Not in the cards.

Upon inserting the Elph’s 1gb card into my card reader, only a subset of the files I knew were there appeared in the Mac OS. Upon reinserting the card into the camera and hitting playback, I was pleasantly informed that there was “No File.”

So I shot some more test pix.

I had been planning a card experiment anyway, as Viv has been pestering me to learn how to get pictures from her phone, a Nokia 6220, on to her computer. When I bought the phone, it was supported by iSync; now, however, it is not, and in fact, there is no Google-able solution for easy data exchange to the Mac with this phone at the moment.

(Unless, by now, there is! via burning paper. crazy!)

The phone is much mocked for the idiotic placement of the SD card, buried deep beneath the battery, so even should this methodology work it’s less than desirable.

Happily, her card read fine and I was easily able to grab all the video and pictures from it. Unhappily, sometime in June, she started shooting to the internal storage of the phone. The phone does provide a mechanism to shift photos from the internal storage to the card, but only one at a time, and the procdure requires several button presses to complete for each image.

Once this had been attended to, I reinserted the Canon’s card.

Once again, the dreaded words: “The Finder cannot complete the operation because some data in ‘IMG_0001.JPG’ could not be read or written.” Sigh. Looks like I need to do some research, or maybe actually insert the Canon-supplied software disc. At least this time it didn’t nuke the images.

So close

Wednesday is the projected completion date on the remodel. They started setting the moulding saturday, and should have gotten at least two coats of clear finish onto the floors today, for a final sanding tomorrow and cleanup on Wednesday. It’s moving time.

Say, my server may be down; shoot!

(It appears I was correct, btw. something bumped my router off the ‘net at about 11pm.)

oof

ah geez, too much to cover.

– remodel in final stages

– spoke to parents

– transient business problem resolved

– new camera in hand (elph 450, pace jon)

– move started

– lawn mowed again

– met neighbor’s mother and ex-homeowner

Space

No sooner did I read Tom’s interesting analysis of his decision to go back to wintel for his laptop needs than I am presented with a low-space dialog regarding this laptop’s internal 70gb drive. Tom notes that from his perspective, Powerbook HDs are not upgradeable. As someone who once performed a hard-drive upgrade on an original iBook, my bet is that upgrades are actually possible, but a giant pain in the neck.

Some research on the subject, for reference. Interestingly, most of this info clearly concerns older Powerbooks.

Nikolais

You know, looking at the postmark on the old Russian stamp and comparing it to the Hungarian one leads me to believe that the stamp must have been postmarked in 1901, possibly in October. THis is because the Russian postmark reads “1 X 07.6” while the Hungarian one reads “68 VII. 1…” and I immediately read it as July, 1968; this was influenced by the fact that the room it was found in was built sometime in 1968, presumably during the summer.

We found the Hungarian stamp first, before we realized that a stamp collector must have lived in the house.

It occurs to me that I could easily find out more about the history of our home, as the house directly behind us was just sold by the only tenant it ever had up to today, and our neighbor spoke to her at some length.

Our contractors gave us a finish date of next Tuesday. Viv and I have finally begun to pack. Alas, the apartment is too messy for me to shoot QTVR panoramas, a fault I will no doubt woe and rue as the century unspools about my feet.

I am excited about the new house, but this apartment is the only place I have ever lived that I truly loved for its’ architecture. It is more or less the exact place I visualized living in as a grown-up when I was a teenager, and it’s just killing me to go.

What’s different about the apartment from the place I imagined?

Well, there’s no sun in the place, at all, year round.

It’s an apartment, not a house, and the upstairs, when rented, is nearly always rented by loud persons with enough money that they tend to be somewhat careless as neighbors.

The walls of the space lack sound insulation, which means we hear much too much of our neighbors’ lives.

The single-pane lead glass leaks heat like a sieve, and the consequence of this and oddball ventilation is a constant battle with mold.

There’s no real fireplace, just a really neat model of one.

The neighborhood is currently subject to urban woes, and is loud and stress-inducing all year ’round.

Still, a year from now, I will miss this place like a dead friend.

Patched

Well, using Uploadr, I was able to upload a bunch of pictures to Flickr. For some reason, FlickrExport is still uncooperative.

Here are some of the pix you can see over at my Flickr page:

PICT3054





After repeated rounds of yelling, begging, emailing, and so forth, my ISP went right ahead and sent out a second router of the exact same model. I’m unimpressed, and still lack parity with pre-move services.

PICT3063

We found and hauled a clawfoot tub Saturday around noon. Thanks to Greg and Stacey for the loan of the truck!

PICT3072

Saturday evening, Petr began to lay the floor.

PICT3077





A Nationalist Chinese stamp, I think. Pre-forties?



PICT3078

This is the most interesting of the stamps we found in the house. It appears to be a Russian 20-kopek stamp from 1899 or thereabouts. The cancellation reads “Nikolais” and “1 X 07.6.”

PICT3079

This lovely one is Hungarian, and the cancellation is from 1968.

bust

sorry, folks, something’s awry between iPhoto and flickrexport this evening, so no photo updates on flickr for a while.

It’s too bad, really. We found some stamps in the house, one of which appears to be a russian 20-kopek stamp dating to 1889.

Out of Sync

Well, I think I found my first Tiger app incompatibility: The Missing Sync. I’ve downloaded the last version 4 update and have a $25 upgrade coupon for 5, so I might just spend the dough.

The interior painting on the house is basically done. That leaves the laying of the new floor, refinishing the old one, and retrimming the rooms. They’ll definitely be done by the end of the month. Looks like renting a sanding suite for the old floors will run about $100 a day; the provisioners both speculated that the sanding should only take a day. Here’s hoping.

On the way up to the house this morning, we drove by a house which we’d looked at in Wallingford, a beat-up but still handsome craftsman. On the median by the sidewalk was a de-footed claw-foot tub, clearly set out for hauling. We pulled into a neighboring drive to ask if we could haul it away, and the new homeowner was happy to let us do so. Viv didn’t think she could lift it with me, so I called a few friends to see if I could borrow them for a few moments. I struck out, but Greg and Stacey were kind enough to loan us their truck.

As it turned out, Viv was able to assist sufficiently that we were able to get it into the truck with no problem. From haunting salvage stores lately, we were well-versed in the going rates for claw-foot tubs, and nothing warms the cockles of my heart more than a good dumpster find.

Ha!

Several months ago in Now Playing I published a long piece about Star Trek fan films, for which I spoke with several persons from various Trek fan projects. Today, when Wired arrived, I was amused to note a cover-featured story about one of these projects in particular, the East Coast-based New Voyages.