07 March 2011

Trivia

I'm recently 47, which is in itself the source of some ambivalence — but I'm delighted to discover that there's still something left to surprise me. Not the important stuff, but the stupid, trivial stuff that I thought I already knew (or had known, and had already forgotten).

For example: did you know that "Last Train To Clarksville" (best known as The Monkees' debut single, though probably more accurately attributed to Boyce and Hart, since the music was performed by studio musicians) was essentially an anti-war protest song? It's the story of a young man who has been drafted, and he knows he may die in Vietnam. I suppose it might also be interpreted as someone fleeing the draft, as well.

I'm not sure how I've never heard this.

06 March 2011

Happy Birthday!

It's Guy Kibbee's birthday today! (That's him on the right, in case you were wondering.)

Speaking of which, I had the opportunity, not too long ago, to see one of his early films — City Streets, made at Paramount in 1931. While notable as a precursor of "film noir," I mention it here because I think it's the only film I've ever seen Guy Kibbee in where he wasn't paying a mostly comic character — he's genuinely sinister here! (It's a terrific film, and highly recommended.)

01 March 2011

The Hybrid

This was my very first iBook, from 1999. (That is, unless you count the one I borrowed for about two weeks while waiting for this one to ship. Waiting took forever.) This was my very first portable computer (and my first computer to use a wireless network, technology Apple had introduced to consumers at the same time this model was introduced), and this convenience changed everything. It would be several years more before I bought another desktop computer, and even then, this was only because I needed a larger screen size for the type of work I do. Otherwise, I might have never gone back to using one.

I haven't actively used this iBook since it was replaced by another model — same design, different color, this time a brilliant electric green — about a year or so later, but it still has enormous sentimental value to me.

It was lent out to someone for a few years, and some time after it was returned, I replaced the internal hard drive (mostly because I had another hard drive from another iBook that I couldn't find any productive use for), and that was no mean feat. I had thoroughly detailed instructions to follow, of course, but there are approximately 3500 tiny screws that need to be carefully unscrewed and even more carefully kept track of. I did all right, I suppose (I had only a few screws left over) but in the process of doing so I somehow damaged the logic board — everything worked except the speaker output.

So I bought a second-hand logic board. It came with the bottom of the computer attached, and that was blue (or "Blueberry"), instead of orange (or "Tangerine"), but it cost next-to-nothing, and that made all the difference. So I put everything in the bottom of my office closet for, I dunno, I suppose it's been three or four years.

Today, anxious for an excuse to avoid doing actual work, I decided I ought to finally replace that logic board. (I'd been putting it off as a project to do with my eight-year-old — he had watched me replace the internal hard drive — but I decided it'd just be easier to keep count of the 3500 tiny screws in peace and quiet.) Four hours and a few questions like "where does that tiny spring that I've never seen before go?," I have a somewhat refurbished hybrid Tangerine-and-Blueberry iBook.

It's almost achingly s-l-o-w-w-w-w by the standards I've become accustomed to, almost twelve years later, and amusingly, the screen size isn't wide enough to fit my photo blog, and I had to set up an ad hoc network because the hardware can't handle the more recent encryption standard my wireless network uses, and the battery will no longer charge, so it's a portable computer only in the sense that it has a handle — but somehow, despite everything, it still works. This delights me no end.