February 2009 Archives
This week got interrupted for me in the middle by a nasty bout of sinus headaches on Wednesday. I spent most of the week doing what I consider "behind the scenes" work - email, setting up deadlines for projects, and organizing schedules. I (along with a few others) are trying to nail down a couple of faculty members and their students to appear in two more videos for the Symposium. It's amazing how long this can take, but I can honestly say that the faculty members we have been speaking with have been nothing but gracious and accommodating.
I've also been trying to get a lot of the smaller pending projects off of my plate - ordering shirts for Educational Gaming Commons, creating support posters for the Digital Commons locations at the campuses, and working up some generic Penn State screen savers for the machines in the computer labs. I got the first two done and have been making headway on the third. Then I can concentrate on doing signs and more promotional materials for EGC as that space gets built over in Findlay.
I had an interesting conversation with Jamie Oberdick regarding revamping the TLT Talks. We have been wanting to get these back up and running, but we also want to expand them to get an audience outside of TLT. We were discussing how April is going to be our "Symposium month" on the TLT site. Essentially, every day's posted content will be related to our Symposium in some way. That led to us thinking that it would be great to have Jeff Swain give a talk at the end of March that would be about the Symposium. I remembered something that Jamie was doing in the previous version of the TLT newsletter that he called "7 Questions" where he would interview a staff member and ask them seven questions that would then be included in the newsletter in podcast form. So I was thinking that perhaps we could spotlight Jeff on the TLT site at the beginning of the month. We would give a little demographic info on him, but the spotlight would mostly be that he is the chair of this year's Symposium and include some info about the event. The spotlight on Jeff would also include a notice that he would be giving a TLT Talk at the end of the month regarding the Symposium. We could have people be able to sign up to attend the TLT Talk through the site, so we would know going in how many people are planning to come. We need to iron out some details, but this could work very nicely.
Continuing to share what I have in my music collection, today are the bands who begin with the letters K, M, and O. Any comments I make about a particular album will be in italic next to the album's title.
Kansas
- The Best of Kansas
The Killers
- Day & Age
- Hot Fuss - I picked this album up after playing Sam's Town to death. A lot of fans of The Killers who got into the band with this album (Sam's Town is their second major release after Hot Fuss) feel that Hot Fuss is a much better album than Sam's Town. I think Sam's Town is great, and after listening to Hot Fuss a few times I still think that Sam's Town is a better album, but I can understand why some fans would feel the other way. The sound on this album is very 80s new wave, which I like a lot. The difference between Hot Fuss and Sam's Town is night and day, but there are some really good tracks on here. As much as I feel that When You Were Young (from Sam's Town) sounds like it could be on this album, the song All These Things That I've Done sounds it could have been on Sam's Town. But that's as close as the two albums get to each other.
- Sam's Town - The song that got me into The Killers is on this album, but I first heard it on the game Guitar Hero III. The song is When You Were Young, and it is probably the one that sounds the most like a track off of their first album Hot Fuss. After repeatedly playing this song on Guitar Hero III, I decided to buy the album, and it has become one of my favorites. I have to admit that it took a little while to grow on me because The Killers have a sound that I would go so far as to call pretentious. There are some really good tracks on here like Read My Mind, My List, and Why Do I Keep Counting. I can see why bands are looking to get their songs on games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band (see my blog post on sales of Guitar Hero III and the effect it has had on bands who are featured on the game). I never would have bought a Killers album if I hadn't played the song on GHIII over and over again, and now I have gotten all three of their major releases.
King's X
- Faith, Hope, Love
- King's X
Metallica
- Black Album - Unbelievably, this is the first Metallica album I every bought. I was a sophomore in college, and I had heard all of their albums up to that point - my friends were listening to them all through high school. But, with the exception of Master of Puppets and And Justice for All, I just never was that much of a fan. Once I heard Enter Sandman, though, I just couldn't get it out of my head. After all these years, I still think this album is hit or miss. I know hardcore Metallica fans feel that they started their sellout phase here with the song Nothing Else Matters, but this album was absolutely huge.
- Garage Inc. (double album) - Includes the original Garage Days EP, but my favorite track on the whole thing is the cover of Thin Lizzy's Whiskey in the Jar (which is originally a traditional Irish song).
- Load
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
- Let's Face It
Ozzy Osbourne
- No More Tears - I've never been a huge Ozzy fan, but this album is simply awesome. Every song on here is a keeper. Blizzard of Oz was good, but I think this is his best album. And the fact that he co-wrote some of the songs with the totally beyond cool Lemmy Kilmister of Motorhead... well no other words need to be said.
Continuing to share what I have in my music collection, today are the bands who begin with the letters G and J. My iPod groups individual artists alphabetically by their first name, so that is why, for example, Jimi Hendrix appears under J and not H. Since this is a series of posts about what's in my iPod, I thought I would use this method as well. Any comments I make about a particular album will be in italic next to the album's title.
Genesis
- Turn It on Again - A greatest hits album, and, while there are some classic songs on here, there are only two tracks from the Peter Gabriel era. It's clear to see how their sound went totally pop in their later years (which probably has a lot to do with the influence of Phil Collins).
Golden Earring
- The Continuing Story of Radar Love - When I bought this album, the only two Golden Earring songs that I knew were Radar Love and The Twilight Zone (and my first exposure to Radar Love was the cover the band White Lion did of it in the late 80s). Needless to say that if you like those two songs, you'll like the other tracks on this compilation.
Green Day
- Dookie
- Insomniac
Guns N' Roses
- Appetite for Destruction - One of the biggest albums of the 80s that introduced one of the biggest egos on the planet in the form of Axl Rose. There's no denying how good this album is, but Axl's attitude and antics quickly led to the band falling apart. Their newest release after 15 years, Chinese Democracy, shouldn't even be called a Guns N' Roses album. It's just Axl and a bunch of guest musicians.
- Use Your Illusion I - I really like both Use Your Illusion albums, and the one thing I'll give Axl Rose credit for is that he didn't want these two albums to be Appetite for Destruction parts 2 and 3. The sound on these albums, while still very much Guns N' Roses, is much more diverse than on their first album and shows that, with the right people around him, Axl can be a very good songwriter.
- Use Your Illusion II - The first time I heard the song Get in the Ring I was speechless. I had never heard anyone so blatantly call out and trash others in a song before. Trust me, there are no subtleties or misunderstandings regarding Axl's feelings.
Jimi Hendrix
- The Ultimate Experience - If there is a term I would use to describe Jimi Hendrix's sound it would be "Acid Blues." This is a great collection of songs (yes, another greatest hits album) including some true gems like Manic Depression and Crosstown Traffic.
Joe Satriani
- Surfing with the Alien
John Lennon
- Lennon Legend: The Very Best of John Lennon - My favorite member of the Beatles and the one who I feel was the most gifted songwriter. Still, the team of Lennon and McCartney just played off each other so perfectly that I don't think any of their solo efforts could touch the work that they did together.
Journey
- Journey's Greatest Hits
Continuing to share what I have in my music collection, today are the bands who begin with the letters C, D, and F. There are actually very few bands in my collection that begin with these letters, and there are no bands in there that begin with E. So I thought I would combine them in this post. Today's list clearly illustrates my penchant for buying greatest hits collections for bands whose music I like but am not familiar enough with to choose individual albums from their entire catalog. I have noticed that I do this mostly with artists who I heard a lot of when I was a kid. Only in rare instances do I actually try to track down an entire catalog as opposed to just getting a collection of the most well known stuff. But it does happen (as I will point out when I get to Peter Gabriel). Any comments I make about a particular album will be in italic next to the album's title.
Cheap Trick
- Greatest Hits - Robin Zander has one of the best voices in rock music, and Rick Nielsen writes really good songs. Plus, when your drummer's name is Carlos E. Bun, well, you just know your band rocks.
Creed
- Human Clay
Def Leppard
- Adrenalize - This is the last Def Leppard album that I ever bought. The ridiculously over-produced sound that began to rear it's ugly head on Hysteria is in full force here. However, the tracks on Hysteria (for the most part) were much better.
- Hysteria - A whopping 9 of the 12 tracks on this album were released as singles, but the best song on the album, Run Riot, got no airplay at all while groaners like Love Bites were played to death.
- Pyromania
The Doors
- Greatest Hits
Fleetwood Mac
- Greatest Hits
Foo Fighters
- The Colour and the Shape - This was the album that got me into Foo Fighters. I always liked the title of the band. My brother and I were UFO buffs when we were younger, and the term "foo-fighter" was used by Allied aircraft pilots in World War II to describe UFOs and other strange lights they saw in the skies. Only being a so-so fan of Nirvana, I was thinking that this band would be more of the same since it was founded by Dave Grohl, who played drums for Nirvana. Interestingly enough, Grohl is Foo Fighters' lead guitarist, lead vocalist, and primary song writer (though he played all the instruments on the demo tape he sent to record companies). Once I heard the song Monkeywrench, however, I couldn't get it out of my head. My Hero and Everlong are two other awesome tracks here.
- Echoes, Silence, Patience, and Grace
- Foo Fighters
- In Your Honor (double album) - The first album has electric guitars and a fast beat, whereas the second one is mostly acoustic and much more mellow. I like them both, and each album has one of what I consider to be two of the best Foo Fighter songs in their entire catalog - DOA (on the first album) and Cold Day in the Sun (on the second album).
- One by One
- There Is Nothing Left to Lose - My favorite Foo Fighters album and what I consider to be, song for song, one of my favorite albums of all time. There is a three song stretch in the middle of the track list that is just perfect - Aurora, Live-In Skin, and Next Year (with Live-In Skin being my favorite song in the entire Foo Fighters catalog). The sound of the band really began to mature during this album, and I think Dave Grohl really started to become an awesome songwriter here.
Continuing to share what I have in my music collection, today are the bands who begin with the letter B. Any comments I make about a particular album will be in italic next to the album's title.
The Beatles
- Abbey Road
- Help! - The transition from the early pop to the more progressive sound of The Beatles can be heard on this and the Rubber Soul albums. One of my favorite Beatles songs of all time is on here as well - You've Got to Hide Your Love Away.
- Let It Be
- Magical Mystery Tour - My favorite Beatles album. The tracks on here read like a greatest hits collection - Magical Mystery Tour, I am the Walrus, Hello, Goodbye, Strawberry Fields Forever, Penny Lane, All You Need Is Love
- Past Masters Volume 2
- Revolver - Probably my second favorite Beatles album. Just like on Magical Mystery Tour, the tracks on here read like a greatest hits collection - Eleanor Rigby, Yellow Submarine, Good Day Sunshine, Got to Get You into My Life
- Rubber Soul
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - The definitive Beatles album to many. Just don't watch the god-awful 1980's movie starring Peter Frampton and the Bee Gees (although Steve Martin was in it and sang Maxwell's Silver Hammer).
- The White Album (double album)
Black Sabbath
- Paranoid
Blue Oyster Cult
- Don't Fear the Reaper: The Best of Blue Oyster Cult - I've always been a fan of their music, but I wasn't sure which album of theirs to get because they have a large collection. So, as I do in most cases like this, I went for a greatest hits album. There are some awesome tracks on here like (Don't Fear) The Reaper, Goin' Through the Motions, The Marshall Plan, Joan Crawford, Burnin' for You, and Shooting Shark.
- Some Enchanted Evening (live album)
Boston
- Boston
Brother Cane
- Brother Cane
Buckcherry
- 15
- Black Butterfly
- Buckcherry - The first thing I heard from Buckcherry was the song Lit Up, and I thought they sounded like the second coming of Guns N Roses. The lead singer, Josh Todd, is covered with tattoos including one across his stomach that says "Chaos." So you just knew these guys were the real deal and not posers. Their music is what rock is supposed to sound like.
I thought I would share what I have in my music collection on a daily basis beginning with all the bands who begin with the letter A. Any comments I make about a particular album will be in italic next to the album's title.
- '74 Jailbreak
- AC/DC Live (double album)
- Back in Black - Brian Johnson's voice on this album is just awesome. It's a shame how bad it has deteriorated over the years, but that's what smoking a ton of cigarettes and 30 years of screaming your lungs out on world tours will do to your vocal chords.
- Ballbreaker
- Big Gun - Single from "The Last Action Hero" movie soundtrack, and the best thing about the film.
- Black Ice - Their first album in 8 years, and one of the best ones in the Brian Johnson era. Brendan O'Brien, who is a great record producer and has worked with bands like Stone Temple Pilots, Pearl Jam, and Velvet Revolver, produced this album as well.
- Blow Up Your Video
- Bonfire: Live from the Atlantic Studios - Bonfire is a boxed set tribute to the late Bon Scott who passed away in 1980.
- Bonfire: Live in Paris (double album)
- Bonfire: Volts
- Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap
- Flick of the Switch
- Fly on the Wall
- For Those about to Rock... We Salute You
- High Voltage
- Highway to Hell - Bon Scott's final album with the band, and perhaps the best AC/DC album of them all. The track Night Prowler became infamous due to the fact that Richard Ramirez, who was the serial killer known as the Night Stalker, was an AC/DC fan and obsessed with the song.
- If You Want Blood You Got It (live album)
- Let There be Rock - This is a great album with gritty, raw guitar riffs on classic tracks like Whole Lotta Rosie and Bad Boy Boogie.
- Powerage - Another of my favorite AC/DC albums. Down Payment Blues and What's Next to the Moon are two of the best AC/DC songs you've never heard.
- The Razor's Edge
- Stiff Upper Lip
- Who Made Who - The soundtrack to the Stephen King movie "Maximum Overdrive." Not only did King write the screenplay based on his 8 page short story "Trucks," he made his feature film directorial debut here as well. Needless to say, Who Made Who was the best thing about the film (which seems to be the case with most of the movies that AC/DC lends their music to).
Alice in Chains
- Dirt
- Jar of Flies - Contains one of my favorite Alice in Chains songs, Whale and Wasp, which just happens to have no lyrics.
Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Jesus Christ Superstar - I have loved this music since I was a kid, especially King Herod's Song (Try It and See). I am actually going to see this play tonight at Eisenhower Auditorium, and Ted Neeley, who played Jesus in the 1973 film, is portraying Jesus in the play tonight. However, I have the original album and not the movie soundtrack, and I prefer the singers on the original album. No offense to Neeley, but Deep Purple singer Ian Gillan, who portrayed Jesus on the original album, is a much better singer and the songs sound much better with his vocals.
Animal Logic
- Animal Logic - A three piece group consisting of Stewart Copeland from The Police on drums, bass legend Stanley Clarke, and vocalist Deborah Holland. My brother turned me onto this group, but I only have one of their two albums.
Audioslave
- Audioslave
I purchased an iPod Touch when they first became available, and I just love the thing. However, other than getting on the internet a smattering of times (it really passes the time during halftime at Beaver Stadium), I pretty much use it solely for music. I don't have photos or videos on it. However, I do have all the album artwork from my music catalog on it, and I enjoy seeing the cover of the album as a song is playing. Still, what it really boils down to is that I have a really cool, touch screen music player.
Now, I have been aware of the iTunes App Store since it launched, but I have to admit that my interest in it wasn't all that great. I guess that was because I really didn't use any of the other features of my iPod to begin with, so I didn't really think it was worth browsing through a bunch of other applications I would never use. Plus, I really didn't think that there would be anything worthwhile that you didn't have to pay for, so it just didn't really seem like there was much of a point. Then I discovered that I could get Instant Messenger on my iPod for free. And it works really well. That led me to downloading the Facebook app. Also for free. Pretty cool, and I was actually using them kind of frequently. I mean, how cool was it to be sitting at Champs having a drink and updating my Facebook page (ok, it's not really that cool, but I liked that I could do it). After months of using these apps, I found the one that has made me fall in love with the iTunes App Store.
I have always been a solitaire junky (weird I know), and when I saw a free solitaire game, I figured I would give it a shot. Honestly, it's nothing fancy. It looks good and offers 5 games, but I pretty much only play the Klondike Deal 3 game. What has me hooked, though, is that it keeps stats. I can't even tell you how much I like that. Being a sports fan, I am obsessed with stats. I seriously can't stop playing the damn thing. I really think part of this is because two of the stats it keeps are an average per game score and a total running score. Basically, you start a game at minus 52 points, and you get 3 points for every card you can move into the Ace area. So, currently, my average per game score is minus 17 and my total running score is minus 5,503. It sounds bad, but Klondike 3 Deal is pretty tough. I win about 12% of the time.
Anyway, my love for the solitaire app (it's called Sol Free, by the way, in case anyone is interested in downloading it) has led me to see what other cool apps I can find for free. I found a really cool touch football game called FingerFB that is a take off on the old paper football game I used to play with my brother as a kid. The one where you and another person would sit at a table and each take turns pushing the football to try and get it to come to rest with part of it off the edge of the table. If you could do that, you scored a touchdown. Then you could try an extra point by finger kicking it through goal posts that the other player makes with his hands. Well, this app is just like that old game. And it has the football look like a football that you can slide with your finger on an actual football field. And when you score a touchdown, you can try for an extra point by swiping your finger as well. The cool thing is that it changes the angle of the goal posts, so you have to account for direction and power. It's a really fun app. You can play a one player game against the iPod, or you can play two people over wi-fi. And yes, it keeps track of scores and margins of victory which you can actually track online to see how you stack up against other players. Very cool indeed.
So I have started digging into the apps store. I am still just downloading the free stuff, but some of the pay apps have caught my eye. And the prices vary too with none of them seeming unreasonable. So far, in addition to the ones I have already mentioned, I have a college football app that lets me keep track of schedules and scores, a blackjack app, an air hockey app, and a flashlight app (all of these are free apps). Now the flashlight app I downloaded just because it looked fun. All it does is make the whole iPod screen emanate a color (you can choose what color you want) that you can use as a light in the dark. I never thought I would use it. However, just last night I came home to my apartment after watching the Super Bowl, and when I flicked on the light switch a fuse popped. It was pitch black, but I had my iPod with me so I fired up the flashlight app (it's called Flashlight) and it worked like a charm.
The other thing I really like about the App Store is that the apps aren't just games. That was another preconceived notion I had - that all the apps would be games. Well, I have a good number of video games. I didn't want to play what I considered would be watered down games based on the fact that there is no controller other than touching the screen with your finger or moving the iPod itself. How fun would that be? Just another reason why I wasn't interested in the App Store. I think I was wrong about the quality of the games, but I seem to be more interested in the non-gaming apps anyway. There's some great content in there, and I'm glad I'm finally experiencing it.
Once again a large chunk of my week consisted of planning for the Symposium. The thing to mention here is that time spent on planning doesn't necessarily equate to time spent in actual production work. I met with Jeff and Cole regarding where we are with the marketing campaign and what our thoughts are going forward as well as into next year. Cole always has lots of input, and I found it satisfying that many of the ideas and concepts he was thinking of were things that Jeff and I had discussed in one form or another. We're chugging along with the videos, and I can't give enough credit to Justin Miller, Matt Frank, and Hannah Inzko on their hard work on these. A rough cut of the Christian Brady video has been put together and sent to Jeff for his review. I can't wait to see it. Next, we are scheduling to travel to Schuyklill on February 9 to interview and film Elinore Madigan and her students.
We've also sent out the general registration announcement for the Symposium, and Jeff and I have already received several phone calls and emails from faculty inquiring about the event. The announcement will hit the all-campus Faculty/Staff newswire on Penn State Live this Thursday, so I expect a surge in registration soon after. As of 1/30, I believe we had about 160 people registered. That doesn't include the 4 or 5 of us who are listed as "instructors" and can't register on SemReg. We had a record number of proposal submissions this year, and I wouldn't be surprised in the least if we also have a record number of registrants.
The Symposium print campaign is trying something new. Last year we made posters of our "faculty profiles" photos. These were mounted and laminated on foam board and then hung out in the hallway between the 210 and 202 side of Rider Building. The tools at my disposal for hanging the posters was very low-tech... thumb tacks. I tried to use clear ones so that they wouldn't show up as easily, but when I ran out of clear ones I had to resort to white ones (the wall was white so I figured they would blend in). Suffice it to say that while it didn't look horrible, it didn't quite pull off that professional look I was going for. So as we start to make posters for the print portion of this year's marketing campaign, we are running into the same issue. Dave made 4 very sharp posters that he had mounted on board and laminated, but he was struggling with how to hang them on the wall. If there is one thing I have learned about Dave is that he is incredibly resourceful. He found something on the internet called Wallhogs. Wallhogs are large posters than can be printed on vinyl and attached to a wall using something called Photo-Tex that, in the words of Wallhogs themselves, is a "reusable adhesive backing that can be used indoor or outdoor on nearly any surface." These are very similar to Fatheads, which I have seen advertised on TV. So we ordered one to try it out, and it should be here tomorrow or Wednesday.
The other big news of this past week was that the first TLT internal newsletter was published on the TLT web site. This new format for the newsletter is made up of the daily content that the Communications Group posts to the TLT site. This content is aggregated to a page on the TLT site that automatically publishes on the last Friday of each month. Users can subscribe to the newsletters RSS feed, so it will show up in their readers when it publishes. It worked very well, and it seems as though everyone was very pleased with it. A big thank you goes out to Audrey Romano for doing such a stellar job in putting all of this in place and making it work. Jamie Oberdick, Mary Janzen, and Tara Caimi also deserve a ton of credit in crafting how this all came together and for submitting daily content to the web site. This will continue to evolve as we move forward, but I think we are off to a great start.
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