Archive for July, 02004

Atari 2600 , some house pictures, and the GRE

Saturday, July 31st, 02004

1) I’ve been playing quite a few Atari 2600 games via the Stella emulator. You can get nearly every available ROM for the 2600 at this website. Some of my favorite titles from childhood include Pitfall, River Raid, Defender, Frogger, and Chopper Command, but I’m enjoying playing a number of other games for the first time.

Here I am, about to collect a diamond ring in Pitfall:

pitfall

2) Some photos of my new house from when I moved in:

new house new house
new house

I’ll post some others sometime. I hope to remove most of the grass next year.

3) From now until August 20th, I’m mostly concentrating on studying for the GRE.

Nine Block

Friday, July 30th, 02004

I’m now the proud owner of a print of Nine Block:

Nine Block

Jared Tarbell, the artist/programmer, was nice enough to drop it off in person at my house. Very cool.

What does it mean when Google can’t find something?

Wednesday, July 28th, 02004

I can not express the lameness I feel when I look for something with Google, and I can’t find what I’m looking for. It’s truly frustrating to lose your omniscience.

I’m working with something called PAPI (Performance Application Programming Interface). When you google for plain “PAPI”, you get nothing that’s even close. On the other hand, when you google for “perfctr”, which is something PAPI depends on, the first hit is gold.

Am I spoiled to expect a Google query for “PAPI” to return something relevant, or have Google’s algorithms determined that PAPI is lame and maybe I shouldn’t waste my time with it?

For future google juice so I don’t have to keep bookmarks:

PAPI is some cool stuff. Go here if you want to learn more about PAPI. PAPI, PAPI, PAPI.

ABQ Computer Art

Wednesday, July 28th, 02004

Albuquerque’s own Jared Tarbell creates code that generates some of the most amazing art I’ve ever seen. What’s more, some works have source code and applets you can run to create your own unique versions. There are prints available. I’d love to get one (or more).

via boingboing

Google is down

Monday, July 26th, 02004

google error

A nasty Microsoft virus is hurting our beloved Google. Slashdot has the story. Some people are really upset. When one of my co-workers learned of Google’s outage, he said:

I don’t even know where to type “google is down” now. I can’t do my job.

I understand where he’s coming from.

Ode to my new desk

Sunday, July 18th, 02004
desk desk receipt
desk

Oh sweet and beautiful desk,

When first one gazes upon you, it’s easy to mistake you for a multi-thousand dollar desk from Design Within Reach. One wonders how a desk with lines so classic and a work surface so vast could be purchased for a mere $37.12 at Surplus City on Central. You are truly a beautiful desk. You have a large drawer for hanging file folders and a lockable pencil drawer. Your top is so large that I can comfortably nap upon you. I am so happy that you are mine.

On Blogging

Saturday, July 17th, 02004

On Thursday, I was interviewed by a local writer for a story about Albuquerque bloggers to appear in the November issue of Albuquerque Magazine. Although I don’t think my blog is interesting enough to warrant an interview on based its content, I live in Albuquerque, and sometimes I post Albuquerque related stuff, so I guess it made sense.

During the interview, Kelly asked me many of the questions you might expect in an interview about blogging. I’d like to expand on some of things we discussed. The blog-o-sphere seems an appropriate place. Perhaps the most appropriate place.

Why do we read blogs? Why do we write them? Why are they important? What’s their future?

Aside from the obvious — a diary, a soapbox, solidifying an online brand, or simply posting photos so your friends can see places where you’ve been — there’s other things at play with this weblogging deal…

Orson Scott Card might be most well known for a story that has two children posting their public policy opinions on "the nets". Behind a set of anonymous personas, these children and their rhetoric change history. This sub story of two siblings left home while their brother destroys the enemy and claims victory for Earth may not be the part of Ender’s Game that most people remember or are especially fond of, but I see it as the most important idea in all of the Ender books. I haven’t read the book for going on eight years now, but I seem to remember getting the following message, after reading it:

When mechanisms exist that enable much of humanity to freely publish their thoughts and inventions, while easily accessing the published works of others, individuals, not organizations will cause the events that shape our world. The more widespread these publishing mechanisms become, the more the demographics of those who alter our society will bend to become strange and unpredictable and the more those with the best authentic talent will come to the forefront.

This could be my philosophy warping Card’s intentions, but it’s a cool idea don’t you think? Maybe not. What do you think of meritocracy? Are today’s blogs having such an effect on the world? I think that they or their successors have the potential. We’ll see what happens.

For the record, the stuff I’m talking about in this post isn’t a reflection of what my blog is, has done, can, or will do. I don’t think my blog will be informing, entertaining, or swaying the opinions of large swaths of human population anytime soon.

There are, however, many blogs out there today that are doing exactly what I’m talking about and truly supplanting traditional media. There’s a good reason for this; They’re better than the traditional media. They’re breaking important stories first, providing more intelligent analysis, and offering a web of intelligent discussion to boot. There’s no way that the Ron Burgundy’s of the world and the wankers that feed him their lines on the 6:00 news can ever be as nimble as the web and a nation of inter-connected individuals.

It seems to me that:

A real person, even one masked behind an anonymous persona, speaks with a voice that is magnitudes more human, authentic, and compelling than the sterile and passionless organs of today’s corporations, media, governments, and institutions.

For example, when I want to know about the SCO lawsuits, I don’t go to sco.com. Instead, I read http://www.groklaw.net/, because a real human who I can identify with writes it, and a real discussion with real humans takes place in response to it. The websites and press releases from SCO, IBM, or Novell are not compelling. They’re not made by people you can relate to. They’re unoffensive (and uninsightful) gray poop that’s spit out of a machine after it’s filtered through a building full of lawyers. Yeech. Who’s interested in that crap? I’ll take real stuff from real people. Thanks.

Another example came to me this morning as I happened upon the homepage of The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (communist North Korea). The site is hilarious. If freedom of speech was possible and computers were available to the general population of the DPRK, I’d wager you would get a much different and vastly more authentic picture of what goes on in North Korea. I admit, it’s an extreme example, but doesn’t it make my point? Do you see how, for example, a poor but articulate and inspired blogging math teacher from the DPRK could gather a greater audience without coercion than their "leader" can generate with all of the state’s army?

On a lighter note, the obviously fake but brilliantly constructed weblog of Kim Jong Il (the illmatic) is much more fun that the DPRK’s homepage. In it, the reader delights in instant message conversations between Kim Jong Il, Saddam, and George W. Bush.

If you remember the 95 theses of the cluetrain manifesto, you might notice a few that fit well into this discussion. Actually, all of them fit somehow. Perhaps I should just shut up and have you read it?

One final musing:

In New York on the morning of September 11th, 2001, I was in South Korea where it was already into the evening. I had just gotten back to the hotel from a hard day’s work. The news hadn’t happened yet. I didn’t turn on the TV. Instead, I booted my laptop, hooked into the hotel’s high-speed Internet jack and, as I frequently do, checked the news on slashdot.org. There, on a weblog about geek stuff, I found out that we had been attacked, right as it happened. After a good hour of reading, I turned on CNN, but continued to read. Slashdot and the stuff it linked to didn’t totally replace what I was seeing on CNN, but it was in many ways more balanced, personal, and informative. I believe the experience was an early and very clear glimpse into the future.

I’ll be back after I take some pictures of my new desk.

Zen, Motorcycle Maintenance, and AI

Friday, July 16th, 02004

I’d like to retrace part of the route traveled by Robert Pirsig from Minneapolis, MN to San Francisco, CA and do photography later this year. Traveling via motorcycle would be nice, but my VW will have to do. I have to do some real planning, because:

As Pirsig says, if you rush through the planning process, you are not mindful, you have insufficient care, Low Quality will result!

Two guys are blogging their journey on the exact route right now.

On a different note:
3 Laws unsafe

Rain

Wednesday, July 14th, 02004

Much rain as I came home from work this evening:

Rain in the street
Rain off my garage Plastic lawn furniture with rain Salt cedar collect rain drops

Time for Firefox

Tuesday, July 13th, 02004

Now that there’s been four new “Extremely Critical” vulnerabilities discovered in IE (slashdot.org), it might be a good time for you to migrate to firefox.

Read this article (slate.com) and then

Get Firefox

After you’re up and running, check out Firefox help.