Archive for August, 2007
Pandora
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Music, Pictures, Programming, Random on 2007/08/30
Pandora’s randomizer algorithm may be crappy, but this is just ridiculous (really, it’s an example of bad programming):

Brain freaking out
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Random Thoughts on 2007/08/29
I keep thinking it’s Friday. It’s not that thing where ‘it feels like Friday’, I actually think it’s Friday! Twice I’ve said that today the traffic going out of Microsoft is going to be bad even if you leave early because it’s Friday. What the hell is going on?!
I figure it’s the stress. Or something. So I’m writing up a little blog entry, taking a break from work. Hopefully that’ll help.
Whaa?
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Pictures on 2007/08/29
House on beauty
USE EXTREME CAUTION!!
The content in this post has been deemed hazardous. It is not advisable for anyone to view the video below. May result in severe damage.
PS: I know that I’ve been posting a lot of videos and so forth, but it’s a sad fact that work has been piling up and I haven’t had much free time. I’m actually working on some content at the moment, so, to the 1.5 readers of this blog, just wait a bit longer. If you’re bored, watch South Park. Episodes are available online: http://www.allabout-sp.net/episodes.php
The drive home
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Music, YouTube on 2007/08/26
I listened to these two songs, in this order, on the way home today. One word to describe it: breathtaking.
16 thousand!!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books on 2007/08/23
FictionWise, an online e-book store has added the ability to get their book in Sony Reader’s LRF format. They say that they are currently about half-way through converting their database of 16 thousand (!!!) e-books into the LRF format. Oh, what glorious news! Sony’s own Connect book store sucks the big one, both in implementation and selection, so this is a very welcome change.
The benefits are absolutely astounding: Sony’s Connect has three books by Larry Niven, while FW has 23 titles. Yes, most of these are short stories that I already have in paper format, but these are stories that I will definitely want to read again and again, so I’m ecstatic. And, FW has sci-fi magazine subscriptions! It’s exactly what it sounds like: you get monthly (or whatever) electronic editions of sci-fi magazines. How awesome is that?! Of course, I’m still waiting for e-publishers to get more content, such as… well, pretty much everything on my Reading page, but most importantly ‘Replay’ and the works of Steven Gould.
The content isn’t the only thing that’s good: the interface is much better. Connect makes you log in through a horrific Flash gateway, while FW uses a standard browser. FW has a large collection of free books, cheap books (under 50 cents, even!), and sales. The sales are curious: they offer some books at 100% discount. How? You pay the price of the book, but the money simply gets put on your account. You’re free to spend it on anything else, as long as it’s on the site. Good for those who are planning to make lots of purchases. I know I’ve mentioned interface already, but I’ll say it again: FW has categories! Connect tries to do that, and fails miserably. Finding a book there is… simply painful. Sony really dropped the ball on that one. But is that really news? Sorry, sorry, they did make the Reader, they’re not that bad.
Oh, this is a good day. And it’s not even my birthday!
World drivers
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Random, YouTube on 2007/08/22
Some guy in India crossing the street.
American soldiers driving around in Iraq.
Freaky Eclipse, Part Dos
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Games, Gaming, Work on 2007/08/22
Amazingly at the same time as the Freaky Eclipse there occurred another Freaky Eclipse: everything was sold out or unavailable. Circuit City was sold out of ‘BioShock’ and didn’t have ‘House’, and Barnes & Noble didn’t have ‘Jumper’. Bah!
I’m going to pick up ‘Jumper’ and ‘House’ tomorrow from the Barnes & Noble in Bellevue, but ‘BioShock’ is still a bit of a problem. Best Buy doesn’t have it. At least, the one on the way to Barnes & Noble. So I’m sorta stuck here. Order it online? I hate ordering stuff online, especially if I want it as soon as humanly possible and it’s already past Monday. With luck, if I order the game now, it’ll get shipped on Friday and I’ll get it next Thursday. And the box will be banged up to all hell. Bah!
There’s something funny here, though. Here are some funny quotes from a discussion of the game on a Microsoft discussion list:
My copy is sitting on the seat in my car, ready for me to leave early today. (err, wait, I mean it is in here in my office, where you can’t reach it, don’t you go looking for my car. I mean truck. Yea, I’ve got a truck)
I just picked up my pre order from ebgames in which … scarily enough. I encountered a conversation completely in lolcat, started by myself.
Me: I can has bioshock?
EbGuy: U has a pre-order?
Me: I has
EbGuy: U can has bioshock, if u has a money
Me: I can has give you a money before
Ebguy: Ok
Me: K thks bi.
Josh Groban Concert
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Music, Pictures on 2007/08/21
Josh Groban Concert 1
At the Josh Groban concert, right on the side of the stage.
Josh Groban Concert 2
The stage at the Josh Groban concert, along with part of the audience. There were 12,000 people total.
Originally uploaded by FuzzyGamer
Freaky Eclipse
This Tuesday (tomorrow) will be the occurrence of a freaky eclipse: it’s the release date for ‘BioShock’, ‘House: Season Three’ and ‘Jumper: Griffin’s Story’.
‘BioShock’ is a retro-shooter taking place in an underwater ‘paradise’. The player has access to old-fashioned (1960′s) weapons, as well as genetic modifiers that give telekinetic powers, such as the always-useful power to set stuff on fire. The demo is pretty good, even if parts of it are long cut-scenes that can’t be skipped.
‘House: Season Three’ is just that, the third season of ‘House’. Some of those episodes I’ve only seen once. A crime against humanity!
‘Jumper: Griffin’s Story’ is a prequel of sorts to ‘Jumper’ and ‘Reflex’. The book is about Griffin, a ‘jumper’ like Davy, but with a different upbringing and a distinct outlook on the teleportation angle. The book ties in with the upcoming movie, so I expect that it will cover in detail this mysterious Paladin organization. By far the most exciting, for me, concept about the novel is that Griffin takes a more offensive approach to being a ‘jumper’, going as far as establishing a hidden base of operations in the Sahara Desert. How cool is that?!
IE Find
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Random on 2007/08/20
IE, and many other fine Microsoft products, really suck ass at ‘Find’. FireFox got it right the first time: I start typing stuff, you start looking for it on the page. I push F3, you look for the next occurrence. Simple!
IE is already in its 7th iteration, and ‘Find’ still stinks! Every time you want to search, you have to press Ctrl-F, type in your search text, press enter. Then, if you’ve focused on the page, there’s no easy way to get to the next search term, so you have to refocus on the search box, press enter and repeat. Once you close the dialog box, your search string is lost. The ‘system’ has been around, unchanged, since at least IE 4! Actually, Notepad in Windows 95 did have the feature where you could hit F3 to go to the next term, I applaud them. But IE doesn’t have that! And what the hell is that thing about ‘Search Up’ and ‘Search Down’?! Make it easy! F3 searches forward, Shift-F3 searches back! I would have thought search would improve with 7, but I was hella wrong.
Here’s where Find As You Type comes to the rescue. This add-on allows you to search as you type in IE, highlight the specific term and match the exact case. Finally! It’s a very nice application that I’ve found to be quite useful and non-intrusive. Give it a try.
For poops and giggles, the first page I tried to use this add-on with was a very nerdy Wikipedia article: COMEFROM. It’s quite entertaining, actually.
Come on!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Movies, Sci-Fi, YouTube on 2007/08/20
I couldn’t find a small clip of GOB from ‘Arrested Development’ saying his trademark ‘Come on!’, so here’s a semi-short clip of him saying the phrase. There’s some story mixed in there as well. Bah.
Anyway. I was looking at the Wikipedia entry for the ‘Jumper’ movie and what I saw made me want to vomit in rage. In rage.
A genetic anomaly allows a young man to teleport himself anywhere. He discovers this gift has existed for centuries and finds himself in a war that has been raging for thousands of years between ‘Jumpers’ and those who have sworn to kill them.
WTF is that?! Where the hell are they getting this crap? The books have nothing about any genetic anomalies, any centuries-old wars or jumper-hunters! The concept of a genetic anomaly is briefly touched on in the first book, when Davy questions his abilities, but that’s as far as it goes. And there certainly isn’t anything to suggest that a war has been going on between the jumpers and the jumper-hunters!
This movie has been changed so many times since I first heard of it, I fear that it will come out to be a steaming pile of crap that has nothing to do with the novels. First, the part of Davy was set to be played by Tom Sturridge, a young English actor, before being given to the plastic Hayden Christensen. Hayden stunk up the ‘Star Wars’ prequels and I can’t imagine him pulling off the role of Davy too well, either. Millie was recast from Teresa Palmer, another relative unknown like Sturridge, to Rachel Bilson, who annoyed the hell out of me in her role as Summer in ‘The OC’. On a curious note, Sturridge and Palmer were born in 1986, while Christensen and Bilson were born in 1981. I wish that the studio cast a younger actor for Davy, as in the first novel he’s just turning 18. Millie should have been a few years older, but there you have it. Apparently, Millie and Davy have known each other since childhood, departing from the book’s fateful meeting in New York City. Finally, Samuel L. Jackson started out as playing Brian Cox, the NSA agent trying to catch Davy, but was then changed to some asshole named Roland, the head jumper-hunter. Argh!
Obviously I will go to see the movie when it opens in February. I may even take the day off and see the very first showing of it. But, at this point, I have very little hope for a great film. Knowing that they’re planning a trilogy makes me feel sick inside.
Woot!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Random Thoughts on 2007/08/19
I just checked the blog stats and found out that one way that people are finding this blog is through search engines.
Sure, on Google. On the second page of results (10 results per page). And Yahoo! and Live have never heard of it. But whatever. I’m still happy. Now if I could only figure out why…
My office
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Pictures, Work on 2007/08/16
My office
Originally uploaded by FuzzyGamer
This is my office. Quaint little place, ain’t it.
EDIT: Here’s a list of things that are in the picture, from left to right.
- Three books on Sharepoint and one book on Web Parts
- Bender in an advertisement ‘apartment’
- A six-shooter NERF gun
- Old speakers (in the background, on top of a monitor box)
- Pencil-holder
- Stacking dolls or matryoshka or матрёшка
- Squishee cup from a Kwik-E-Mart (converted 7-11 in Seattle, made to look like Kwik-E-Mart for the Simpsons movie)
- Logitech X-230 speakers
- Maggie
- Monitor turned on its side, to better read long pages of code
- Normal monitor with sticky notes about what I have to do at work
- Subwoofer of the X-230 speakers (the black thing barely visible between the two monitors)
- Menu from Zen Yai Noodle House
- Can of Diet Dr Pepper
- Miniature cactus (behind the Dr Pepper)
- Robot from “The Mystery of the Third Planet” or “Tayna Tretyey Planety” or “Тайна третьей планеты”
- Wired headset
- Ergonomic keyboard
- The rest of the X-230 speakers
- Picture of the quad of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Picture of Sherlock held on a Microsoft photo-clip
- Glass sculpture
- Far Side comic-a-day calendar
- KVM switch
- Another can of Diet Dr Pepper
- Mouse
- Dead black marker (left of the phone)
- Phone
- Russian white aerated chocolate (my coworkers seemed to enjoy it last week, so I cut up a bar and put it on a plate outside my office. It’s all gone now.)
- Knife that I cut the chocolate with. The knife is also used at our weekly cheese meetings.
- Post-its (on the wall)
- Shelf (above the post-its)
- Can of cinnamon Altoids (on the shelf)
- Cup (orange thing on the shelf)
- Footrest (under the desk)
- Miscellaneous wires (in front of the footrest)
- Computer (to the right of the footrest)
- Trackball (on top of the computer)
WordPress difficulties
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Random on 2007/08/10
For all that WordPress.com does great, it has a few failings. One of those is this issue of Categories. If you’ll notice, each* post now has one or more categories associated with it, and the sidebar has a category cloud, so you can filter the blog by specific categories, such as ‘Religion’ or ‘Reading’. The problem is that if you import your messages from, say, Blogspot, you then have to set the categories manually. I imported close to 300 posts. Yeah, I’m having fun here, going message by message and updating them. Argh.
*I’m on the way to marking each post, but it’s slow work, so for a few days, a lot of posts will still be in the ‘Uncategorized’ category.
Artistic Terrorism
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Art, Terrorism, Writing on 2007/08/08
I got myself a Magic 8-Ball two weeks and have been having quite a… ball with it. Horrific pun fully intended. …anyway. I’m quite lazy. Hell, I wrote an AI script that writes blogs for me, that’s how lazy I am. And the thing is the smartest bot ever, capable of penning Pulitzer-worthy blogs, but does anyone notice? No! Does anyone care? Of course not! I’m stuck in this dump, writing entries for an idiot with too much time and no life. All he ever does is work work work. Ooh, look at me, I work at Microsoft, I have to neglect my ‘side’ projects. Asshole.
Ahem. Anyway. So he― I mean, I got myself a Magic 8-Ball, but the whole thing about shaking it got so damn boring. So I hooked it up to some motors, posed a webcam over it and automated the whole shebang. It’s very simple now: I write up a list of questions, push a button, go to make myself a sandwich and by the time I’m back, all the questions are answered. I even programmed the system to note when the 8-Ball throws out one of those idiotic “ask again” signs and doesn’t mark the question as answered, but comes back to it after all the others have been asked. It’s really quite an ingenious thing. So, there I am, eating a sandwich and examining the output. And I see a strange pattern: the freaking 8-Ball is spot on! It’s always right! I ask if it’ll rain in 28 minutes, it says ‘yes’, and lo and behold it pours! It’s really working! It tells the future!
What would you do in such a situation? Ask if you’ll meet the love of your life in the next year/month/week/hour? Bah, you’re an idiot! Stop thinking so small! What did I do, you ask? Well, isn’t it obvious? I hooked my blogging AI up to it. The AI is already connected to a vast array of online research tools: dictionaries, thesauruses, encyclopedias, Wikipedia, MSDN (supporting my employer, you understand), CNN, BBC, whatever the hell else it wants and I approve. It asked for Playboy and People a few weeks ago. Of course I wouldn’t allow such trash on my computer, I only let him use the Playboy feed. So, anyway, with most of the non-pornographic internet backing it up (Playboy is to pornography as Hershey’s is to chocolate: if you’re looking for the real thing, keep on walking, Jack) the AI is asking the 8-Ball an unending queue of 20-Questions. About the future. It’s not an easy task to paint an accurate picture of the next decade, particularly when the answers are binary, but he’s pretty far along. He’s already got the major events down and is now concentrating on the small details. Last I checked, he was going for the third week of March, 2013. He’s got the initials of the next-next President of the United States. I don’t particularly care about the 2012 election, though. Or the 2008, aside from having my suspicions confirmed: America elects an old, white, religious male. Surprise!
But, anyhow, let’s skip the small stuff and focus on the important aspects of the future: in just under a year the United States will come under a widespread terrorist attack. There is good news, though, so don’t just dash off to buy a second Uzi. The terrorists are using art. Yes, art. We are under attack from art. Now, don’t start straining your unmyelinated neurons, might hurt yourself. I’ll explain everything.
Art is “an action, an object, or a collection of actions and objects created with the intention of transmitting emotions and/or ideas”. Simple definition, right? Some guy was feeling happy, wrote some symbols on a piece of paper, you looked at those symbols and felt happy: that’s art. Well, art terrorism is just that, only now it’s not happiness or sadness or whatever. No, now it’s slightly different. Here’s an example: the first known piece of terrorist art was painted onto a billboard on the side of a busy road; every person who saw the billboard had an irrational desire to kick his brother out of a car. It didn’t matter if the person didn’t have a brother, or the brother wasn’t in the car, or even if they weren’t driving, but were rather walking along the road: every person wanted to kick their brother out of a car upon seeing that particular picture. And quite a few did! A woman driving an SUV kicked her brother, who was in the passenger seat next to her, right out onto the road. Another incident occurred when two brothers were riding in the backseat of a car: one brother saw the advertisement first and attempted to kick his brother into oncoming traffic. One woman succeeded in kicking her brother out of the car, only to realize that he was the driver. Hilarity ensued.
Artistic terrorism didn’t stop there. Not even close to it. Some artistic terrorist replaced the DVD of an in-flight movie on a transatlantic flight with a DVD that passed onto the viewers a strong need to spit at others. The DVD got stuck on repeat mode and, upon arrival in London, two men and one woman were listed in critical condition as a result of extreme dehydration. Another terrorist plot was much less damaging: the walls of a conference room in a Fortune 500 company (I won’t say which one, but it rhymes with Wicrosoft) were painted a shade of yellow that is very hard to distinguish from their usual wall color and acts primarily on the subconscious level. In this case, the paint persuaded everyone present in a rather a large meeting that they were, on some level, pugs: the attendees turned around three times before sitting down, snored uncontrollably (even when wide awake) and found each other irresistibly cute and huggable.
One incident which caught my eye occurred at MoMA, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. An exhibition by an until-then unknown artist drew nationwide news coverage when one of the pieces, a water-color painting, resulted in over three hundred divorces over the course of a week. Patrons were often heard exclaiming something along the lines of “that’s pretty good, but― I’m leaving you, Meredith, take the house, I don’t care anymore― the foreground colors produce quite a menacing effect.” The artist was questioned by the FBI but they concluded that he was merely a “loser hippy.” The mayor of New York City invited the artist to what he referred to as his “bachelor pad” after attending the exhibition with his now-ex-wife. I doubt that this was an act of terrorism.
I saved my favorite act of terrorism for last: a programming genius in Redmond, Washington, devised a devastating attack in the form of an easy to draw scribble. This scribble imparted in the observer a feeling of extreme happiness, a desire to share this joy with the world and, having shared, to fight back against a world incapable of accepting or understanding this wonderful gift. In short, every one who saw the scribble got the urge to draw it elsewhere and then went on a spree punching strangers, all the while humming a happy tune and smiling a Cheshire grin. The scribble went on to infect Seattle and neighboring towns, but stopped soon after, for lack of a high enough population density to sustain the reaction. It also didn’t help that the rains kept washing the scribble off most publicly-accessible areas that were effected.
The Magic 8-Ball also went on to make predictions about the second coming of Jesus and me having a life. You know, maybe this thing doesn’t actually work.
Accelerando
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Sci-Fi on 2007/08/07
Charles Stross. I’ve quoted him before. He’s got an ear for catchy phrases. I’ve started another book of his called ‘Accelerando’. It’s actually a collection of short stories. Quite good so far, even though I’ve only read the first one. Here are some choice quotes.
“I really came here to talk about the economic exploitation of space travel, but I’ve just been slashdotted. Mind if I just sit and drink until it wears off?”
“Did I say I nearly got mugged on my way here?”
“Mugged? Hey, that’s heavy. I thought the police hereabouts had stopped―did they sell you anything?”
“No, but they weren’t your usual marketing type.”
“[Y]ou can forget governments for this market, Bob; if they can’t tax it, they won’t understand it.”





