Archive for January, 2009

Music!

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

My dad ordered me an electric violin! I found one on Amazon for only $80 that comes with just about everything you need. I was going to order it myself, but my dad is super nice. I’m so excited!

I’ve been plucking around with my old violin, but I can’t actually use the bow because… well, I’m in an apartment. I don’t want the neighbors to hear my rusty squeaking. Who knows. Maybe I won’t squeak. I’m still good, just a little out of practice. I’ve had my old violin for 17 years. (SEVENTEEN YEARS. I’m getting old.) For about half of that time, I haven’t been able to practice as much as I want because of dorms, townhouses, apartments, and the close proximity of potentially irritated neighbors therein. With the electric violin, I’ll be able to practice with headphones. No noise!

I really can’t believe it took me 8 years to figure out there is actually a way to practice without being annoying.

So, I’ve gotten out all of the sheet music that I still have, making sure I can still read music. (And I can! In fact, I can sight-read quite well.)

I’m so excited. It should be here soon. Yay! Violin! Music!

Albums.

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

So, it’s been a little while since I posted a project. I was working on a pretty big one that I couldn’t mention because it was my Christmas gift to my grandparents. My grandmother occasionally looks at this little site, so I couldn’t post about it until after they received it.

All that genealogy work I did? I put it in an album. I cross-stitched the cover, and I scrapbooked the pictures and censuses and everything that I found:


Now that was a big project. It took quite some time to finish, but it sure turned out… well… pretty amazing. I found so much information and actually finished an album. In time for Christmas, too!

Now, I’m working on a new album. This one’s geekier. This one’s just for me.

A certain somebody who I’ve known to like cheese for a very long time brought a cheese plate to a holiday dinner at our house. I told her I wanted to do that all the time, just for myself. She kind of chuckled and said, “Yeah, me too.” But, I’m actually doing it. Fancy cheeses! Yeah!

So, in order to keep track of all the fancy schmancy cheese I eat, I’m putting pictures, descriptions, and other notes in a little journal to keep all to myself. I’ve had about seven new cheeses just since the new year, and I haven’t scratched the surface. Cheese hobby!

We Live in a Digital World, and I am a Digital Girl.

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Anti-material.

Digital.

It’s this thing that, without power, is nothing.

Digital Cameras.

Digital Picture Frames.

Digital TV.

The Internet.

I went shopping yesterday. I was perusing the shelves at Bed Bath and Beyond, Marshall’s, Office Max, and Target. Everywhere was dead. Yes, the economy is poor at the moment, but people still need things. Right? I managed to leave four stores and only spend $40. I only bought from two of them. And my bank account is pretty high at the moment.

While in Bed Bath and Beyond, I was dumbfounded by the amount of pure crap that they sell. I went looking for an automatic coffee grinder. Right? Bed Bath and Beyond. Right? But no, they only had one coffee grinder. One. It wasn’t automatic. It was fifteen dollars. Instead, they have forty-five different shapes of silicone ice cube trays. They have the latest as-seen-on-tv wonder contraption that only performs one function: toasting your bread in a spiffy design. Are you serious? I want a coffee grinder. I’m willing to drop $100 for a nice coffee grinder. You don’t want my hundred bucks? Or anyone else’s who’s looking for a nice coffee grinder? I’m not spending a dime on the crap you’re trying to get me to buy on an impulse.

Given the economy, which I’ve already addressed in a brief sentence, this is my advice for all major retailers: Stop buying the impulse crap to sell. Nobody will buy the impulse crap. Because? It’s crap.

I thought my store was dead. I don’t shop much, which is my little subconscious contribution to the economic crisis, but I really was shocked that on a Saturday at around 5:00, I was the only person in Bed Bath and Beyond. I was the ONLY person in Office Max. My store isn’t doing so bad in comparison.

My store is equally as bad with the impulse crap. My favorite came recently. It’s a small metal train painted solid white. It comes with stickers that look like grafitti. It’s forty freaking dollars. Who, in corporate, in their right mind, oh my, WHO BOUGHT THAT TO SELL? In a bookstore. And we got about fifteen of them. (Makes me want to facepalm.)

So, anyway. Apparently, if you want a nice automatic coffee grinder, you have to shop online.

Right back to Digital, baby.

I bought my husband a little digital picture frame for Christmas. It wasn’t something I would ever buy for myself, but he’d said on several occasions that he thought those things were neat. I’m not entirely sure that he liked it, since I found a place to put it and I put the picture on it, but… that’s all aside. I was just sitting and looking at it and thinking how completely useless it would be without power. Then, I started thinking about a post-apocalyptic world:

“What’s this big box with metal pieces and wires connecting to a flat rectangular black panel?”

“What are all these wires connecting post to post along these passageways?”

“This civilization was so lazy that it would buy pre-prepared meals in a box.”

Etc.

Etc.

Ok, so that last one was a completely different rant, but I had to at least show you a peek at where my thoughts were about to go.

Desktops.

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Every once in a while I’ll do something really geeky to my desktop. My old laptop was once turned into a space scene with all of my icons being planets, asteroids, galaxies, and supernovas. Another time, it was an aquarium. In that case, the recycle bin was a puffer fish. When it was full, he would puff up, and when empty, it was just the calm puffer fish.

Now I’ve done a silly one.

(Click to enlarge)

When I was young, we had an Atari 2600 PC. This is from the game Ghostbusters. It’s the very beginning of the game, where you are choosing your car and all of the gadgets you want on it. The little guy in the forklift picks the things up and moves them over to the car. On the left, the white thing at the top is the containment unit for all the ghosts you catch. The green one is a ghost trap. You have to buy a bunch of those. I have no clue what the blue thing is. The weird brown slash-like thing is a ghost vacuum. You put it on the hood of the car and as you’re driving to go get slimer, you can catch ghosts from the road. All the while, it plays the ghostbusters song in monotone atari blips. It was awesome.

The recycle bin shows the famous no-ghost sign when it’s empty, but it turns into a ghost when there’s stuff in there. It took some hunting to find all the images to make them icons, but it was worth it. I’ll keep this one for a while.