Sunday, July 29, 2007
More thoughts...
Well, while the NTFS driver will help a lot, I also have a number of things on an 80gb hard-drive that the operating system goes on. I am thinking at some point of getting an external drive and doing the transfer that way. I now think there needs to be more thought put into this before I go ahead and proceed.
Friday, July 27, 2007
Happenings...
After much deliberation, I have decided to make an attempt at using Ubuntu as my exclusive operating system. I believe today I will try to make the migration over to it.
The reason for this decision is that Ubuntu has drivers now that can read NTFS (Windows main file system) partitions and drives. I have my back-up/storage 160gb drive completely filled with stuff that I like to listen to and watch and it is in an NTFS format. It is really the last thing holding me to Windows at all.
The drivers for NTFS and FAT32 are here.
More to come.
The reason for this decision is that Ubuntu has drivers now that can read NTFS (Windows main file system) partitions and drives. I have my back-up/storage 160gb drive completely filled with stuff that I like to listen to and watch and it is in an NTFS format. It is really the last thing holding me to Windows at all.
The drivers for NTFS and FAT32 are here.
More to come.
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Nine swords...
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Friday, July 13, 2007
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Monday, July 02, 2007
TF Bias...
Yes. I am a die-hard Transformers fan. I grew up with them. It was Optimus Prime who shaped my morals and beliefs at the age of four and five and some of that has stuck with me as geeky as it sounds. What is funny about it is that when I watch the show now, much of the magic is gone. It is hard as an adult to get past the finger smudges, animator hair, and plain old mess-ups that made the original cartoon. It is, however, a classic and is still my favorite show.

Tonight, I saw the new movie Transformers. Before I give my unbiased review of it, I would like to say a few things. Firstly, there are Transformers fans that will tell you that the movie is ridiculous because there is very little that coincides with the original cartoon. I would like to point out that this is not true. There is much of the movie that does coincide with the original and tries to stick to what it can. I say "what it can" because the cartoon was a myriad of logical issues and stupid mistakes. So, as a movie producer, do you stick to many of those mistakes or do you try to salvage what you can? I think the answer here is clear based on the fact that the movie is made to make money.
Secondly, I do think the movie addressed the main issue of taking the franchise seriously. This wasn't a child's movie. It was directed towards my generation as it should have been. That, in my mind, is a huge victory.
Thirdly, there was a complaint that many of the famed robots were missing from the movie. Yes. This is true. But, this is a re-invention of the franchise. Again, we already have the original Transformers Movie to look to for all the hard-core non-deviation. This, like Batman Begins, is a retelling of a story from the beginning, only this time, it makes more sense.
I loved this movie. It was exactly what I was hoping for and delivered in every way.
Now for the unbiased section. The effects were amazing, the robots were put together beautifully, and while it took some time to get to the good stuff, the movie is act one in at least a three act play. Like my opinion of Batman Begins, I will always deal with less action if there is character development happening. That being said, every other scene in this movie was action, and artfully done action. The story was lacking. This is to be expected in a Michael Bay film. He has always opted for basic story and epic action. This was no different. I didn't mind seeing as the focus should be on massive robots fighting. All-in-all, it was good and I look forward to the sequel.
Remember, "Freedom is the right of all sentient beings."

Tonight, I saw the new movie Transformers. Before I give my unbiased review of it, I would like to say a few things. Firstly, there are Transformers fans that will tell you that the movie is ridiculous because there is very little that coincides with the original cartoon. I would like to point out that this is not true. There is much of the movie that does coincide with the original and tries to stick to what it can. I say "what it can" because the cartoon was a myriad of logical issues and stupid mistakes. So, as a movie producer, do you stick to many of those mistakes or do you try to salvage what you can? I think the answer here is clear based on the fact that the movie is made to make money.
Secondly, I do think the movie addressed the main issue of taking the franchise seriously. This wasn't a child's movie. It was directed towards my generation as it should have been. That, in my mind, is a huge victory.
Thirdly, there was a complaint that many of the famed robots were missing from the movie. Yes. This is true. But, this is a re-invention of the franchise. Again, we already have the original Transformers Movie to look to for all the hard-core non-deviation. This, like Batman Begins, is a retelling of a story from the beginning, only this time, it makes more sense.
I loved this movie. It was exactly what I was hoping for and delivered in every way.
Now for the unbiased section. The effects were amazing, the robots were put together beautifully, and while it took some time to get to the good stuff, the movie is act one in at least a three act play. Like my opinion of Batman Begins, I will always deal with less action if there is character development happening. That being said, every other scene in this movie was action, and artfully done action. The story was lacking. This is to be expected in a Michael Bay film. He has always opted for basic story and epic action. This was no different. I didn't mind seeing as the focus should be on massive robots fighting. All-in-all, it was good and I look forward to the sequel.
Remember, "Freedom is the right of all sentient beings."
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