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It has been nearly four years since Roger Ebert lost his lower jaw and his ability to speak. Now television’s most famous movie critic is rarely seen and never heard, but his words have never stopped.

By: Chris Jones

Nearly four years ago, Roger Ebert lost his ability to talk, to drink, and to eat. But, as this interview shows, he has never seemed more alive.

Read More at Roger Ebert’s Journal >>

For the 281st time in the last ten months Roger Ebert is sitting down to watch a movie in the Lake Street Screening Room, on the sixteenth floor of what used to pass for a skyscraper in the Loop. Ebert’s been coming to it for nearly thirty years, along with the rest of Chicago’s increasingly venerable collection of movie critics. More than a dozen of them are here this afternoon, sitting together in the dark. Some of them look as though they plan on camping out, with their coats, blankets, lunches, and laptops spread out on the seats around them.

The critics might watch three or four movies in a single day, and they have rules and rituals along with their lunches to make it through. The small, fabric-walled room has forty-nine purple seats in it; Ebert always occupies the aisle seat in the last row, closest to the door. His wife, Chaz, in her capacity as vice-president of the Ebert Company, sits two seats over, closer to the middle, next to a little table. She’s sitting there now, drinking from a tall paper cup. Michael Phillips, Ebert’s bearded, bespectacled replacement on At the Movies, is on the other side of the room, one row down. The guy who used to write under the name Capone for Ain’t It Cool News leans against the far wall. Jonathan Rosenbaum and Peter Sobczynski, dressed in black, are down front.

“Too close for me,” Ebert writes in his small spiral notebook. Read the rest of this entry »





The unveiling of the iPad today was an exciting event, and the new "tablet" promises to be an "it" gadget, just like its Apple predecessors. And, Steve Jobs is the consummate pitchman. I looked at a live-blogging record of the event and copied all his superlatives.

Taken right from the quotes:

a truly magical and revolutionary new product
it’s phenomenal
It’s an incredible experience
It’s a dream to type on
it’s a wonderful way to share your photos
an awesome way to enjoy your music collection
Using this thing is remarkable
It’s that simple
This is gorgeous
gorgeous keyboard
It’s really wonderful
It all works!
it screams
remarkable device
It’s remarkable
We’re really excited
unbelievably beautiful
captures the essence of a newspaper
We’re incredibly psyched
We’re incredibly excited
“Isn’t that awesome
People are going to go crazy
I’m very excited about this
something very exciting
we’ve done some amazing and remarkable work
how amazing this software is
immense potential
We’ve got a real breakthrough here
We think it’s a phenomenal offering
Email is fantastic. Great for enjoying your music collection. Video is phenomenal.
thrilled to announce
some great accessories as well
a really nice case
It just feels right!

Posted via email from splats

Our home is nearly 30 years old. We’ve done a lot of upgrading inside and out back. But the front yard badly needed some work, and we wanted to eliminate the lawn to reduce water use (and maintenance!) It now looks established, but with some enhancements. Take a minute to view it and let us know what you think in the comments.

 

Xeriscape Makeover from steve on Vimeo.

Posted via web from splats

Patti!

Ooo, what hilites in her hair! Shopping before Christmas.

Posted via web from splats

A best for me, I went on a 32-mile ride on the bike. The full 42-mile route includes a 10-mile light-rail ride from my office in downtown phoenix to Tempe Town Lake. But, the rest, starting from home, was a pedal.

Posted via web from splats

New Chimes

New chimes as a gift from Patti on a rainy, blustery day. 12/22/09

gulp!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqC2URQstz4

Don't get me wrong: I love my iPhone and you'd have to pry it out of my cold, dead hands to give me a new phone, right now anyway (lots of new smart-phones coming out, and I could change my mind in the future). And, I may make it sound very annoying, but it's not so much.

But, the iPhone is a VERY smart phone and a lot of power for the money, and it's a lot of money (well, only $200 for the less-memory model). But, you're locked in with AT&T for a 2 year contract, plus the extra $30 for the iphone data package…and, only AT&T has the iPhone right now, so you'd have to be able to change from another phone company if you're not with AT&T.

Anyway, I'm just saying unless you're going to use a lot of the iPhone's smart power, you might be better off with a simpler phone, and there's a lot of good ones very similar to the iPhone.

Just a couple of annoyances:

The phone goes into standby mode when not in use. It's still functioning 100% and you can answer an incoming call with a tap of your finger. But, if you want to place a call you have to

  1. press a button to get the screen to light up,
  2. then you have to swipe your finger across the screen to unlock it (even enter a password if you have it set that way)
  3. then, the iPhone has a lot of native "apps", or applications, and the phone function is just one of those apps. So, depending on what app you left active the last time you used it, you have to press the hard "home" button, then possibly press the home button again to get to the icon button for the phone app, or at least tap an icon to launch the phone app,
  4. then press another button to get the number keypad to come up on the screen.

Then, that's the other annoyance: no hard buttons for the keypad, just places to tap on the screen. With pudgy or inaccurate fingers, there's a lot of mistyping (except the dialing keypad… those numbers are large).

But, it is cool to have the visual voice-mail right on the phone to see what new voice messages there are and just tap one to listen to it.

Other than that, you just use iTunes to load music on the phone and other apps from the Apple App Store, some free, some a dollar, some much more. You can also search for and download music and apps over the airwaves right from the phone.

Some of the apps help to take away the frustrations of dialing out, too, by just speaking the name of someone in your contacts (but, you've got to launch THAT app, too!).

That's about it. Again, I wish some things were different, and Apple is improving and updating functions right on the same phone with updates and upgrades thru iTunes. So, none of these issues are deal-killers for me.

****
sagronek_email

Posted via email from splats

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