Archive for category Blog
PostSecret of November 11th
Yes, I’ve got comments on a few cards from this week’s PostSecret, but first off I have comments about PostSecret itself. In the past I’ve voiced some negative opinions about the blog, primarily over the lack of an archive and Frank’s annoying habit of deleting user-submitted comments about the week’s cards. All of that still stands, I’m still pissed about those issues. And I have one more to add to the mix: Frank just can’t stop plugging his books, can he? Every single week (or more often? I’m not sure, I don’t check the blog during the week.) he keeps putting up e-mails about how people find secrets someone left in the books. OK, we get it, people have secrets to share and stick them in your book, which is sort of appropriate, I guess. Do we need to hear about every Tom, Dick and Harry who’ve found a load of “bonus” secrets in their copy of the book? Argh.
Now, for a second complaint: PostSecret won the 2007 Bloggies award for “Weblog of the Year” (in addition to “Best Topical Weblog” and “Best Community Weblog”). I really don’t think PostSecret should have won that award, or have even been nominated for the category. Why? Well, a number of reasons, really. First, from a technical (or a somewhat objective) perspective, PostSecret barely qualifies as a blog: it is a single page, lacking distinct entries, is only updated once a week (with the exception of sporadic e-mailed comments), lacks a formal comment section, has no archive system to see previous entries. If the URL of the “blog” wasn’t http://postsecret.blogspot.com, it would be just another personal web-page. Whatever content the page does have is either submitted by the public or is advertisements for speaking events or merchandise. Frank doesn’t even create his own content, the content for the blog and the books come from the users, all Frank does is choose what goes online and what doesn’t. Compare PostSecret to LifeHacker: the latter has original content, archive system, comments, is updated on a regular basis, etc. Now that’s a real blog.
PostSecret is referred to as a community art project, and with that I have absolutely no qualms: it’s art, it’s produced by a large community, what more can you ask for?
OK, anyway, the rant part of the post is done with, now we can get to the analysis of this week’s secrets.

House put it best, “These cancer kids. Can’t put them all on a pedestal. It’s basic statistics. Some of them have got to be whiney little fraidy cats… If there’s not one yellow-belly in the whole group then being brave doesn’t have any meaning.” Simply being thrust into a horrific situation does not make a person brave.

Yes, the pastor is an idiot, but what is the term for a person who takes scientific advice from an asshole who says the world is 6,000 years old? Let’s hope no diabetic or TB patient listens to this mental giant.
"Making of". Of sorts.
I feel I should provide a bit of an insight into how this blog is written and updated. From the outside, it may seem the answer is “infrequently” or “poorly”. All too true. But here’s why.
Lately, work has been a monstrous pain: there’s lots of things to do, not enough time to do most of them, and yet all of them are being pushed as the most important tasks. First and foremost, I have to investigate the new features I will be responsible for. First and foremost, I have to fix bugs in my old features. First and foremost, I have to attend meetings about both. First and foremost, I have to answer to six people why I’m behind schedule. There’s a pattern here. All of this makes for a stressful day, an unhappy me and an almost-forgotten-about blog. Hence, the recent lack of updates.
Now, here’s a small foray into what makes it into the blog and exactly how. I get ideas. Strange things I think about on the way to work or during yet-another coma-inducing meeting. Then I e-mail myself whatever idea I can still remember by the time I get to a computer. Right now, I have 12 unread, self-addressed e-mails with such descriptive titles as “idea”, “for the blog” or simply “thoughts”. So, once a week (or so) I sit down, sift through the rubble and dredge out whatever I still find interesting. Those thoughts are sometimes enough to fill a few pages-worth with crazy ramblings. Most of the time, though, I just make bullet lists and blabber on about entirely disjointed concepts.
So, here’s what’s on tonight’s menu:
Josh Groban’s “Awake” CD sucks. It’s essentially rap. When he’s not singing in Italian, he’s reading prose to semi-classical music. I’m sorry, what the hell is that? I’m no expert when it comes to music, but it seems that songs sound better when the lyrics actually rhyme. I don’t know, that’s just me. What he sings in Italian is great and I adore it, but I find myself fast-forwarding past the rest of the songs that he sings in English. Maybe that’s his new style? Or maybe I just don’t “get it” (which is quite possible). I know I loved his first album (“Josh Groban”) when I first heard it in college. I really like “Closer”. But “Awake” disappoints and bugs me. Like I said, seems more like rap. Or some guy reading a phone book.- People stumble onto this blog for a variety of reasons: some of them might be regular readers (wishful thinking), but most come here by way of a search engine. Here’s a choice list of verbatim search terms that leads people to this blog. In [brackets] are my comments, not part of the actual query:
- CSI “feather database”
- picture of a cartoon saying SICK BASTARD
- alien pick [I think this refers to a guitar pick with an alien picture. Maybe?]
- gta sa hot coffee clips
- spying on boyfriend
- thick babies [WTF?]
- cocaine happiness quotes
- blank gun TV rules [Are they wondering what rules actors on TV follow when using a gun?]
- screenplay randomizer
- reverse determinism [Wait, what? Who in the world is wondering about reverse determinism?!]
- dish chairs with fuzzy coverings
And every day (really) there’s someone looking for an electronic copy of “Jumper”, “Replay” or a Heinlein book.
People end up here for really strange reasons. - Stephen Fry told an interesting story during the sixth episode of season 1 (series “A”) of QI:
I was in a room with Paul Merton and Nicholas Parsons… Paul Merton was writing on this piece of paper for quite a long time, and Nicholas Parsons said to him “What are you writing?”, and Paul said, “It’s a suicide note.” [*] And Nicholas said, “Oh”. And then Paul said, “Sign here, Nicholas, would you?”
Now, that part denoted with the [*] is the interesting point. It’s a point at which I laughed really hard. On the show, however, there was dead silence. It wasn’t until Fry said “sign here, Nicholas”, that the panel and the audience broke up in laughter. Is it bad form to laugh at something so drastic and uncommon? How often does it happen that you’re present in the room with a person in the process of writing a suicide note? What is happening at that moment that the person in question decided, right there and then, to end their life? This reminds me of a PostSecret card (that is now inaccessible, thanks to Frank’s asinine posting practices) where the author say something along the lines of “[Someone] called me and asked me how to spell [some word]. I later read it in his suicide note. He was writing the note while talking on the phone with me.” I like that card, wish I could see it again.
Fry follows up his anecdote with the following (paraphrased):The Spanish general and political leader Ramón Blanco y Erenas, when asked by a priest on his death bed, “Do you forgive your enemies?”, said “No, I have no enemies, I’ve had them all shot.”
At this point both the audience and the panel laugh. Murder is funny but suicide isn’t?
- Good night.
A few minor updates
Some things have changed, both on this blog and off. Here’s a bullet-list:
- I’ve changed the look of the site. Which is sort of hard to miss, unless you’re reading this through an RSS feed. The different look is to accomodate Flickr pictures. The previous template was about 400 pixels wide, so the default 500-wide pictures didn’t fit.
- I got myself a camera: Nikon D80. (Amazon link, Wikipedia link) It’s beautiful! So, as I am prone to do, I have gone nuts, snapping pictures like a mad man.
- To accomodate my new-found addiction, or maybe to fuel it, I’ve got a Flickr Pro account. It comes with unlimited uploads and storage. So far, it’s a pretty good service. They have some issues to work out, like easily setting sets to be public or private (ATM, I think you have to see all the pictures inside a set to be either public or private, sets themselves don’t seem to have a permission flag), but overall I am very satisfied. A coworker said that Flickr has a public API, so maybe I can code some sort of batch-editor for that specific purpose. We’ll see.
- Oh, here’s the page of my photos: Flickr link. There are private sets, like pictures of my parents, my coworkers or friends. If you’d like to see them, drop me a line.
- Yesterday, for the first time ever, I went to Belltown at night. Yikes. Finding parking at 11pm on a Saturday night is an experience I am not too anxious to repeat any time soon. But, it was worth it. I went to Umi Sake (link) and was thouroughly impressed and satisfied: the sushi was great (and there was quite a bit of it), the sake hit the spot and the steamed peas are a good starter.
- Lately, I’ve found myself placing a bookmark every time I see a funny or really quotable passage in the book I’m reading. It’s a good thing these books and bookmarks are electronic, ’cause I use lots of them. Here’s a short list of these passages, taken from ‘American Gods’:
- “I got a son, stupid as a man who bought his stupid at a two-for-one sale, and you remind me of him.”
- The song on the jukebox ended, and for a moment the bar fell quiet, every conversation at a lull.
“Someone once told me that you only get those everybody-shuts-up-at-once moments at twenty past or twenty to the hour,” said Shadow. - “The boundaries of our nation, sir? Why sir, on the north we are bounded by the Aurora Borealis, on the east we are bounded by the rising sun, on the south we are bounded by the procession of the Equinoxes, and on the west by the Day of Judgement.” – The American Joe Miller’s Jest Book
- Shadow had done three years in prison. He was big enough and looked don’t-fuck-with-me enough that his biggest problem was killing time.
- [Shadow is talking to a raven.]
“Say ‘Nevermore,’” said Shadow.
“Fuck you,” said the raven. - “CIA”, said Wood. He shook his head, ruefully. “Those bozos. Hey, Stone. I heard a new CIA joke. Okay: how can we be sure the CIA wasn’t involved in the Kennedy assassination?”
“I don’t know,” said Stone. “How can we be sure?”
“He’s dead, isn’t he?” said Wood. - “There’s never been a true war that wasn’t fought between two sets of people who were certain they were in the right. The really dangerous people believe that they are doing whatever they are doing solely and only because it is without question the right thing to do. And that is what makes them dangerous.”
That’s about it, I think. Here are some of the Flickr photos to finish up this long-overdue blog post.
English
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Random, Rant on 2007/09/24
There are various forms of English: British English, American English, Russlish, Spanglish, Indian English, Chinese English, bad English (‘The Fifth Element‘). I don’t doubt that there are countless more.
Usually, the variety of the different forms is refreshing and entertaining. In the cases of British, American, Russlish and Chinese, I can even see some of the reasons for the changes, which really adds to the experience. But there is one version of English that I absolutely despise and will likely never grow to like or appreciate: Blog English.
It isn’t the Queen’s English that the blog authors use, no. They have developed their own twisted, crippled and almost-incomprehensible take on the Bard’s native tongue.
Here are two (grammatically) sorry-looking blogs I stumbled upon at random:
- Bye Bye Office – Hello Google at It’s all about luck
- How Girl’s Can Also Enjoy Travelling Being Single…..!! at Deliberation Of Samiha Esha
I struggle to pinpoint the exact offenses these people have committed. Sure, it’s the use of “their” instead of “they’re” (and vice versa) and the general spelling skill-set equivalent to that of a small rodent with a big substance-abuse problem. But it’s more than that. The blogs are a faithful reproduction of the author’s speech. Typed out. So, you take someone’s verbal diarrhea, type it up, place a pretty pink border around the whole thing and call it a blog. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the blogger: a largely-incoherent, self-important, almost-illiterate ass. And someone decided it would be a good idea to give him a podium. Shudder.
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
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…
New day, new blog
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog on 2007/07/26
After more than a year with Blogger, I have decided to take a different road. Certainly it is one less traveled by: Blogger has a hell of a lot more blogs than WordPress.com. But hopefully it will be a warm new home for my ramblings, religious rants, surrealistic mumblings and a few mentions of miscellaneous occurrences in my mundane life.
Quite a bit of thought went into the change. I weighed the possible alternatives, including a return to LiveJournal, but in the end WordPress.com won out. I’ve actually hosted my blog here for almost a week now, tweaking it in parts, making sure that right off the bat I start with a blog I can be proud of. Obviously you can see that all my Blogger content has moved with me: all the past blogs and their associated comments are here to peruse. There are some minor incompatibilities that I’ll have to resolve with a few of the older posts, but overall I’m very happy with how smoothly the move has gone.
So, welcome!
Blog quirkiness
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog on 2007/07/13
There are some issues with the blog as it now stands, the most obvious of which is the damn ‘Expand’ link on every single post. I’ll try and work on that over the weekend. Damn scripts!
Minor note
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog on 2007/02/07
My university hosting has expired, so as a result some features of the blog might be MIA for the moment. This includes applets, some images, etc.
Meebo
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog on 2006/12/09
If you’re viewing this on the website, and not RSS (nudge nudge), you’ll notice a nifty little feature on the right. It’s a Meebo Widget. Meebo, for those who don’t know, is a wonderful website that brings IM’s to you without needing to install a multitude of clients. Now I’m trying out a little feature of theirs that allows people who visit this blog to talk to me if I’m using Meebo.
Rainy piano
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Music, Random on 2006/12/06
If you’re an angsty-Asian, or have your sister’s login information, and are able to sign in to Xanga, check out this beautiful piano piece.
I have it playing in the background whenever I don’t want to listen to Sinatra or Rosemary Clooney, but still need some music in my life.
A comment – turned into a post
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Books on 2006/12/03
I was writing a response to the comments left on my previous post and it seemed to turn into yet another post, so here I am.
—-
As long as whatever company steps up to the plate and makes a good e-book reader that’s open to standards and, this is something I don’t think will happen for a while, nice programming tools, I’ll buy it. Wouldn’t it be neat if you could (easily) program the multitude of consumer devices coming on the market? Imagine adding meat to the skeletal structure of the iPod, like the ability to play WMA’s and OGG’s or run games, without flashing the whole thing to the penguin OS.
The fact that Sony is being an arrogant asshole when it comes to standards is a flaw in the Reader, but I’d still buy the damn thing, if only there was a wide array of sci-fi available to purchase. As soon as I can buy Larry Niven’s novels (only short stories are available so far) and Steven Gould’s “Jumper”, still my favorite after all these years, I’m walking into the closest Borders and slapping down 350$ and my dignity for the chance to hold that beautiful device in my hands.
[About there being many ebooks online, like at Project Gutenberg] Yeah… See, I’m not all into Dickens and Faulkner. At the moment I’m plowing through yet another strange novel by Vonnegut, but normally it’s Heinlein and Niven (though I think I’ve read all of Niven). Next on my list is picking up the first of a trilogy by Robert Sawyer. Which, of course, isn’t available in ebook form. Seems that either I change my reading habits and get the oh-so-cool Reader or continue to lug semi-weighty paperbacks around.
This is somewhat off-topic, but it’s yet another reason I am avoiding ebooks: it’s not standardized. I was just on Fictionwise, a place that actually has a fair amount of sci-fi, even if they are mostly short stories. But there’s no set standard! Some books are in Palm format, others are in Microsoft’s own format, and there are quite a few that are audio books, sold as 14-hour MP3 files. Blech! No thanks. This is coming back to that programmability thing I mentioned: once you can easily modify the software on one of these readers, someone will come up with an elegant (and illegal) program that allows you to read every single format without bothering to figure out what it is and how you’re supposed to convert it to Sony’s own format.
Websites and blogs, oh my
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Random Thoughts on 2006/10/19
Are websites on their way out? Certainly not the big-people businesses and porn websites, hell no, but how about personal sites?
Which one is simpler:
- Register a domain, get a host, create a unique layout, create content, add extensions to count your visitors, create a forum and a guestbook, make a photoalbum, design a template to make your site have a continuous theme, etc.
- Sign up for a blog and start posting. Post text, pictures, multimedia, games even. Individual feedback is already enabled. Practically no setup cost, aside from the time to choose a template.
Yes, blogs aren’t as configurable as websites. They are certainly limited in a major way: a particular look, content that has to abide to specific guidelines, etc. But for the lazy Joe Schmoe like myself, a blog is a pretty neat alternative to a website. There’s not much that I have to set up and I can create “webpages” instantly.
The internet is moving away from the old static format to a much more involved, interactive and communication-based existence. No longer are users satisfied to read lines of text on a screen and click a link once in a while. They expect an experience. They want to reach out and talk with others. That’s why sites like Facebook, MySpace and the multitude of blogs (or journals) are enjoying such popularity: they give the user a simple way to put ideas on the web, allow other users to comment on those ideas and make communication as easy as writing on a person’s virtual wall or leaving a quick comment.
The new, “interactive” sites are here to stay. And that’s a pretty sad thing. Everything is getting easier. A “site” can be run by anyone, be they 6 or 91 years old. Such a wide user base produces a lot of content. And a whole lot of it is pure drivel. Crap. A decade ago, a person had to be more than slightly determined to make a website. It wasn’t as simple as signing up for an account and jotting down some thoughts. Naturally, this weeded out the not-so-serious crowd and created a much better crop. In the end, there were websites with content and meaning, not just another pre-teen bemoaning their existence and complaining about the hard life in Orange County. Give me a break.
This is true for anything, really. At the Microsoft-wide company meeting I was “fortunate” enough to see new technology that will allow a game to be made in as little as half a minute. Will the game be absolute crap? You better believe it. Will we see hundreds of minute-games within a week of the release of this tool? Yup. And they will suck! No originality, no replay value, just a quick app put together by the last person in the world who should be designing games: the user.
Am I being too forward? Not nice? Pessimistic? Spend enough time on the internet and you will be convinced that the last thing we need is an easier way for idiots to be heard. Sure, with the multitude of morons “creating” content, we are bound to find a gem. It’s a statistical inevitability. Unfortunately, on the internet, it means shoveling 10 tons of manure to find 4 grams of gold.
Spam!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Random on 2006/08/31
A short post on spam.
Using the Treo to post blogs is interesting. I write the blog on the Treo, email it to a secret (and pretty random) address, then go online and change the blog from Draft to an actual Post. Lately, though, I’ve been getting spam on that e-mail address. I am getting spammed on my blog! If I checked one box, the e-mails would be posted immediately, so that spam would reach the web before I decided to delete it. Bah.
And, I am officially a M$ employee: I am getting spam in my mail box! Yay.
Treo
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Random on 2006/08/24
Treo is coming back, soon, with unlimited data. And you know what that means: lots of low-res images from my all-too-boring life! Yay!
Treo Posting
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog on 2006/08/03
For the next month (or so), there will be little to no posts done from my Treo. As such, there will be little to no posts done at all. I know, I know, what’s the big deal. Really, no big deal, just throwing it out there.
Alexian Brothers ER
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Pictures on 2006/07/13

Alexian Brothers ER
Originally uploaded by FuzzyGamer.
A list of their values. Efficiency ain’t it.
We went to the Alexian Brothers ER Monday night after my mom fell and injured her arm. I think we got there around 12:30. We didn’t leave until 5:30. The people at the security desk where sitting and watching a movie or a TV show, thankfully with headphones on, and kept on saying that they were real busy. There were two other patients and it was three hours after we got an x-ray before we went to see an actually doctor. Let me tell ya, if I’ve got a golf-ball stuck in the side of skull after experimenting with a home-made Gatling gun, I’m not going to Alexian Brothers. I’ll drive around, get everyone’s estimates on the wait and choose after I have four quotes. That’s the Progressive way.
I didn’t post this earlier because Taty didn’t know until yesterday afternoon, and after that I didn’t feel like posting it cause the spontaneity was gone. Fortunately, I came up with the thing of talking about why it took me a while to write the post, which is sorta spontaneous, so here it is.
I figured out that I like to write spontaneous blogs. Like if I see something hilarious, or something interesting happens and I get a picture of it with my Treo, or I got some idea I’d like to explore. Thanks to Taty, there are a few posts that I’ll never write. Mainly because I already told her what I thought and I don’t wanna retell the same old thing over and over. Too boring.
That’s why having my Treo is a great thing. I see something interesting, take a picture, post it and that’s it. I don’t have to wait ’till I get home and have possibly lost interest by then.
Naked Links!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Rant on 2006/07/07
Support the “Naked Links” movement!
Ever hear of Naked Links? No, don’t try to Google it. I just did, and trust me, it’s not what I’m talking about. You know what’s the opposite of Naked Links: try Google or UIUC or eBay. Something like this, but worse. The infamous “Your eBay/PayPal account is going to close, Dear Sir/Madam, please click her to update some information and your account will be just fine” link. The less-infamous AIM profile “Click me and this weirdo will know who you are and when you clicked me” link.
The first is a potentially dangerous link. An unsuspecting idiot clicks the link, sees the familiar eBay/PayPal website, enters their password and a month later they’re being hunted across three states for not paying their $50,000 credit card bill.
The second link is not as dangerous. At least, the victim won’t be on the run from the law. This is a rather sore point with me, as I see this sort of link as an invasion of privacy. They used to be pretty popular a few years ago in AIM profiles. The owner puts this link in their profile. The victim clicks the link, are sent to some weird website before being instantly redirected to some MySpace site. But now the profile owner knows the screen name of the person who followed their link and when they did so. Sneaky. It’s also not a very nice thing to do, considering most of the people that follow these links have very little idea of what’s happening. My first way of fighting back was to flood the offender’s system with about 90,000 users named “FU” until he finally took the link down. Now, I hope to educate. And flood them more if they don’t learn.
The Naked Links movement aims to strip away the confusion. Give us a link and show exactly what’s behind it. No more of this obfuscating crap. Sure, I always look at a strange link (read: non-search engine link) before I click on it, but most people don’t. Scams are the most serious problems, but other annoyances exist. So I say strip! Take off that damn text.
There are alternatives, you know.
On my AIM profile I precede a link with a description in square braces, like this.
[My new blog]
http://power-to-the-fuzzy.blogspot.com/
Simple and to the point.
Another alternative has been sprouting up recently: Google search links.
This is when directions to a website or whatever say “Google this phrase and click the first result.” This is one of my favorite ways to get a particular idea across. It serves multiple purposes:
1. IQ test: if a person can do a simple search, their IQ might be enough to see what I’m talking about. Seriously, too many people are stumped by simple things that can be Google’d in about 4 seconds. Learn to use that search button!
2. No complicated link to remember!
3. The website you’re telling them is probably not the only one. Maybe you’re telling a person how to make jello in the shape of cars. The phrase “nascar jello” returns a number of links pointing at Jello molds in the shape of various NASCAR cars. The person now has choices of which molds they might want to buy.
4. Pontiac is doing it! I saw a commercial that ended with “Type Pontiac into Google and see what’s hot!” I mean, if a major car company is paying millions for this sort of advertisement, the method’s probably not too bad.
Naked Links movement is not for everyone, of course. This is mostly for personal communication, whether in e-mails, chats, blogs of whatever. Make the wondrous interweb more friendly to the poor goobers who think hover is something a helicopter does.



