Categories
musings

Tony Hawk’s American Wasteland

I did it. I beat Tony Hawk’s American Wasteland. And I did it with only a couple of small gamefaqs.com checks. This sort of event might be commonplace for you but this is a pretty unique happening in my life. I believe this is only the second game I’ve ever beaten in my lifetime, and the other one was Tony Hawk’s Underground (the first of the two).

From this bit of information you may have surmised that I’m a fan of the Tony Hawk series of games and that would be a correct surmission. (Note that I know surmission is not a word, but ‘a surmising’ seems to be the correct phrase and that just sounds dumb.) Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 was one of the first two games I bought for my playstation 2 and based on that game and how much I played it and thought about it, I was worried I might waste my life away. That did not happen, thankfully, and my interest did eventually wane. I have continued to follow the series ever since but with a more normal level of enthusiasm.

So, with that useless information in your brain, I leave you with yet more useless information… With a single combo score of nearly 1.7 million points, I have also now reached the levels of the crazy pre-teens on the Internet who used to always kick my butt when I briefly played online That’s basically just craziness. I’ve only done that once but I also had another of about 1.1 million points so it’s not just a flash in the pan. I’m here to stay!

Categories
musings outside

Art in Context

Two Beauts The Washington Post did an insightful experiment where a world famous concert violinist performed unannounced at a Metro station in Washington DC at rush hour. If you’ve ever been in an urban environment for much time at all you’ve no doubt seen street performers. In my experience the vast majority of them are completely ignorable. I do still try to give them a few seconds of ear as I pass though, just in case. It’s enlightening to see what happened in this real-world experiment!

Read the article now!

Now that you’ve read the article… it brings up the idea that it may only be really possible to appreciate art in the proper context and environment. That even totally beautiful and amazing art may be overlooked and unappreciated if viewed from the wrong mindset or perspective. That makes sense to me. It also makes me think of the role of art as a concept and idea in our daily lives. We’re inundated with pseudo-artistic advertising so much that we can become trained to block it all out, especially while on our daily commutes. We’d go crazy otherwise. The difficulty is in knowing when to open up the blinders a little bit when there’s something worth experiencing going on. It seems that all too often that just doesn’t happen.

As a side note, this picture of nose art on the front of a World War II airplane makes me think, too. It probably falls under the pseudo-artistic category due to its relative lack of quality but it also is such an icon of American culture that you just can’t ignore it.

Categories
notes

Sugar-powered Fuel Cells!

To sum it up: sweet!

Categories
outside

Parking Ticket Plans

The city of San Francisco has a corporate parking ticket program that bills companies monthly for their parking ticket fines. It’s intended for companies that do deliveries or on location services. The top three accounts in 2006 by dollar amount were UPS ($673,334), FedEx ($434,046), and Airborne Express ($140,845).

The idea of charging companies monthly for their parking tickets is a bit odd, but I see the logic in it. It’s just not possible for UPS drivers to find legal parking on every one of the 100 stops a day they make. It can sometimes take 45 minutes just to find parking for our Mini Cooper! Parking tickets are just a part of doing business in a major city and shaving off some of the human time needed to process all those tickets (UPS recieved 11,788 in 2006) just makes sense.

The SF Chronicle article has lots more interesting details.

Categories
musings

How Different is Different Enough?

I sometimes think back to a moment in my early life that has likely had a dramatic impact on the person I have become today. I think it was probably the first day of 7th grade. I attended Lakenheath American Middle School (LAMS, for short) in England as an Air Force brat and on that first day of school I was greeted by an acquaintance who said something to the effect of, “You haven’t changed at all. You look exactly the same.”

At that moment I didn’t know how to take that or what it should mean to me. I wasn’t sure then why I cared so much about what that one person said, or even why it mattered that I hadn’t changed at all over the course of the summer break. I did decide, however, that I didn’t want to ever hear that again.

I don’t know if I have some sort of ‘desire to be unique’ gene in me that was triggered by that moment, or if my current desire to be unique in the world is a reaction to that moment. I do know that said desire to be unique has influenced many of my choices so far. In middle school I began listening to music that was different from what most of my peers listened to. That choice largely pushed me into specific social groups and behaviors that continued through much of High School, and probably resonates in my life still today. When picking a college, I was probably drawn into Harvey Mudd College by the literature describing the uniqueness of the college and its curriculum. While in college, my desire to not just follow the traditional road to working for somebody else may have pushed me into wanting to start a company and that decision has pretty much molded my life ever since then.

As of late, though, I’ve been starting to wonder if right now I’m really pursuing a path through life that’s much different at all. How is being an entrepreneur and making money in America really ‘different’ in any significant way? What sort of real impact am I having on the world around me? Am I really making the world a better place?

I guess it probably has to come down to the sum of your individual actions, how you live your life, and how you interact with the people around you. And really, even trying to be ‘different’ implies that there’s some sort of way that everyone else is behaving when the reality is just a lot of different people each making their own sets of choices. Sometimes a choice you make may match up with someone else and sometimes a choice may not match up with anyone you know. You can try to intentionally not match up with as many other people as possible but then ultimately are you really living the life you truly want to be living? Or are you just riding through reacting to the world around you?

Categories
musings

Recording an ambient album

Submodern is starting the process of recording a new full-length album tomorrow and we’ll be blogging about the whole thing. The blog is one-part self-promotion, one-part self-motivator, and one-part just for fun. Hopefully it will provide some insight into the thought process of our work methods (aka the ‘method to our madness’) and maybe you’ll get something useful or entertaining out of it!

We make very ‘electronic’ music in general terms but for this project we’re shooting for an extra ‘live’ quality and to that end we’ll be using a lot of standalone gear with wires galore hooking everything together. The more knobs, switches, levers, sliders, buttons, and blinking lights, the better.

Read along with us… recording an album of ambient electronic music.

Categories
musings

iPhone Thoughts

I went to Macworld today and spent an hour in the expo hall watching a live demonstration/presentation of the iPhone. I also checked out the cool rotating display case you’ve maybe seen bad video of online already. It’s smaller than I expected in person.

Here’s some miscellaneous thoughts I formed during or shortly after the presentation…

  • The web browser looks pretty awesome. Sites load slower than on a computer (the iPhone in the demo was using wifi).
  • The SMS application looks good but functionally not significantly better than what Treos have had for a few years now.
  • It has a notes application I hadn’t previously noticed.
  • It doesn’t look easy to use one-handed for anything more than calling people on your short favorites list. It’s really designed to be held in one hand and controlled with the other hand.
  • Being able to quickly navigate a music library by tapping letters of the alphabet is pretty awesome, but would be much more useful on a ‘full size’ iPod with much larger libraries.
  • I think I might actually use the coverflow mode to browse through album covers.
  • The email application shows attached images inline in the message itself. That’s pretty darn cool.
  • Typing on the on-screen keyboard does not look anywhere near as easy or fast as a real thumb keyboard. It might be worth it for the awesome huge screen.
  • People in the audience around me were so impressed with some of the cool, but not mind-blowing, features that I suspect they may not know how powerful smartphones of today already are.
  • A visual interface with that much pizazz on a handheld device of any kind is pretty freaking cool. I’m excited for the future of all handheld devices.
  • The Google Maps application is neat but isn’t much more useful than the one I have on my Treo now. The interface is slicker and there’s some cool graphical tricks that are fun to watch. The satellite images are neat, but I almost never use those on the web anyway.
  • Current CDMA/EVDO networks (Sprint/Verizon) cannot handle data and voice simultaneously so some of the features of the iPhone would not work at all on those networks, if Apple had chosen to release iPhone with those carriers. They demoed sending an email out with an attached photo while talking on the phone with someone at the same time, for instance. EVDO Rev A does support this, and I think Sprint and Verizon are both rolling out Rev A upgrades currently.

I’ll add more thoughts as I come up with them.

Categories
musings

Starbursts Suck

Categories
toys

TiVo Series 3

I did it. I bought a top of the line series 3 HD dual-tuner TiVo. It’s the best thing to ever happen to television. As a gadget, it’s pretty great. It also, however, pegs me as somebody willing to spend a pretty big chunk of money on enhancing my television entertainment.

After having a series 2 TiVo previously and having used the Comcast Motorola HD DVR box for over a year, I feel confident saying that as far as digitally recording high definition content (including premium content like HBO), nothing else out there touches the TiVo. The Comcast DVR records fine, shows look great and all that, but it’s just lacking the polish and finish the TiVo interface has. The ridiculous number of steps it takes to search for a program and set up a series recording on the Comcast DVR is mind numbing, and the way it dumps you back to the ‘live TV’ mode at odd times forcing you to dig through the menu system to get back to where you were is infuriating. It almost makes it a chore to watch television, and that’s exactly what watching television should never be.

I don’t think the TiVo interface is the end-all be-all of set-top DVR but it has very clearly had a lot of work put into it and it’s pleasant and almost fun to use. Oh, and wishlists. Yay for wishlists. With a nice set of wishlists and season passes set up, a TiVo almost makes the exorbitant prices Comcast charges for cable worth it. Almost.

Categories
toys

Roland Handsonic electronic hand drum

I had been eyeing these things for awhile and finally decided to give myself an early Christmas present and get one. It was designed to be a sort of electronic conga drum and it has some very good conga sounds built-in (as well as several hundred other world and electronic sounds). The interface is split into 10 rubber pad areas and each one makes a different sound. Some of the pads can influence other pads to emulate things like holding one hand down on a drum while you hit it with the other. You get a different more muted sound. That works pretty well and if I was a better drummer I think it might sound pretty realistic.

It has inputs for a couple of external pedals so it can be closer to a full drum kit with the addition of kick and hihat pedals (but way more portable), and it has the nifty ‘D-Beam’ infrared controller for triggering sounds (like a big gong, blammo!) or affecting other sounds like fiddling with the pitch for some cool effects. It also has a somewhat interesting ‘Rhythm Coach’ that I’m hoping may help me actually be able to play some of these ethnic beats.

I played with it some today and it’s pretty fun so far. I’ll be using it live for the first time tomorrow (at the Be Nice Party one year anniversary) so hopefully I don’t embarrass myself too much. I was hoping to have more than a day to get to know it. Wish me luck!