Yearly Archives: 2008

Netflix adds Instant Queue. Yay!

I logged onto Netflix today to watch a video while filing some papers at my desk. I was delighted to see a new feature: Add to Instant Queue.

Add to Instant Queue

I’d noticed several movies or television programs I thought I’d like to watch instantly, but never remembered them when I sat down to actually watch something on Netflix. This feature will be very handy.

It looks like they’ve already added the list of movies I had in my rental queue to my instant queue (and kept them in the rental queue as well).

Netflix is always coming up with good ideas to make life a little easier.

Tabs – two queues

Now I’m wondering how easy it is going to be when we can instantly watch programs via my son’s XBox 360 — if that is really going to ever happen.

Sound bites from the early 70’s

My constant companion, RQ-209s, captured many [seemingly] important as well as unimportant audio moments in the 1970’s. Below are a few. The tape must have been damaged, because every so often the sound was erased. Perhaps it was too close to a magnet or maybe it is just age.

The first part of the tape was a TV weather broadcast. I didn’t know why I would record a weatherman talking, but then remembered that in junior high we had a visit from one of the weathermen on a local TV station. I recorded his mention of the visit. (Kimball Tigers)

It’s interesting hearing this voice from nearly 40 years ago. Voices seemed different then. More full perhaps.

Listen to an unknown weatherman from nineteen seventy-something.
[audio:weather_kimball_mention.mp3]

And here I am playing Silent Night [poorly] on my green electric organ.
[audio:organ_silent_night.mp3]

Here is a card game. I think my dad was losing and being nasty about it, but it is hard to understand in many spots. It’s neat hearing my Aunt Ginny and grandparents. I wonder if anyone knew they were being taped.
[audio:playing_cards.mp3]

I like this one – Kevin comes in from outside and I taunt him. I threaten him, but we end up laughing. I think he has another friend in the house too. The cat also has a word or two to say.
[audio:kevin_dona_playing.mp3]

This next sound bite is part of a call-in radio broadcast centering on the firing of Elgin’s police chief whose name was Hanson. I don’t remember it at all. The speaker seems to be the city manager. Mayor at the time was William Rauschenberger. My parents either strongly liked him or strongly didn’t like him. I think my mom must have taped this.
[audio:police_chief_hason_scandal.mp3]

This next is someone singing — but I don’t know who it was. I’m sure it wasn’t me. I cannot carry a note. My mom might have done this, but I don’t think she would sound that good. It might have been my grandmother, but I don’t know why she would do this on my tape recorder.
[audio:someone_singing.mp3]

Here’s a little bit from WLS, my preferred radio station at the time. I wish I had not ruined it at the end with the beep beep beep noises.
[audio:wls.mp3]

My cat, Cinder, was part Siamese. She howled like one. My first landlord thought I was hiding a baby in the apartment.

Listen to Cinder howl.
[audio:cinder_howling.mp3]

Finally, I don’t know whether this last sound bite is funny or depressing. I certainally sounded depressed at first – mostly because I knew this tape was not a very good birthday gift and was upset with myself that I didn’t make more of an effort to get him something. It ends ok, with my brother and me collaborating, but is hard to understand in many spots.
[audio:dad_birthday_tape.mp3]