Archive for June, 2008

Free Piano Sheet Music

I found this wonderful piano sheet music site the other day, and just thought I’d post it here to share with you. This blog is where I got the sheet music for Comptine d’un autre: http://my-piano.blogspot.com/

Enjoy!

Me playing Comptine d’un autre on piano

I posted an animated film with this song in it a couple days ago.. I’ve been hard at work trying to learn it.  Here is the result:


 

 

Locost update - Miata disassembled, build table done..

Well, its been a while since I’ve updated on my Locost build.  First, I will post some text from my locostusa.com log:

 

Posted Jan 25th, 2008:

“Today I bought a donor car, finally. Its a 1991 Miata with 250k miles on it. 100k miles on the engine. What’s really cool about it, is it has a Jackson racing supercharger on it, and full exhaust from the headers back. Of course, I don’t care about the exhaust other than its worth some coin.. I paid $2500 for the, but I think I ought to be able to recoup most of that, especially if I sell the supercharger. 

I’m waiting to start working on the chassis until I totally strip the donor, so that I can measure everything and appropriately decide on my chassis size. 

I also need to sit in eVo-x’s car (book frame) and see how my size-13 feet fit.. From the sound of it, I’ll need to go with a Mcsorely 442, or perhaps the design presented in the Gibbs book, which is a “221″, I believe. We shall see. I would like to go with as small of a frame as I can and still fit. 

Oh, and also, I bought 450 lbs of steel last week.. I know that’s a ton, but I got a good price on it and wanted to get a bunch of everything. The 4′x8′ sheet of 1/8″ (11 gauge) plate weighs 160 lbs! 

My steel list: 

1″SQR tubing, 16GA, 20′ lengths, 9 pieces - $115.56 
3/4″SQR tubing, 16GA, 20′ lengths, 2 pieces - $22.72 
1/2″Round STD (.84″ OD x .109″ Wall) 21′ lengths, 2 pieces - $35.70 
Sheet, 11GA x 4′ x 8′ - $87.62 
Sheet, 16GA x 4′ x 8′ - $52.00 
Cutting Fee - $7.50 
Subtotal - $321.10 
Taxes - $25.69 
Total - $346.79 

Now that I actually have everything I need, I will try to post a bunch of pics this weekend of the garage, the donor car, and the steel.”

 

What I’ve done since then…

Not much, unfortunately.  There was actually a lot more work after pulling the engine and drivetrain to fully disassemble the car.  After I pulled the engine/drivetrain/suspension, I moved the car out into the driveway on moving dollies, where it sat for about a month.  BAD IDEA!  When I went to move the thing back in, I discovered that it was completely and thoroughly infested with ants and a few other kinds of insects.  Ugh!  I spend a couple weekends spraying bug spray all over the thing after I pulled it back in the garage.  I also made sure there were constantly pools of bug killer liquid surrounding the four jackstands, sort of like a moat, so that no insects would escape the miata with their life.

Well, now the bugs are all dead, and the thing is almost entirely disassembled, except for some A/C components and the rear bumper (I didn’t have the courage to remove it at the time, for fear that there were still some ear wigs living inside, but they’re probably dead now).  I’ve yet to sell any of the parts on craigslist, including the shell itself!  Ugh.  Space is definitely one thing I don’t have right now.

 

In other news.. I built a.. build.. table.

I was originally planning on building it with steel, but then I realized how much cheaper wood is.  It actually took me two tries to build the thing to my satisfaction (the first one was done with mails, and imprecisely; this one is very square and held together with screws), but now I have a table that should be able to hold at least 1000 lbs (and is on wheels to boot!).

 

Please forgive my photos linking you to flickr right now.. I’ll try and resolve that soon so that you don’t have to keep going to an external site.

DSCN3095 DSCN3100 DSCN3106 DSCN3105 DSCN3108 DSCN3101 DSCN3124 DSCN3162 DSCN3185 DSCN3156 DSCN3154 DSCN3348 DSCN3349 DSCN3350 IMG_0178 IMG_0181 IMG_0182 IMG_0185

Craigslist Tutorial for everyone!

So.  You have a piano sitting in your dining room that never gets played.  You have a bed that’s tucked away in storage.  You have a car that you need to sell.  You wish desperately that you could easily sell these items without paying someone to display your ad somewhere, but you don’t know what to do!

Paging Mr. Craig on isle 4, Mr. Craig on isle 4, please

Craig’s list, that is.  Craig is a man from San Francisco who decided to make a very simple and free website, called craigslist.org, to allow people in his same town to easily buy and sell just about anything, back in 1995.  Initially, the service was only available for San Francisco (the Bay Area, specifically); however, it has grown to almost every major city in the U.S. nowadays.  The beauty of the service is that it is localized, i.e. the ads you see will be posted by people within a 50 mile radius (give or take) of you, so you can go look at the item before buying.  No more sending money on the internet and then wondering whether your item will actually show up!  Conversely, if you’re selling something, its much nicer to deal with local buyers, rather than to have to worry about shipping something.

Right about now, you’re probably thinking that you don’t know anything about computers, and aren’t comfortable with selling things on the internet, even if it is craigslist.  Wrong!  A few weeks ago, I showed my slightly computer-challenged mother (no offense Mom!) how to post an ad on craigslist.  She was selling a canoe.  Within only 5 hours, the thing had sold!  Oh man, was she hooked!  Since that time, my mom has sold or helped friends sell nearly a dozen things through craigslist!

Good for her, but I’m not your mom, genius.  How are you going to teach me?

I thought you’d never ask.  For your viewing pleasure, I have created a video which goes through all of the steps required to post something on craigslist.  This is just the first in a series of videos I plan on creating about craigslist.. Video #1 is all you really need to post something on craigslist, while the future videos will be tutorials on how to make your ads look nicer, and have more and bigger pictures on them.  

Hope you enjoy! Please leave comments if you think this video rocks, or if you think it sucks, and you want me to do it differently somehow.

 

The most beautiful Piano Music Ever: Comptine D’un Autre Été

This song is from the movie Amélie, which is itself quite a beautiful film. This is my new focus on the piano.. Hopefully I’ll film myself playing this sometime soon.

 

Flickr Fanaticism

I’ve just recently become infatuated with Flickr, in combination with my iPhone. Specifically, there is a third party app called iFlickr that makes uploading pictures from your iPhone a snap (pun intended). For people with a non-jailbroken iPhone, sending a picture to Flickr involves taking a picture, and then emailing it to your Flickr email address. With iFlickr, however, you have a customized Camera application, where upon taking a photo you get the option to “Send to Flickr”. Once you tap this button, within a few moments your picture will be displayed on your Flickr site.

By your powers combined..

Now, combine this coolness with the awesomeness that is WordPress, and a neat little plugin for it made by tantannoodles, and you get something that makes posting pictures on ones blog so streamlined that you may need some aviators goggles. Observe:

TanTan_Flickr

Picture 7

And that’s it!  All you have to do is click on one of your pictures, and it becomes one with your masterful writing.  As you can see, this plugin makes the addition of photos to your blog posts a piece of cake. I’m enthralled by it.

The Face of Computing in 2038

I had to write this for a computer science ethics class. I didn’t really put much time into it, and perhaps at some point I’ll revise it.. but upon rereading it I thought it was pretty good. Here it is for your enjoyment.

            Thirty years from now, computers will be even more ubiquitous than they are presently.  Your clothes will contain computers that monitor and log your vitals; your contact lenses or glasses will contain computer monitors that allow you wireless access to the internet, which may be controlled via the chip implanted in your brain, or perhaps your baseball cap will contain non-invasive sensors to read your thoughts.

            You will no longer have to drive to work; your car will drive itself.  As a result, traffic will become multiple times more efficient, and automobile accident related deaths will reduce dramatically.  Cars will be able to safely travel over 100 miles per hour, thus longer voyages will become far easier to make.

            We will have neural-computer interfaces available to the rich, and virtual reality will take on a whole new meaning.  Applications ranging from training simulations for the military, to virtual (yet very real) meetings with parties half way around the globe come to mind.  This will be another enormous society-changing breakthrough in computing.  Keyboards and mice will be nearly extinct by this time, as the 2d or 3d displays will be directly touchable at the very least, or will be controllable simply by thinking the commands.

            Huge ethical debates will have climaxed or be near it by this time; truly intelligent computers will be on the verge of birth.  It will be possible to modify your baby before he or she is created to make them as intelligent, good looking, strong, and healthy as possible.  Not to mention the power to choose whether they’re a girl or a boy, what color hair and eyes they have, and other such things. 

            Human augmentation by digital means will be available.  Prosthetic limbs and organs will be highly advanced and able to function nearly at the same level, if not at a higher level, compared to the originals.  We may even have electronic devices that  repair and replace certain parts of your brain as they age and die, extending your life by decades.  Perhaps we will have the ability to “download” a humans consciousness on to a computer, thereby giving them eternal life.

            The possibilities are endlessly terrifying and exciting simultaneously.  We humans are obviously thrill-seekers, as a group, and so our technological advancement will continue at an ever faster pace.  It is difficult to predict exactly what the next five years will bring, let alone the next thirty years.. but one thing is for certain: Thirty years from now, the face of computing will be almost unrecognizable to consumers of the present.