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  • chuft
    Stepher
    SPECIAL MEMBER
    MODERATOR
    Level 34 - Airship Controller
    • Dec 2007
    • 4822

    #61
    What don't you understand?
    l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

    Comment


    • possessor
      possessor commented
      Editing a comment
      Everything
  • BRBFBI
    The Long Arm of the Law
    SPECIAL MEMBER
    Level 14 - Sportscandy
    • Oct 2023
    • 310

    #62
    Originally posted by chuft
    Just came across an old self portrait
    That place is missing a womanโ€™s touch. Does that bird predate Skittles and Twisker? I donโ€™t recognize him. I like that Battlestar Galactica DVD coverโ€”canโ€™t find it online. Also nice bullet casing collection.

    Comment

    • chuft
      Stepher
      SPECIAL MEMBER
      MODERATOR
      Level 34 - Airship Controller
      • Dec 2007
      • 4822

      #63
      Originally posted by BRBFBI
      That place is missing a womanโ€™s touch.
      Like now, I live in a bachelor pad. Although my lava lamp and plasma sphere are put away at the moment. I have a Himalayan Salt Lamp out, in the rotation.


      Originally posted by BRBFBI
      Does that bird predate Skittles and Twisker? I donโ€™t recognize him.
      By quite a bit, that pic is about 20 years old. That is a naturally colored parrotlet, and my first one, Puck, named after the mischievous fairy in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Puck is the Subatomic Birdicle in my YTMNDs of that style. (There were a number of them, non-LazyTown.) Skittles is a turquoise mutation and Twisker is a blue mutation, neither found in nature.

      Originally posted by BRBFBI
      I like that Battlestar Galactica DVD coverโ€”canโ€™t find it online. Also nice bullet casing collection.

      You can't find what online? Episodes to watch?

      And thanks. Yes those range from .22LR to .50 BMG, pretty much every caliber people shoot. Found them all over time at the shooting range, on the ground. Well except for my own calibers of course. 22LR for the Ruger, .40 ACP for the Glock 22, 5.56mm for the AR-15.
      l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

      Comment


      • BRBFBI
        BRBFBI commented
        Editing a comment
        I mean that particular cover image on the DVD case.
    • boredjedi
      Master
      SPECIAL MEMBER
      MODERATOR
      Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
      • Jun 2007
      • 8694

      #64
      Originally posted by chuft

      By quite a bit, that pic is about 20 years old. That is a naturally colored parrotlet, and my first one, Puck, named after the mischievous fairy in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Puck is the Subatomic Birdicle in my YTMNDs of that style. (There were a number of them, non-LazyTown.) Skittles is a turquoise mutation and Twisker is a blue mutation, neither found in nature.

      Ugh I was going to say going by that TV. Looks like an old pic. Then was thinking maybe it lasted this long.

      http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

      Comment

      • chuft
        Stepher
        SPECIAL MEMBER
        MODERATOR
        Level 34 - Airship Controller
        • Dec 2007
        • 4822

        #65
        That was a Samsung 50" 720P DLP TV. Cost me about 4 grand in 2003 dollars if I recall.

        DLP was a truly amazing technology and the best HD of the time, when HDTV meant either 1080i or 720p. Plasma TVs were thinner and could be hung up like a picture, but got burn-in, and LCD TV's (rear projection, like DLP) could not make true blacks, only dark greys. DLPs had the better image quality and contrast compared to LCDs and did not suffer from burn-in. That 50" TV weighed about 60 pounds, which sounds heavy today compared to these LED or whatever they are TVs we have now, but was 5 times lighter than the previous rear projection technology, CRT, which would have been around 300-400 lbs for a 50" TV if I recall correctly. A 50" plasma was about 100 pounds.

        Sold that TV one mosquitoey night (loading it on his truck was a pain - clouds of them) for, I think, $100 in 2015 as I recall. Technology ages like milk. The home theater receiver had long since been destroyed by a cat peeing on it, and I got rid of the surround sound speakers and stands.

        Home theater was fun for awhile but in this building I think it would bother the neighbors if I blasted movies like that. Not like the old concrete apartment I used to live in where I could really crank the helicopter attack scene from Apocalypse Now and the downstairs neighbor did not hear a thing (I asked).

        Not that I really sit around and watch movies anymore like I used to.

        Good video showing how the micromirrors and the color wheel worked.



        l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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        • BRBFBI
          BRBFBI commented
          Editing a comment
          That video was incredible.
      • possessor
        I like LazyTown.
        SPECIAL MEMBER
        Level 32 - Secret Agent
        • Oct 2021
        • 3617

        #66
        Playstation 3 hooked up and working!!
        sportacus10.lazytown.eu / okdvd.neocities.org

        Comment

        • BRBFBI
          The Long Arm of the Law
          SPECIAL MEMBER
          Level 14 - Sportscandy
          • Oct 2023
          • 310

          #67
          Originally posted by chuft
          Sold that TV one mosquitoey night (loading it on his truck was a pain - clouds of them) for, I think, $100 in 2015 as I recall. Technology ages like milk.
          My cousins had a built-in home theater setup when I visited 15+ years ago. I remember that it was a flatscreen, not a CRT, but I didnโ€™t know what technology it was. Maybe it was a DLP too. It stood out to me because it must have been a massive investment when it was new, but even back then it seemed outdated. I thought about it not too long ago when I heard of a coworkerโ€™s new 80โ€ TV: he could carry it back in his SUV or have it delivered and set it up himself, and might not be out even a thousand bucks.

          Comment


          • chuft
            chuft commented
            Editing a comment
            DLP was about 16" thick. So was rear projection LCD. Only thin tech (relatively) was plasma. But all had non-curved screens.

          • chuft
            chuft commented
            Editing a comment
            I think my current TV, which looks like it's 48" or 50", was abut $200.
        • possessor
          I like LazyTown.
          SPECIAL MEMBER
          Level 32 - Secret Agent
          • Oct 2021
          • 3617

          #68
          Is a home theater setup just a massive TV and a bunch of DVDs in your living room or is it more distinguished then that..?
          sportacus10.lazytown.eu / okdvd.neocities.org

          Comment

          • boredjedi
            Master
            SPECIAL MEMBER
            MODERATOR
            Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
            • Jun 2007
            • 8694

            #69
            Originally posted by possessor
            Is a home theater setup just a massive TV and a bunch of DVDs in your living room or is it more distinguished then that..?
            No not just a TV. I have 1080p DLP projector with a 200" movie screen. I still only use 5.1 audio.
            http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

            Comment

            • possessor
              I like LazyTown.
              SPECIAL MEMBER
              Level 32 - Secret Agent
              • Oct 2021
              • 3617

              #70
              Originally posted by boredjedi

              No not just a TV. I have 1080p DLP projector with a 200" movie screen. I still only use 5.1 audio.
              That sounds awesome. Where is it?
              sportacus10.lazytown.eu / okdvd.neocities.org

              Comment

              • BRBFBI
                The Long Arm of the Law
                SPECIAL MEMBER
                Level 14 - Sportscandy
                • Oct 2023
                • 310

                #71
                Originally posted by possessor
                Is a home theater setup just a massive TV and a bunch of DVDs in your living room or is it more distinguished then that..?
                To go chuft-mode on you for a moment, when I was a kid TVs looked like this:

                Click image for larger version  Name:	IMG_5824.jpg Views:	0 Size:	224,4 KB ID:	208449
                Itโ€™s a Cathode-ray tube, or CRT, which is the same technology that TVs used going all the way back to the 1950s. They make a loud, very high-pitched whine which kids can hear but adults mostly canโ€™t. They were box shaped and incredibly heavy, and most families would have one about this size, maybe a bit larger. Really big oneโ€™s didnโ€™t even exist.

                Nowadays many people have 80โ€ or even larger TVs in their living room, but back then if you wanted something bigger than an oversized computer monitor you would have to get an expensive projector and have a large enough surface to project onto, and then if youโ€™re doing all that you should probably get a nice sound system to go with it: In other words a little movie theater in your own home.

                Most people didnโ€™t have anything like this, so it was kind of unique if you knew someone who did. By the time my cousins remodeled and added their home theater there were the other TV technologies which chuft mentioned, like LCD and DLP, which allowed TVs to get larger, although large ones were still quite expensive and rare. Theirs wasnโ€™t much larger than what most people have today, but it was so thick and heavy it had to be built into the wall as a simi-permanent fixture of the house.

                Nowadays massive LED TVs are relatively extremely cheap and I donโ€™t think the term home theater gets thrown around that often. But if someone says they have one they probably mean they have a nice sound system, since the sound systems cost more than the TVs now. Most people skimp on the sound and watch movies on their massive TVs using the horrible built in speakers.

                Comment

                • possessor
                  I like LazyTown.
                  SPECIAL MEMBER
                  Level 32 - Secret Agent
                  • Oct 2021
                  • 3617

                  #72
                  Originally posted by BRBFBI
                  By the time my cousinโ€™s remodeled and added their home theater there were the other TV technologies which chuft mentioned, like LCD and DLP, which allows TVs to get larger, although large ones were still quite expensive and rare. Theirs wasnโ€™t much larger than what most people have today, but it was so thick and heavy it had to be built into the wall as a simi-permanent fixture of the house.

                  Nowadays massive LED TVs are relatively extremely cheap and I donโ€™t think the term home theater gets thrown around that often. But if someone says they have one they probably mean they have a nice sound system, since the sound systems cost more than the TVs now. Most people skimp on the sound and watch movies on their massive TVs using the horrible built in speakers.
                  interesting.. i also remember reading at the time computer screens were about the size of a crt. ech! i'd have to watch movies in 4:3.. sinful

                  i think the sound thingy is because most movie-tv watchers only care about the visuals, but some people care about the music more, but i'd say its a mix of both. that's why i like watching a specific cut/dub of certain films.. for most 1980s asian action movies, lots of people will say go for the original cut, but i like going for the export cuts. sometimes the music is better + the dubbing is good too.

                  okay sorry for the off-topic dubbing talk

                  sportacus10.lazytown.eu / okdvd.neocities.org

                  Comment

                  • boredjedi
                    Master
                    SPECIAL MEMBER
                    MODERATOR
                    Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
                    • Jun 2007
                    • 8694

                    #73
                    Originally posted by possessor

                    That sounds awesome. Where is it?
                    My dedicated theater room. That's an older 27" CRT TV on the bottom right of image I barely used at that time. Since then nope.
                    I had set it up in September 2015. And it's still there.


                    Click image for larger version  Name:	TheaterRoom01.jpg Views:	0 Size:	524,1 KB ID:	208453
                    http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

                    Comment

                    • boredjedi
                      Master
                      SPECIAL MEMBER
                      MODERATOR
                      Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
                      • Jun 2007
                      • 8694

                      #74
                      One more for scale

                      Click image for larger version

Name:	TheaterRoom02.jpg
Views:	23
Size:	408,7 KB
ID:	208455
                      http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

                      Comment


                      • BRBFBI
                        BRBFBI commented
                        Editing a comment
                        Larger than life

                      • boredjedi
                        boredjedi commented
                        Editing a comment
                        Giant Steph ๐Ÿ˜„
                    • possessor
                      I like LazyTown.
                      SPECIAL MEMBER
                      Level 32 - Secret Agent
                      • Oct 2021
                      • 3617

                      #75
                      that. is. AWESOME. simply awesome.


                      now i want a theater room to watch all my john woo and sammo hung movies on

                      something to aim for when i grow up
                      sportacus10.lazytown.eu / okdvd.neocities.org

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