I hear tell my honorary mentor, The Best Bus Driver in the World, is coming around to my point of view regarding music produced with minimal amplification and internal electronics. I’m glad to hear it – the qualities I hear in obscure field recordings and teenage punk rock singles draw me to the genres as if here was no distinction.
No no Nokia
For about a year I have been frustrated by the inadequate file-sync support available for the Nokia series 6 phones, in particular the 6600 and the 6620. There appeared to be only limited ways to get the images off the phone.
The best way has proven to be removing the battery and downloading from the storage card by mounting the card on a USB reader; but the following pieces of software may also be of assistance:
Nokia Collector enables desktop file transfer to the phone only. Uploads appear as new SMS messages, enabling application installation.
Photo Server and Photo Retreiver are a pair of apps that enable image transfers from Nokia series 60 phones. A note, however: as of this writing, the download link will produce a non-binary download. I used an ftp client and set the file-type to binary manually, which worked. The developer has a bunch of interesting apps, most especially including a range of Nokia-specific Mac-remote-control via Bluetooth goodies.
Keyed!
I have locked my car keys inside my workplace. Arg.
JP not Patches
I was saddened this week to hear of the passing, at 76, of my former professor and friend and all-around character J. P. Darriau, at home in Bloomington, Indiana. J. P. grew up in NYC during the war in a Jewish neighborhood, and one of my favorite memories of him is this grey-headed child of French Catholic emigrants to the States singing Yiddish songs about baseball at a piano during an evening of performance art circa 1989.
J. P. came to Bloomington in the early sixties and remained a prof at IU until his retirement in 1996. He was my professor in three classes and became my friend during the first. He opened his home, over the years, to innumerable members of my cohort, usually something I would discover much later.
During the first class i took with him, which he insisted on holding in his backyard sculpture studio instead of on campus, all the members of the class were charged with researching something about transformative performance traditions and presenting our findings in the context of a performance. While the details of my research are somewhat hazy, as I recall I determined to compare and contrast the European use and abuse of alcohol to the indigenous and pre-Colombian use of tobacco. I spent about $100 on various interesting beers and about the same amount on a selection of high-end tobacco, including what must have been among the last tins of Balkan Sobranies imported into the US before the Yugoslav civil war destroyed the factory.
I loaded all this on the back of my mountain bike and sprung this on the class, insisting that we had to consume all the beer and smoke all the ‘baccy in the three hours set aside for the class. J. P. was not happy with me and gave me an additional assignment to make up for the drunken debacle class that day was transformed into, and he explicitly enforced a no-booze policy on these classes after that day. But he certainly had his share of the goods I brought that day and there is no question in my mind that our relationship was deepened and cemented that day.
J. P., you were a good man; a hardworking, insightful artist; and a thoughtful, challenging, at times baffling but always deeply engaged teacher. My world is richer for having you in it, and I owe you more than can be told for your role as my mentor and as a contributor to the alternative culture of my hometown. R.I.P.
Tacos
Los Taco Trucks Unitos, via Seattlest. Useful!
Boozocracy
Boozocracy, partiallly the product of one Editor B. I’ll drink to that!
Jarts!
Bocces was fun, but of course Jarts came up, as we had two toddlers running around. eBay came up empty, but it seems they can be had!
Hoosier Boom – or bust?
Eric notes Counterpunch: “Will they bomb Bedford?” I will contact my conspiratorial Bedford FVW friends to see what they think.
SLC news sources credit the ever-muckracking CJ with the story.
Bocce!
After an intensive round of googlizing and calling local retailers, I was able to locate a bocce set for sale today, and thus will spend this evening cooking and eating hot dogs, apple pie, and root beer floats to the soothing accompaniment of the klonk of lawn bowls. I was briefly introduced to this sport one blazing September afternoon over ten years ago in Bloomington, Indiana, at the pre-New orleans home of Bart and XY.
And may I say how am excited to see my old pal Kenneth Goldstein this week for an evening? Very well then: very. Sometimes the right friend just finds you.