Those were the days …

… when it was perfectly acceptable to smoke while entertaining children.

It was 1940 and Looney Tunes produced one of its finest works, ‘You Ought To Be In Pictures’. This was an animation-on-live-action piece featuring Porky Pig and Daffy Duck. Daffy convinces Porky to get the real-life producer Leon Schlesinger to tear up his contract to release him so he can become a movie star.

It is beautifully done:

You Ought To Be In Pictures - handshake

and:

You Ought To Be In Pictures - speeding car

But here’s Schlesinger speaking to Porky near the start:

You Ought To Be In Pictures - Cigarette

and later on with Daffy:

You Ought To Be In Pictures - Cigarette with Daffy

By my count he had three cigarettes in the course of this short. You can watch it — for the moment at least — here on a Romanian site.

It used to be on Youtube, but Warner Bros had it taken down.

Yet there are plenty of other Looney Tunes cartoons available on Youtube. Perhaps the company is sensitive to the smoking issue.

Schlesinger died nine years later at the age of 65. But not from lung cancer

, surprisingly. From a viral infection.

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What kind of a geek is that?

The host puts a question to two people who are represented to us as geeks. “How many different editions are there of Vogue magazine across the world. The closest answer wins.”

You would not expect a geek to know the answer. I vaguely knew that there were lots of them, and so presumably did the first geek. He offered ’10’ as his answer.

You are going second. You don’t know have a clue what the real answer is. Any real geek knows what to do. First, flip a coin: higher or lower. If it lands ‘Higher’, say ’11’. If ‘Lower’, say ‘9’.

I would have gone higher

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, even knowing nothing, because there are a lot of countries and a lot of languages. But perhaps our second geek had a vague memory that it was lower. So he should have said 9. If there were, say, 4 editions he would have won, being closer. If there were 9 issues he would have won, still being closer.

So what did he say? 4! What kind of an answer is that? If the correct answer had been 8 or 9 his opponent would have won.

As it happens, the correct answer was 19 so his initial up/down decision was wrong anyway. But goodness, surely a geek knows how to play a game.

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Restore saves all

My iPod Touch, which isn’t very old at all, has been flaky for ages. Most irritatingly the double tap on the home button, which brings up pause and skip keys and volume slider, has been totally unreliable. It would work properly about one time in three on average. Sometimes if I paced it carefully it would be higher, sometimes not. Googling suggested it might be a physical problem with the button itself, and suggested squirting it with compressed air.

So I purchased an expensive tin of air, gave it a squirt, and it made no substantial difference.

Then I noticed that it was starting to display the wrong cover art when playing some tracks.

I upgraded to iOS6, and the double tap seemed to work well for a couple of hours, then rapidly went back to normal. There was no difference to cover art. I removed a couple of the troublesome albums from the iPod and reloaded them, but the problem persisted.

So last night I decided to hit the big ‘Restore’ button in iTunes on the iPod Touch. This is something you don’t do lightly. It wiped the whole unit, firmware and all, then reloaded everything. With more than 5,000 tracks and a stack of apps it took about six hours I think. A bit of setting up after that (getting it back on my WiFi network, reorganising of icons and re-connecting with Bluetooth) it was right to go again. And now it works perfectly.

Cover art is right. Double tapping has worked every single time today. And there were no pregnant pauses, which I had thought were characteristic of how the unit operates. It seems that something was making it run slow, and that was interfering with the double tap. What that had to do with the cover art I don’t know.

A slow, but certain cure.

UPDATE – 9 October 2012

Hmmm.

Not so certain. A couple of days after that I ran an app that’s supposed to feed music to a network device. It crashed. Then the iPod started getting flakey again on the double tap. So I did another system restore, another many hours of reloading, another clean start. This time the double tap reliability only lasted a day or so, and then it began working irregularly. I had done a restore to backup, so the next day I did a full restore to new, but this time I made sure it loaded no apps or anything else that I didn’t select. I also switched off messaging and everything else I could think of. The double tapping has, since, been fairly unreliable, but usable with a bit of persistence.

I was kind of prepared to live with it … until tonight. I took the dog for a walk and finished listening to a podcast I’d started earlier in the day. It got to the end and then froze. That is, the music player froze. I could go back to the home screen, but couldn’t get back to the music player’s menus. So I did a system reset. After a bit over a minute the thing had restarted, so I went to play some music and … nothing was there. The iPod had wiped everything, leaving 57+GB of free space.

Not good.

UPDATE – 11 October 2012

An appointment with the Apple Genius bar at the new Apple store in Canberra, yesterday, saw the iPod Touch replaced. All seems to be working properly now. It certainly loaded up the 30+GB of content quite a bit faster. I’ve installed it as a new iPod to avoid importing any corrupt settings

, and gone the full hog with all my preferred apps as well.

Double tapping seems reliable so far.

Apple are sending down a new iPod Touch (5th Gen) for review tomorrow, so no doubt I will start to feel dissatisfied with my 4th Gen shortly.

Surprisingly, 64GB remains the max size.

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It’s not only audiophiles who fool themselves …

The most recent episode of Skeptoid deals with the subject of the superiority of Stradivarius violins. It has been an article of faith for many decades at least, perhaps even centuries, that these violins are the best and possess some unique features of manufacture or material that make them so.

But are they really the best in the first place?

Skeptoid looks at a 2010 study in which blind playing of six violins was conducted. Three were highly regarded examples of 18th century Italian manufacture (two of them Strads), while the other three were new violins. The old ones were worth, between them, about $US10 million. The three new ones were pretty much top of the current art, and so cost between them about $US100,000. That is, one per cent of the price of the antique violins.

The results were clear:

We found that (i) the most-preferred violin was new; (ii) the least-preferred was by Stradivari; (iii) there was scant correlation between an instrument’s age and monetary value and its perceived quality; and (iv) most players seemed unable to tell whether their most-preferred instrument was new or old.

They add:

These results present a striking challenge to conventional wisdom.

Indeed.

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Posted in Imperfect perception, Misc | 1 Comment

Google and the Bacon Number

From a tweet:

Joel Golby ?@joelgolby
IMPORTANT: if you type “bacon number” + any actor name into Google it will tell you how many degrees of separation they are from Kevin Bacon

Damn, it’s true!

Simon Phillips’s Bacon number is 3
Simon Phillips and Kierston Wareing appeared in Bonded by Blood.
Kierston Wareing and Michael Fassbender appeared in Fish Tank.
Michael Fassbender and Kevin Bacon appeared in X-Men: First Class

This is the ‘degrees of separation’ lark: how many connections need to be followed to link actor X and Kevin Bacon. X acted in a movie with Y who was in a movie with Z who was in a movie with Bacon, so that’s three degrees of separation.

Meanwhile, for a more renaissance-man style of connections, there’s the Erdös-Bacon-Sabbath number.

This one combines that with degrees of separation from the band Black Sabbath and academic collaborations with mathematician Paul Erdös.

His initial results were Richard Feynman, Stephen Hawking

, Brian May (the astrophysicist, formerly the guitarist from Queen) and … Natalie Portman!

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Visual Field

If you’re ever inclined to think that the human visual system is perfect, like some kind of ultramegapixel video camera, then you should study this recent XKCD cartoon:

Click and expand to use properly

Click and expand to full screen to use properly.

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Is M. Night Shyamalan about to uptick?

M. Night Shyamalan has, as I’ve previously written, been on a steady decline since The Sixth Sense, falling from a well-deserved IMDB rating of 8.2 to

, most recently, a dreadful one of 4.5.

But I see that he is working on a new movie, After Earth. Science fiction fare, but written by Gary Whitta (The Book of Eli) and Stephen Gaghan (Traffic). And starring Will Smith, who seems to have a knack of involving himself in strong movies.

Here’s hoping!

Posted in Cinema | 3 Comments

Mad Max

And here’s another Blu-ray vs DVD comparison: Mad Max. Believe me

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, this one’s worth it. Sample:

Mad Max comparison

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The Sound of Blu-ray reviews

I’ve been updating my Blu-ray review page and will probably be doing so for a few more days. Lots of last year’s reviews are up there now (look for the ‘Added’ tags)

, including a few Blu-ray 3Ds.

I’ve also done a new Blu-ray vs DVD comparison, the magnificent The Sound of Music. Sample:
Sound of Music DVD vs Blu-ray

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Scopes Monkey Choir logoIf you like learning more about sound and music, and the scientific basis thereof, may I suggest subscribing to the podcast Scopes Monkey Choir.

It’s about 40 minutes long each week or two and covers things from (most recently) how elephants vocalise the very low frequencies (15-20Hz) they use to communicate over long distances, through to human perception of sound and music. It’s a pleasure to hear people talking about sound in a way that distinguishes between, for example, the fundamental frequencies and the overtones or harmonics.

Right now I feel guilty because when I went to check on the address for the link above, I noticed that they’d linked to my post on The Loudness War about which I’d corresponded with them. So this could look like a courtesy link. It isn’t. It’s an I-ought-to-have-linked-already-but-was-too-lazy link.

Update: On the new Scopes Monkey Choir podcast (Episode 83) my correspondence is mentioned. Included is some stuff I put in an email about Dark Side of the Moon. I’ve just up-loaded my recent review of the DSotM Blu-ray

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, here.

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