iMac Mini monitor

The Greatest Bus Driver in the World dropped a line wondering, “Can I use my iMac as a monitor for a Mac Mini?”

I scoffed, and indicated only the nuttiest of alpha geeks would even consider this. Well, them, and perhaps a sole, brave Italian, pushing back the frontier of creative hardware reuse!

If TGBDW’s iMac is quite old, he might well be able to use his Bondi iMac as a monitor for that shiny new Mini.

But for newer iMacs, as I understand it at least, reusing them as monitors is unlikely.

I should note that this is perhaps the fourth Mac Mini related inquiry I have fielded since Apple announced the model in January. That is totally unprecedented. Apple’s sales figures for the first quarter should be the best for any new Mac introduction, I suspect. The level of interest it seems to have generated must be quite comparable to that of the iPod.

For you NNW users: I think I need to proofread my blogstuff more closely.

Odd I see

I left work early today because of a dental appointment. It was a cold, sunny day and a chilly wind was blowing. I was not dressed for it and the walk to the bus stop took on the aspect of a struggle.

I paused and called Viv, and then one Eric, and then another. As I spoke to the final Eric, a tank-tread construction shovel started up, lunch hour evidently over, and squeaked and clanked an end to our conversation. Moments later, my bus arrived, and I wended my way down the crowded aisle.

A lanky young man in loose-fitting black slouched into the aisle atop one of the two benches in the very center of the bus. He sported a lovingly braided mohawk, dangling and flipping about his face. His face was vividly painted in red, black, and white greasepaint, the angular shapes apparently applied carelessly and without direct cultural reference to Native American facepaint, or, I thought, to circus entertainers.

I seated myself next to a man in filthy clothing who was absorbed in a battered Marion Zimmer Bradley paperback. He refused to share the seat with me by not moving from the expansive sprawl he had adopted prior to my unwelcome appearance on the scene. A few stops later, the lanky young man shifted seats, and I could see his sweatshirt was emblazoned with the art and name of the Insane Clown Posse. He was down with the clown. I should have known.

As I emerged from the bus tunnel, a melodic voice singing in a language unknown to me filled the echo chamber in front of the Nordstrom tunnel entrance. I listened for a moment and heard some pretty good guitar picking behind it. I paused and hit the record button on my phone. As the song ended, I had become certain that the singer was my acquaintance Karen Olsen, a fervent Jason Webley admirer who has lately taken up her own creativity and begun to exhibit at the independent gallery Art Not Terminal as well as to busk and perform in public. This was the first time I had heard her, and I was pleasantly surprised.

I stopped and chatted with Karen and offered to host her demo at mp3.whybark.com, promising to email her the URL and to explain what all is involved. She might not want to post the material. I believe she may have concerns about people taking the music for free or stealing the songs. The option is there and her concerns are legitimate ones that should be addressed as a matter of education. I’m pleased that Karen has been pursuing her muse and am happy to lend a hand when I can.

Emerging from the side of Nordstrom into a driving, stinging rain, I was amused to note a mannequin posed in one of the windows, holding a cheap guitar with open case at her feet, filled with shoes. The windowdresser had seen fit to provide the doll with a sign reading “Will play for shoes,” and the windowdressing gnomes had done so.

DJ Vicki

Manuel provides me with proof that the lazyweb works. Inspired by my bedtime musing about having speech synthesis provide occasional track info in the context of iTunes, he busta move and the results (should that be ‘TheResult’?) can be found here.

Looking at the code, the script provides the information for the last three songs, and Manuel hasn’t blocked out globals that could store lists of variables to swap in randomly. It also doesn’t yet perform a count-and-interrupt (where when the script is fired it assigns n to the number of tunes to wait before performing a set break and then pauses the playback before reading the announcements).

Lessee now, I know I wrote something that uses globals…

Ah, here it is. My Applescript for using cron to schedule radio streams in iTunes uses a block to set the way that the script sees the radio streams:

global myPlaylist, theCallSign

set myPlaylist to “a radio selection”
set theCallSign to “KUOW”

This lacks a randomization method, though.

UPDATE: I take it back about the pause-to-announce; Manny has the volume fade to half while Vicki lays the lowdown on ya and brings it back up when she’s done. It made me laugh so hard spittle went flyin.’

What would be great: a handy list of the dialog which the never-seen-on-screen deejay from 1979’s “The Warriors” employs. I think it would be a lovely base for DJ Vicki to rock the talkbox with. Amazingly, no script for the film appears to be online.

Of course, eventually we will need to see what DJ Vicki looks like. Little help, party people?

Uber

The Greatest Bus Driver in the World, Jon Nelson, recently got a kick out of something I posted.

Here’s where life gets strange. I had not thought about the song “California Uber Alles” by the Dead Kennedys in years, but just last night, with the Governor’s butt still in recent memory, I posted a link to Mike Whybark’s Tussin Up archives. If you look over Mike’s blog, you’ll find, down at the bottom, a Quicktime film of his friend’s Seattle Punk Accordion Class performance of Calfornia Uber Alles. It sounds great and is totally way more punk rock than anything ever recorded by Rancid. The accordions achieve a sort of Klezmer sound that reminds of the Governor’s dad, and his many victims.

Hooray! I was very excited about posting that clip. Happy Jon enjoyed it.

However, although Jason is from Seattle, the singer in the clip is Aaron Seeman, who I don’t know personally. Jon may be excited to learn that Aaron is actually from the Bay Area, and that when Aaron’s tour is over he will be back in the same area that Jon lives.

Doomed to repeat it

As I sat down, I had the realization that I’d been through this once already.

I’m not the sharpest blade in the knife block, evidently.

Concerned onlookers please note: no actual powerbook was harmed in the creation of this entry.