Posts Tagged ‘cool stuff’

On the Abolition of Free Time

Friday, March 4th, 2011

I’ve been doing a pretty fair bit of gaming lately.  Mostly computer gaming, but a bit of Zosias too.  It feels like a lot, but the truth is I’m gaming less than I had been; I’ve basically dropped out of World of Warcraft for the time being, and that game is the sort of time sink where you don’t even realize you’re losing time until you’ve been performing some mind-numbing task for eight hours.  It’s . . . kind of like a job, really, and I just haven’t been in the mood for it lately.  I have been playing a fair amount of Minecraft, but now it’s Minecraft and splotches of other games, not Minecraft and WoW.  Those two are a lethal combination.

I’ve been keeping an eye on the Steam specials, and earlier this week Braid went on sale for about $3.  Well, 2d platformers are the secret love of my heart, and I’ve been wanting to try Braid for awhile, so I snapped it up.  It’s not very long — I finished it earlier today (well, yesterday by the time you read this) and it only took me about 5 hours total.  That was with a fair amount of faffing around and a couple of puzzles that really burnt my brain out, but had I cut that I probably would still have needed . . . four, four and a half hours?  I’m bad at estimating time.

Braid was a real breath of fresh air.  This isn’t to say I’ve been playing a lot of bad games lately — quite the opposite — but I don’t remember the last time I ran across a 2d platformer that delighted me this much.  Well, that’s a lie; it was probably Cave Story; but as much as I like Cave Story, it’s really a very different type of game.  Cave Story is Metroidvania; Braid is a puzzle game.  I’m tempted to compare it to The Lost Vikings, but other than them both being 2d platformer puzzle games, they’re not very much alike.

I feel that I should clarify that.  Both are 2d platformer puzzle games, but they have very different types of puzzles.  And very different tones.

In short: Braid was excellent.  Even having solved the puzzles, it’s worth playing again at least a couple of times, which is more than I can say for a lot of puzzle games.  The story was excellent, and it didn’t intrude on the gameplay like so many do.  It had one of the best finales I’ve seen in any game, ever.

Actually, I’m going to take a moment and talk about the finale.  No spoilers, I promise, though that does make it a bit harder to talk about.

There’ve been a lot of people around saying that games can’t be art lately (if by “lately” we mean “in the last few years”).  This is an old and worn-out debate, in Internet time, and I’m not going to get too far into it.  They’re entitled to their opinion.  But if you’re one of the folks with that opinion, and you’re at all amenable to being swayed, I humbly recommend that you play Braid.  Don’t stop in the middle somewhere when you can’t get to one of the bloody puzzle pieces, though you will probably get quite frustrated a couple of times.  Finish the game.  Play through the finale.  Maybe it won’t change your mind, maybe it will, but for me?  That’s the very definition of games-as-art.  That finale wouldn’t have worked nearly as well without the game mechanic that the game is built around.  It could have been done in another form, in much the same way that a good book can be turned into a good movie — but, just as with any conversion between art forms, it would have had to have been done much differently.  I don’t know that the impact could have carried over as well.  Because in games, it’s not about what you see done — it’s about what you do.

So: five hours of damn good entertainment, lots of great puzzles, and the best and most artistic finale I’ve ever seen in a video game.  That’s $3 well-spent.  I’d recommend it to anyone for that price.  The usual $10 tag is a bit higher than I’ll usually go on a lark, but I’ll say that I’ve gone to the movies and spent $10 on two hours of relative misery before, and this is a way better deal.

Current Music: Guns & Roses, Welcome to the Jungle, and then Linkin Park’s What I’ve Done, via Pandora.  Both songs that I enjoy a great deal.

The Daily Lynx 11/29/2010

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

I have some WoW-related links for you today:

Shamus Young gives a casual player’s perspective on the Cataclysm changes.  Personally, I think the decision to remove the portals from Dalaran and Shattrath was idiotic; if they wanted to make the other cities feel more lived in, as they stated, putting portals in every major city would have worked much better.  Then people could choose where to live!  Imagine that.  As it stands, I can’t imagine (say) the Exodar being used by anyone except low-level draenei and the occasional mage or bank toon.

Three Panel Soul also weighs in on Cataclysm.

And now, assorted videos.  I don’t tend to watch a lot of web videos, but I’m getting a bit of my awesome video backlog out of the way here.

Epic Meal Time is epic.  I didn’t like the first video as well as the rest, so I recommend watching one of the others first.

Sometimes Loading Ready Run is just magical.  (Pun not intended.)  Also, their Desert Bus for Hope fundraiser (which is over for the year) is crazy awesome.  When it’s running I usually keep the driver cam open on my other monitor regardless of what I’m doing.

Why Yoshi hates Mario.  (Via Geeks are Sexy.)


The Daily Lynx is dated primarily for my own reference.  As such, the dates are in my personal time zone, in which the next day doesn’t usually arrive until I go to sleep.


Today’s writing progress (Derelict): 448 words, bringing the current working total to 89805.  This was another day consisting mostly of revision, but I’ve got the worst scene in the book about halfway rewritten.

The scene in question actually dates back to the very earliest form of the story and makes me bleed when I think about it; its removal from earlier drafts accounts for the associated word increase as I write it back in.  The new version of the scene is actually a ground-up rewrite: I’ve kept the original idea of the scene while changing nearly all the particulars, which is definitely for the best.  I think this version of the scene is worth keeping in.

Today’s writing progress (secret project): Seriously, what makes you think there’s a secret project?

Current music: A Pandora station seeded on various songs by Bob Dylan; Peter, Paul, and Mary; Plain White T’s; and the Beatles.  I’ve been on a classic rock kick for a while now, particularly the revolution music of the 60s and 70s.

I just noticed a subtle, yet interesting, lyrical difference between the John Denver version of “Leaving on a Jet Plane” and the Peter Paul & Mary version.  In the Peter Paul & Mary version the line, “When I come back, I’ll bring your wedding ring” is replaced by “When I come back, I’ll wear your wedding ring.”  Note that the singer of the latter version is female.

The Daily Lynx 11/28/2010

Monday, November 29th, 2010

[Insert drawing of a lynx with a monocle here]

I don’t want to admit how many RSS feeds I watch on Google Reader, but suffice to say it’s more than two and less than aleph-null.  Given how many interesting things I run across, I have decided to start a semi-regular link aggregation here.  Pay no attention to the purported daily nature of this lynx: he’s got delusions of grandeur.

SMBC has a message for science journalists. Yes.  Please.  That.

Here is a fairly awesome music video, made even more awesome by the apparent fact that it was filmed in one take. (via Shamus Young)

(Warning: Contains some NSFW language.) Blag Hag weighs in on the relationship between feminism and sexiness. These are very important points, given how frequently they seem to be forgotten.  TL;DR: Feminism is (or should be) about letting women choose what they want, not forcing them to avoid traditional roles.

(Warning: Probably not for the snake-phobic.) Something about the Pentagon and snakes, but I’m mostly interested in the video of a flying snake.  I’ve heard of those fellas, but never seen one in action.  Very nifty.

(Warning: Not for those trying to avoid Minecraft addiction.) Mojang has a bug tracker now!  Crazy.  It even tracks solved problems!

In other news, I might be doing some blog maintenance soon.  Getting a non-default WordPress theme, cleaning up my schizophrenic tag usage, that sort of thing.  Please imagine an emphasis on “might.”

Today’s writing progress (Derelict): -1 words.  Today was almost pure revision: some scenes were moved around, an outline was updated, and several scenes in Part 1 were partially rewritten to accommodate some major changes to the plot there.  (Outlines are not reflected in word count.)

Today’s writing progress (secret project):  What secret project?  I don’t know what you’re talking about.

Current music: Rogue by Incubus.  I’ve got Light Grenades on a playlist with Within Temptation, Muse, and Flyleaf albums, set to randomize.

Oh. Oh, no.

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

I thought I’d kicked the habit.  But now there’s a new release.

Well, I guess I’ll see everyone in a few months.

Current music: The default DF music.

Amusement in Bite-Size Chunks

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Most of the RSS feeds I watch tend toward the long side.  Generally this is a good thing.  I enjoy reading the wide variety of articles at Tor.com; I like reading lengthy Scalzi-rants or game reviews by Shamus Young.  Sometimes, though, I just need a bite-sized chunk of amusement to pick me up.

Historically, these bite-size chunks have been most frequently proffered by webcomics.  For the last several months, I’ve been subscribed to F My Life.  A frequently hilarious site, FMyLife is a place where people come to offer twitter-like explanations of why their life, at that very moment in time, sucks. Really, its only significant downside is it makes me feel like a horrible person for laughing.

Enter It Made My Day.  It’s pretty much the same thing, except instead of horrible happenstances it’s happifying ones*.  IMMD.


*Interestingly, some IMMD posts look a lot like FML posts, the notable difference being that the author ended with IMMD instead of FML.  This says things about psychology and stuff.

It’s good to know I still can.

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Right now, I’m reading Neil Stephenson’s Anathem.

Count ‘em.  One book.  What’s wrong with me?

The worst part is, I’ve been reading it since . . . oh, some time before Christmas — and I’m on page three hundred ninety something.  Somehow or other, for some unknowable reason, I just haven’t gotten much reading done lately.

But I feel good.  Because two hundred of those pages?  I read ‘em last night.  Just sat down and read, finally forced myself to stop because I figured I should get some sleep, checked the clock, and discovered that I wiped them out in just a bit less than two hours.

It’s good to know I can still do that.  To some extent, a lot of my identity and self-confidence — a lot of my self-image, really — ties into reading.  I like to read.  I really like to read.  And it seems like, for the past five years or so, reading just gets pushed further and further back on my agenda, until I start to wonder if I’m still allowed to identify as an avid reader.*  So two hundred pages in two hours feels pretty good to me.


*I say “the past five years” as opposed to “the past three months” because, while my reading time has dramatically decreased even from what it was before she was born,** it’s really been dropping ever since I went to ASMSA in 2004.  As in, I read the (I think) seventh book of The Wheel of Time in a couple of days before I went there, and the eighth over the course of a couple of months.  I’ve been busy ever since.

**And I don’t begrudge her that.  She’s pretty darned awesome.

Torchlight: Sans DRM

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

I’ve had my eye on Torchlight for a while now.  I got some Christmas money, and I’ve been thinking about purchasing it.  So today I dropped by their site to have a look at the options, and noticed something that makes me really happy about the boxed version (which comes out on the 5th).  Something that, for all the accolades I’ve read, I haven’t seen mentioned anywhere.

The boxed version?  No DRM.

Now you and I both know that, somewhere around 1:43 AM on the 5th, Torchlight’s DRM-free version will have been ripped to .iso, uploaded to several major torrenting sites, and will be happily on its way to a number of nonpaying customers across the globe.  Thing is, I don’t think this is necessarily a bad thing, and I’m really super glad that Runic Games is taking this approach.  (If you want some detailed discussion on the trouble with DRM, I direct you to Shamus Young — this article seems a good summary, but there are also a lot of great articles on his blog.  I really don’t feel like going into it here.)

Before, I was thinking maybe I’d buy Torchlight, looks pretty cool, sounds fun.  And really, it is right directly up my alley.  But just because it’s up my alley doesn’t guarantee I’ll buy it – I might well have just passed it up.  I mean, I have Diablo II.  I play Crawl more than is really healthy.  Dragon Age sounds amazing, but pricey.  I wanted Spore really badly for a while, but I got better.  But no DRM?  I’ve gotta support that.

Of course, it’s worth noting that the digital download version does have DRM.  They have an explanation of why in their purchase FAQ, and it sounds reasonable enough to me — I would have done it a bit differently, but then I’m not them.  (And how often do we see a rational explanation for DRM ahead of time?)  And having some (relatively friendly in today’s market) DRM on the digital version in no way undercuts the sheer awesomeness of the DRM-free physical version.

Go take a look at Torchlight.  You might be impressed.

Old Code o’ Happiness

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Digging through my ancient email a few days ago, I found a lovely old program I wrote for a friend of mine.  He sent me a sporadic email along the lines of “Awesome/bizarre challenge: Program a 4d maze.”  So I did.

The up-to-date source code for this is long gone — I’ve made a feeble attempt to recover it using a java decompiler, to no avail — but the program stands well enough on its own.  If anyone wants to play around with it, I’ve helpfully uploaded it here; it works wherever Java does.  The .bat file should work for Windows users, and otherwise just go to the directory in a command line and type “java WalkerTester” (sans quotes, of course).

I feel like adding a note on the coordinates here.  After some amount of discussion, my mysterious unnamed friend and I decided to measure the coordinates in arbitrary units with no frame of reference, and to use a differently-named unit for each coordinate.  The coordinates are listed in the admittedly unconventional Z, Y, X, T order, and the #1 change I would like to make (and will, if I ever feel like it) is to change it to the rather less unconventional X, Y, Z, T order.  The maze is difficult enough as is.

If you decide to map a maze — well, good luck.  I found a flowchart worked serviceably, as did a T, Z grid of smaller X, Y grids.  It’s a thankless task, because while you can tweak the maze generation settings with “config,” you can’t use a specific seed or generally do anything to make a given maze persistent.  What can I say?  This was programmed on a lark and then abandoned when I got bored with it.

Have fun!

4dMaze

Lovecraft Month

Friday, December 11th, 2009

It’s Lovecraft month at Tor.com, and I couldn’t be happier.  There’s a bunch of great stuff, including some analyses of various classic Lovecraft tales — most of which I’ve never read before, so I’m having a blast reading them for the first time.  So far, they are . . . not as freaky as I’ve been led to believe, though I like them anyway.  In particular, “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” seems more fantasy than horror to me, especially at the end.  Maybe I’m just desensitized.

Regardless:  Lovecraft month!  Rejoice!  Have fun!  Take the opportunity to read some great old stories, if you can get past the horrible horrible racism!

Ninite

Friday, December 11th, 2009

I ran across a lovely little app today called Ninite.  It made me cry a little.

How often have you found yourself on a new, new-ish, or refurbished computer with none of your must-have software on it?  It’s happened enough to me in the past several years to become something of a running annoyance.  I don’t know how many computers I’ve built, but I know I’ve gone through at least three main computers in as many years.  (I plan to stick with this one for a while, though.  It likes me.)

Ninite lets you pick from a fairly comprehensive list of open-source software, freeware, and shareware, and then it gives you a custom installer which will fetch the latest versions for your computer (in x64 if need be) and install them to the default locations — no babysitting, and absolutely no bundled crapware.  (I’ve mis-clicked or autopiloted myself into a couple of annoying toolbars in the past, despite a deep-seated and lasting loathing for most of them.  I’m not the only one, right?)  It’s pretty darned nifty.

Ninite doesn’t have all of the stuff I install — there’s no MediaMonkey, for instance, though Songbird has gotten good enough recently that I’ve considered switching.  Firefox will need to be immediately upgraded with your favorite addons.  And of course no computer of mine is complete without a version of Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup.  But really, it’s very pleasingly complete.

So which of these, I cannot hear you asking, do I use?  Well, seeing as how you’re so obviously interested, I will tell you in great detail.  Because I feel like it.  (For those of you who don’t care, this post is pretty much over for you unless you care what music I’m listening to.)

Starting from the top — browser of choice.  I use Chrome quite a bit, but for now Firefox is on top.  Chrome has a special place in my heart — it’s fast as blazes, for one thing — but it’s just not as customizeable as the Fox yet.  That’s going to change in a hurry now that Chrome has opened it’s extensions gallery, and I’m enormously pleased to have Chrome on my laptop now that it’s been released for Linux.  When running Portable Apps, Chrome is usually my go-to browser; its much faster and much more stable when running off my poor flash drive.

Pidgin is my messenger of choice.  I do sorely miss the cute little Gmail chat emoticons, but Pidgin’s everything else makes up for it.  I’ve poked Thunderbird a couple of times, but never seriously.

Current Music: Counting Crows, Accidentally In Love.  I thought this was a Dixie Chicks song for the longest time.  Also, I’m putting this in the middle just to annoy anyone who does care about what I’m listening to but not what apps I use.  No reason.  Just feeling contrary.

Media: Oh yes, VLC Media Player.  This is like the second or third thing I install on a computer, right after Firefox and maybe some antivirus software.  As awesome as VLC is for movies, though, I never use it for music — for that I prefer desperately need MediaMonkey or, failing that, Songbird.  Songbird has great potential, but I don’t really feel it’s quite gotten there yet.

Imaging: The Gimp.  I also mess with Inkscape enough that I’ll probably include it in any Ninite install, even though I do so little graphical work that I could probably make do with MS Paint indefinitely.

Documents: OpenOffice, Adobe, and maybe Foxit.  I actually prefer not to use Adobe for PDFs — not only is it bloatware, but it’s been known to have some pretty impressive security holes.  Sumatra PDF is usually my app of choice, but Foxit is a perfectly good alternative.

Security: Avast and Spybot.  I love both of those.  I’ve also started to mess with Malwarebytes, but I’m not yet very familiar with it.

Runtimes: Flash 10 (for other browsers, I will never need the IE version), JAVA, and .NET.  This falls under the “yay for annoyances I’ll never have to deal with now” category, because I never notice these missing until I need them.

File Sharing: uTorrent.  For Linux images, dontchaknow.

Other: I started using Dropbox about two days ago for backup purposes, and it’s pretty awesome.  Steam annoys me a great deal, but I do love me some TF2, so I’ll install it on any machine I expect to do gaming on.

Utilities: Launchy and Revo.  Revo is indispensible. (Do you know how many registry keys some programs leave behind?  Upwards of four thousand, in the case of some HP printer software I took off a laptop the other day.)  I just started using Launchy the other day. (I had a “hey let’s try out some software I’ve been eyeing forever” day)  But you know what?  Launchy’s pretty freakin’ cool.

Compression: 7-zip.  I used to use Winrar, but it’s shareware and 7-zip is open source.  And faster.  And supports more formats.  And doesn’t bloat my right-click menu as much.

Developer tools: I like Python, and I love Notepad++.  And . . . what’s this?  You mean I never have to dig through Sun’s website for the (right) JAVA SDK again?  That alone makes Ninite worth it.