Apple and Google apparently don’t need me anymore


I’ve been a Mac user and Apple fan for many years.

My first Mac, a Macintosh Classic, won me over with its simple, intuitive user interface, and its compact, all-in-one package, and my most recent, a 12-inch Powerbook G4, has been the perfect notebook for me.

All along the way, I’ve drooled over the new releases, loved Apple’s sleek, modern design sense, bought an iPod Touch, coveted the freedom of the iPhone, and I always agreed with friends who would say that the best anti-virus software ever created is OS X.

But then, in June of 2008, it was revealed that the then-upcoming newest release of OS X, Snow Leopard, and therefore all subsequent updates, would only work on the new generation of Macs with Intel processors.

Apple essentially gave my Powerbook a death sentence.

And now, adding considerable insult to injury, Google, whose search, Gmail, and Docs products I use every day, has offered up a long-awaited Beta version of its Chrome browser for Macs…

…BUT, it only works on Intel Macs.

My Powerbook is five years old and starting to show its age and act funny.

A new aluminum MacBook Pro, which I’ve been longing for, would cost me $1,200 minimum.

It’s getting harder and harder to justify going there when I could get a decent laptop and a free copy of Ubuntu for half the money.

Apple? Google? Are you listening? Do you care?


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Six Degrees of Cameron Crowe

almost famous
Well, it’s that time of year and journalists are writing their reflection pieces, covering the best and worst that 2009 had to offer. (Pitchfork is a good example, with their lists of best songs, albums, and videos, and worst album covers.)

But we’re also, according to the media (post refuting this claim soon to follow), at the end of the first decade of the 21st Century, and yesterday I came across a curious cross-reference: Rolling Stone magazine has published their Best Music of the Decade, Salon is doing a series called Films of the Decade, and R.J. Cutler writes about how one of the Films of the Decade, former Rolling Stone writer Cameron Crowe’s autobiographical Almost Famous from 2000, was not only about Cameron Crowe, it was about R.J. Cutler as well.

Well, what Cameron Crowe and R.J. Cutler both don’t realize is that Almost Famous was actually about me.

I’ll explain.

There’s a scene near the beginning of the film, when young William Miller’s older sister, Anita, leaves home (cue Sgt. Pepper, Track 6), after a quintessential late-1960s culture gap conflict with their overbearing mother. William is Crowe at 11 years of age, and right before Anita gets in the car to leave, she whispers in his ear, “Look under your bed. It’ll set you free.”

That evening, William locks the door of his room, reaches under his bed, and finds a stash of records that Anita had left for him. He flips through them, and we see some of the greatest albums of the era, albums that exemplified a time of revolutionary music, film, art, politics, and culture, and as he’s flipping through he comes to an album by The Who, where he finds a note from Anita that reads, “Listen to Tommy with a candle burning and you will see your entire future.”

William lights a candle, places Tommy on his turntable, and as he drops the needle on the vinyl the spacey glory of the song Sparks fills the room, a song from an album, a rock opera, that was an allegory for the kind of consciousness breakthrough that so many experienced at that time, a consciousness breakthrough that Anita obviously experienced, and one that, as we see in the next scene, a jump forward in time of 4 years, William has experienced, as is evident by his obsessive doodling of rock band logos on his school notebook.

Now, while some of the details were different – my older sister didn’t leave because of a conflict with my parents, she left our home in New Jersey to attend the University of Georgia; she didn’t leave me her albums, I stole some of them from her; I didn’t become a writer for Rolling Stone or Salon, I write a blog – Tommy WAS one of the albums I got from my sister, and it did blow my mind and set me free, and I too would eventually obsessively doodle the logos of my favorite rock bands on the brown shopping bag covers on my text books in school.

Just the other night, I was at Bellingham’s great local bookstore, Village Books, where I invariably end up spending some of my time browsing the titles in the music section. I came across a biography of Led Zeppelin that I’d never seen before, Mick Wall’s When Giants Walked The Earth, and as I thumbed through the pages and looked at the photos, I was instantly taken back to my childhood, feeling that amazing sense of awe and wonder that the music of that time evoked, and an unwelcome voice in my head said, “When the HELL are you going to grow up?!”

Then a competing voice said, “Your 45-years old, happily married, the father of an incredible 12-year old son, you work at a university, play guitar and sing in a band, and you write a blog.”

If that’s not growing up, well then, I hope to God I never do.

The love and hate of Christmas

xmas tree
Let me tell you a dirty little secret that you’ve probably already heard from someone else who was raised Jewish:

Jews, including me, LOVE Christmas.

Not all of us will admit it, and many of us have actually convinced ourselves that, far from loving it, we HATE Christmas for typical woe-is-us-the-constantly-oppressed reasons: Christmas is everywhere; it’s assumed that everyone celebrates it; it’s all a materialistic orgy; it’s a right-wing conspiracy to Christianize America; it forces us to eat Chinese food and go to movie theaters when everyone else is eating ham, drinking egg nog, and giving presents to each other; Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, and Bob Dylan are Jews, so what are they doing recording Christmas albums?… etc.

My love of Christmas started with a perfect storm of holiday TV specials and next-door neighbors who, year after year, celebrated with quintessence. My best friend lived next door, we did everything together, and so I helped put the lights on the house and helped decorate their tree, every year until they moved to Cleveland the summer before I started high school.

I knew all the lyrics to all of the Christmas songs and carols, and I would have worn a Santa hat everyday if I owned one.

Then, one year, we took the train into Manhattan, as we’d done many times before, but this time it was Christmastime, and we walked down 5th Avenue, past all the famously decorated shop windows, we went to Rockefeller Center (pictured here) and beheld the most magnificent sight, the biggest Christmas tree ever, towering over the most idyllic skating rink you could imagine, we ate hot roasted chestnuts from a street vendor, we walked into St. Patrick’s Cathedral, which was all decorated out and a choir was singing Christmas songs…

…it was absolutely magical!

Meanwhile, in our home, we did a very strange thing. My parents, obviously, didn’t want me and my two sisters to feel totally left out of the season, so along with lighting the menorah, reciting the blessings, eating latkes, and playing dreidel on Chanukah, my dad would read us “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas” on Christmas Eve, and in the morning, in our living room, there’d be presents laid out…

…not under a tree, but on and around our coffee table. No Christmas decorations anywhere else in the house, but the gifts were all wrapped in traditional Christmas wrapping paper.

It was confusing to say the least, but we got presents, so who were we to complain? Am I right?

Still, I wanted a tree SO badly. And one year I did a completely crazy thing.

We lived across the street from the elementary school I went to, and the school had this big, flat lawn in front of it that was perfect for playing football on…

…except for that small tree growing right smack dab in the middle.

We had all sorts of collisions with the damned tree, going long for a pass and suddenly not going anywhere but down to the ground, hard, as the ball soared overhead.

It wasn’t my fault that this tree just happened to be an evergreen, with a distinctly Christmas tree shape to it, and so one winter’s night a couple of weeks before the holiday, my friend and I sneaked across the street with a pruning saw, we ran from bush to bush on the way, and then we crawled, soldier-like, across the frozen lawn, and once at the tree we cut it down as quickly as we could and ran, dragging it across the street. It eventually ended up in our basement, where we were confronted with the fatal flaw of our plan. We had no idea what to do next.

Needless to say, it ended badly. I tried some good old-fashioned Jewish guilt tactics, telling my parents that it was all their fault because they wouldn’t let us have a tree of our own, but that didn’t work. I don’t really remember the punishment, but I do remember feeling a little bad about having killed that tree, and justice was ultimately served, as we ended up tripping over the stump we’d left just about as often as we’d collided with the tree, during our epic half-time football games in those often bitter cold New Jersey winters.

Space should make us humble

hexagon
See this photo? Does anyone want to guess what that is?

Ok, so, the photo was taken by the Cassini spacecraft, and it shows a jet stream that flows around the northern pole of Saturn…

…which, by the way, happens to be in the shape of a hexagon.

A total fluke you say? Perhaps some glitch with the camera?

Nope.

Oh, but surely the jet stream made that shape momentarily, and, as jet streams in Earth’s atmosphere do, returned to constant meandering like this:

…shortly after the photo was taken, right?

Nope.

The last visible-light images of the entire hexagon were captured by NASA’s Voyager spacecraft nearly 30 years ago, the last time spring began on Saturn. After the sunlight faded, darkness shrouded the north pole for 15 years. Much to the delight and bafflement of Cassini scientists, the location and shape of the hexagon in the latest images match up with what they saw in the Voyager pictures.

“The longevity of the hexagon makes this something special, given that weather on Earth lasts on the order of weeks,” said Kunio Sayanagi, a Cassini imaging team associate at the California Institute of Technology.

About a month ago, humans got all cocky because we confirmed that there was ice on the moon by essentially dropping bombs on our pie in the sky and analyzing the lunar material kicked up by the impact.

A month before that astronomers reported that they’d discovered 32 new planets outside of our solar system, bragging about their technology and knowledge.

Let’s face it. Stuff like the Saturn hexagon is a big fat reminder of just how tiny we are amidst the vastness of an infinitely complex universe. I’m not saying that we should view astronomy and space exploration as beyond our grasp, that the mysteries of the universe are ultimately beyond our understanding and so we should just give up.

But, I am saying that we should maintain a degree of humility as we continue to explore. Humans don’t have a great track record in this area. We have, rather, a long, bloody history of conquest thinly veiled as exploration, sticking flags in the ground wherever we want.

We should be willing to say we’re wrong when we’re wrong. We should, most of all, not conduct ourselves as if we have ownership over all we survey. After all, we wouldn’t want extraterrestrials treating us like that.

Would we?


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Video Fridays: Portishead-Amnesty International


As I mentioned in a post about Death Cab For Cutie, I was late to their party, having not discovered their music until 10 years after they’d formed.

Well, this is a pattern for me in my mid-adult life. The same happened with Radiohead, and the same thing may have just happened for another “head” band, Portishead, whose first album, Dummy came out in 1994.

The only song of theirs that I was even vaguely familiar with was Glory Box from Dummy, but then yesterday I stumbled on a brand new Portishead video, promoting a new song they’ve donated to the ever-worthy folks at Amnesty International (AI). Join AI and you get the track for free, or download it at 7digital and all earnings going to AI.

After watching Chase The Tear, I ended up spending an hour watching Portishead videos on YouTube, and I must say that I’m intrigued. While it’s odd to watch them in this video, as one member spends more time fiddling with knobs on machines I don’t even recognize than playing a guitar, I can’t help feeling and getting into the groove. It actually reminds me of stuff from that other “head” band’s last record In Rainbows, which I like when I’m in a moody-mellow state of mind.

And now, without further ado, this week’s Video Fridays entry: