Speed Reading Links

Speed Reading Links

While searching Music Speed Reading to help my brother I came across a few pages:

Speed reading software, articles and tips (Ababasoft) – has lots of background info on speed reading plus flash games to help you develop your skills. There are lots of them, there is even a speed reading metronome. The site also has a lot of flash games to learn music theory. Great site.

RocketReader – An aussie product which is an end to end speed reading and comprehension tool. Looks good – a little pricey ($99 AUD).

There were other relevant tools (mainly screenreaders) at this site where I came across the above two links.

Strengthening Archilles Heel

http://kbserver.netgear.com/kb_web_files/n101496.asp

The Netgear WGT634U router has been giving me connection woes of late. I’ve had to hard reboot it a few times before any client machine could connect wirelessly. Given I want to run some permanent services on my desktop, I want to swap it around with my Linksys WRT54G.

I thought I found my answer until I realised that making the WGT634U an access point, would not make it a client.

The ToNot plan I had:

  1. Backup existing router settings.
  2. Reflash the Linksys back to its original firmware (from OpenWRT)
  3. Follow the instructions at the Netgear support page to turn the WGT into an access point. I learnt this was possible for the WGT634U thanks to this support post.
  4. Connect the Linksys to the DSL Modem (via WAN port) and configure to connect to internet. Set it as 192.168.1.1, turn on DHCP. Pick a new SSID to reflect this new networks config.
  5. With the WGT634U having DHCP off and a different SSID to the one above per Netgears instruction
  6. Hope I can still connect – its not going to work. How will the Netgear know to connect to the devices on the linksys’s network? If I set the SSID’s to be the same, then that is relying on wirelessly bridging which is what I’ve already tried. I need the netgear to work in a wireless client which requires OpenWRT/OpenWGT
  7. Also Hope that I can get 108Mbps transfer when my 108Mbps wireless NIC talks to the WGT634U.

An alternate plan comes to mind

  1. Sell the WGT634U

BBC – Programme Catalogue

http://open.bbc.co.uk/catalogue/infax

The BBC have launched an “EXPERIMENTAL PROTOTYPE” of their broadcast catalog on the interweb. You can go and view what shows they have broadcast and go into news stories and other information. You can even see what was on the TV/Radio on your birthday (maybe more relevant if you are a UK resident but still interesting methinks – just change the link to reflect your birthday yyyy/m/d). Go and see when Monty Python was first aired. I learnt that on my birthday, BBC Radio did an adaption of a star wars movie for radio. Can you imagine that: “And then 3CPO displayed a hologram of princess Leia.”

Eventually they hope to digitise all their shows and release them for download either for a fee but with the intent of a big chunk being mostly free. I’ll hardly want to watch real telly again.

CVSNT server

http://web.telia.com/~u86216121/ViewCvsSetup.html

I have had a CVSNT running on my desktop for some time now. Recently with more group assignments occuring at Uni, I decided to open this up to the rest of the world (well just the 3 other people that I’m participating in an assignment with)

Considerations for whether it is worth running a CVS server included the fact that the Uni firewall may infact block the relevant ports, so I looked at a way to publish the CVS project contents to the web.

The ViewCVS package contains a mini-webserver and allows users to browse a repository and download its files via FTP. To install and get this to work on a windows box with IIS can be a bit fidly but a Bo Berglund wrote an installer and has placed instructions here on how to set this up.

Bo also has another CVSNT getting started page which has links to a variety of CVS related info (books, tutorials and other software). Great if you are just starting out in CVS. I’ve came across those links before and was going to publish them seperately until I realised that Bo had bet me to it.

Edit: Some links just so you can concentrate your reading.

10,000 Days First Listen

http://toolband.com/

So after lining up for the midnight release (and boy was there a line) I finally got the latest installment of the Tool saga.

I’ve only had one listen end to end and tried to absorb as best I can. This release is more layered than previous, mixing in the rocky tunes of Aenima/Undertow with the abstraction/new direction that Lateralus achieved. Its a refinement more than a new sound but thats not a bad thing.

There is much going on at once, I felt throughout listening that I was listening to a Pink Floyd type record, long tracks, interesting segments/interludes, it is definetely a great journey end to end.

The vocals were a bit softer, but this give all 4 contributers the chance to equal out the record. I’d kinda say it is a bit harder to listen to (in terms of seeking imagery and meaning) simply because there is so much to it. I’m used to the vocals making (the understanding of) a Tool song for me, but at the same time realising that on 10,000 Days, everything appears to be on more equal footing and it really does work. (and perhaps that I should learn more musical understanding to fully appreciate the process behind that work.)

Once I’ve listened a few times, I’m sure the tapestry will start to make itself more accessible. There is so much to it, where do you start? How do you do justice to it all? Will you get to take it all in? Have you ever taken everything in from the previous records?

Just like one of the punters collecting the CD last night said “See you all in another 6 years”, I think in this case, most easily, Tool have bought their time well. Whether it will take you a shorter or longer period than the last to digest, this one feels much more intense – time will tell whether it is a bright spark that will die out the quickest or whether the tapestry will keep us enthralled/imaginative/appreciative/understanding/content until the next record (I know its the later, my pesimism feels the need to state the former though)

If I could state a favourite bit (with such a limited listening behind me), I would have to say its in the middle of 10,000 Days. There is a music change and Maynard roars about going to the gates (of the heaven/holy trinity?) to take back/give back what they have deserved for their injustices. That part just blew me out of the water, the endorphins kicked in for sure, I was awake, in total ecstasy and thinking my god, this is the shit.

I heard the Triple J interview yesterday where Maynard was talking about their song writing process (again) and he mentioned about how the songs are refined from the jams, they collect the bits where their hairs stand on end and work backwards to find the emotion that created it. I can understand and attest that without any assistance or external provacation, that this record does that. I can only imagine (and will experience over the course of digesting this record in the next few years) that there are a billion more of these moments hidden within and I can’t wait.

Half the time I was in a self induced hypnosis while listening to this record. Perhaps I’m older, less intelligent, have the flu, but it is really something that you need to digest – chew your food before you swallow – perhaps its the fact I’ve got these hypnosis techniques under my belt – my brain didn’t take it all in at once – or rather, my awake consious didn’t take it in – my subconscious was busy experiencing it. My endorphins worn out (is that possible?), my mind taking part in recreational neuroscience and the mental gymnasium has ripped my brain muscle and is craving more work with the new Tool machine.

Somewhere in this blog, I should mention the packaging. Tool have found a way to make a CD case into a viewmaster. Google around for some images and you’ll see what I mean. The 3d imagery is fun to watch. I’m trying to see the meaning of the images standalone without trying to integrate their position within the record, again so much to take in…

These are only my first comments and I’m sure much will be revealed and change in the future. Don’t flame me if you don’t agree, I’m sure we’ll have moments when we see I to eye or we are like ships passing each other on the wrong side. For now I’m just “thank god you are here”, the reason which gave Tool the motion to make this record and “thank god you are here” that there is another soul experiencing this too.

O.H.M.

http://myspace.com/ohmtribute

Before Opus Dai, there was O.H.M.

They consisted of almost the same lineup with an extra female vocalist. There songs are still just as great. They made a video for Sora – personally I like the newer Opus Dai version better but still worth checking out.

They’ve done a cover of Tool’s Bottom, which if you are really eager, can buy from amazon here – appears on yet another tool tribute cd. To hear the vocals of Opus Dai infused into a great Tool track is a humbling listen.

OperaHistoryComponent for Google Desktop Search and Opera 9

If you are using this plugin to keep track of your browsing history in the Opera 9 pre-release you’ll need to change a registry key to point to the location where 9TP2 stores its profile (slightly different to the default)

Its mentioned in the release notes and readme but it doesnt tell you where the key is:

HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareOpera History Component

There are two values in this tree you have to change

BookmarksLocation:

set to your documents and settings folderyour usernameApplication DataOperaopera9TP2 (yours may vary)profileopera6.adr

HistoryLocation: set to

your documents and settings folderyour usernameApplication DataOperaopera9TP2 (yours may vary)profileglobal.dat

… and so we have learnt

http://www.10000-days.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=663&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=15

Music Distributors have become ofay with the use of the internet. Where it is not practical to send a courier of a new release to a radio station, they release a wav file on a supposedly hidden part of their webspace.

After someone has discovered Vicarious here on the Zomba Label Group site, I’m sure the record companies will tighten up their net security and distribution in future. (maybe a VPN, maybe an encrypted download first with a key released on the actual date to decrypt said file – ala Steam distribution for Half Life 2)

But I guess we all learnt a lesson today. Well no, just the record companies did. Tool fans simply get the next installment of their Tool lives a few days earlier than expected.

Whoever is paying for Zomba’s bandwidth will have kittens.

Edit: Please, please, please get the wav file over the MP3. Due to the compression the MP3 does, the vocals come out much softer, and like most of my lossy rips of existing tool stuff, some drums get muted down. Its the little things that contribute to the experience and I can strongly recommend getting the WAV version. Suck it up, its big but its also a few days before the radio release and even then the streaming / broadcast quality won’t be as good as the rips. This song is growing on me much faster than schism did, I definetely didn’t think I’d say that 3 hours ago.