Archive for category Pictures
Eggnog!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Pictures on 2011/11/06
Taking a page from the Book of Catherine, I’m sitting at Tully’s right now, a hot tea in one hand on one side of the computer, a paper shot-glass of eggnog opposite it. Eggnog is amazing, but more than a shot at a time and you might as well call the paramedics. Look, do yourself a favor, don’t wonder about the calories and just enjoy REGULAR eggnog this season, not that light/fat-free/sugar-free/piss-flavored stuff.
Pandora on the go
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Music, Pictures on 2011/11/06
Pandora on my phone is a pasta-send. It’s what’s playing when I don’t have my usual music around or when I don’t really care what to listen to, but still want it to be good.
I surround myself with music almost constantly. At work, if I’m not watching Netflix, it’s gotta be some Pink Floyd or Bob Dylan or Bon Jovi that’s resonating in my head. In the car, it’s something old but fast, like select Rolling Stones tracks, or some version of “All Along the Watchtower”, or simply Joe Cocker. At home, when I’m reading or editing photos and need some background music that isn’t intrusive but at the same time it’s something I like, there’s Pandora, with a station where I rarely ever have to skip a song. (OK, I just had to skip the Beach Boys. But Pandora should learn from this. Ughh, Beach Boys.)
Finally having a non-Fischer Price phone, a phone that can actually hold a charge, I find myself starting up Pandora almost constantly. It’s an app that runs more on my phone than the Google Maps application. (And I use that fairly regularly, having just moved to a brand-new office building downtown.) I listen to it at home when doing housework, or loafing around in bed on a Sunday morning while catching up on comics or some random blog psot, or while out on a walk through the Kirkland waterfront.
Even the silly ads aren’t much of a distraction. Uhh, that is, until I actually bother to listen what they’re saying. A few minutes back they played a commercial where an excited consumer calls up the Rosetta Stone people and asks if the ads are true, that they’re offering a “free demo” of their product, and what the “catch” is. (Insert some witty pun about being that Rosetta Stone costs an arm and a leg and doesn’t actually teach you the language in question.) The helpful representative replies that the ads are true, there is no catch, that Rosetta Stone is so confident in their product, they’re offering a “free demo” of it! Yay! That means I can get a trial version for FREE! That’s quite different from all those other places that make me pay for a partial product. If only I could remember any of those instances…
Well, since I couldn’t recall one, I had to Google for something that stupid… and stumbled onto this made-of-win post: “Capcom Is Charging for a 3DS Demo”. Seems Capcom is selling the first chapter of a game. Unless the model is chapter-by-chapter, this amounts to a paid demo. Ok, so the article itself is kinda thing, but actually it’s the comments that make it a win:
Capcom touched my wife inappropriately and got my kids hooked on crack.
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Capcom punched my mom down a flight of stairs and sent me the tape.
Capcom bundled AAA investments with garbage housing loans into premium packages sold to 401k managers, artificially inflating the financial market and causing an economic disaster following the collapse of the housing market.
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Capcom swapped my office chair with someone else’s.
Capcom gave long-term financial advice to Greece back in 2000, leading to an unsustainable level of debt that has them teetering on the edge of a bankruptcy that would greatly harm the value of the Euro.
And many more…
Now, having no idea how I’ve arrived at this point, here’s something relevant*:
*In the totally irrelevant sense of the word
A bit more on REAMDE
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Pictures, Reviews on 2011/10/25

The last four hours were spent head-down in REAMDE. My rating? 4 out of 5 stars. It’s no “Cryptonomicon”, but it’s also not “The Baroque Cycle”. With all due respect to Stephenson, in this book he got some things right, but quite a number of things wrong.
I saw some semi-clear plot holes, something that I couldn’t even begin to utter about “Cryptonomicon”. The end of the book stretched out forever. Or maybe it was just my desire to be done with it. The characters weren’t as good as his previous work and there was too much storyline that was covered, only to be forgotten and never returned to. (Contrary to the tangents in “Cryptonomicon” or “Diamond Age”, which had an actual purpose.) The MMORPG parts were good, but the interface that was described was not realistic and we didn’t spend enough time in that world. A virtual war of factions was mentioned, and apparently helped some real characters, but Stephenson didn’t delve into it too deeply. The writing was good, but not exemplary: whereas his other books were littered with insightful, quotable and hilarious passages (I literally crack open “Cryptonomicon” in random spots and enjoy the material), REAMDE was lackluster. I had trouble finding a handful of clever quotes, or concepts that made me stop and reconsider some taken-for-granted part of reality.
With REAMDE, Stephenson does something strange: he writes an actual ending. If you’ve read anything else by him, you know that a Stephenson ending is something akin to a wall, sneaking up on a nice, speeding Porsche right in the middle of the road. Something like a Roadrunner cartoon and about as welcome as a tsunami. REAMDE, however, has an actual end, something that attempts to wrap up all of those disjointed story-lines with a satisfying, Hollywood-esque finale. And I said attempts. Because, in my opinion, the story isn’t really wrapped up. Just… finalized. Not as suddenly as “Snow Crash”, for instance… for who could forget a pop-up ad?… but rushed nonetheless.
I keep coming back to this, but it’s true: REAMDE just isn’t as good as Stephenson’s earlier work. Does this mean that the master has lost his touch? I certainly hope not. Maybe it was just the side-effect of working in the action-thriller genre. Who knows.
The book does have the feeling of being a great source for a TV miniseries. Action-filled and usually not dull, I can easily see the plot being something similar to “24″. And at least partially in the same format: about 200 pages (of 920 total) are devoted to a single, hair-raising day. A great chapter. Though, sadly, it is followed up by 50-100 pages of boredom.
I could go on for a bit more, but it’s getting late. Read the book. It’s more “mainstream” than his other works, so maybe that’ll appeal to some. For me, I wish Stephenson would get back to the sci-fi, tech-novels that I fell in love with.
“REAMDE” and the Kindle Touch
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Pictures, Random Thoughts, Rant, Reviews, Terrorism on 2011/10/22
I’ve been ensconced in Neal Stephenson’s “REAMDE” for a bit over a week now. It’s a contemporary techno-thriller that deals with MMORPGs, viruses, international terrorism, espionage and Canada. Of course, as a Stephenson novel, it strays far from its main plot and hits on a hundred different fascinating tangents.
That being said, this book is an exercise in pushing the limits of my emotional response to its two extremes: indescribable joy/amazement/thrill, and almost mind-numbing boredom. Of Stephenson novels I’ve read, this is only the second time I’ve experienced this. “The Baroque Cycle” also had periods of boredom, most likely brought on by discussions of 17th century economics, politics or theology. REAMDE does sometime fall into a gratefully-short sprint of semi-boring happenings. But this is punctuated by amazingly awesome, action-filled sections that propel the story at supersonic speeds.
As is common with Stephenson novels, it’s hard to describe the novel in a sentence or two. At least, without spoiling the entire story. So I won’t try to. I will mention that there are quite a few overt references to Stephenson’s earlier work, like “Snow Crash” and “Cryptonomicon”. I giggle every time I notice one of these little gems.
The only other thing I’ll say is that if you’ve any interest in computer gaming (MMORPG experience is helpful, but not a requirement: I have never played WoW or anything of the sort), action thrillers, espionage, info-dumps or just good writing, REAMDE is more than capable of holding your interest.
A few curious excerpts (with spoilers removed minimized but still present) from the novel. These are only from the last two hundred pages or so, or since the last time my book crashed. A bit more on that later.
Except for the part about [SPOILER], this was the best vacation Richard had had in ten years. The only vacation, in truth. He had never understood vacations, never really taken them. But sometimes he talked to people who did understand and take them, and the story they seemed to tell had something to do with getting away from one’s normal day-to-day concerns, putting all that stuff out of one’s mind for a while, and going somewhere new and having experiences. Experiences that were somehow more pure and raw and true – the way small children experienced things – precisely because they were non sequiturs, complete departures from the flow of ordinary life.
Which Richard was totally incapable of, normally. Looking back, he could see that the majority of his breakups with [women] had occurred in conjunction with attempts to go on vacation. He had never gone on vacation in any place that did not have high-speed Internet. Even the private jet in which he flew to those vacation sites had its own always-on Net connection. This probably qualified him as a serious head case, but he liked nothing more than to sit on a beach underneath a palm frond cabana in Bali, stripped to the waist, sipping an exotic drink from a coconut shell, watching waves roll in from a blue ocean, while wondering around [his company's MMORPG] via the computer on his lap, firing off memos and bug reports to his technical staff. He could think of nothing more relaxing.
Except for what he was doing now. If only the bad parts of it could be done away with. He was seriously thinking that, if he survived this, he might try to launch a new venture: a vacation services provider for wealthy, hardworking people that would work by showing up at their homes without warning and abducting them.
I’d love to add some more, but… ready for another rant on e-books?
My Sony Reader – PRS-500, to be exact, the first of the line and one of the earliest “true” e-ink consumer ebook readers – has an annoying tendency to crash every so often, and to take the history of the past few weeks with it. Like the history of the books I’ve read and the bookmarks I’ve placed. In the case of Stephenson work, that’s about a bookmark every few pages.
Last time the Reader crashed, I was apparently on page 520, out of 920. So that means that all those little segments that I wanted to mark as interesting in the first 520 pages of the book… all those pointers to all those interesting tidbits are now lost to oblivion. How wonderful.

I’m pre-ordering the Kindle Touch right now. Fuck this shit, I’m tired of my Reader not holding much of a charge and deleting information that I consider important. It’s time for an upgrade, anyway.
I would have loved to add some more quotes to this post, if not for the fact that (a) my bookmarks have been erased and (b) I got a headache typing in the above quote.
So, the mini-rant on e-books: copy-pasting. You can’t do it! (At least with the Sony Reader.) The text is there, I can see it, I can read it, I can transcribe it, I can even highlight and add notes to it. But I can’t. Fucking. Copy it.
If I didn’t know better, I’d swear that Sony and the publishers were having a laugh, that they were making an ironic reference to the Wooden Table “meme”: to get the digital text that already exists on my computer, I have to read it and type it up in notepad, or take a screenshot and run OCR on it. It’s a joke, right? I mean, do the publishers want me to crack the DRM on the book as soon as I download it? Because copy-pasting already digital text seems like an idea that anyone would want to take advantage of. Like, students, for instance. Or people that want to quote a book in their blog. Or people who want to copy-paste the entire book into a Word document, print it out, and share the entire book with their neighbor. Ummm, I mean… who the fuck would be doing that? Is that really a concern?
Apparently the publishers aren’t getting it through their heads, so I’ll type it out in bold: the people who want to steal a book, WILL. It takes 5 minutes to rip the DRM, and that includes the time to Google for that information and for a non-technical person to use it. The only thing your draconian measures are doing is pissing off the legitimate users.
Shit, because I got pissed off enough at this concept, I paused before writing the last paragraph, and it did take me 5 minutes to crack REAMDE. (As mentioned above, that’s how long it took me to find the tools online, download and use them.) It wasn’t a hassle at all. Ripping the DRM off a book is a two-step process. And it takes the same 2 steps to batch-convert a thousand books.
Fuck you, publishers. Just… fuck you.
Religious micromanaging nonsense
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Pictures, Random Thoughts, Rant, Religion on 2011/10/14
Sure, maybe the phrase “religious nonsense” is an oxymoron, but until now I wouldn’t have pegged “religious micromanaging nonsense” as being one. OK, fine, there’s some fairly specific rules in religion:
- The Quran says something about praying five times a day in a specific direction
- There’s the whole infuriating business of Catholics not having meat on Fridays (infuriating because the cafe in college and again at Microsoft would serve fish on Fridays, and I’m not a fan of fish)
- Shabbat elevators. ’nuff said.
- Scientology (cult, religion, what’s the difference?) has something against therapy
- Hinduism has the whole cow fetish
- Every religion seems to hate pigs
But something was forwarded to me this morning that simply takes the micromanaging religious cake: What is the optimal Jewish toenail cutting algorithm?
…there is a tradition about not trimming toenails in sequential order.
There seems to be dissenting opinion on the precise application of this tradition, but we think that the following rules are sufficient to accomodate people whose religious practices prohibit cutting toenails in order:
- No two adjacent toenails should be cut consecutively
- The cutting sequence on the left foot should not match the sequence on the right foot
- The cutting sequence on two consecutive runs should not be the same. The sequences shouldn’t be easily predictable, so hardcoding an alternating sequence does not work.
What. The. Fuck.
And no, I’m not making this up. There seems to be actual language in the Torah about the order of cutting nails, which days it’s not OK to cut nails on, and the disposal of cut nails and what happens to pregnant women who walk on cut nails. (Spoiler: it’s a miscarriage.)
Gaahh!

Tower of London
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Art, Pictures, Random Thoughts on 2011/09/27

“But sometimes, no matter how carefully you plan your playlist, there is no right track for what awaits you.”
Less said, the better
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Pictures on 2011/09/23
It’s been forever and a day since I’ve written on this blog. It’s been forever since I’ve wanted to. The last few months have seen a fair bit of change in my life. Some things got pushed way down on the priority queue. But, here we are again. Hopefully back from an unintended hiatus.
And now, without further ado…
Episode 5…
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Movies, Pictures, Random, Sci-Fi on 2010/09/12
…is FUCKING AWESOME!!


Related web-comic (just started reading these, they’re not bad).
The rain
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Pictures, Random Thoughts on 2010/09/08
Half way there!
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Pictures, Random on 2010/08/27
It’s a minor accomplishment, but I’m now half-way toward my goal: I’ve sampled 80 beers at the Tap House Grill. Hells yeah!
According to an application of mathematics (yet another practical use, after returning the minds of all Futurama characters to their original bodies), in the 42 days since I’ve started the challenge, I’ve consumed almost 2 beers a day. One might extrapolate that I’ll need a new liver at the end of this. Cool!
Guitar practice
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Music, Pictures on 2010/06/07
“I’ve got blisters on my fingers!”
“The Atrocity Archives”
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Books, Pictures, Reviews, Sci-Fi on 2010/03/15
Currently on my reading list – and thus on my Reader – is Charles Stross’ “The Atrocity Archives”. It’s a quaint little book of the occult, mathematics, Nazi’s and Stross’ humor. The last part of which reminds me so much of Stephenson that it’s freaky. In a very good way, mind you. Stross somehow manages to write a terrifying occult story (some of the things in the book leave me shaking) while dripping a healthy portion of Office-esque bureaucracy all over the place. Below are some of the great quotables from the book that I’ve encountered so far:
Nameless dread is all very well when you’re slumped in front of the TV watching a slasher movie, but it plays havoc with your stomach when you drop half a pint of incredibly strong black coffee on it in the space of fifteen minutes.
The theorem is a hack on discrete number theory that simultaneously disproves the Church-Turing hypothesis (wave if you understood that) and worse, permits NP-complete problems to be converted into P-complete ones. This has several consequences, starting with screwing over most cryptography algorithms – translation: all your bank account are belong to us – and ending with the ability to computationally generate a Dho-Nha geometry curve in real time.
In the case of the great circuit of Al-Hazred, the terminator was originally a black goat, sacrificed at midnight with a silver knife touched only by virgins, but these days we just use a fifty micro-farad capacitor.
I boggle as discreetly as I can manage. “I’m not sure you should be on this course. The material gets technical quickly and it can be dangerous if you’re not familiar with the appropriate laboratory safety precautions. Are you sure you want to stay here?”
“Sure? I’m sure! ’Course I’m sure. But I ain’t too happy with the content For one thing, where’s all the stuff about license terms and support? That comes first. I mean, pacts with the devil is all very well, but I need to know who to phone for real technical support. And have CESG certified all this stuff for use on government networks?”
“That woman’s a psychopath.”
“So I keep telling myself. But after the tearful reconciliation, hot passionate bunny fucks on the bedroom floor, screaming pentacle-throwing tantrum, and final walkout number four, at least she’ll give me something concrete and personal to feel really depressed about, instead of this gotta-save-’em-all shit I’m kicking my own arse over.”
“Just keep her out of the cellar this time.” He stands up unsteadily. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got some omelettes to nuke…”
“Fred was a waste of airspace and one of the most powerful bogon emitters in the Laundry.” [Protagonist's employer.]
“Bogons?”
“Hypothetical particles of cluelessness. Idiots emit bogons, causing machinery to malfunction in their presence. System administrators absorb bogons, letting the machinery work again. Hacker folklore-”
Well, that’s enough for now, don’t want to copy-paste the whole damn book here. If you’ve got the stomach for Nazi occult literature and multiverse discussions, give this one a read. I’m 2/3 of the way through and so far this one looks like a B+/A- effort. I’m even attempting to overlook the all-too-persistent consciousness-causes-waveform-collapse bullshit. See, I place that idea in the same basket with creationist nonsense, young earth crap and similar mysticism. But, seeing as how I’m reading a book about the occult, I’m willing to let the author have this one. It’s on the house.
More of Olivia Wilde
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Pictures, TV on 2010/02/27
What is it about fake doctor’s that’s so sexy. I mean, obviously that’s the reason I posted up this picture, because Olivia saves fictional lives. No other agenda, really. Oh, wait, maybe… I just found out that she’s appearing in the new ‘Tron’ film, so it’s a geek thing, too.
Get Fuzzy, 2010/02/21
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Comics, Pictures on 2010/02/21
I literally LOL’d when I read this cartoon. Below is a thumbnail, it links to the full-sized image. Official comic site is here.
Mass Effect 2
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Games, Pictures, Sci-Fi, YouTube on 2010/01/25

Ahh, I can’t wait! “Mass Effect 2″ is out in just ten hours! I’m in class right now and can’t stop thinking about jumping back into the Mass Effect universe. Can’t focus on Asynchronous ASP.NET.
OK, here’s a trailer for the game. In all likelihood, I’ll be really late coming into work tomorrow.
Sherlock Holmes
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Movies, Pictures, Reviews on 2010/01/17
Went to see “Sherlock Holmes” today. A half-assed review, complete with SPOILERS, follows. After the jump, of course.
Yet another “opposite” moment
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Humor, Pictures on 2010/01/10
You know when you’re driving two hundred kilos of premium heroin from Vancouver to Seattle and are standing at the border, lying to the customs cops and suddenly realize that they’re just waving you through and that you’re actually getting away with this insane plot that your uncle convinced you to do and that you were at first reluctant about and then he pulled the whole “come on, we’re family” angle?
Yeah, well, in the airport on the way home I had the opposite of that. I wasn’t carrying drugs but was sure I would get stopped and questioned about carrying drugs. Seriously, I had a mild panic attack right there. And why?
Well, I happened to buy some pork sung (a.k.a. rousong) which is this dried, fluffy pork snack that I happen to enjoy. They normally come in plastic containers of varying sizes. At the end of my trip, the container was still half-full, and I wanted to take the stuff home but didn’t want to bring along the damn container which would have just been too big and unwieldy to put into my luggage. So, in a flash of genius, I decided to use a ziplock baggy. My second flash of genius went something like this: say, you’ll be on a four-hour plane ride, and they’re not going to serve real food (or the closest alternative) on the plane, and even if they did, for instance if you were in the first-class cabin, Alaska Airlines puts those freaking Bible quotes on cards with your dinner, and who wants that?, so why don’t you put the pork sung in your carry-on?
The Wikipedia entry doesn’t have a very good photo of pork sung, so here’s a better one I snagged (and resized) from Kyrie Eleison’s Blog (http://kyrieeleison2008.blogspot.com/2009/07/food-trip-to-chinatown.html):
What do you suppose one of those radiology-drop outs would think about a ziploc baggy of brown, cottony substance? That’s exactly what I was asking myself (after checking in my luggage) as I prepared to step through the metal detector.
Good news, they didn’t ask to do a visual inspection of my bag. Let that be a lesson to any would-be drug trafficers: just leave the stuff in a clear ziploc bag in your carry-on luggage and travel on a Saturday night. The plane was mostly empty, as was the airport, so the “security” personnel was just standing around shooting the breeze.
Next flight: confectioner’s sugar!
—
Currently listening to Mamma Mia! soundtrack.
Aurora
Posted by FuzzyGamer in Blog, Pictures, Programming on 2010/01/07
EDIT: Usually, EDITs are placed at the bottom of a post, but in this case… I’ve just found a command (a single command!) to generate a single animated image, so now that command is part of the script that’s described below. Which means that the Javascript portion of this post is outdated, as the page no longer contains any Javascript. And I no longer need to create an XML file for the Javascript to parse. And now the animation is of the past 24 hours, not 3 days. Short story: a lot of changes from the below post.
—
A coworker introduced me to the concept of the k-index and showed me this nifty site that displays the current graph of auroral activity.
With a small bit of scripting, a cron job and a fairly hacky Javascript page, I’ve setup an archive of past graphs and animated them on this page: http://www.fuzzyworld.net/aurora/
The images are downloaded every 5 minutes (if there’s a change) and added to an XML file. After that, the script on the page reads the XML, creates the relevant <img> tags and uses setTimeout to “animate” the whole thing. The worst part of this whole exercise (and an excuse to use a list):
- Finding out that this code works
<script src=”aurora.js”></script>
But this doesn’t
<script src=”aurora.js” />
Who the fuck came up with this?! - Figuring out the differences in reading XML from IE and from Firefox. W3Schools has a good example of how this is done, but you basically have to do it exactly how they’ve implemented it (AFAIK): http://www.w3schools.com/XML/xml_examples.asp
- Bash is great, but it took me a few tries to figure out this little puppy:
[sourcecode language="text"]
echo “create xml file”
echo “” > allImages.xml ” >> allImages.xml
find \
-maxdepth 1 \
-ctime -3 \
-name “${filenamePrefix}*.gif” \
-type f \
-exec echo -e “\t{} ” \; \
| sort >> allImages.xml
echo “
[/sourcecode]
This code creates allImages.xml, a file that contains an XML document with all the images in the current directory that match a wildcard-ed name and were created within the past three days.
That’s about it for now. If you’re gonna be trying out the aurora page, make sure you’ve enabled Javascript (or allowed it, as the case may be) and keep in mind that loading some 100 images will take a moment. Be patient.














