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Come together, right now...



If you plan on watching satellite broadcast shows on your new ultra-deluxe 42-inch LCD or plasma TV, be aware that the picture won’t look much better than that on a traditional 7,000-baht 21-inch TV set.


II’ve been writing this column for more than five years now, and the volume of questions keeps increasing. I’m finally going to get off my duff and do something about it.

I would like to invite you to join me in something I call “PC Group Therapy”. The idea’s pretty simple: let’s get a bunch of computer people together in the same place at the same time, and help each other solve problems.

There’s an enormous pool of computer talent here on the island. Many uber-geeks, for a myriad of reasons, prefer to fly under the radar: they don’t get out much and when they do, they don’t readily admit to knowing much about computers. I certainly understand why.

On the other hand, everywhere I turn, I meet people who simply need to spend a few minutes picking the brains of someone who knows about a particular product or someone who knows how to solve a specific problem. Thus the need for, and the benefit of, PC Group Therapy.

If you have a computer question, I would like to invite you to join me this and every Sunday between 10 am and noon at my Sandwich Shoppe in Patong. Bring your questions. Bring your problems. Bring your computer – and don’t forget your sense of humor.

If you qualify as a card-carrying geek, or even a geeklet or GIT (that’s a geek in training), I would like to invite you to join all of us lost souls. We need your help!

More than that, if you have something to sell – a computer, an EV-DO card, a genuine pearl-handled Osborne 1 Portable – schlep it with you. If you’re a computer consultant, system builder, re-seller, Internet Service Provider, Web programmer or a hardware repair guy, come on by. You’d be astounded how many people really want to get their computers fixed, or need help getting their websites off the ground, but have no idea where to turn.

In short, I hope to build a critical mass of computer people every Sunday, between 10 am and noon in Patong. No rules. No holds barred. No commitments. No guarantees. Let’s just get together and see if we can solve each other’s problems.

For those of you who haven’t been to the shop: drive over Patong Hill, turn left on Rat-U-Thit 200 Pi Rd, go past the Post Office and turn right immediately after Thanachart Bank into Aroonsom Plaza. Just after the CAT office and before the entrance to Andaman Beach Suites, at BYD Lofts, turn left. We’re there on the right.

If you can’t make it this week, not to worry. I’ll be there next week, too. And the next.

Switched on: I received a fascinating – and deadly accurate – message from David Kirk the other day. If you’re thinking about shelling out big baht for a fancy TV, David’s imagined conversation warrants your consideration. With his permission, I reprint it here more-or-less verbatim:

“So there I was contemplating handing over half-a-million baht for a fancy LCD TV. A thought came to me, and I asked a particularly intelligent-looking clerk, ‘Will this gorgeous TV be compatible with my current DVD player? Will I need a special cable or adapter to get the same quality of picture that I can currently see on this HD (high definition) LCD screen?’

‘Oh yes sir, you won’t be able to get this clarity from your existing DVD player. You need one of these,’ he explained pointing to a very smart looking box.

‘No problem, I will hand you over another half-million baht for this HD DVD player,’ I said reluctantly.

‘Well the problems don’t really end there. You see you can’t buy high-definition DVDs in Thailand, and we don’t sell HD DVD players.’

‘So why are you demonstrating a product with a picture quality that the customer will not be able replicate at home?’ I asked.

‘Bait sir, and unlike you most customers get hooked on this demo quality and don’t ask these questions, so they are conned into buying HD TVs. It doesn’t end there; as soon as they turn on their terrestrial or satellite cable reception the picture is 10 times worse than the DVD quality. What we are showing here is in effect a complete illusion.’

Of course the above conversation is completely fabricated, but nevertheless the facts are correct and extracting them was like trying to get blood out of a stone.

While in Bangkok last week I did a huge amount of research on this. Everyone I talked to said the Panasonic Viera plasma high-definition TVs ran rings around the competition. I looked at the same movie on the Viera and then on the half-million-baht LCD TV, and for sure you could see the plasma was infinitely better, with no “shake” or “motion pattern noise”, as they say in the trade.

Price-wise, the Viera 42" model lists at 129,990 baht, but I saw it offered for 75,000 baht with a DVD player thrown in.

As for getting a demonstration of terrestrial or satellite TV, the retail shops were loathe to give one. Eventually a shop at the Emporium let me see just how bad it can be. Seemingly, it’s the old technology being beamed into the new technology, and for sure they are not compatible.

Although I agree with David’s observations, my take on the matter is a little different. I have a new 27" Dell monitor that runs 1920x1200 pixels. That means it shows full 1080p “true high-definition TV” pictures in 16:9 aspect ratio without any munging of the signal. (For a discussion of 1080p and other truly inscrutable TV terms, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1080p).

UBC TV’s Star network, based in Hong Kong, recently ran a Star Wars movie marathon, with each of the movies in digitally re-mastered, high-definition 16:9 format. In Phuket, they looked like crap. If you lived in Hong Kong and watched the HDTV version of Star Wars, you saw the re-mastered high definition version of Star Wars – a truly awesome experience. If you live in Phuket, the UBC TV satellite set-top box – at least, the one that I rent from UBC – doesn’t even have a Super VHS plug, much less a set of three composite DVD-quality video plugs.

The video quality of satellite TV in Phuket is limited to a “yellow RCA” video connector, or standard antenna co-ax. Virtually every TV made since the mid-1990s has an SVHS plug. UBC doesn’t.

Eagerly anticipating the Star Wars marathon, I fed the co-ax output from my UBC box to my new 27" monitor, and I couldn’t bear to look at the result. George Lucas’s masterpiece appeared as though it were shot with the lens on a telephone camera.

On that point, David and I agree. Here’s where I differ: I’ve found that downloaded HD videos – TV shows recorded in the US or Europe, or ripped (and most frequently illegal) DVDs offered on the Web – play with astoundingly good quality. All it takes is Windows Media Player 11 under Windows XP or Vista, a hefty video card and a big monitor.

Toss in a great sound system and a bucket of popcorn and a drink, and Pirates of the Caribbean will put the swash back in your buckle.

When he isn’t writing computer books and magazine and newsletter articles, or knocking Microsoft on his website, Woody Leonhard (woody@khunwoody.com, www.askwoody.com) runs Khun Woody’s Bakery and the Sandwich Shoppe in Patong.







McMurtry meanderings

Larry McMurtry has written 29 novels, so they all can’t be deathless works of high literature. His early novels were literary: Horseman, Pass By and All My Friends are Going to be Strangers about modern Texas, as was his mid-life masterpiece, the great Pulitzer-Prize winning Lonesome Dove about the Texas of the great cattle drive days.

But he does crank out some stuff for pure entertainment and moneymaking reasons, and one such piece is Telegraph Days (Pocket Star Books, New York, 2006, 405pp).

The conceit is that this is a tale of the Old West as told by a spunky independent woman in the mode of the successful novel and film True Grit. But the language isn’t that colorful, the characters aren’t vivid and the plot isn’t gripping. Telegraph Days instead limps along with flaccid language, cardboard characters and an aimlessly meandering plot.

It’s 1875 and Nellie Courtright’s father has just “suicided himself” on a lonely ranch in Oklahoma. Nellie and her 17-year-old brother head for the rundown village of Rita Branca. Nellie is 22 and “kissable”. So far in her progress from Virginia she has kissed Wild Bill Hickock and General George Custer.

“Here we were, the two surviving Courtrights, having already, in the course of our westering progress, buried two little brothers, three little sisters, an older sister, three darkies, our mother, and now look! Father’s tongue was black as a boot.”

Her brother Jackson gets a job as deputy sheriff while Nellie takes over the village telegraph station. One day the six notorious Yazee bandit brothers ride into town and Jackson, by a fluke, manages to gun each of them down with shots to the heart.



Nellie writes up the story and the town is flooded with reporters, one of whom, Zenas Clarke, becomes her lover and later her husband.

The parade of famous Western characters now continues with the arrival of Buffalo Bill.

“I had pretty well convinced myself that this Buffalo Bill Cody was probably somebody who needed to be put in his place… The man might well have an irksome personality. When Thursday came I got ready to be icy and stiff, but then up Bill Cody trotted, on a fine gray horse, beautifully dressed, handsome as a god, friendly as a collie, and all my tough resolves turned into toffee.”

The final half of the book is a series of desultory adventures in which Nellie goes to live in Buffalo Bill’s mansion in Nebraska, meets the Earp brothers in Dodge City, bluffs a train-robbing Jesse James, jokes with Billy the Kid and is an eyewitness to the gunfight at the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona.

She’s working as a reporter for her boyfriend’s newspaper at the time and the two go off to run a magazine in California, which leads up to the movie-making era in which Lillian Gish plays Nellie on the day of the big gunfight against the Yazee brothers.

What McMurtry wrings out of this picaresque tale isn’t much. There is no suspense and little humor. The descriptive scenes are weak and the action perfunctory.

Occasionally he can wind up a crisp bit of dialog. Here, for example, is Nellie reporting at the bank in North Platte to exercise Buffalo Bill’s power of attorney. The fat banker, Senior Applewhite, is skeptical that “a slip of a girl be allowed to make free use of the Cody funds”.

“Have you known Mr. Cody long?” the ample banker asked.

“Long enough to know he doesn’t flinch from expense and extravagance,” I said.

“Are you his harlot?” he asked.

“How’d you like it to catch an inkwell in the middle of the forehead?” I responded, standing up. “When I tell Bill Cody what you said I have no doubt that he’ll come back here and pound you into blubber!”

But for the most part each short listless chapter follows another in a meaningless plot and by the end you suspect that the author is as tired of the tale as you are.


 




Worrying about worrying

Let me start with a disclaimer. I know I should be happy and it’s utterly indulgent even to be thinking about not being happy, given that I have a roof over my head, three healthy children, good health, a career and a thousand other things – which my mother would gladly list to be grateful for.

But if someone asks me, “Are you happy?” the word “yes” emerges a little hesitantly from my mouth, and inside there’s a throb of doubt that rapidly escalates into a silent scream: “No! This is not how it’s supposed to feel even though I have everything I really wanted.”

Of course I don’t have everything I ever wanted, because what you want changes over time. When I was a teenager, happiness eluded me in the shape of a pair of tight denim jeans. Not just any pair of jeans, but a faded pair of skin-tight Levi’s 501s that clung to every curve.

This was the first of many garment fantasies in which an item of clothing, always just beyond the reach of pocket money/Christmas envelope from an aunt/Saturday job/salary/credit card limit, would change my life irrevocably for the better. When I actually did achieve the Levi’s, several fashion cycles later, I never wore them, because by then I really wanted a Nicole Farhi leather coat.


Would you rather be Socrates dissatisfied, or a pig satisfied?


Perhaps that’s the thing with happiness. Maybe we’re programmed to desire something with a passion that makes life almost unbearable without it, and then when we get it we’re straight off in search of the next thing. Perhaps it’s the eternal quest that keeps our species evolving – as well as designers in profit. I make a point of buying skintight jeans for all my friends’ daughters now.

My father used to ask me: “Would you rather be Socrates dissatisfied, or a pig satisfied?” when he wanted to sharpen up my logic. Well, little piggy actually, because from my encounters with Socrates he always seemed so pompous and miserable.

Struggling with gloomy tomes of happiness according to Plato, Aristotle or John Stuart Mill brought me little enlightenment. And in fact I do remember chancing upon the secret of happiness at university with some friends, but being too drunk to remember what it was the next morning.

We might have been debating, between bottles of beer, whether happiness would consist of career success, simple riches or just fame. At a recent reunion the only thing we were all concerned about was our weight. So much for higher education.

Back then I was rather keen on the money idea, but when someone asked how much it would take to make me happy, my riches immediately became another source of anxiety. Once I started imagining wonderful apartments in New York, Paris and London, I also wanted one in Rome, as well as one on Lake Como or even Capri (why not?), and what with all the hired help and shoes in all those places, the sums involved were almost distasteful.

In my twenties I knew I would be happy if I had a successful career and a lovely flat where I could have dinner parties with my friends. Then in my thirties I thought the secret might be found in a simpler and less materialistic way of life. So I sold my business, gave up my loans and the whole ambition thing, and decided to become a full-time mum.

Then I became restless for something to do. Laura, a friend who is enviably successful in television, has two homes and a partner she adores, but says that she sometimes wishes she could just disappear and start again with a completely clean slate.

Is this something everyone feels, or is it peculiar to our generation of women who are able to have it all without too much of a fight, but suddenly find that we don’t want anything after all?

One of the truly fulfilling things that I have done in my life was having children, but the heady combination of joy, fear, fascination and exhaustion was not exactly what I imagined pure happiness to be.

I remember the first night in hospital when my first-born lay beside me in his little Perspex pod. I watched him in awe and wondered if I was ever going to be a good enough parent for him. And when he began to cry, I took him into my bed and talked to him, this tiny human being, and it felt like the beginning of a great friendship, full of wonderful promise, but also very scary.

Does happiness have to be a sustained state? Yes, says my friend Chrissie concisely – happiness implies something longer than an orgasm. When I imagine what it might feel like, I think of a glorious continuum of freedom from anxiety.

Is it just me or is there just more to worry about these days? Not just how personal pension plans work, and whether or not to have Botox injections when the time comes (even worse, has it come already and I haven’t noticed?) but also the big ones like terrorism and biological warfare.

Sometimes I actually worry about worrying, and I worry whether it would be right to be happy at all in a world that is so full of injustice.

In her book Wanting Everything: The Art of Happiness psychologist Dorothy Rowe advises taking responsibility for ourselves and practicing kindness, tolerance and sharing.

I’m sure that’s the sensible long-term route to happiness, but I’m inclined to agree with the novelist John McGahern, who says that happiness cannot be “sought or worried into being or even fully grasped. It should be allowed its own slow pace so that it passes unnoticed if it ever comes at all.”

Mind you, if I could only write like McGahern, then maybe…

For the moment, I shall just have to settle for moments of sheer joy that happen at the most unlikely times.

The other day, my youngest and I were sitting on the sofa together watching another rerun of Friends. “Mum,” he said, “she looks just like you!”

I laughed: “Well, thank you. Did you know that many people think that she’s the most gorgeous woman in the world?”
He turned to me, as innocent as an angel, and said, “You are the most gorgeous woman in the world.”

The wonder of the feeling went on for so long that it might almost have been happiness. It even survived the quite disproportionately loud and sustained laughter of his teenage brother.

Ambrosia Sakkadas, a UK-born Greek Cypriot and graduate of Central St Martins College of Art & Design in London, is an artist, designer and newspaper columnist. Her first novel, Greek Girls Don’t Cry, is available from amazon.com


 
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