I should probably be worried about this…

Kirsten pointed out the Book Quiz — another of the many online personality tests, this one purporting to link your psyche to a novel.

My results?

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blockquote>Vladimir Nabokov's 'Lolita'

You’re Lolita!

by Vladimir Nabokov

Considered by most to be depraved and immoral, you are obsessed with sex. What really tantalizes you is that which deviates from societal standards in every way, though you admit that this probably isn’t the best and you’re not sure what causes this desire. Nonetheless, you’ve done some pretty nefarious things in your life, and probably gotten caught for them. The names have been changed, but the problems are real. Please stay away from children.

Take the Book Quiz at the Blue Pyramid.

Oh my.

[Ahem.]

More camera ramblings

I’ve spent a good portion of the evening bouncing around various camera reviews and specifications, comparing all the various suggestions made in my comments today (many thanks to all of you!). Right now, I’m leaning towards one of two possibilities…

Option one is essentially what I was looking for recommendations for, a more immediately affordable smaller “point-and-shoot” camera. Right now, I’m leaning towards the Canon PowerShot A80 (here’s the DPReview listing). Small, good combination of features, a little more expensive than I was aiming for (\$381.52[*]/\$385[**]) but it looks to be worth it.

Option two is if I can hold off a little longer, save a bit more, and get paid back for a loan I made to a friend a few years back — in which case, I’ll go for a more powerful camera. While I’ve had my eye on the Canon Digital Rebel (DPReview listing) (\$1100.90[*]/\$927.99 [body only]) for a while now, Nikon just announced their D70 (DPReview listing) (\$1114.49[][*]) which looks to handily best the Digital Rebel and should be out soon — but the Minolta DiMAGE A1 (DPReview listing) (\$754.19[][*]/\$736.40) is really catching my eye. It doesn’t have the lens-swapping capabilities of the other two, but really, I’m not likely to have the ability (financially or photographically) to worry about that for a long time to come, and the number of features it packs in for the price is fairly astounding.

I’ll keep looking, though, to see if something else looks like a better deal. I’ve gotta come up with the funds first, after all. ;)

[*]{#mcr1} Average of all appropriate results out of the first ten hits in a Froogle search.

[**]{#mcr2} Average of the five prices listed on DPReview’s pages.

iTunes: “Wiggedy Wack” by Utah Saints from the album Two (2001, 1:28).

Digital camera recommendations?

Okay, so it looks like I’m going to be in the market for a new camera as soon as I can afford it (which, knowing me will be sometime in 2007, but that’s beside the point).

My camera of choice right now is the Canon EOS Digital Rebel — but given its \$1000 price tag, I’m afraid that it’s going to have to stay in the “pipe dream” category for a while.

So here’s my (more realistic, and not that unreasonable) wish list:

  • 2-4 Megapixel resolution.
  • Compact Flash storage.
  • Optical zoom (not digital).
  • Smallish size.
  • \$200-\$350 price range.

Any recommendations?

Today sucks

It’s all of 2pm, and I’m having an amazingly shitty day.

First, iPhoto corrupts its library, so all 3500 photos need to be re-imported and re-named.

Then iTunes corrupts its library, losing all ratings and play count data.

Now, both of those are more on the annoying side than anything of really major importance — the data is still there, just not as conveniently organized as I might like it. Frustrating, but not that big of a deal, all told.

The crowning moment so far, though, was getting so engrossed in reading The Stranger‘s’Marriage Issue‘ that when the bus comes, I stand up, get on, and sit down…

…then realize halfway to work and ten minutes later that I left my bookbag at the bus stop at 2nd and Spring.

Shit.

Items lost include:

  1. The bookbag itself: just a bookbag, but a nice one, and one I got for free during my months at Microsoft, complete with Microsoft logo embroidered on the flap.
  2. One necktie. Eeeh. No biggie.
  3. The book I was reading, which wasn’t even mine, but was loaned to me by Prairie. A minor annoyance, but books can be re-bought, so I’m not terribly worried about that.
  4. My \$300 (at time of purchase) Kodak DX3500 digital camera. Shit.

Work let me bail out as soon as I got there and take a cab back downtown to see if by any chance someone had turned my bag into the building that the bus stop is in front of, but (as I expected), no dice. A quick swing by home to pick up another tie and verify that my camera really was in the bag and not on my desk, and now I’m just waiting for the next bus back to work.

So, I’ve managed to be a complete and total idiot and lose my camera.

I guess it’s time to start saving….

Elation and Frustration

Been somewhat of a roller coaster morning here.

Elation: finding a Quest Customer Service representative who’s competent, and who discovers that due to some billing wonkiness Quest owes me \$130, and credits that to my current telephone account.

Frustration: discovering that iPhoto has somehow self-destructed, and while I still have all my photos, I’m going to have to go through and re-sort, re-categorize, and re-name all 3500 of them.

And the word “PROJECT” flashed before my eyes…

Update: And the day just keeps getting \<sarcasm>better\</sarcasm>. iTunes just flaked out on me too, so now I’m re-importing all my music. ID3 tags should be fine, which is the main worry, but I’ve lost all my custom smart playlists, all the “last played” metadata, ratings, and anything else not recorded directly in each file’s ID3 tag. Argh.

Today just doesn’t seem to be a good day for me to be touching a computer.

iTunes: “Floor Show: Rose Tint My World/Don’t Dream It, Be It/Wild and an Untamed Thing” by Original London Rocky Horror Show Cast from the album Rocky Horror International (1973, 6:00).

Sounds like it’s closed

Well, I was a bit of an idiot and walked out of the building without my bus pass today, so I’m going to be a bit late for work (which they’re okay with — when I called them, a three-alarm fire next door complete with road closures, some of which are still in effect, counted as a reasonable excuse for being a bit distracted).

Before I realized that I didn’t have my pass on me, though, I passed a TV news crew either filming a report for later or broadcasting live, and overheard the reporter say that Jensonia residents were only being let in the building to retrieve personal belongings, and that the Red Cross is going to be assisting them find places to live. Sounds like the Jensonia finally got shut down.

Now, off to find the next bus to Georgetown…

Update: According to this KOMO report, the building isn’t permanently shut down, though it is closed off for the next few days due to fire, smoke, and water damage.

More trouble at the Jensonia

Sirens.

More sirens.

Wow, that’s a lot of sirens. Maybe I should take a look…

Two people coming down the ladder

And with those thoughts to wake me up at 7:45am today, I found out that the Jensonia hotel, right next door to my apartment building just off of 8th and Seneca, was on fire. Again.

This time was much bigger than the last one I saw, though — tons of trucks, police, and firefighters all over the place. Streets have been blocked off for a few blocks around, from at least Spring to Pike on 8th, and from 9th to 7th on Seneca. Multiple ambulances, a few tanker trucks, and two ladder trucks with their ladders out and extended to the roof of the building.

When I hopped out onto my fire escape to keep an eye on things, there was smoke billowing out the windows of the top floor. I could see one man on the roof of the building, and two pairs of feet sticking out of a window on the top floor, waiting as the firefighters maneuvered the ladder of the first ladder truck into place. They were brought down safely and ushered to an ambulance, and the guy trapped on the roof was brought down just a moment thereafter.

Fire trucks outside Town Hall

The firefighters have been working on the fire since then. It looked to me like it was mostly contained about half an hour ago (8:45am) — at the very least, the activity level dropped off a bit, and smoke stopped coming out of the building — but as of now (9:20am), all the trucks are still there, the ladders are still extended to the roof, and there are still a lot of emergency workers milling around in the street. My guess is that the main blaze is out, and now they’re just dealing with the cleanup work.

I’m really starting to wonder just how much longer the Jensonia is going to be habitable. There was the fire I saw in January, apparently there was one I missed last week, and now this one. How many fires can one building sustain before it’s out-and-out condemned?

Here’s the two reports I’ve found on today’s incident so far:

From KIRO (courtesy of Ermac in my LJ Seattle Community thread): 9 Hurt In 3-Alarm Fire Near Downtown Seattle

Nine injuries are reported from a 3-alarm fire near downtown Seattle.

Five women and four men were treated for minor smoke inhalation and eight were taken to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, fire department spokeswoman Helen Fitzpatrick told KIRO 7 Eyewitness News.

The fire was reported at 7:45 a.m. at the 7-story Jensonia Hotel, a 1920s vintage residential hotel on 8th Ave. at Seneca in the First Hill area near downtown.

When firefighters arrived, flames were coming out a sixth-floor window. The fire was under control by 8:41 a.m.

More than 80 firefighters in five engines, five ladder trucks and medic units and other cars converged on the scene.

Ladder truck below me

And from KING5: Nine injured in downtown Seattle apartment building fire

Witnesses said some residents were clinging to windows trying to get out of the building.

“It looked like they kept hanging out further and further,” said Heather Young, resident. “Everyone down at the bottom was screaming ‘don’t jump, don’t jump’ because the smoke was just billowing out behind them just really, really thick. People were worried they couldn’t breathe.”

Firefighters used ladders to evacuate some residents since smoke filled many of the stairwells, preventing many elderly residents from leaving the building.

Shots from Sky KING showed several firefighters attacking the blaze, which reportedly started on the sixth and seventh floors, from the roof of the building. Firefighters doused water and flame retardent on the blaze and contained the fire by 8:30 a.m.

I’ve uploaded a gallery of sixty-three images I took this morning, mostly from the fire escape out my window. Enjoy!

iTunes: “Fire” by Hendrix, Jimi from the album Radio One (1967, 2:43).