Category Archives: Entertainment

Bunny Block Bid

Killer Bunny CardWelcome to my new section on Our Reading of Killer Bunnies rules. 

In a discussion between Melissa, Chris, Mark, and myself, we have deceided that in a Bunny Block Bid the Kaballa go to the auctioneer instead of the discard pile.  The rules are silent on this, but in the spirit of being as obnoxious as possible, we feel the money going to the player is the way to go.  So let it be written, so let it be done.

Ron Moore on Disaster Preparedness.

Ron Moore is the one of the executive producers and visionaries behind the new Battlestar Galactica.  I follow his blog to get insight into the story lines and when he randomly answers BSG universe questions.  Today, he had a great post looking back at Katrina a year later.  Here’s a small excerpt

The subject is the one most likely to inspire yawns and rolling of eyes, so ready your mouse to click onto something else: Disaster Preparedness.

Still awake?

Okay, look, I’m not writing this because I’ve been sentenced to doing PSA’s off some DUI conviction or something, but I do work on a show that’s premised on the idea of an apocalyptic event actually happening to group of people and their struggle to survive in its aftermath, and so the idea of being ready for the unexpected does actually occur to me on occasion.

The third paragaph above is what hooked me.  The rest of it is worth the read as well.

Yes… Yes, it is!

For a combined Father’s Day / Birthday gift, I got a Canon Powershot SD630.  I call it mine, but I guess its the whole family’s.  🙂  We still have our Canon Powershot G3 and love it, but we wanted something small we could carry in a purse or backpack without it being too heavy.  We definately have different uses for the two cameras.

Anyway, the whole point is that I might do some more photoblogging than I used to.   Especially the next few weeks while i’m in new toy mode.

I went off to meet Nick at the House of Blues for lunch, on the way I saw this truck.  It made me damn thirsty, and its the whole point of me doing this post.

Mmmmm

Logitech Harmony 688 review

Logitech Harmony 688Dave’s coworker is in the market for a new universal remote, so Dave asked me on my thoughts since we own two of them.  I’ve meant to write a review for awhile, so I wrote Dave back and saved a copy for myself to post here.  Dave asked, "What model number is yours and what do you like and dislike about it?"  The following is my reply.

We’ve got 2 of the 688s.  Its the highest end of the b&w display ones and has ‘buttons optimized for a DVR.’  The color ones are 800 series, iirc.

Anyway, I loved it when I got my parents one (partially as guinea pigs) and loved my first one so much we got a second and they replaced both our sony massives.

I can honestly say its the best remote I’ve ever owned.

Pros:

  • activity based, so it has buttons like ‘watch tv’ and ‘watch dvd’ and ‘play music’  it so simplfies control that my technology challenged parents and in-laws can handle it.
  • has buttons for most every common feature, as opposed to the mostly lcd displays of the old sony.  I can run the remote without looking at it.
  • compact size (again compared to our old ones.)  Its about the same size as the tivo peanut.
  • 6 buttons with accomping lcd readout to handle functions that there aren’t buttons for.  Also supports multiple pages.  The aiwa receiver in single device mode has 7 screens of these.
  • ‘help button’: since the remote tracks the state of devices, it can get out of sync with the devices if an ir signal was missed or a toddler hits a key on the tv.  The help funtionality will try to resend the signals to set the devices how they should be, and then ask you if it fixed it.  If you answer no, it walks through a check of each device asking on its state.  Its awesomely powerful for the clueless.
  • can handle fairly complex setups that include items like a/v switches as well as TVs and Recievers.

Cons:

  • as with any universal, its sometimes difficult or impossible to do really esoteric funtions on receivers.  However, this has rarely been a problem
  • on our model it isn’t supper appearent what the directional arrow buttons are a first.  Minor quibble, but it stumped me for a few minutes, so its worth noting.

Unique item and one of the killer features of the remote that is mostly a pro, but may become a con in the far far future:

  • all of the configuration of the remote is done via a website, then a custom build is downloaded to your pc and loaded onto the remote via usb.
  • the web site is backed by a huge partially user contributed database.  every device I own, no mater how out of the mainstream (audiotron and radio shack supercheap a/v switch) were already there.  The remote can learn (and it sends the learned items to the db) but I haven’t had to do that except in a few cases where I had to reteach it a button or teach it a button that I use that no one else had added to the db.
  • the downside of course is two fold: 1) what happens if the web page goes away and 2) what if they stop supporting my particlar model (the forced upgrade problem.)  I only think of this because as an open source weenie this is always an argument against proprietary software.  🙂