This blog journals Ed's life. Follow him as he struggles through fatherhood, his work, insomnia and his addiction to coffee.
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Derailed
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Books, Books, Books
Lately, I've been doing all of my reading on ebooks. In the last three months or so I've been able to finish some seven or eight books. Most of my reading I did on coffee breaks or at night before going to sleep. Breaks are convenient for guerilla reading - LOL. And since I have the eBooks on my phone, I need not keep the lights on at night and it doesn't bother my sleeping wife.


So far, I've read mostly spy novels. Actually it's more of a nostalgia trip rather than straightforward interest. See when I was in high-school, I started reading novels. Mostly it was old books from my sister's Hardy Boys collection
and Stephen King Novels
borrowed from a dear old friend. For a time, I was even fixated on George Stark, a character in The Dark Half. But then as I read on, my imagination got the better of me. I had to get away from the scary stuff so I had to stop reading them. Pet Sematary
actually gave me a couple of weeks worth of nightmares.
During my college years, things took on complications. I had 2 sets of friends, one group around my age and another 10-15 years older than I was. It was from the younger set that I got the cutting edge and 'literary' stuff. I was not uncommon to have copies of Tolkien, the Philippine Collegian, Rolling Stone Magazine, literary reviews and post-grad journals strewn about in the desks of our office. I kept a desk at the school paper, a convenient tambayan. That office really was more of a collective fast-moving informal library than anything else.
From the older guys I got influenced into trying spy and suspense nov

els. The same kind of books my father read. Me and my father were going through a difficult time back then and having a neutral common interest helped my bridge differences. He favored Robert Ludlum
most of all. My older friends on the other hand exposed me to other writers like John Le Carre
, Sidney Sheldon
, Mario Puzo
, Michael Crichton
, Tom Clancy
and James Clavell
.
Fast-forward to the future some ten odd years after I left college and here I am pre-occupied mostly with work, the kids and chores. I barely find time to blog any more and it makes me feel like I'm loosing something. My mind needs to churn, not with random worries, but with good reads to stir the imagination. So it's either I create content or consume it. With the limitations I have on time, I chose to read instead of write. eBooks were perfect because I could load them into my phone and read anywhere. So for the last few months I've managed to read the The Bourne Trilogy (The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy and The Bourne Ultimatum)
. I've also managed to read the first three books of the Covert One Series: The Hades Factor
, The Cassandra Compact
and The Paris Option
. I'm all set to read the last three books of both series but I think I need a break from the spy stuff, as I tweeted yesterday. So I picked up a book I bought a couple of weeks ago. I completely forgot about it, but found it on our bookshelf this morning. I'm going to start reading The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho today. This is going to be one sweet read :-)
From the older guys I got influenced into trying spy and suspense nov
Labels:
Books,
eBooks,
Entertainment,
Hardy Boys,
James Clavell,
John Le Carre,
Mario Puzo,
Michael Crichton,
Paulo Coelho,
Robert Ludlum,
Sidney Sheldon,
Stephen King,
Tolkien,
Tom Clancy
Monday, February 25, 2008
Animatrix Vids
Much to my wife's chagrin, I am a fan of the Matrix movies. By extension, I also like the Animatrix series.Below are the episodes, courtesy of In2TV:
The Second Renaissance, Part I
The Second Renaissance, Part II
Kid's Story
Program
World Record
Beyond
A Detective Story
Matriculated
The Final Flight of The Osiris
The Second Renaissance, Part I
The Second Renaissance, Part II
Kid's Story
Program
World Record
Beyond
A Detective Story
Matriculated
The Final Flight of The Osiris
Thursday, March 1, 2007
Do-It-Yourself Media Center...
I'm itching for another device. The Mediagate MG-35. Three reviews after I see an ad and I'm convinced this would make a great media device for my home. I've been wrestling with storage lately, as three years worth of burned media is starting to pile up. I already have three large CD wallets stealing closet space from my wardrobe. I just bought a fourth one from CDR-King. I'm having second thoughts about storing my music and movies on my PC, since I usually reformat my hard drive regularly. My first thought was to get a NAS, and that idea I've given up on. It would be extra handy if I could carry my storage device around.
Then I see an ad in PC Buyer's Guide for the Mediagate MG-35 and the idea grows on me. I can solve several problems with one device. It's small enough to lug around. It connects to PCs for managing media. It doesn't require MS-Windows to manage that content :-)) It can connect to your LAN, you can use it as network storage (NAS). It can play movies or music on it's own and supports the main plethora of codecs you'll need, including Ogg Vorbis, Divx and Xvid. Its outputs can connect to your TV or stereo. It supports (at max) a 500GB hard drive. This is one flexible device. I want it! There is the question of money, though. Haha... It's a bit too expensive for my means. So I'll have to be content with writing about it and why I want it.
BTW, here are the reviews that I read:
Then I see an ad in PC Buyer's Guide for the Mediagate MG-35 and the idea grows on me. I can solve several problems with one device. It's small enough to lug around. It connects to PCs for managing media. It doesn't require MS-Windows to manage that content :-)) It can connect to your LAN, you can use it as network storage (NAS). It can play movies or music on it's own and supports the main plethora of codecs you'll need, including Ogg Vorbis, Divx and Xvid. Its outputs can connect to your TV or stereo. It supports (at max) a 500GB hard drive. This is one flexible device. I want it! There is the question of money, though. Haha... It's a bit too expensive for my means. So I'll have to be content with writing about it and why I want it.
BTW, here are the reviews that I read:
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