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↳ lighting design & theatre projects by neil e. hobbs

Landscape

Tuesday, 14 June, 2005 — filed under: lighting / mac / tech

I’ve made a (very) short film: Landscape.

It’s an exploration of the – duh – landscape that I’ve been living in for the last couple of years: some of the sights and sounds that come with being surrounded by Yorkshire’s fantastic nature, and some practical experimentation with framing and exposure. I shot the film on a series of walks over one weekend, wandering around the Bretton Country Park with camera and tripod, setting up then waiting for the sun to make an appearance.

I’ve spent much of the intervening time trying to find the ideal soundtrack – since there’s no real plot or dialogue in the film it uses music to help drive the visual, so getting the right track was very important.

I wanted to use Creative Commons licenced music, since that would neatly step around any problems with copyright, and I found what I was looking for at CC Mixter. After ploughing through practically everything in the classical, instrumental & experimental categories – among many others – I found sHORT fACED bEAR and his Big Idea (reduced mix).

Thanks to the wonder of Creative Commons’ non-commercial sampling plus licence, I could have sampled, remixed, scritched and scratched bEAR’s music, so long as any derivative works that I make with it are released using the same licence.

So, that means that Landscape is now also kind-of public property: you can “creatively transform this work for non-commercial purposes” provided that you play by the rules: please drop me a line if you do.

Anyway, downloaderify away: Landscape.mov [16MB .mov - QuickTime required]

[Update: file now hosted at archive.org ]

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Intel, Apple and Me

Monday, 6 June, 2005 — filed under: mac / tech

Writing things down helps, supposedly.

Caveats: I’m an old-guard Apple supporter, and part of that is about being the underdog, being different. Different software, different hardware. Better hardware, even if it was more expensive and less megahertzy – that was part of the mystique: Wintel fanboys wouldn’t and couldn’t understand that. Through the dark days of Quadras and Performas and Gil Amelio there was always our operating system and those Motorola processors beating at the heart of our beige boxes. Kick that up a gear to the early PowerPC’s and we were different once again, RISC’ing a radically different – cleverer – approach to the brute force of Pentium. Shifting to IBM seemed obvious, even invisible; oddball enough to be different, but focused on performance and the user.

I’ve had a bad, twisty feeling in my gut all weekend, waiting for the news from the WWDC. I’d read the rumours and the speculation just seemed to be an unending whirl of “well, yeah, they could – but why the hell would they want to do that?”. Sure, there were plenty of pros and cons, not to mention whether this was a future-of-the-Mac thing or a some-other-device thing – a getting-x86-chips-from-Intel thing or a getting-PowerPC-chips-from-Intel thing.

But the PowerPC’s actually had better growth than Pentium recently, even if it’s missed Steve’s magic targets. PowerPC has better scalability. PowerPC is cheaper. PowerPC is smarter. It’s different. It’s ours.

How could Apple leave that behind?

That twisty feeling in my gut didn’t go away. Largely because of the oh-so-certain reporting in the Wall Street Journalreal journalists apparently aren’t allowed to just make stuff up. But there were also the twinges of 1984 about the magical anti-piracy abilities of the Pentium-D: I suddenly saw the Mac platform remolded in the light of the iPod, complete with a restrictive set of DRM gubbins that has, until now, not affected me in the slightest. I believe in the second coming of Steve Jobs as much as the next man, and I didn’t want to think that he could have been secretly angling to make Apple his own little media company at the expense of my computing platform.

But now it’s announced, annoited in the Reality Distortion Field, and I’m not sure how to feel. So let’s look at a few basics:

This is about chip supply and availability, jostling for more space in a marketplace whose public seems to think Intel is the only brand, and laptops. It’s not about processor speed, future chip development potential or unit price.

Part of what I feel, then, is that Apple is sacrificing being different (read: better) for market share. And that feels like betrayal.

Of course, there’s also the simple fact that my lovely (and expensive) iMac G5′s going to run out of new software sometime in the next one to two years. I’m a) poor and b) a cheap-ass, and Apple hardware’s always been better value for those willing to invest over a slightly longer term than your average Windows user, so this, like, really pisses me off.

Narg.

But it’s a done deal. Mac OS X has been co-developed for x86 hardware throughout the last four years. Cocoa apps can apparently be ported reasonably easily, Carbon with a little more work. OS X running on Intel will have backwards compatability with PowerPC apps. New apps can be compiled ‘fat’ for PowerPC and x86 – but who’s going to bother with that? I’m starting to feel left out in the cold.

And how many G5′s are they going to sell over the next year?

After putting it off, I finally read the coverage of the keynote. Then I went and watched The West Wing, which really lost its way in season five: empty scripts, hollow direction, the dramatic abandonment of characters I’ve absolutely cherished like no others.

Seemed familiar, somehow.

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Replacing The iMac G5 Midplane Board

Sunday, 2 January, 2005 — filed under: mac / photo / tech

The replacement midplane board arrived in a box about the same size as the iMac, plus some padding. It was really nicely packed, with hefty layers of shaped foam holding the board in antistatic wrapping. I’d already warmed up my PowerBook with the pdf of the instruction manual – but that became redundant since they’d included it in the box, along with a UPS return shipping label, spare screws and a magnetised Philips screwdriver. I was impressed by the level of detail here.
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Once, Twice, Three Times A Lady

Friday, 31 December, 2004 — filed under: mac

Tranquility is back!

I’m going to write up the procedure at some point, but right now I’m just checking that everything’s okay and my data’s intact. She gave me a couple of scares along the way, and the new midplane board is definitely noisier than the old one, but I’d rather have a slightly louder computer that works than one that doesn’t.

Phew!

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Midplane Madness!

Friday, 31 December, 2004 — filed under: mac / tech

Well, I’m hugely impressed: my replacement midplane board has just arrived. I reported it late on Wednesday afternoon and the kindly support assistant quoted “five to seven working days” for delivery. Given that we’re heading into the new year and a bank holiday, I figured I’d be lucky to get it by the end of next week – particularly given my last round of waiting for Apple to deliver.

So, for it to turn up a scant 48 hours later seems nothing less than all-round fantastic. If it had arrived next week then I’d have properly documented the process with a decent(ish) digi camera, but we’ll have to settle for my phonecam.

This had better work.

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Please Hold

Thursday, 30 December, 2004 — filed under: mac / tech / web

I’m not going to live this down for a while…

I got back from a walk yesterday to find that Tranquility, my iMac G5, had shut herself down. She wouldn’t start up. That’s when the trouble started.
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Brains And Beauty

Thursday, 18 November, 2004 — filed under: mac / photo / tech / Top Girls

Okay, although I didn’t have access to a camera during the unpacking ritual (hence the phonecam shots on my moblog) I’ve now got Tranquility in something resembling a decent order, so here are a few snaps of the latest light of my life:
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That New-Mac Smell

Monday, 15 November, 2004 — filed under: mac / tech

I don’t really believe it.

I’m writing this in ecto, on my still-shiny iMac G5. I’ve spent today partitioning, installing and transferring.

World – Tranquility. Tranquility – World.

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And Now The Moment You've All Been Waiting For…

Sunday, 14 November, 2004 — filed under: mac / tech

TNT assures me that Tranquility will arrive tomorrow, and I’ve left instructions as to how she should be delivered to the middle of nowhere.

This should, therefore, be my last night without OS X – it’s taken six weeks so I can wait a few more hours. Just about.

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New Thing!

Thursday, 4 November, 2004 — filed under: audio / mac / news / web

After many days of lies, half-truths and procrastination, those crazy fools down the hall from me have scraped together the second episode of The Mundane Egg – head over and download Yolk of Oppression now!

I’m in it as a real character, for once – three lines, with no idea of my character, but it came out alright. And I am shaped like a drawer, incidently.

No new Mac yet. Boo.

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