Making screen captures of a DVD

Apparently Apple doesn’t want you to take a screen capture of your DVD movies. When the DVD Player is running, the standard keyboard shortcut Command-Shift-3 is disabled. I did some googling and eventually found a nice work-around.

Underworld

Run the terminal, run ‘screencapture -c’ to copy the entire screen to the clipboard. You can even tell screencapture to write directly to a file. The only difficulty I have right now is that I can’t run a movie full-screen and still make the capture. There might be a way to tie it to a shortcut key, but my Apple skills are weak.

Fractured self: putting Humpty Dumpty back together again.

I’ve tried to keep seperate my interests in technology and writing, going to far as to keep two seperate blogs dedicated to each. On one I would the technology of the day and the projects I was working on. On the other, this one, I would talk about more personal issues, about writing and other flights of fancy. I feel that the day has come to stand united, not divided.

From today onward, no more holding back, no more filtering who I am. I’m going to merge the posts from battleaxe.net into this system and finally do what I’ve needed to do with that site for a long time, turn it into a presence for the business I’ve been struggling with for the past year. A clear sense of identity leads to purpose to progress and hopefully, success.

Yes, I did it again.

I have a bad habit of changing things that aren’t broken… and I’ve done it again.

About two months ago I decided to switch from MoveableType to .Text. I thought this would be a move in the right direction for me. I was wrong.

I’ve been switching things back over to Linux lately. I started with the mail server, which was a resounding success. Next I migrated all of the old web sites and shell accounts to the new server. Finally, I moved this site over to it, using WordPress. I imported the old posts from MoveableType and manually imported the ones from .Text. Hopefully everything’s working okay.

By the way, I know I’ve been kind of quiet as of late. Business matters have kept me extremely busy but I’m finally back on track where I wanted to be. I still have a lot of work to do but I should actually have the time to respond to emails now.

iPhotoToGallery

I finally decided to install Gallery and upload the pictures from our vacation to New Zealand. While looking for an easier way to upload the photos I stumbled across this. iPhotoToGallery is a plugin for iPhoto that makes it easy to upload your iPhoto albums into Gallery.

I’m a happy camper now. Uploading each photo individually is a daunting task and the discovery of this is very pleasing. Good job, Zachary Wily.

Tinkering

I installed the latest version of .Text a few days ago. As happens with beta software, the upgrade broke things. I’ve managed to fix the critical things and I’m now cleaning up the layout a bit. The good thing about this particular software is that it’s written in a language that I enjoy, C#. I’ve finally gotten a chance to familiarize myself with the layout of the project and have started to customize things.

Eventually I’ll be able to recreate some of the content features I had before, in a way that’s easier for me to manage, such as my story stats and Amazon links. For now, though, the site is functional. I think I’ll take a break and watch “Bringing Out the Dead”.

What’s wrong with Howard Dean?

A friend of mine, one of my fellow moderators at Ars Technica, couldn’t quite put his finger on what it was about Howard Dean that bothered him. When the reason finally dawned on him, he decided that words could not accurately describe it so he came up with this:

What's wrong with Howard Dean?

Given my conservative poltical stance, I thought it would be fun to share this gem.

Did I say that?

Apparently I posted this in my resolutions entry last year:

In my mind, making a new years resolution is a good thing, if done in the proper context. Short-term goals (as I consider these) should be realistic. Saying that you will lose fifty pounds is unrealistic. Saying that you will drastically change your life is unrealistic. They can be accomplished, but not in the short-term.

I think you can see a difference between these two photos of me taken last year: [April 2003 | December 2003]

Well, since August of last year I lost a total of fourty-four pounds. Not quite the fifty I mentioned in my resolutions rant but close enough to make no difference. I hope crow is low-calorie, as I seem to have been served a dish.

Back in the saddle again

I’m finally beginning to settle in at home. The jet lag hit me harder than I thought. That coupled with the illness and I was one tired dude.

My resolutions from last year are the same this: keep writing. I’m working on a new story now, making progress nearly every day. As long as I can spent most of my lunch hours writing there is no reason I shouldn’t be able to finish a have dozen stories of reasonable quality.

I have an entire year to look forward to. There are conventions to attend, stories to be written and submitted and readers to annoy. While the past year was rough ride I have high hopes that this one will come out on top.

New Zealand aftermath

We’ve been home from vacation a little over a week now. I’ve just now finished uploading my journal of the trip. I tried to keep it as current as possible. I’m sure it has numerous spelling and gramatical errors. Maybe at some point in the future I will go back and edit it.
I took several hundred pictures while we were on the road. It’s going to take me a few more days at the minimum before I’ll be able to upload them.
Overall, the trip was wonderful. There we moments that were stressful and having a touch of the flu in the middle of it didn’t help. All that aside, it was an experience that will be with me til the end of my days. As a person it has expanded my horizons and taught me a great many things about people that I had once taken for granted. As a writer it has fueled my imagination moreso than I would have thought possible. It’s no wonder that the Lord of the Rings trilogy has been so successful. Peter Jackson already had a land so much like the middle-earth described by Tolkien that he had very little to do in the way of scenery to bring that world alive. I’m still digesting all of these new experiences. The only thing I can really say now is that I am glad we went.

Day 17, Wellington NZ -> Aurora, IL USA — December 18, 2003

What started out smoothly morphed into a fiasco. Our return trip was planned out and, if executed smoothly, would have put us home and in our fuzzy slippers by the evening news. Unfortunately things went amiss.

We all checked out and got our luggage loaded into the taxi by ten. The first leg of our return trip was a short one-hour flight from Wellington to Auckland. We got to the airport with plenty of time to spare. Unfortunately this is where our fellowship began to break up. April, being one of our native members, had a short flight to her home in Hamilton. Her flight left shortly after we settled in at the airport. Then went we boarded the plane we left behind Jenny, a Wellington native. It was sad to see them go.
Things got rocky once we reached Auckland. We were congregating at the baggage claim when one of our group came up and told us that our flight was delayed. Thus began one painfully long headache. Apparently there was some kind of mechanical issue delaying the flight. Isn�t that reassuring? It turns out it was some kind of scheduled maintenance that was conflicting with the flight schedule but had priority. Our flight, which was originally supposed to leave Auckland at nine in the evening ended up boarding at two in the morning, with a scheduled lift-off of three, and an actual take-off at four. This put us seven hours behind schedule. We had planned for a four hour layover in Los Angeles, so we missed our connecting flight too.
The airline tried to be accommodating. They gave us food vouchers. Unfortunately we had about ten minutes to eat at the only restaurant we could find � McDonalds � before they started closing up. From there we found a few long benches and spread out. Most everyone ended up lying down and napping but I couldn�t settle down enough to relax. I was anxious to get going. The time finally came to board and we were very happy to see that there was still a duty-free shop open. We ran in and picked up a few bottles of wine. We�re not big wine fans, but we wanted to pick up some for gifts and whatnot. Two whites, a red, and a yummy bottle of ice wine.
I don�t remember much of the flight to Los Angeles. I passed out as soon as I got buckled in my seat. I suffered periodic moments of consciousness, but thankfully they were short-lived.
When we eventually landed in LA, it was an unexpectedly short trip through customs and back to the Air New Zealand counter. They had rescheduled our flight on United for us and even checked our baggage for us, so we didn�t have to carry it across several terminals. We got checked in at the United terminal and staggered towards our gate.
Our flight to Chicago landed at five in the morning, seven hours past schedule. The handful of hours of sleep we�d gotten since watching Return of the King was not enough, and I had to go into work at ten to do a conference call. I blame that tiredness for what we discovered next. As we were picking up our luggage, we noticed a bag identical to the one we bought in Wellington go around the carousel a few times, but the name tag on it wasn�t ours. We finally checked the baggage claim number. Oops. It turns out I had picked up the wrong bag in LA and checked it in to Chicago as our own. United did a good job handling it. We turned in the bag and explained what had happened. The person who picked up my bag called and we had a laugh about the mix-up. It turns out he bought the exact same bag while in New Zealand, so he could carry home all of the extra stuff he bought, too. We also both put on the temporary tags provided by the airline, so at a glance the two bags looked identical. He picked up his bag that afternoon and United delivered ours the following afternoon.
After getting things settled with the airline we caught a taxi home. We had a great time on our vacation, but it was good to be home.