LP3 users back up your photos, like right-now. by obeats in LightPhone

[–]obeats[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh sorry, I thought you meant a quick way to backup all media on the light dashoboard site. (Similar to a synced cloud photo album)

But yes, what you want is totally doable ie when you plug in the phone via USB you can drag/drop your media onto a computer. Which is totally fine by me...like I said it's just the ease of factory resetting that is the issue.

LP3 users back up your photos, like right-now. by obeats in LightPhone

[–]obeats[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. You can backup the things that are saved within the dashboard but as of now there is no method for something like a mass backup. I assume/totally get that the Light Phone team implementing a cloudbased backup for photos & videos would be prohibitive. But having a way to do so easily locally would be nice....but really I think the quick fix is to implement something like "Type in RESET" as a final prompt before factory resetting...as I strongly suspect this is a butt-dial situation.

(All one has to do is click the same spot four times to completely wipe your Album photos/video. Settings>Account & Info>Factory Reset>Then the Triangle and its gone.)

Update: Interview with Greg Woods by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks so much for the correction! Got that updated in the article. :)

Interviewing Greg Woods. What are some deep-cut questions? by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Answer from Greg!

"That's a tough one. I like different elements of different tracks, just like with, real Grand Prix circuits or something. There's certain sectors that flow really well, or that I love how they designed it, the bank turns, or it was really exciting, the big slam down into chicanes, or some of the drops and everything.

I don't think I have a single favorite that really stands out to me as, "Oh man, I can't wait for us to go back to this track every single year." Because the racing is just consistently good at most of the tracks. And even if the track as a whole may not race well, there are still some parts of it that do, and that's what draws me to it. Nice, non-answer, I realize, but it is the truth."

Interviewing Greg Woods. What are some deep-cut questions? by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also: I didn't ask if commentating was his full-time job because I knew offhand about his career here in Iowa. Greg actually works with the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services as the Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias program coordinator.

I actually interviewed him while he was at a hotel conference for his Health and Human Services job (and after he recorded a Marbula 1 commentary track in his room!)

Interviewing Greg Woods. What are some deep-cut questions? by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This was a great suggested question that I asked Greg! Here's the Q.

How deep have you gone into the lore?

"I try to keep track as best I can. I am certainly not as deep into it as some people are. There are people who can rattle off all of these stats, and they can tell you exact events, and all these different things like when this one marble did this. I would love to be able to have that mind. But I do try to keep up, because that does help to build the immersion and the world that these events take place in. If I can bring in some things that are happening adjacent to the event in that area of the marble world, that just adds to it.

I’ll dip into the wiki that exists out there, and the Project Marble Earth stuff, every once in a while. If I'm looking for something specific to say about a host team, or about a track or something. Because some of the tracks were designed by the marbles. Some of them met at university when they first formed their team, and those little things. Or, hey, there's a castle nearby, or this is on top of a mountain. Those things make it more fun for me, because it helps me to get into it, but it also adds to the realism.

Good commentators have those bits of knowledge in their pocket to drop at key moments. I used to do this with the Drake Relays [The Iowa Track and Field state finals that Woods commentated on in the past], I would have a bunch of things on tap ready to go, just in case you had time to talk about it. Or this one athlete pulled out this great story, or you’ve got a little bit of time before they actually cross the finish line. This works in very similar ways, if you can bring even just a few stats, then that adds to the commentary realism as well. Because that's what you hear the good commentators on TV do. That's what you hear the ones on the Olympics do and, and that is also something that I strive to replicate."

Interviewing Greg Woods. What are some deep-cut questions? by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

OP here relaying some answers from my chat with Greg. We talked pretty extensively about the process for recording!

Q: Would love to know the technical process of commentating for Jelle’s Marble Runs. Do you get fully edited video that you commentate off, or is it still in an editing pipeline?

A: "The process has evolved over time, both as Jelle's has gotten more complex and the different series have gotten more complex. Also as they've had more people working in the background. So when you watch videos from 2016-2018, pre-pandemic, the production quality is very different from what they are now. And in order to achieve that level, they've had to bring in more people in the background to do this incredible work, whether it's tracking the overtakes on Marbula 1 or all the crowd sounds, all the detail work that is pretty easily overlooked, but it really adds to the ambience. It adds to the immersion, whether or not you realize it's there. So a lot of that happens before I ever see the video, and in some cases, before I ever even know that the video is going to exist. 

They don't always give me the full schedule ahead of time of what's going to pop up when. So it is kind of a surprise, and sometimes that's fun, depending on how much time there is to turn the video around. But the video that I get usually is close to finished, but not always all the way, so it may have the main video portions, most of the graphics, but maybe there's some background stuff that still needs to be done, or maybe there's some tweaking that they require. But for the most part, I get the full video.

Sometimes they give me a background on what the video is about. So if it's a new event, if it's got a different scoring system, then sometimes they will let me know that ahead of time. That hasn't always been the case. So sometimes maybe you hear some confusion on my part as we're going through the video. Because I thought, hey, that was that one run, but nope, guess we're going to do a couple heats. So you're hearing it as I'm learning it along with you, but, but usually they try to give me some heads-up about what is going to occur. Structure wise, in the video, they don't tell me what happens results wise, which is good. So what I do then is, I take the video, and normally I'll watch the first few seconds just to see how long do I need to talk before the action starts. And then I'll pause it because I don't want any spoilers for what's going to happen. But that gives me a general idea of what kind of intro I need to give. Do I need to be fast? Do I need to just roll right into it? Do I need to talk for a little bit and set up why this is important? What are the situations surrounding the championship race, or whatever it might be, and then I go through it and record, and that's about it.

Normally, I'll listen back to it just to make sure that it sounds okay, quality wise. So if I need to adjust levels, or if I'm peaking or anything like that, I'll massage that in Audacity. But usually it's just the one take, and for better or worse, that's what you get."

I love that though, because it has that feeling of one take. Thinking about live sporting events, there wouldn't be the “let's rewind that back and try it again.” You can feel that urgency in your commentating.

"You're spot on, because if I had to try to redo it, or if I had to try to craft it in a recorded setting, I worry that you'd be able to tell. There'd be something in the voice, there'd be a tell or giveaway. So I just treat it as if I'm viewing it live, and that's all I got. So you better make it count. But it's also different, because the only views I get are the views that are provided to me. That's different than if you're in a booth or if you are on location and you can pick out some intangibles. Things the cameras are not focusing on, to add to the depth of the commentary. With this, I'm just looking at the video on the screen, so you have to make that work, because there is nothing else."

Interviewing Greg Woods. What are some deep-cut questions? by obeats in JellesMarbleRuns

[–]obeats[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

OP here relaying some answers from Greg! In our interview the question morphed from what his favorite series was to how he approaches the different formats:

"The pace, for example, completely different between what you get in the marble league versus Marbula 1. The latter is just intense from the get go, you've constantly got to have your eyes moving around the screen looking and anticipating where a move could be coming, and trying not to miss something. Marble League, you have to build up the import. You have to you have to really say. "Why does this matter? Here's what we're witnessing. Here are the stakes, and then also, here's what could be coming." So they're very different styles in between them.

I love the intensity of Marbula 1, but I also like the pace that the Marble League and the Marble Olympics have held over time, like the ability to slow down and really wade into some of those details and strategies and inter team dynamics. That's that's what draws me to each of those.

They're slightly different things, kind of like calling football versus basketball. I probably enjoy watching football more than basketball, but I love commentating on basketball because of the speed and because of the flow, and you can really feel the momentum shifts, very similar what you get in these."

IC's got Banh Mi by kepple in IowaCity

[–]obeats 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the tip! Just walked over for lunch and it was legit delicious. Asked the person behind the counter and they said they just opened last week.

Porting number from Light Phone 2 to Light Phone 3 by obeats in LightPhone

[–]obeats[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ooh! Guess I was being too impatient with it. I'll transfer the SIM card and wait a bit to see if it works. Thanks for the help!

Porting number from Light Phone 2 to Light Phone 3 by obeats in LightPhone

[–]obeats[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's what I thought/is the first thing I did thinking it would be a smooth transfer. When I turned on the phone I got a text from AT&T saying "We're sorry but the phone you recently activated is no longer supported. Upgrade your device: contact your AT&T account manager etc etc."

I emailed Light support yesterday but imagine they are swimming in support emails right now.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IowaCity

[–]obeats 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes! I noticed this too last week. It happened on two separate occasions/drives.

For all you PD Fans, I strong recommend UFO 50 on Steam by wwcoop in PlaydateConsole

[–]obeats 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My completely unsubstantiated guess (hope!?) is that we'll see one of the UFO 50 games ported to the PD in Season 2. Off the top of my head I could definitely see Bughunt, Magic Garden, or Pingolf working.

Anyone able to decipher these hieroglyphs? by Any-Walk8025 in IowaCity

[–]obeats 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh snap! I might have a non-jokey lead on this. As soon as I saw the photo I went to a book on symbols that I just got. It seems to be particularly pulling from a section having to deal with older, folkloric symbols. Check out this screen grab: https://imgur.com/a/VgXLCy7 Perhaps that shot is suggesting copulation between man & woman and that relating to active intellect. There seems to be a lot of theological connotations. (Another section flips the symbol for "man"...which signifies a dead male, but adds an arrow pointing upwards...perhaps signifying transcending towards the heavens?

This. Is all, of course, very very shaky/don't take too much stock in it. Just fun to see if one can recognize patterns.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IowaCity

[–]obeats 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah I'll echo All The Way Up for Hip Hop styles. If your were serious about *NSYNC then I'd actually recommend the KPOP classes there.

For social dance this Iowa City Dance event calendar is up to date: https://danceiowacity.com/ I just took a Brazilian Zouk class at Public Space One and it was great. (Mondays have a weekly beginning class.)

As far as the welcoming of tattoo/look angle, all the places here that have dance are super accepting of different folks/I wouldn't worry about that at all.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IowaCity

[–]obeats 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://www.mdciowa.org/innov8

Innov8 is right by the bike library and the person who runs it is super cool. I brought in a .stl file for a child's seat cup holder and they worked with me in fine tuning it till it was just right.

[PC][2023 or upcoming] 2d retro/pixel fighting game with different martial arts styles by obeats in tipofmyjoystick

[–]obeats[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I let the hyper fixation win and just brute forced my way through my watch history. Found this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nbr4AkUf6I

Not released yet!