Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Welcome back to '80s

Recently, I found myself revisiting one of my favorite '80s pop culture icons--Max Headroom! After almost a quarter-century languishing in the vaults--aside from occasional airings on the Sci-Fi Channel--the short-lived TV series, which ran for only fourteen episodes on ABC between 1987 and 1988, has finally made it to in a five-disc (four discs of episodes and one of bonus features) set. Sadly, the set does not include the original UK telefilm, which launched the phenomenon a year or so earlier.

Anyone who was alive and in front of a TV set between the later half of 1986 and the end of the Reagan era, could not possibly have avoided seeing this apparently computer-generated talking head. The funny thing is it wasn't computer generated at all. It was actor Matt Frewer under several pounds of latex. And anybody who saw Max Headroom back in the day knows he was bigger than just a 14-episode TV show. He was a pop culture phenomenon, sticking his head in everywhere from MTV music videos to commercials for that most hated of '80s icons, New Coke. He even inspired Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau to give President Reagan the Headroom treatment in the form of a video generated character called "Ron Headrest". Oddly enough, life eventually imitated art when then-former President Reagan gave videotaped testimony before Congress on the Iran-Contra scandal. By the beginning of the '90s, both Reagan and Max Headroom had largely faded away as the digital and political landscapes continued to evolve in odd and unexpected ways, some of which mirrored the TV show.

Viewing the series in its entirety over the course of a week was at once nostalgic and chilling. Its razor-sharp social commentary hasn't lost one bit of its bite. If anything, some aspects are even more relevant today. That said, it's kind of odd to see just how analog everything was back then. Set "20 Minutes into the Future," It's post-industrial, look, evoking equal parts Blade Runner, Brazil, and early MTV, is a product of its time. The production values are very '80s, and to Warner Home Video's credit, they opted to keep the original 4:3 screen aspect ratio, rather than re-cut things to fit our newer "landscape" TV screens. At the same time, it's uncanny how predictive the show could be.

During Max's heyday, I remember being annoyed by his frequent trademark stutters, ostensibly caused by his image sucking up more computer resources than were available at the time. Who could have predicted that broadcast digital TV would look just like that 23 years later! Actually, broadcast digital looks a hell of a lot worse. After watching several episodes on DVD, I was surprised by how little I even noticed his stutters.

After watching all fourteen episodes, including one that ABC failed to air in its initial network run, but later made its debut on the Sci-Fi Channel, I was left with only one question: was it low ratings that killed Max Headroom, or did he step on too many toes as he exposed network television for what it was?

All I can say is Max, I'm glad to have you back, even if it is just for a 14-episode nostalgia trip.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Sweet Deal on a Glucometer

It's been almost 10 years since I was first diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and in that time, I've been through a handful of glucometers. Until now, they've all been from the One Touch Ultra family. I started out with a One Touch Ultra then got a One Touch Ultra Smart, and I've also had a couple of One Touch Ultra 2's. I have no complaints about those meters. I came to them by happenstance and have stuck with them out of convenience. as all of those meters have used the same One Touch Ultra test strips.

The happenstance came when I was first diagnosed, and my doctor sent me to the pharmacy with prescriptions for a couple of different medications and a glucometer to test my blood sugar. The pharmacist had recently been visited by a manufacturer's representative and was very enthusiastic about the One Touch Ultra that had just come out. There were heavy rebates on the meter, which brought the $70 device down to almost nothing and I walked out of the store feeling like I'd just gotten one heck of a deal.

What I didn't understand at the time was that glucometer manufacturers, like razor manufacturers and ink jet printer manufacturers before them, operate on a very simple--yet insidiously profitable--business model in which they lock the consumer into continuing to purchase their very expensive consumables, be they razor blades, ink jet cartridges, or test strips, by giving away the durable part of the product--the razor handle, the printer, or the glucometer. Over the years, I blithely went along with this ploy, feeling I had no real choice except to cut costs by not testing as often and thus conserving test strips This is what I did after I lost my COBRA health coverage and had to buy my own cut rate plan with scant coverage to match.

Ironically, that all changed when my doctor gave me yet another "free" glucometer, a One Touch Ultra 2 at a recent office visit, along with a prescription for test strips. When I picked up the strips at Sam's Club, I remarked to the pharmacist about how much they cost. After all, it had been a while since I had bought strips. Trying to be helpful, the pharmacist suggested a cost effective alternative. It turns out that Wal-Mart and Sam's carry their own line of glucometers under their in-house ReliOn brand. The meter was affordably priced at just under $12.00 and the strips were about $22 for a package of 50, which was less than half the retail price of the One Touch Ultra strips I was purchasing. Even with my insurance--such as it is--the strips cost me almost $34. By comparison, the ReliOn meter and the strips together cost about the same as the strips alone for my One Touch Ultra! Needless to say, the pharmacist got my attention.

I went ahead and purchased my One Touch Ultra test strips, but my curiosity was piqued, so I went online and researched the ReliOn meters. At Sams, I had been shown two models, the ReliOn Confirm and its slightly smaller sibling, the ReliOn Micro, the latter being an obvious knockoff of the One Touch Ultra Mini. These are manufactured by an American company called ArkRay. The The user reviews I read of both the devices and the company were uniformly favorable. By the time I went to bed that night, I had decided to go with the Confirm as soon as my present supply of One Touch Ultra strips runs out. I decided on the Confirm over the Micro because it stores more test results than the Micro, and beside, it's not that much bigger. I ended up making the purchase ahead of schedule when I saw the meter on sale for $9.00 at Wal-Mart about a week later.

Initially, I was a bit concerned about locking myself into Wal-Mart as a sole supplier of test strips. Why would I want to do that when I can get the One Touch Ultra strips anywhere? I reassured myself with two realizations--The first was that Wal-Mart is everywhere. The second is that ArkRay also sells these meters under their own name, so the strips can be found elsewhere--and at a comparable price.

So how does the Reli-On confirm stack up to my One Touch Ultra 2? Very favorably, actually. Here's a breakdown of the major differences I have seen:
  • The Confirm is longer, but slimmer than the One Touch. The entire package, in its zipper pouch is smaller and lighter than that of the One Touch. Winner: ReliOn
  • The Confirm's display is not as sophisticated as that of the One Touch, but it's perfectly readable. The Confirm's display also lacks a  back light, which the original One Touch Ultra also lacks but the One Touch Ultra Smart and Ultra 2 both have. It's hard to really count this as an advantage, since I have almost never used the back lights on the meters I have that are so equipped. Let's face it. If you have enough ambient light to see the blood sample you're taking, you have enough light to read the display. Winner: It's really a draw, but we'll give it to One Touch.
  • The only minor shortcoming I've seen is the Confirm shows a blinking icon as it makes its seven-second countdown, whereas the One Touch gives a numerical five-second countdown. The Winner: Technically, it's One Touch; but frankly, that's not a big deal. 
  • The Confirm requires a smaller blood sample (three microliters as opposed to five for the One Touch). A couple of microliters doesn't sound like a whole lot, but a smaller sample means it's easier--and less painful--to get a successful test. It is not uncommon to waste two or three test strips to get a successful reading. We're talkin' real money here.  The Winner: ReliOn
  • The Confirm's test strips are self-coding, whereas the One Touch Ultra 2 must be coded manually. Admittedly, the One Touch people have addressed this by now issuing all strips with a code of 25, but I've still got a few older ones with a different code. The winner: ReliOn because the meter actually reads the code from the test strip.
  • In side-by-side tests, the Confirm is usually within five points of the reading given by the One Touch. No real winner here, but it's nice to see ReliOn keeping up with the big guys.
  • The big difference is in customer service. I called the number on the back of the meter to ask about the lancing device, which seemed to be defective and was answered on the second ring by a live human being!!! No automated answering system, no endless labyrinth of menus, just a person with a pleasant disposition, who listened to my complaint, and agreed without arguing to send me a new lancing device at no charge. By comparison, the last time I was on the phone with the people at LifeScan, which manufactures the One Touch Ultra meters, I spent more time on hold than I did actually talking to anyone, and they had the usual morass of menus that we've come to expect from corporate phone centers these days. The winner: ReliOn--by a long shot!
So if you add up the score, you can plainly see the ReliOn Confirm is the winner, especially since the areas where it beat the One Touch were areas that are more significant to my needs. The ReliOn meter has already paid for itself, and longer I use it, lower the total cost of ownership will become. I also plan to check and see what--if anything--my insurance company will pay toward them, but even at full retail, it's still more cost effective than using a name brand meter.

And that raises the final question of what I've bee paying for all these years I've been a One Touch user. The only answer I can come up with is their big ad campaigns, that and a couple of "free" meters. I still have quite a few One Touch Ultra test strips left to use up, but I'm seeing that my days as a One Touch user are definitely numbered.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Something Old is New Again...

They say the 'Golden Age of Radio' died around 1962 when Suspense and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar went off the air, effectively bringing to a close a 30-year era of great drama, comedy, and variety programming as it all began migrating to the new medium of television. Sure, there were some great shows after that time, most notably CBS Radio Mystery Theatre (1974-1982), National Public Radio's efforts like the adaptations of the first three Star Wars films between 1981 and 1994, and Bradbury 13 (1984), as well as British contributions like The Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy (1979), but those were niche productions at best.

For those who loved old time radio (OTR), shows were hard to come by, except as nostalgia programs and fairly expensive cassette and CD collections published by the likes of Radio Spirits. Today, thanks to the Internet, OTR programs are enjoying a resurgence in popularity as collectors are digitizing their old tapes and rare transcription discs into more accessible formats like mp3. A volunteer organization called the Old Time Radio Researchers' Group has made it their mission to catalog classic radio shows and assemble what they consider to be definitive collections of the best recordings all episodes known to exist of selected programs. Their goal is nothing less than to preserve the as much of OTR programming as possible. The best part is these 'OTRR Certified' collections are available free for the downloading. More about that later.

That any of these classic shows survived at all is truly amazing. The producers of these shows generally saw them as being of little or no value, other than as a vehicle for advertising. The only recordings that were made were transcription discs that allowed shows produced on the East Coast to be re-broadcast a few hours later on the West Coast. Copies of these discs would also sometimes be sent to advertisers along with an invoice as proof that their spots had aired as agreed upon. By far, the largest publisher and distributor of recorded radio shows was the United States Armed Forces Radio Service, which aired them on its stations at overseas bases and sent them out in morale packages to be played over loudspeakers at more remote bases and on ships at sea. Thankfully, many of those discs have survived.

The producers themselves valued the programs themselves so little that in some instances, tapes of shows were erased immediately after broadcast because the recording tape was deemed to be of more value than the content it contained. The 1950s BBC sci-fi series Journey Into Space was thought to be lost for several decades until a set of misfiled transcription discs was discovered in the late 1980s. And the few episodes that still remain of The Avengers, a South African radio adaptation of the classic BBC TV series,  exist only because fans of the show recorded them off the air and later shared the the tapes. It was not even standard practice to copyright the productions, which puts them in public domain today, making it legal to copy and trade them freely.

So where can you download these great shows? Here are a few sites that offer them at little or no cost:

Old Time Radio Mystery Theater www.mysteryshows.com offers some 2,000 shows for free and another 40,000 or so episodes in the members' section for a one-time minimum donation of $10. Memberships are free for the visually impaired or those who simply can't afford it. Members are also encouraged to contribute to the collection by uploading shows from their own libraries. And don't let the site name fool you; it contains far more than just mystery shows.

Archive.org, the Web's equivalent of the great library at Alexandria, has an extensive collection of vintage radio shows at http://www.archive.org/details/oldtimeradio. Content is organized alphabetically and is available for download and streaming. Of course, old radio shows are just the tip of this site's iceberg. It also contains music, movies, and much more, all for free under Creative Commons license.

The Monster Club http://www.themonsterclub.com/ offers a collection of some 500 macabre and mysterious shows, organized thematically. It's a great place to graze if you're into that genre but aren't interested in acquiring entire collections. You must sign up for a free membership in order to download shows.

The Radio Archive http://radioarchive.cc offers a vast library of old and new BBC radio shows via  peer-to-peer download. You must create a free account and have a bit torrent client installed to access the shows.

Happy listening!

Friday, July 30, 2010

I almost killed my iPod today...

So I picked up a used iPod on the cheap from eBay a couple of weeks ago. It's in good shape and everything works as it should, except the battery wouldn't hold a charge but for about two hours. Not a good ratio when it takes three to four hours to charge it up. In all fairness, the seller pointed this out in the listing, so I made the purchase with full knowledge of what I was getting.

I tried to live with this deficiency, honest I did, but it finally got the better of me, so back to eBay I went to look for a battery. I found one for about a tenth the price the Apple Store would charge to replace it, and the battery even came with the necessary tools to perform the operation. Sounded like a DIY-er's dream package to me, so I ordered it.

While waiting for the package to arrive, I did a little online research and found some well-illustrated, easy to read instructions at ifixit.com and after reviewing them thoroughly, I felt I was ready to roll.

The package arrived yesterday as I was going out the door to work, and I was tired when I got home, so I decided (wisely, I thought) to put the project off until today when I knew I would have more time. Ifixit.com's instructions rated the job at a moderate difficulty and estimated it would take about half an hour to complete. Having about three hours with the house to myself this afternoon, I knew it was now or never, so I sat down with my iPod and tools and began tearing my new toy apart.

The photos in the instructions made separating the metal and plastic halves of the case look very easy, but it's not. After a good 15 minutes, I had broken both of the plastic prying tools that had shipped with the replacement battery and was on the verge of giving up, when I remembered a set of jewelers' screwdrivers I had picked up at the dollar store a year or two ago and had promptly thrown into the kitchen tool drawer to gather dust. Using the largest of these, I had the case apart in about 20 seconds.

The next few steps of disconnecting a couple of wires and removing a couple of teeny-tiny screws with a teeny-tiny Torx screwdriver that came with the new battery were deceptively simple. The really hard part was physically removing the battery from the device. It was stuck in place with some pretty mean double-sided tape. The force required to break that adhesive bond was not inconsiderable, nor was the flexing of the plastic faceplate and a seemingly fragile corner of circuit board behind it. With a little patience and persistence, I was able to dislodge the old battery to make way for the new. There was even enough tape residue remaining to hold the new battery firmly in place, not that it was about to go anywhere once everything was reconnected and buttoned up.

Although everything was back in one piece, I just couldn't shake the nagging feeling that I had just turned my iPod into a high tech paperweight. The worst part was that I would have to wait several hours while the battery charged before I could find out. That's the thing about DIY projects, you always run the risk of royally screwing things up. But I guess it's also part of the thrill of doing it and it makes the satisfaction of success all the sweeter. In this case, I was pleasantly surprised to find that I had not killed my iPod after all. To the contrary, I had given it a new lease on life. I'm hoping it'll be belting out the tunes for a long time to come.

Rock on...



UPDATE: 6 Aug 2010
After breaking both prying tools without opening the case of my iPod, I contacted Accstation, the eBay seller from whom I had purchased the battery kit, to politely vent my frustration and ask for suggestions for alternative tools I might use to safely crack the case. I didn't really expect a response, and was thus doubly surprised by the response I received. Not only did they send me a replacement set of tools, they sent me an entire battery kit! Now, that's what I call customer service.