cellio: (whump)
2010-06-10 10:52 pm
Entry tags:

not my finest hour

Around 2:30 last night I was awakened by the siren song of under-nourished UPSs. (Out of phase with each other, of course, just to maximize the pain. But hey, I will never have to worry about sleeping through a power outage...) First I waited in case it was another power hiccup, but after several minutes I got up to shut down my computer.

Like everyone else I have an assortment of electricity-demanding computer stuff, but the UPS only fuels the CPU and monitor. (The external hard drive spends most of its time sleeping anyway, so it can fend for itself.) Bleary-eyed in the dark I sat down at my computer. I wiggled the mouse -- nothing. I tried the keyboard -- nothing again.

Oops, I thought -- when I bought the wireless keyboard and mouse, did that perchance involve a powered doohickey of some sort? Why yes, now that you mention it... Ok, fine -- I found the laptop bag and the mouse therein by the glow of the monitor and plugged it in. Strictly speaking I didn't need a keyboard for this.

I had just clicked on the apple on my way to the "shutdown" menu item when the battery decided it had had enough of me. Oops -- not my best timing. Well, now I have a slightly better idea of what the battery can manage -- about 8 minutes for a Mac Mini and a 20" LCD monitor. I had higher hopes.

cellio: (shira)
2010-01-10 04:08 pm

talent show

My congregation's talent show was last night, and I thought it went really well. We had 14 performers (some individuals, some groups), three of them kids (two piano players, one violinist). A trophy was awarded by audience vote, and the ten-year-old violinist, who played really well, got it. I'm glad. Populace-vote systems have all sorts of problems, but fortunately, no one was really treating this as a competition and the winner performed very well, so it wasn't just that he was a kid. I'd estimate that there were about 200 people there, which is more than they were expecting. This was announced as our "first annual" talent show and the organizer confirmed later that yes, she has been asked to do this again next year. Yay! Maybe next year I'll get that Rossi quartet together. Or compose another song. Or both.

Material covered a pretty broad range -- show tunes, Yiddish songs, blues, jazz piano, baroque, old-timey banjo, and original poetry. One performer is a pro (someone said he sings with the Pittsburgh opera) and it showed. He didn't do operatic style (which I loathe -- can't understand the words and the vocal qualities are grating, though less so with basses I guess). He sang a couple of Frank Sinatra songs, very well.

My performance was very well-received; lots of people praised my singing, and I got lots of positive feedback for composing the song myself. ("I didn't know you composed music, too!" "Well, it's been mostly renaissance dance music and the like until now." "Um, ok." :-) ) The pianist told me he would like to play this again. I said that he is much, much closer to the decisions about what music gets done for services than I am and I hope he understands that it would be awkward for me to push at all. So we'll see. I also made sure he knows that transposition is a matter of a few keystrokes. (I'm betting that our cantorial soloist would want a different key.) The pianist also agreed to (later) give me some feedback on a few parts he found a little awkward to play, which I would definitely like to get. I had sent the music in advance with an invitation to do that, but he and his wife had their first child a few months ago so I don't imagine he's had any cycles to spare for that. (I asked if he is getting to sleep through the night yet and he said heck no.)

The pianist described the style of the song as "American" and "Reform" (he didn't elaborate), while a fellow congregant thought it sounded "renaissance". I'm not sure what it is, but not that last. :-) I would enjoy doing renaissance-style Jewish music, but that pretty much means choral works, not soloist stuff, so there are additional hurdles there. (We have a choir, but would they do work written by a congregant, or would that be all kinds of awkward if people didn't like it?) I wrote a singable (not "artistic") piece for solo voice and piano because (1) I could perform that in this show (I wrote the piece for the show) and (2) it has the best chance of future adoption. If it never gets used again well that's life, but I wanted to at least have the chance. The opportunities for a regular congregant like me to sing on the bimah are practically nil, so writing material that others sing on the bimah is as close as I'm going to get to sharing my work beyond one-offs like this talent show.

I understand that the show was being recorded; I hope to get a copy of that. Meanwhile, if anyone can point me to a summary "idiot's guide" to Garage Band or Logic Express toward the end of combining a MIDI piano track and my voice, I'll see what I can do. (I've played through the tutorial videos that Garage Band offers and worked through some Logic Express exercises from a book, but I'm not really getting it yet, and nothing has talked about real-time recording as opposed to just using samples.) I don't have good equipment, mind, but my USB headphones also have a mic that's at least Skype-grade. This would be so you could hear what it sounds like with the words as opposed to just MIDI instruments.

cellio: (musician)
2009-11-27 03:42 pm
Entry tags:

sound editing on the Mac

Dani and I had been digitizing the albums and cassette tapes we still want that aren't available on CD. Then we both switched to Macs and things bogged down for a while until we figured out the new tool chain.

We're still doing the original ripping on a PC. This doesn't require real-time intervention, so the lag inherent in using VNC to connect to another machine doesn't matter. However, we needed to do something different on the editing side, as keeping a PC with direct monitor and keyboard connections around in addition to my Mac wasn't going to work.

Some of you gave me various recommendations, which I appreciate. In the end I bought Amadeus Pro for $40. The workflow is pretty easy: load WAV file representing one side of a tape or album; find the first track break; cut from beginning until there into a new file; edit that file (trim silence, fade in/out if needed); save; iterate. Once I have a directory full of WAV files, use the batch processor to convert to MP3, filling in most of the tagging as part of that process. If I have been clever enough to name the individual files 01.wav, 02.wav, and so on, I can feed file name (sans extension) in as the track number, saving a tedious step. So the batch processor can do everything except track name, which is fine. Finally, import into iTunes (in a "tmp" playlist created for this purpose) and type in the track names. Move the new tracks to the "to be verified" playlist. Done.

I can do almost everything in Amadeus Pro using keyboard shortcuts, including fade in/out. If I could figure out how to deselect without having to click somewhere else in the file, I'd be golden. I've used the program to do several tapes now and it's going very smoothly. This might even be faster than what I was doing on the PC (WavePad to edit, DAK software to batch-convert to MP3 (but no tagging built in), Tag & Renamer to tag, and then import into iTunes.)

We're just starting the early music now. For those who care, yes, Mt. Holyoke did eventually re-issue "The Medieval Lyric" on CD; they sell an upgrade for people with the cassettes. ("Upgrade" price excludes the books, which you are presumed to already have.) They have a web site but can't take digital orders, so we've just put an actual check in an actual envelope with an actual stamp. :-)
cellio: (avatar)
2009-10-26 09:24 pm
Entry tags:

printer weirdness

New odd printer behavior: when printing from Trope Trainer run under CrossOver, if I print a document it prints the first page and then the printer's orange lights go on. I wasted a chunk of last night trying to clear a jam that was clearly not present. I confirmed that suspicion by moving the printer cable to the PC, where things printed fine. Back to the Mac, and test pages wouldn't print. Hmm.

Tonight I was able to mostly characterize it, and it's weird: after the first page prints, the printer will stay in that state until I go to some other application (I used TextEdit) and initiate a print, at which point it becomes unstuck and gives me my next page. (I do not need to actually print from TextEdit; once the printer wakes up I can cancel.) Iterate until done. I'm 99% sure I've printed from this configuration of Trope Trainer before, though there's been an HP driver update since then. No other apps seem to be adversely affected.

Now that I have a workaround I can just chalk it up to random weirdness, at least until I get annoyed enough by HP-Mac incompatibilities to go buy another printer. But my hardware seems intent on keeping me on my toes.

cellio: (avatar)
2009-09-13 04:48 pm
Entry tags:

Mac updates

Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] mrpeck for pointing out that the just-released 10.6.1 OS patch fixes my printer problem. Yay! This patch rewrote my network settings (resulting in no Internet), so if you get it, be careful. In order to fix it I had to set a manually-configured IP address on our home network; I hope machines getting addresses via DHCP don't bump into me.

I have a few Windows-only applications, and earlier this summer a friend of [livejournal.com profile] ralphmelton's pointed me to CrossOver, which is a less-expensive way than Parallels to run such applications. Their list of supported apps runs largely to games and Microsoft products, but you can try your luck with unsupported apps. So I downloaded the free 30-day evaluation copy.

Trope Trainer works, which removes my need to move the printer back and forth between the Windows machine and the Mac. (I use it to print out nice large copies of torah portions that I'm learning.) The UI is a little garbled, but I can manage. I also succeeded in installing and running Tag & Renamer, the tool I was using on Windows to tag newly-minted MP3s. (I hadn't found anything comparable on the Mac, other than working directly in iTunes.)

The big failure for me, alas, is WavePad, the program I have been using to edit WAV files as part of the music-digitizing project. There exists a Mac version of this program, but it sucks mightily -- among things, the keyboard shortcuts are mostly absent, and the program is just too hard on my wrist if I have to do everything with a mouse. It's also the only Mac program so far that I have had to shoot down by process kill because it locked up badly. Repeatedly. So the Mac version of WavePad just doesn't cut it.

I also have Logic Express on my Mac, which I understand I could use to do this, but I'm finding no joy in the documentation, Google, or just exploring the UI there. I bought what seems to be a pretty good tutorial and am working through it, but that's going to take a while. Editing WAV files isn't Logic Express's core feature, so it's not a focus of any of the documentation. But I'm told I can do it, and maybe someday I will. But I want to be back to editing WAV files sooner than that.

I tried Audacity, which was also very mouse-intensive and slow for me. Basic, essential functionality seemed not to be there, which presumably means I'm using it wrong. I'd like some reason to believe that this really is the best candidate before I spend much more time on it. I tried running the DAK package under CrossOver (no Mac version); it installs fine but fails at runtime with a cryptic error code. I've even tried running WavePad on the PC over VNC; you can probably predict the results of that. I don't have a spare LCD monitor, nor really the desk real-estate to support it, a keyboard, and a mouse, so continuing to do this on the PC doesn't seem promising.

Anyone have other suggestions? This sure feels like it ought to be a solved problem; what clues am I missing? 95% of my editing is: load WAV file representing an entire side of a tape or album, split into tracks, smooth out the edges, and convert to MP3. (For cassettes in particular it's important to fade in/out because of the tape hiss.) I decide where to cut by listening while watching the wave pattern; at the magic moment I stop the playback and cut from the cursor position. (This is what Audacity doesn't do for me; the edit cursor and playback cursor are different! I'm willing to go to a menu for the commands to fade in/out or to do any other adjustments (like volume), but I don't want to have to do everything via mouse, most especially routine playback. It's slow and it hurts too much.
cellio: (avatar)
2009-09-07 12:05 am

argh!

It never occurred to me that after upgrading the Mac from Leopard to Snow Leopard, my printer (HP Laserjet 1020) might no longer work. I had to download a special driver to get it to work with Leopard, and I guess I assumed that driver would still work. Sigh. If I'd actually thought about it, I would have done some research before taking the OS upgrade.

My choices seem to be: (1) revert to Leopard (I don't even know if that's possible without doing damage), (2) wait for a fix (prognosis unclear), or (3) buy a new printer. I wasted a lot of time under Leopard trying (4), network the printer using my PC, so I probably won't try that again. (The Mac still needs a driver, whether the printer is local or remote, so that's not likely to help.) I'll continue with Google research tomorrow; so far the only solution I've found involves downloading a 750MB package, compiling code, and doing lots of fussing.

I realize that this is HP's fault, not Apple's. It's frustrating because I've been using HP printers for more than 15 years without issues and when I bought this one I never thought to check for Mac compatibility. (At the time I wasn't planning to buy a Mac.) It's a peripheral; at some level I expect it to just work.

On the other hand, it's worth noting how easy the OS upgrade was otherwise. Insert disc, confirm intent, leave for an hour, and there it was. I was never willing to attempt an OS change under Windows. This is the only major problem I've seen so far. (There's one minor one that I'll probably just have to get used to; they changed a color that I'd rather they not have, but there doesn't appear to be a user setting for it.)
cellio: (star)
2009-06-27 11:49 pm

midrash session 8 (and a hardware update)

This session was actually a few weeks ago (things have been hectic).

Read more... )

Mac update: I can't connect the printer to one machine and print from the other (either direction), but at least they're close enough together that I can move the USB cable as needed. There's also a weird, loud chirping noise when it's in sleep mode; word on the net is that this happens sometimes when peripherals are plugged in, which seems weird. I normally have USB connections for keyboard, mouse, external hard drive, and printer, and am not really interested in changing any of that. A couple nights ago I left my iPod plugged in to charge and it didn't chirp; weird. I'm not sure plugging in the iPod every night is really good for its battery, though. But pulling the speaker cable and plugging it back in when using the machine is also a hassle.

Oh, and if anybody can get me Windows-style file sorting in Finder (directories then files, but alphabetically within those two groups), I'll be in your debt. "Sort by kind" violates the second part of that. The common motif on the net seems to be "this isn't Windows", which is true but unhelpful. My legacy file structure evolved the way it did in large part because of how it sorted.

cellio: (fist-of-death)
2009-06-22 10:40 pm
Entry tags:

Mac frustration

It's a lovely machine in many ways, but if I can't figure out how to print from it, it's going to be rather limited.

I have an HP LaserJet 1020, which apparently does not work natively with the Mac. I first tried to just share it from my PC, but that doesn't work -- at best I can get jobs to appear to queue from the Mac but go nowhere. These instructions were written for Tiger but I did basically the same stuff (the UI has changed). The Mac doesn't have a driver and won't even let me select one I downloaded (see next step), and "generic postscript" doesn't work. So then I moved the printer to the Mac and followed these instructions, which gets me as far as a job showing up in the print queue on the Mac and never printing. (But hey, on the way it showed me a picture of my printer, so it knows something.) Whee.

I don't care which machine it's connected to so long as I can print from both. Currently I can print from neither. I guess Apple tech support is my next stop. Sigh.

Edit: fixed on the Mac side (Windows can't print to it via the network yet).
cellio: (avatar)
2009-06-21 12:45 pm
Entry tags:

Mac

My Mac Mini arrived Friday, faster than I expected. In an act of will I did not punt my congregation's Friday-evening services, attendance at which required starting Shabbat two hours early, to play with it (and go somewhere else later). I did verify that a VNC server is running on my PC and reachable from my laptop, so I can skip the dual-monitor/keyboard/mouse-on-one-desk setup. So now, off to rearrange bunches of hardware and load up a new machine.

If you've got favorite Mac tips & tricks, sites, software, etc, please feel free to share. I've used an iBook (running Tiger) casually, but as a main machine it's new to me.
cellio: (avatar)
2008-05-05 11:39 pm
Entry tags:

Mac keypad followup

A couple weeks ago I asked for advice (in an entry that was then locked but is now public) on Mac-compatable numeric keypads. The gift has now been given and tested, so here are the results.

This turns out to be hard. Numeric (wireless or USB-tethered) keypads that work with Windows are easy to find, but not so the Mac. The Apple store couldn't even help me. But someone pointed out the Genovation Micropad, which Amazon claims works with Windows and Mac, so I got that. (I knew I could return it to Amazon within 30 days, and was betting that an opened package wouldn't be a problem up against their claim of Mac compatability, if that turned out not to be true. I saved the product page just in case.)

The results: the numbers (and enter and decimal, I presume) work just fine. The special functions, including num lock, do not. The recpient called the manufacturer's support line and was told that the keycodes are Windows-specific and, to their knowledge, no one makes a Mac-compatable one. He has Apple support, so he called them and got the same answer. Apparently there just isn't enough demand for this among Mac users. He wants it because he has a laptop without the numberpad built in, and data entry via the conventional number keys is slow.

He decided to keep it because he mainly wanted the number keys anyway. I'm going to add a customer review to the Amazon page noting the platform semi-mis-information.
cellio: (avatar)
2008-04-24 10:23 pm
Entry tags:

question for Mac users

(Initially locked because this is for a gift. Unlocked May 5.)

I am looking for a wireless numeric keypad that works with Macs. I wouldn't have thought this any more difficult than wireless mice, but so far, all I'm turning up is stuff that either says "Windows only" up front or has reviews saying "didn't work with my Mac". Any ideas or personal experiences? (Bonus points for reliable brands, comfortable ergonomics, and not being made in China.)

Thanks!
cellio: (avatar)
2007-07-19 07:51 am
Entry tags:

interlude: non-class stuff

First, thanks to "Mr. Fixer", as he is known on LJ, for calling and talking me through my emacs issues (on the Mac). It turns out that there are three ways to launch emacs (different emacses) on this machine; one I didn't know about and the other two were clashing over the .emacs file. For my own future reference: running emacs from an xterm works, and so does running from the Mac shell if I use the "-q" option to surpress the .emacs file. (Since the .emacs file is for a different version, with settings for fonts and colors that don't matter when running in a shell, that's fine.)

I discovered tonight (when trying to install a mouse driver [livejournal.com profile] hakamadare clued me in about) that I don't know the root password for my machine. Err, oops. I wonder how I can fix that. (Maybe I'm lucky and the person I got the machine from remembers.)


Wednesday night I joined Andrew and his family (sorry Andrew; I can never get the user name right on the first try), [livejournal.com profile] mabfan, and [livejournal.com profile] gnomi for dinner, conversation, and ice cream. I had a good time. How can you not, when in a single evening you can geek about halacha, science fiction, comics (that was mostly [livejournal.com profile] mabfan, TV, and music? :-) Mabfan or Andrew, please remind me of the name of that TV show you were so excited about getting on DVD?

Much time was spent trying to find a way, within halacha, for someone (I won't out you here) to read the new Harry Potter book on Shabbat. (Some of my suggestions were rejected because they would involve waiting until morning; apparently solutions that don't involve starting by quarter past midnight aren't interesting.) I hope you find a solution, but if not, I suspect a 22-hour delay isn't fatal... :-)


Erik (one of my cats) is staying with a friend while I'm here, and apparently he's very comfortable in her house. She can offer him avian theatre (we don't get many birds visible from cat-accessible windows), and he quickly established his place in the household. Good, as he'll be going back for Pennsic in a couple weeks. :-) I miss the cats, but knowing they're in good hands helps.


Never mind the academic stuff: I'm beginning to wonder if I would have the physical stamina to attend this school if I lived in this city. That's one steep hill! I'm staying in a dorm at the top of the hill for this program (so no biggie), but the houses up here are all in the multi-million-dollar range, so ordinary people don't live here. (Actually, I wonder about the people who live in some of the humongous houses up here. Are they insanely rich, or large families or other groups? Some of these places look like they'd easily be 10,000 square feet.)

There appear to be no vending machines on Hebrew College's campus. How odd.


I've had a few instances of an odd style of encounter here, and I wonder if it's a Boston thing or if I'm just unlucky. I have asked people on the street (or in the T) what should be simple questions (e.g. "which of these intersecting streets is Center?" when there's no sign), and people who seem to be from around here don't know. In the example I just gave, it was a group of students who'd just gotten off a city bus. On the T, I asked someone who seemed to be a regular T rider (based on overheard conversation) "does this train go to Government Center" (a big stop), she said she didn't know, and then she got on my train (after I got the answer elsewhere) and rode it past that stop. There have been a couple other cases, too. Is this a "don't wanna talk to strangers" thing, or what?

cellio: (avatar)
2004-12-05 12:25 am
Entry tags:

question for Mac owners

I've searched Apple's site for this and done some googling, and near as I can tell Apple hasn't published an answer to my question and it's all speculation. But I might not be looking in the right places -- and certainly don't know the relevant history -- so I'll appeal to my friends for insight.

A relative has Jaguar and is eyeing Panther. He's also eyeing Tiger, which (officially) is being released in the first half of 2005 (but some people seem to be skeptical about that). It costs $129 to upgrade from Jaguar to Panther. No Panther-to-Tiger price has been published.

My question: would an upgrade path that goes through Panther cost appreciably more than a direct upgrade from Jaguar to Tiger when it comes out? Or, by buying Panther, does one get a better price toward Tiger later? If we spend $129 to get him an upgrade now, are we just buying six months' worth of joy or are we doing more for him?