Tilt-Shift for the win!

This is awesome: Bathtub II from Keith Loutit on Vimeo. (I saw it from Frederick V. Johnson’s Twitter.)

Wait, what was that?

It’s “Tilt-shift photography”. (Well that and some time compression.) The gist of it is this: you tilt the camera lens respective to the sensor, meaning that the focal plane is no longer parallel to the sensor. This basically screws up the depth-of-field information and for some odd reason the human mind interprets that as “miniatures”. That footage is shot at Sydney Harbor and apparently doesn’t even have post-processing. If you want to see more the photographer is Keith Loutit and his blog has more goodness. Check it out.
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Fair Enough I Suppose

Just got an email from Netflix.
As you may know, Blu-ray movies are more expensive than standard definition movies. As a result, we're going to start charging $1 a month (plus applicable taxes), in addition to your monthly membership charge, for unlimited access to Blu-ray movies.
I don't think this is unreasonable over all. I knew some sort of move was in the offing and I was afraid they were going to charge more for Blu-Ray than $1/month or even something worse like a per-disc surcharge which would have meant my Netflix bill would start fluctuating based on what we actually watched. I can eat $1/month and not even debate it. While I was reading my old Netflix posts I did have to giggle because the last email they sent me read:
We are sorry for any inconvenience we may have caused. We hope the next time you hear from us we will delight, and not disappoint, you.
I'm not upset over this charge, and as I said I'm almost relieved that it wasn't higher. But you can't really say I'm "delighted" either. There's an old Dilbert strip where they are all in a meeting and the Pointy-Haired Boss says something along the lines "No bonuses this year because profits are low." In the next panel he says "Next up, the CEO is getting a massive raise because of great company performance." Then in the third panel he turns to his secretary and says "You were supposed to put an item about flu shots between those two." I'm sure I butchered the actual text, but the concept is there. I feel like Netflix was supposed to put something else between "Hey we're keeping Profiles" and "New Feature: Blu-Ray Tax!". At any rate, I still like Netflix and I think Blu-Ray quality is easily worth the extra buck a month.
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WTF DirecTV?

I just got this email from DirecTV:
IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT YOUR HD DVR OR DVR RECEIVER In our effort to improve and expand our service, we experienced a temporary technical glitch. If your HD DVR or DVR receiver is not responding to your remote control or front panel commands, you can resolve this issue by pressing the red "Reset" button located inside the small door on the front right corner of your receiver. Please allow about 15 minutes for your receiver to complete the resetting process. Once completed, your picture will return automatically. Unfortunately, any show you may have scheduled to record yesterday will not be available on your DVR.
Nice. So they did "something" and that screwed up the machine to the point where it needs what amounts to a power cycle. And oh it probably ate last night's recordings. Some readers (you know who you are (cough)) mentioned to me previously that they thought the window for being excited by a new TiVo HD receiver had passed. I've never gotten an email like this for the HR10-250, I'll tell you that right now :-)
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Inside Straight

During my recent spate of travel I bought Inside Straight which is a sort of relaunch of the Wild Cards universe. However, I bought it in hardcover (since it's not out in paperback yet) and promptly decided on every plane flight to carry a smaller, lighter paperback or short fiction magazine instead. So once I settled back into home I decided to read it. I was glad to see that Wild Cards had relaunched. I was introduced to Wild Cards in college when I was running a superheroes role-playing game that turned out to have some parallel themes. (And bringing it full circle, Wild Cards evolved from a role-playing game originally!) It's a shared universe setting where a virus is unleashed on Earth that kills 90 out of 100 infected, horribly deforms another 9, and gives that lucky 100th person superpowers. Most of the books were short story collections (later there were a few novels) and they varied over time in terms of how tightly- linked a single's volumes stories were. This new book is still short stories written by a variety of authors, but it organizes into a single narrative thread more closely than many of the original volumes. (In my memory anyway. It's been years since the last time I reread these books.) If you've read and enjoyed the previous WC books you should pick up Inside Straight no doubt. I guess it's a tougher question if you aren't familiar with the universe, but that's a little difficult for me to address since it isn't my perspective. I can see how this was a difficult feat for the authors: how to revitalize a series with over a dozen books and make it accessible to new readers and still pleasing to the hardcore fans. Here's my suspicion: it's an impossible job but the authors made a really good attempt. I think it's tilted slightly in favor of the old fans but it's close. Wild Cards was always a series that played realistically, given the one big fantastic premise. History diverged over time from our history (The Wild Card virus is released right after WWII.), but very few people became crimefighters or donned spandex costumes or whatever. The new series continues that trend, the opening premise is a new reality show called American Hero that pits "Aces" against one another. There are some ties back to the previous stories - the hostess and judges of American Hero are all characters from previous stories, and there are political events afoot that tie to previous stories. This part was done well I think, the tie-ins are present but not mystifying to a new reader. As the plot begins to develop further it ties more to previous events in the series, and to be honest it ties to a storyline I liked less than most the series offered. That's where I think it would stumble the worst for a new reader, I was having a bit of trouble keeping up with all of the "Oh yeah, that's right. These guys did that back in the past, which now means this has happened now." I'm not convinced the authors provided all of the needed backstory for a few items, I could see some of the plot elements being a bit confusing to a total series newbie. Also I have to say that the current crop of powers just aren't as interesting. The old stories were remarkable for how varied the characters were - you had pimps using tantric sex for magic, a person who slept most of his life in a chrysalis and woke up every time with a drastically different power (or hideous mutation), or a person who had literally died and returned from the death and could project that experience onto others until they died. The new characters have a few that are intriguing or unusual, but in general it's all a lot more "vanilla" superpowers in this outing. Still I think that was probably true of the early Wild Card volumes and that the most interesting characters evolved over time. This is the first volume of three books that Tor contracted for and I'd presume the long-term goal is to establish an open-ended series. There's nothing wrong with the new characters per se, they just seem a little bland in comparison - even if the comparison of a 12 volume series to the single volume "relaunch" is a bit unfair. All in all, I liked Inside Straight and I'm looking forwards to the next volumes. If you haven't read any Wild Cards before I don't know that this is the best embarking point, but I don't think the early books are still in print so it may be your only choice. I think if you enjoy superhero books and especially if the concept of superhereos in an otherwise realistic setting appeals to you that you should probably check out Inside Straight.
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Amazon's "Daily Deal"

You know what can really fill in the "I've always meant to buy that" gaps in your music library? (Anybody who said Zune Pass get out. I'm the designated smart-ass here, damnit!) The answer I was looking for is the Amazon "Daily Deal" MP3. Last week you could get Led Zeppelin IV for $1.99, today it's Exodus by Bob Marley and the Wailers. "But Tim," you may wail, "how do I find out the Daily Deal every day without annoying spam or what-have-you?" Oh foolish reader. Get yourself a Twitter client and follow Amazonmp3. Most days the Daily Deal is crap, but that's the cool thing about it being Daily, you can ignore it and maybe the next day it's something you want. Most days it isn't, but $2 for a full album of legal MP3's at 256k with no DRM? Even if that only works one day a month it's a steal when it happens. If you're an iTunes user and you don't use the Amazon MP3 store, check it out. The downloader can automatically copy files into iTunes, the tracks have album art and solid meta-data. They work great on all of my devices (heck, they work on the 360, which is only true of iTunes Plus tracks)
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