All posts by Raymond Tomlin

About Raymond Tomlin

Raymond Tomlin is a veteran journalist and educator who has written frequently on the political realm — municipal, provincial and federal — as well as on cinema, mainstream popular culture, the arts, and technology.

A Buyer’s Guide to A Portable Flash-Based MP3 Player


SANDISK SANSA E280R RHAPSODY

Although it’s taken a number of years to get to the point where there are now a few, half-decent mp3 players on the market to consider (despite the prominence and ubiquity of the Apple iPod), it’s now safe for consumers to walk in to their local Best Buy and purchase an mp3 player that will do pretty much everything they need it to do, from playing music and video, to voice recording, calendar work and everything in between.
The newest, and according to C|NET, best mp3 player is the 8GB SanDisk Sansa e280R Rhapsody, a flash-based mp3 player which (unlike its iPod competitor) includes an FM tuner, a voice recorder, access to music downloads through Rhapsody, a user removable battery, an expansion card slot, and great battery life.
They’re not calling the Sansa e280R an iPod killer for nothing.
Why buy SanDisk’s e280R, or Creative’s 4GB Zen V Plus — also a C|NET Editor’s Choice, just like its Sansa cousin&#32 (and, in the interest of full disclosure, currently VanRamblings’ default mp3 player) — rather than one of the many hard drive-based mp3 players on the market?
The answer to that question is many. First off, battery life. Because it’s a flash-based player and there are no moving parts inside, battery life is two to four times as great as you’d experience with a hard drive-based player.
Next up, again because it’s a flash-based player (with no moving parts), whether it’s Sansa, Zen V or iPod Nano, it is pretty much indestructible.
Creative and SanDisk are one up on the iPod given that they play Microsoft’s proprietary WMA format, allowing for almost double the number of songs to be moved onto the player (up to 4000 mp3s on the e280R — and, really, how many people have more than 4000 songs they want to load onto their mp3 player, and carry around with them to the gym, the beach, or in the car?). Four thousand songs? Sounds great to me.


CREATIVE ZEN V PLUS (4GB BLACK)


Both the 8GB SanDisk Sansa e280R Rhapsody and the 4GB Creative Zen V Plus (pictured right) offer a host of features at a price below $250.
Aside from the 1.5″ colour OLED display, it’s scratch resistant, has a built-in voice recorder and 32-channel FM tuner, you can play several different video formats, view photos and album art, record directly from a CD, play audio books — and the player is not only light (at barely 35 grams, or an ounce and a half), it’s portable and won’t skip no matter how hard a workout you give it (or yourself) at the gym or on the beach.

Oscars 2006: Another Four Oscar Contenders Reviewed

We’re back with 4 more reviews of films that are up for Oscar consideration, a couple of which are on DVD, so you can check ’em out at home.


CHILDREN OF MEN / HALF NELSON / LAST KING / LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE


First up, Children of Men, a fine, stark yet flawed dystopian thriller that, while sporting some dazzling filmmaking hardly involves with its story about a world plagued by infertility and on the verge of collapse. Clive Owen’s performance is actorly in a manner that fails to engage, while Julianne Moore is in the picture for such a short while it’s a wonder that her name even made it into the credits. Lots of critics liked this film, but VanRamblings is not among those that found it “gritty, disturbing, solemn or haunting.”
Half Nelson, on the other hand, now here’s a slice of life drama that is wholly absorbing despite its low budget and generally lacklustre production values. Ryan Gosling’s performance as a drug-addicted inner-city school teacher is human scale, watchable and near mesmerizing (and very much deserving of an Oscar), while 13-year-old newcomer Shareeka Epps gives as good as she gets. Absolutely one of the best films of 2006 — and now on DVD for rental.
Now, you’d think that The Last King of Scotland would be heavy fare and a slog to get through, but you’d be wrong. Forest Whitaker’s larger than life performance as African dictator, Idi Amin — charismatic, trained by the British, and home to create chaos in Uganda during his eight-year reign — may be menacing, but he’s also horrifically engaging and possessed of a wry sense of humour. Prediction: Whitaker will win Best Actor for his performance.
Little Miss Sunshine can garner all the accolades it wants, but you’re not gonna find unadulterated praise for this rather pedestrian film in this corner. A too cute and rather mundane road movie chock full of odd “characters” rather than relatable people, there’s a cleverness, no doubt, in this Oscar nominated picture, but when it comes to films emerging from January’s Sundance Film Festival, give me a Quinceañera any day of the week. Strained, foul-mouthed and verging on the grotesque, from VanRamblings’ standpoint Little Miss Sunshine is much ado about not very much. Don’t say you haven’t been warned.

35 Things Every PC User Should Know (or so says PC World mag)


WINDOWS XP MAXIMIZED


Ran across this article earlier in the day, written by Christopher Null for PC World magazine (and, by the way, if you own a PC, and don’t most of us, you oughta subscribe to PC World).
The article covers everything from how to improve font legibility on your LCD screen, to surfing anonymously, tweaking your Internet connection, and securing your WiFi connection, and much much more.
For those who are curious about how to capture streaming media (including Windows Media, Real, QuickTime and Flash media, like YouTube and Google Video), Null points you towards Replay A/V and KeepVid.com, although for the latter you’ll want to download the latest version of the VLC player.
Otherwise, Null covers moving big files across the Internet (VanRamblings likes Pando, a sort of e-mail insert which allows you to send files up to 1GB), creating keyboard shortcuts, and a bunch of other useful “tools”.

And The 79th Annual Oscar Ceremony Doth Approach

As the 79th annual Academy Awards ceremony approaches (Sunday, February 25th), VanRamblings will set about to offer you our take on the various 2006 films up for Oscar consideration.


BABEL-DREAMGIRLS-NOTES ON A SCANDAL-PURSUIT OF HAPPYNESS

First up, there’s Babel, the pick o’ the bunch here, a powerful, melancholy, wholly transcendent film and, often, very difficult film to watch. Just when the conditions of a characters’ life becomes almost too unbearable to endure, the narrative switches — to the Moroccan desert, Los Angeles, Tijuana or Tokyo — to another one of the four interwoven stories. Heartbreaking, humane and devastatingly brilliant, Babel is the odds on favourite for Best Picture.
Absolutely one of the best films to come out of Hollywood in 2006, who knows why the members of the Academy slighted Dreamgirls? Conjecture runs from the supposition that producer David Geffen is hated in Hollywood, to allegations of racism and homophobia, but whatever the politics behind the snub, Dreamgirls remains one of the most important films of 2006, an entertaining and always involving celebration of the movie musical at its very best.
Delicious. Brilliantly adapted by playwright Patrick Marber from Zoë Heller’s acclaimed novel, Notes on a Scandal is elegant, pitch-black filmmaking at its very best, with a marvelous and stunningly gorgeous Cate Blanchett, and a scarily effective, misanthropic and unrelenting Dame Judi Dench, at its centre. Gothic, gripping filmmaking of the first order (à la Fatal Attraction, but with a great deal more wit), Notes on a Scandal offers a refreshingly literate battle royale involving colleagues undone by sexual desire, and another cineplex must-see Oscar contender.
Pedestrian, conventional filmmaking, The Pursuit of Happyness is a modest Tinseltown success at best, a quasi-inspirational, feel-good fairy tale that holds the accumulation of material wealth as the raison d’être of life. At least it’s not sappy, though. We’ve all been through tough times, but this film is so unrelentingly bleak at times it verges on unreality. If a slick and gleaming pull yourself up by your own bootstraps flick is your cup o’ tea, then this is likely the film for you.