Archive for June 2nd, 2010

Today’s Business: 2010-06-02

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Today’s Activities

  • Shower.  DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.

Log

09:30 AM: I’m up.

11:20 AM: Posted the     Copying DTBs To NLS Player Cartridges   piece.

11:50 AM: Threw a pork roast with extra onions into the crock pot for supper.

03:15 PM: Wrote 400 words.

04:10 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless   on the DVR.

05:00 Watched today’s episode of   Dr. Phil   on the DVR.  This installment was titled    Adoption: Return To Sender?

07:25 PM: Watched tonight’s episode of   NBC’s Nightly News   on the DVR.  Missed some of it due to a several-minutes-long power outage.  But I got the gist of the broadcast I think.   Nap time now.

08:15 PM: I’m awake again.

09:25 PM: Posted the   Water Park Musings: 2010-06-02   piece to the   Tom’s Love Quest   blog.

10:30 PM: Talked with [Emmy].   Thunderstorms passed through her area and appear to be headed in this direction.  We’re supposed to have them throughout the night.  But so far, all is quiet outside.

12:00 AM: Watched tonight’s episode of   CNN’s Toxic Towns;   a report that covers the problems of contamination in one community in Louisiana, where many chemical plants function.

01:00 AM: Facebooked, and while doing that, the Bellwood fire siren is sounding.  I wonder what that’s about?  I don’t own a police scanner these days but I suppose that if I so so desired, I could find the audio from local scanners on the Internet.  But I don’t; at least, not enough to bother.

02:00 AM: Gong to bed now.  So, catch you later on back out here.  Good night.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None today.

Related Posts

Quest Revisions: 2010-06-02

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Documents Revised Over The Past 24 Hours

Revised Post Count: 23

Tom Hesley

Diary Revisions: 2010-06-02

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Documents Revised Over The Past 24 Hours

Revised Post Count: 7

Tom Hesley

Facebook Tid Bits: 2010-06-02

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

11:50 AM: I posted instructions for uploading digital talking books to blank memory cartridges that can then be played on the DTB players from the National Library Service for the Blind. Search provider data suggest that folks are curious about this. So, I thought I’d oblige. :-)

09:45 PM: We’re supposed to have rough weather here between 10:00 PM and 4:00 AM. I’m excited actually; I love thunderstorms, as long as they don’t get too close.

12:45 AM: Today: TV, writing (2200 words), phoning, gabbing, musing, napping, cooking, dieting, connecting, house-keeping, and facebooking. “[I] love to work at nothing all day.” :-)

Tom Hesley

Related Posts

Today’s Diet: 2010-06-02

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

I keep this food diary to stay aware of just how many calories I’m eating daily, with the hope that it decreases the likelihood that I’ll overeat.    It seems to work, so here we go with another day…

Today, I consumed the following items:

  • Herbal tea and diet caffeine-free Pepsi  throughout the day. 0 calories.
  • 01:00 PM: Decaffeinated coffee with half + half.  100 calories.
  • 03:00 PM: 2 cups organic skim milk.  160 calories.
  • 04:10 PM 4 slices of muenster cheese.  320 calories.
  • 04:15 PM: Strawberries.  150 calories.
  • 06:00 PM: Pork roast and vegetables.  600 calories.
  • 06:10 PM: 1 cup raisins.  520 calories.

 

Total calories: 1850.

Tom Hesley

Related Posts

Copying DTBs To NLS Player Cartridges

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Questions: How do you burn to the NLS digital player blank cassettes?  How do you copy a new talking book onto a blank NLS cartridge? Answers follow.

The blank cartridges available for the digital talking book (DTB) players from the National Library Service for the Blind (NLS) are actually just USB thumb drives housed in bigger-than-typical cases.  I’ve purchased some 2GB units in February of 2010 for approximately $11 each.  Their larger size makes them easier to handle for people with arthritis and other ailments of the arms, hands, and fingers, and these easier-to-hold memory cards come equipped with a USB A-style male connector on the end opposite the finger hole. So, you can copy files to and from them just as you would a CompactFlash, SD, SD HD, or other external storage device.  However, you will need to obtain a male-to-female USB-A cable for this, which you must purchase separately.  Further, your computer must be USB2.0-ready to get the fastest data transfer rates.  This really speeds things along if you’re copying long NLS books.  So avoid using USB1.1 ports if possible.

When you connect these cassette-like memory cards to your Windows computer, you should hear the ba-blunk sound of a new USB device being recognized.  Then, some seconds later, a new drive letter will appear in your Windows Explorer folder list once the system installs the drivers for the card.  At this point, you can use copy-paste, drag-and-drop, the command prompt’s COPY or XCOPY commands, or any other valid Windows key stroke sequence to transfer files to and from the card.

You can store any files on the card you wish; they need not be NLS DTB files.  However, in this piece, I’m focusing on transferring the DAISY-formatted DTB book files from the National Library Service for the Blind, Recordings for the Blind, and other vendors.  So I’ll not discuss other file types further here.

To copy a DTB recording onto these flash-style memory cards, perform the following steps:

  1. First, download the book (as a ZIP file from the NLS BARD web site or other similar provider).  You’ll need to set up an account on the BARD site first through your nearest regional library for the blind.  But once you’ve received your account information, you can browse the library’s collection through your broadband Internet connection (recommended), and download any number of books to your computer as long as you have enough space on your hard drive for them.
  2. Once you’ve obtained a DTB book you’d like to read, connect a cartridge to your computer as discussed above.
  3. To minimize confusion, delete any files and folders that may be present on the card (say, from other books that you’ve listened to).
  4. Then, in Windows Explorer, find the ZIP file of the book you with to copy to the cartridge.
  5. Right-click that file, and a context menu will appear.
  6. On that menu, choose the  Extract All…  item.  This runs the extraction wizard.
  7. Click the  Next  button.  This brings up a window that allows you to choose the place to extract the DTB files in the original ZIP file to.
  8. Press the   Browse   button. The   Select a destination  window should pop up.
  9. In that window, navigate to the   My Computer   folder and open it.  Then, find and select the drive letter of the DTB cartridge you just connected above.  Press the  OK  button.  The  Select a destination  windows closes, and you’re taken back to the  Extraction Wizard  window, and you should observe the drive you chose appear in the   Files will be extracted to this directory   edit box.
  10. To begin the extraction to the card, press the   Next   button.  At this point, a progress bar appears, and the files in the ZIP file are decompressed and copied to your cartridge.  The time it takes to perform the extraction depends on the reading time of the book.  The longer the book, the bigger its files are, and the bigger the files, the longer the extraction will take.  Average-sized books extract anywhere from within five to fifteen seconds.
  11. Next, disconnect the card from your computer but first, it’s safest to use the   Safely Remove Hardware   wizard first to make sure that any open files on the card have been properly saved and closed before you unplug it.
  12. Insert the card into your NLS DTB player and power the player on.  After a short pause, the title of the book should be announced.  If so, then you’ve successfully copied a talking book to your card, and you can then read and navigate through it just as you would the already-populated cartridges you get from NLS.

Happy reading, and take care.

Tom Hesley

Related Posts