Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Beethoven Opus 111

I'm am just crazy about the last 3 piano sonatas of Beethoven.  Last year, Opus 109 consoled me in mourning.  Then, as I listened more to Opus 111, it pierced my soul as much as the other solo piano works I love (Schumann Opus 13, Schumann Opus 17, Brahms Opus 24, Brahms Opus 118, Nr 2, Chopin Barcarolle).  There is a part in the last movement that sounds jazzy.  This is followed by a part that just blows me away -- trills and chords together.  I have a DVD of Kocsis playing this sonata and it makes you appreciate how hard it is to play.  Wow.  Today, Bruce Hungerford's recording of it arrived from Passionato.  I like it.  I also like Pollini.  For sheer beauty of sound, Simone Dinnerstein is unbeatable.  This is why so many regard Beethoven as the greatest of them all.  Click here for some insights on Hungerford's Beethoven.

Lego Mindstorms NXT 2.0

I got another set of Lego Mindstorms NXT 2.0 today.  Their uncle bought them one for Christmas in 2010 I believe.  This should keep the kids busy!

It uses a version of Labview to program the bots:


If you want to do something sort of like this, Scratch is free and pretty fun.  You can also program your Android phone with AppInventor.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Opera - I think I'm going to get hooked

In this era of DVD, I finally am taking to opera.  In the DG 111 box I have, there are several operas which I have yet to view
  • Der Rosenkavalier (Kleiber)
  • Carmen (Karajan)
  • Don Giovanni (Furtwängler)
  • La Traviata (Barenboim)
I watched the DVD of Rigoletto (McVicar production) I have and I quite like it.  The most famous tune is at the start of the third act. I have another McVicar production on the way - Manon and I'm looking forward to listening to Natalie Dessay's singing.


HP Parallel Print Server Workaround

Every time I reinstall Windows, I have to setup the printers again.  I have a 3 port HP Parallel Print Server I got off Kijiji with an IBM Network Printer 12.  In order to be able setup the printers on the print server, I had to first install the printer and set the port to File:.  With Windows 7, you have to wait quite a while as Windows update builds the list of printers.  Once the printer is installed locally as printing to File:, you can run the HP Network Printer Install program to install the printer as a network printer on the print server.  The local version printing to File: can them be removed.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Music to remember

Today, is one year since my grandmother died.  Music is the language that means the most to me.  I started the day (midnight) by listening to some old standards (by Cole Porter, Hoagy Carmichael, the Gershwins, Rogers and Hart) sung by Linda Ronstadt and Carly Simon.  I had first heard Linda Ronstadt's singing of these old classics on Richard Uuzounian's Say It With Music on CBC Stereo Sunday afternoons when in grad school.  I loved it and bought all three of her CDs (which I later gave to a fellow grad student, Joko, when he returned to Indonesia).  I had bought the 2 CD re-issue ('Round Midnight) to replace the ones I gave him.  When I was in San Francisco for the 1992 December AGU meeting, I walked into a record store and bought LPs Lush Life and For Sentimental Reasons as well as the 3 LP box of 'Round Midnight.  That's how crazy I was about this music!  Lorenz Hart wrote some beautiful lyrics.  Some of my favorites are But not for me (Gershwin), Little Girl Blue (Rogers and Hart), It never Entered My Mind (Rogers and Hart), Skylark (Carmichael).



Then I listened to Strauss' Beim Schlafengehen with Lucia Popp.  That was followed with Beethoven's 3 last piano sonatas with Maurizio Pollini.


I borrowed Simone Dinnerstein's CD The Berlin Concert from the library yesterday and listened to it this evening.  She plays Beethoven's Opus 111 much more romantically than Pollini does.  I love the fullness of the recording.  Not too bassy like Kovacevich's newer Diabelli recording.  Very enjoyable indeed.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Clone the drive, can't do a partition copy!

I was trying to move Windows 7 Pro 64-bit from a 250 Gig drive to a 1 terabyte drive that was partitioned.  I used Easus ToDo Backup Free Edition to copy the C: partition from the 250 Gig drive to one of the partitions on the 1 terabyte drive.  To my surprise, the system wouldn't boot with the 1 terabyte drive.  It wouldn't boot with the 250 Gig drive either!  I was really up the creek.  Luckily, the data on the terabyte drive could be read from my Windows 8 computer and I copied the C:\User data over to a partition on my Windows 8 desktop.

I had forgotten that Windows 7 (and 8) have some stuff on another hidden partition!  CRAP!  Lesson learned.  Clone the drives, don't copy partitions over!

I then proceeded to reinstall Windows 7 Pro from scratch.  This might not be a bad thing though.  This particular computer would sometimes not start and I had to shut the power off and try again (and select boot as normal instead of startup repair which did nothing).  So after several hours with all Windows updates and Windows 7 SP1 installed, I cloned the 1 terabyte drive back to the old 250 Gig drive and then disconnected the 1 terabyte drive to check if the system would boot with the 250 gig drive.  Success!  The 250 Gig drive will now be disconnected and the 1 terabyte drive reconnected.  The 250 gig drive will be my basic Windows 7 Pro backup in case I ever have problems.  My system is now upgraded with a 1 terabyte hard drive.  Now to install all the software back!

Friday, February 8, 2013

Classic Shell causing problems with Windows 8

The Lenovo X220 Core i7 notebook my kid has would not let him login as a standard user.  After some fruitless searches about Windows All user install agent, I decided to uninstall Classic Shell.  After a reboot, his account was now able to be logged in.  I had installed Classic Shell to make the Windows 8 look more like standard Windows with a Start Button.  Oh well, back to plain new Windows 8.


How blind are our energy analysts?

I came upon an article last week that indicated that the significance of the Nexen takeover by CNOOC was China's access to fracking technology.  This morning, I decided to try to find that article.  I couldn't, but I found these:

Having seen my homeland's economy hollowed out by short sighted business leaders (such as those who run Acer, Asus and other Taiwanese companies).  They were pivotal in developing China's IT industry by shifting production to China from Taiwan.  It is rather sad that Canada is following in the same path.  How the heck would there ever be a need for the Northern Gateway pipeline if China can now develop, with western know-how, their vast shale oil reserves?  What of the geopolitical fallout for America in the western Pacific if energy poor democracies such as Korea and Japan are beholden to the People's Republic of China (PRC)?  Is that why the PRC has been so brazen (along with the misguided Kuomingtang-led Taiwan) in the Senkaku Islands dispute with Japan?

When will we learn?