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Archive for October, 2005

A Note to CSS Rebooters

31 Oct

I got in on this whole idea pretty late in the game. About 5 days before the reboot to be exact, so please bear with me. This is a major work in progress, and some might look at my before and after shots and wonder how this is an improvement. And maybe it’s not…the point is that I’ve created a tableless CSS design that is truly mine for the first time. I know that everything doesn’t validate correctly yet (although I think Blogger is partially to blame when it inserts my content), but I’m working on it. I wanted to have something to show for those who come by to check out my site. This isn’t a radical change, but I didn’t want to jump in over my head and wind up nowhere. I welcome comments, both criticism and praise, but if you’re going to criticize please be constructive so I can learn from it. Also, if you do comment please leave your name and contact info as well as your site if you have one. Feel free to critique my design, then hang around and do a little reading.

Edit: I stamped this post in the future so it will remain at the top for a while. Originally posted: 10/31/2005 @ 11:45 PM.

 
 

PS3 Delayed Until 2007?

31 Oct

I thought I was done posting from class (we’re getting into stuff I don’t know), but this was too good to pass up. Yesterday, BBC reported that the PS3 wouldn’t be launching until late 2007 (I looked but couldn’t find the article). Not so significant by itself, but today Joystiq.com received a tip from a former GameStop employee who confirms the delay. If what’s in this article is true, that’s some serious problems for Sony and some potentially good news for Nintendo.

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Posted by Carson in Gaming

 

Happy Halloween

31 Oct

I’m not really sure why you would want to make a computer out of a pumpkin (can you say “rotting case”?), but who cares. Happy Halloween!

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Posted by Carson in Humor, Life, Tech

 

Origami

31 Oct

I started learning Origami around 4th grade. I got a little kit with a book and some paper and went nuts. I never really went beyond the basic levels, but it was pretty fun. Occasionally I find myself making something when I’m bored (like now – I’m in a class at work where so far everything has been review). This gallery is way beyond anything I’ve ever done. Enjoy.

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Posted by Carson in Art, Life

 

Is This Your First Photo?

31 Oct

This a pretty cool idea using Google image search. Since Sony digital cameras have a default naming scheme for pictures, these results are the first pics taken for their respective cameras after their owner uploaded them to the net. It works for Canon too, although the naming scheme is different. Pretty cool.

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Courage

30 Oct

I just finished watching Inside the Actors Studio with Michael J. Fox. I’ve only seen the show a handful of times, but I saw a preview for this one yesterday and made sure to record it. His first major role on Family Ties started before I was born and ended before I was really old enough to care about TV shows enough to know who starred in them. I remember him first from Back to the Future and it’s sequels which I still love. It’s one of the few DVD sets I own, and the movies are so timeless I can’t wait to enjoy them with my kids someday.

When Spin City came out I watched it all the time. It was consistently one of the funniest shows on TV. It was never as good once he left.

I remember how I felt when he finally announced to the world that he had Parkinson’s (after hiding it for five years). I remember how I couldn’t believe that the disease could affect someone so young who wasn’t the least bit deserving of it (not that anyone ever is). I was sad he was leaving his show, but I admired his courage.

Tonight he sat through most of the interview and you would barely know he’s affected at all. Just over halfway through his symptoms finally became visible and he left the stage to take another pill. Still, when he came back out he was able to make a joke out of it and talk openly about how it has affected him. The fact that he doesn’t let it limit his life is really amazing to me. He’s gone on to started a foundation for Parkinson’s research, written a book called Lucky Man, and still dreams of put something new on TV or directing a movie. He also had some very encouraging words for a young actress struggling with a similar disease:

What’s in my power, what’s in my control? Do I throw in the towel and have a tantrum about it or kill myself or what? None of those are acceptable solutions to me. The only one that’s acceptable is to go on and see what happens. And what I find is cool is there’s great stuff out there. When you walk through this stuff, when you walk through the fear, when you walk through what are people gonna think about it, you know, what’s gonna happen. Well something’s gonna happen. And we don’t know what it is, but chances are at least 50/50 that it’ll be pretty good. And so I’m willing to take that risk.

I think I’m gonna buy his book and make a donation to The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research.

Currently Playing: Surphace – Outlit

 
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Posted by Carson in Life, TV

 

Revolution News

29 Oct

Well I’ve been working hard to come up with a new site layout. I stumbled onto CSS Reboot the other day and decided to sign up. The only problem is I’m supposed to change my site over on Tuesday. I don’t know if I’ll make it with things fully finished, but I think I can have a new basic skeleton by then. So CSS Rebooters be patient with me. I did a little checking and this won’t technically be my first layout without using tables. The current template I’m using on Blogger uses all divs, but I’ve only done a little modification to a pre-existing design. This time will be brand new from the ground up.

I just read some interesting news about the Revolution. Apparently it’s been confirmed by Iwata that it will launch Worldwide next year. He mentioned the time frame as “sometime after April.” Let’s hope he means May 1.

Revolution Report has more good news about the controller. I don’t really plan on picking up a copy of Edge, but sounds like they have only good things to say about the controller. I especially like this part:

returning to TGS’s show floor after playing the [Revolution] demos [was] a faintly surreal process. Suddenly, the 360 looks incredibly old-fashioned. Picking up a DualShock for a quick play of Rogue Galaxy seems preposterous. The [Revolution] controller makes it instantly apparent how much of a cheap fudge the 3-D controls of the last two generations have been.

News isn’t all good, though. Mark Rein, VP of Epic Games (no relation to my employer) recently got a little mouthy about the controller. I think he’s confused. He thinks the next generation of gaming is all about the graphics. How much shinier can you make them? The next-gen consoles are already to the point where many of the games aren’t even going to be using the full potential of the hardware. What’s the point?

Hasn’t Nintendo said all along that their next system was going to be about games? What’s wrong with making good games? Graphics are nice, but they don’t make me go out and buy games. Isn’t the whole reason Nintendo wants to make things more intuitive for all kinds of gamers so they can focus on the games? And what’s wrong with a gimmick once in a while when it has so much potential for fun? I can understand him being skeptical, and I can even understand him speaking out about it. However, I can’t understand him saying something this stupid:

Rein then conducted a quick audience survey to find out how many people present owned a GameCube – and found that rather a large number of hands were raised.

He then asked everyone who also owned a PS2 or Xbox to put their hands down – and concluded that under ten per cent of the audience were Cube owners only.

“Hard to make a business on less than 10 per cent,” Rein said.

Wait…what’s that? Is he saying Nintendo has a hard time making money? If I recall Nintendo is the only one of the big three that makes a profit, and it’s a tidy one at that. Just because they aren’t fighting for market share using the same methods that Sony and Microsoft are doesn’t mean they don’t have a strong business model. While response to the Revolution controller has been overwhelmingly positive, it strikes me as odd that Rein would alienate himself and his company like this. It’s all OK in my mind though. He makes himself look like an idiot, and I have an even better reason not to buy his games. I don’t care about another version of Unreal Tournament. I’ve never played before, why would I start now? I’ll enjoy watching him eat his words.

That’s all for now. Hopefully the party on State Street isn’t totally insane yet. I’m going back to working on this new layout.

Currently Watching: Law & Order: Criminal Intent

 
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Posted by Carson in Gaming, Tech

 

So Boring

26 Oct

I’ve liked baseball as much as any sport since I was a little kid, but tonight’s end to the World Series makes me sad. Two years in a row it’s been a sweep, and that’s just boring. Tonight’s game was decided by a single run scored in the 8th inning. I don’t really care that the White Sox won or that the Astros lost (although I would have preferred the opposite). What bothers me is that in the end it wasn’t very exciting, despite all of the controversial calls on the way to the series.

That’s another thing that bugs me. Bad calls (questionable at least) seemed to be the bane of the post season this year, and I hate to see that when they directly affect the outcome of such important games. So many people think replay in baseball would be the worst thing ever, but sometimes I think it would be appropriate in some situations. As a baseball fan, I guess I’m just disappointed in how things wrapped up.

 
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Posted by Carson in Sports

 

Thou Shalt Not Blog…

26 Oct

Read:

Students can be suspended for a lot of odd reasons these days — wearing “objectionable” T-shirts, cross-dressing for prom, planning elaborate senior pranks — but a principal at a Catholic high school in Sparta, New Jersey, has added another offense to the list: having a blog.

Ok, stop. I don’t care if this is a private school or not, this is absolutely ludicrous. Who is this guy to say that none of the students at his school can express themselves through a website? I can understand if they want to limit comments made about the school or its staff, and it would be perfectly appropriate to hand out school punishments for violations in that regard. But to say that you can’t even have a blog because of the possibility of exposure to the bad people of the world…give me a break. That’s like saying you should never go outside because there’s a possibility you’ll get a cold that leads to fatal pneumonia. No one can live their whole life inside a box.

What really gets me is that this is an issue for parents, not the school principle. It’s the parents responsibility to make sure they know what information their child is putting out on the web, and to teach them what is appropriate and what is not. The school can certainly teach guidelines (and they should), but for a kid to face suspension simply because he writes his thoughts online is shameful. A school trying to instill values into its students for home life is one thing, but actually trying to regulate home life is something altogether different and completely unacceptable.

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Ouch

26 Oct

I woke up yesterday with lots of pain from movement in my wrist. In some ways, this was nothing new, as I occasionally have some pain (sprain-like) in both wrists. It usually lasts for a few days and goes away. Well this time around I’ve been fighting it for about two weeks and it was finally starting to get better. Until yesterday.

So I decided I’d had enough and that it was time to make my first trip to the doctor since coming to Madison. I was thinking about it and I haven’t been to a doctor in about four years, so I just scheduled a physical. He looked me over and didn’t have any earth shattering news about my health. It was the first time I’d been to a doctor using Epic so that was kind of cool. He had them draw blood to do some routine tests, so I’ll get to check those results on MyChart sometime soon.

The pain in my wrist is being caused by a ganglion cyst. Mine is on the back of my wrist but it isn’t that large, but it’s big enough to see in relation to my other wrist. Let’s just say I’m hoping the immobilization treatment option will do the trick. I’ll be wearing a wrist guard for the next week or so hoping the cyst will go down. It feels pretty good after day one, so I’m just going to play it by ear.

 
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Posted by Carson in Life