJukebox. I listen to them this time, just to make sure. Everything’s perfect. I close out RealJukebox.

I now go back to “Easy CD Creator” and set it up to use the two new WAV files when burning this copy. I don’t bother to test this time, and everything turns out fine again. I get the CD out and label it.

Ready to hear my now perfect CD, I close all programs and put the CD back in the player. And what pops open as my default CD player?

That’s right, friends…RealJukebox.

This turn of events elicits a caterwaul from yours truly.

So now, of course, I’m stuck with a piece of software that doesn’t do one thing that I need it to do, but is great otherwise, and a piece of software that I hate, but have to use to accomplish that one thing.

And one new coaster.

lose-lose situation

I got a new jacket for Christmas. This does not incense me…I actually asked for one, so I was pretty pleased. What kills me is the way that the people or machines that attach those tags to jackets with some propaganda or something attached to it. When I cut that little plastic tag holder, one of two things must happen. Either:

  1. The piece that was in the jacket’s lining will now be there for all eternity, sometimes irritating my arm by poking my wrist, and especially robbing me of the closure (that I so desperately need) of getting the entire tag holder off. Or:
  2. Desiring the aforementioned closure, I’ll tear a small hole in the seam of the jacket in forcing the piece out that was cut off into the lining. This won’t be noticeable to anyone ever, but I’ll know it’s there. It’ll eat away at the back of my mind.

In other words, it took an evil genius to come up with the original idea to attach tags like that.

behind the music

Music CDs that have promotional stuff or special multimedia that come up automatically when you put the CD in annoy me. I wish that there was some sort of way to stop whatever it is to come up when all I want to do is listen to the music when I’m working on something on my computer.

Oh, wait. There is. It’s called listening to it when I’m working on something in Linux.

But that’s overkill. I’d rather do my website building in HomeSite than xemacs. So I think I’ll just gripe about it instead.

640K is all it takes…

I was reliving my carefree youth playing old Atari 2600 games on my computer the other night (it’s not as good as having the old system with its one-button joysticks, but it’s not bad) and the game decided to freeze up. This wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing, but in this case it ground my whole system to a halt. A Pentium II with 160MB of RAM ghosted because my DOS-based Atari emulator froze up. A quick reboot solved this, but still. Wouldn’t you think a system like that should be able to recover from such a small program’s demise?

Whatever…

bad commercial, okay pizza

On that “Bad Andy” Domino’s Pizza commercial where Andy sneaks up on that delivery guy in the shower, two things come to mind. First, why is he wearing his Domino’s cap in the shower? Second, why in the world is he showering at a Domino’s at all?

Am I the only one who finds this stupid?

apparent top-secret info

Why in the world is it so tough for Buffy from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to slay vampires? I don’t watch the show very often, but Ricky tells me enough about it to where I get the premise, and that she’s faced tough vampires before. I’ve watched The X-Files where they face vampires, and Mulder knows that if you spill items (I think that Mulder used sunflower seeds in the show) on the ground, vampires are compelled to pick all of them up. Wouldn’t you think that Buffy and her friends would be privy to this information? Wouldn’t it be a lot easier to slay vampires if they knew this? Just carry a bag of seeds, and whenever you come up against one, just spill ’em on the ground, and stake the guy while he’s picking them up! Seems easy to me…