Thanks for the reminders, Twitterers.

October 28, 2008 – 10:32 am

Well, it’s been a pretty busy month.  I turned 25 last week, and had a totally awesome week doing it.  I am now in posession of a Nerf Vulcan. It’s a remarkably satisfying toy to play with, too. Discovered a pretty cool new bar in the process of celebrations, as well. If you’re ever looking for a decent drink and a place to hang out in the Bel-Red area, check out Celtic Bayou over on Leary just off of 520. I rediscovered my love for irish car bombs there last Friday night.

In non-brithday news, I’m studying for my MCSE. I know it’s a little bit old what witih MCITP/MCITS out there, but we’ve got a study group going, and I’m really only using the MCSE to get my foot in somewhere. I’m more interested in working with Sharepoint, and eventually network security consulting. That’s going fairly well so far, but I’m not expecting it to get into anything even a little bit complicated until the planning and maintaining server infrastructure stuff comes along.

I’m also working in a camera shop when I’m not out shooting or kicking around some code. That’s been kind of interesting. Mostly because I loathe retail. I get to spend my days playing with cameras, though, and that’s always nice. Spent a fair chunk of time yesterday playing with a D300 and the 105mm f/2.8 VR lens and the 70-200 f/2.8 VR lens. I don’t even remember what paychecks look like anymore. I’m going to have to convert to Canon, or convince Lisa to convert to Nikon. Neither of these things seems particularly likely, but I really don’t enjoy the thought of buying two separate sets of lenses.

Studying fun and retail woes aside, I had a photo shoot Saturday night, and it was easily the hardest thing I’ve ever shot. Swing dancing in a dance studio up in Woodinville. I’ll be putting together a writeup of my experiences with that soon. Some pictures, what I did wrong, what I did right and what I learned overall. It’s something a lot like shooting a track and field event in bar lighting. More on that later, though.

Last thing in this very newsblurb-style post: You’ll start seeing the occasional entry by someone that isn’t me. My good friend Phil will be weighing in on occasion with posts of his own. I expect comedy and insight will come of this. I make no promises, though. Except on the comedy part. Dude is funny as hell.

The trouble with hurricanes…

September 21, 2008 – 10:19 pm

…is that they tend to leave people in unfortunate situations. Especially in the case of Ike, simply because the affected area is hit with this kind of weather so infrequently. These unfortunate situations are not entirely outside of our ability to respond to, though. Many of us are capable of lending a helping hand and helping people to get themselves back into the swing of life and on their way past a rough stretch. With that in mind, I’ve set up a donation button (I’ll add it into the page itself, but for now it’ll live in this post) in hopes of being able to make a helpful contribution. In exchange for your donation, Xero Reynolds has put together a custom wallpaper from his upcoming webcomic. Donators will receive their wallpapers via e-mail. The way this will work is while donations are being collected, myself and a few others will be finding organizations with better-than-FEMA track records with this kind of situation. This will probably be a short run; I’d like to send the donations off by the end of October. Donate what you can, even if it’s only a few dollars. Every little bit helps.


Out of Town

September 12, 2008 – 6:25 pm

I’ll be in Lincoln City, Oregon for the next two nights.  I’ll be back some time Sunday (probably late evening).  Going down to spend the weekend in a friend’s beach house. Beach, surf, wind, alcohol, bon fire…some of my favorite things, all in one place. Check out my Flickr stream. I’ll be adding pictures from this weekend to it. Catch you all on Monday.

PAX 2008 (Finally)

September 6, 2008 – 3:48 am

It took me most of a week to get caught up on everything and actually sit down to write this down, but here it is.  Nicks in parentheses to help the IRC crew put names together.

Thursday:

Chase (Nextreme) had been in town for a couple of days by this point, but mostly we hadn’t done anything other than wander around Bellevue with Phil (Niali) and Chelsea (Sinaeh) and check out a few restaurants.  Picked Micah (Xellos) up from the airport around 10:45 and headed to downtown Seattle to pick up his and Chase’s badges…except Google Maps led us all astray and I basically got us lost on Cap Hill for an hour.  When I say lost, well, we were on the same street twice at one point, and went the wrong way down a one way street once.  Battery Street will forever be emblazoned across my mind as the place I nearly pissed myself in the back of DJ’s (Dejos) car.  Nearly.  We made it to the will call area at the convention center about 45 seconds too late and didn’t get to pick up badges.  It was totally worth the adventure, though.  We piled back into DJ’s car and headed back to my place where Mo had already arrived and Jason (Sparky) had returned from picking up Jack and Jeff.  Ryan (Uller) met us there and we piled back into a couple of vehicles and raided the Denny’s over in Redmond.  It’s the only Denny’s I know of that actually has passable food.  Got everyone introduced, got the humor rolling, generally had good times.  Piled back into the apartment, kind of half-assed sleeping arrangements for eight people and crashed.  Well, tried to crash.  DJ was cranking out some epic snore action.  It was kind of a running joke, excecpt it regularly woke myself and Micah up in the middle of the night.  Dude, Breathe Right strips.  Christmas is so easy this year.

Friday:

We had originally planned to wake up early this day.  Sparky was supposed to wake me up on his way out the door.  Jack had an interview over at Privateer Press early in the morning, and that would have given me time to get up and get ready so we could beat lines and get badges.  Well, Sparky forgot, and apparently everyone in the apartment had developed a serious fear of rousing Jake.  I still don’t get this.  I finally fell off the couch somewhere around 10:45 or so, got cleaned up and some of us piled into DJ’s car to go to Nibbana for “breakfast”.  Enjoyed ourselves a pretty good meal and then headed to the con…and got lost again.  If I took any lesson away from this weekend, it was Google Maps + navigating from the backseat = failure.  We finally got to the convention center and got parked, though (holy balls, $18/day).  Hit the con itself around 2:30 and wandered the exhibition hall for a while.  Rock Band 2 was set up just across from the Starcraft 2 booth, which is basically where we spent most of this trip to the exhibition hall.  Mo Loves Her Some Starcraft2.  She had basically that exact expression for about 90 minutes while Micah and I stood in line to get our hands on the playable demo.  I think we all got some amusing pictures there.  My thoughts on SC2: Well, uh, I should have played the easy AI.  In the brief period before zealots plunged into every orifice they could find and/or invent I got to see some of the new Zerg stuff.  I think I preferred the old static defense buildings.  I wish I’d had more time to formulate some specific opinions.  It certainly looks pretty, though.

From there we headed to the main theater hall to catch the second half of the PA Q&A panel.  I don’t know what it was about this year, but the questions were, by and large, fairly unimaginitive and, well, shitty.  Mike and Jerry were awesome, though.  Mike certainly seems to be much more comfortable on the stage this year.  The medication is doing its thing, apparently.  Definitely an improvement in stage presence for both of them this year.  We were pretty hungry by this point, so we met up with Uller and Luke (ithil) and wandered over to Pike Place Chowder (”Everyone should eat at PP Chowder at least once!”) for some dinner.  Seriously, everyone should eat there at least once.  I don’t care how wrong “PP Chowder” sounds.  It’s serious chow.  Mostly just hung out in one of the handheld lounges, rocking out on some Sumo bags.  I’m starting to seriously consider getting some of those for the apartment.  They are wicked comfy.

We finally headed to the concert and caught the last few songs from the One Ups set.  If you’re not familiar with them, think video game music with soloist/jazz accompaniment.  They have some pretty solid tracks, including their encore song this year, which was a cover of the Tristram theme from Diablo.  The next hour or so after this was a serious test of will.  Maybe I just don’t get synthpop, but Freezepop is just downright horribad.  I’ve endured some shitty bands to see bands I like, but this one tops my list.  It was certainly worth it, though.  Jonathan Coulton gets better every year, and he certainly didn’t disappoint this year.  High points include: Felicia Day coming out to sing Still Alive with him.  Rickrolling the crowd after Flickr, and then again in the Mr. Fancypants remix.  Basically everything else he did.  Seriously, JoCo makes for a fun show.  Stood in line for about half an hour to have him sign a poster and take a picture.  My comedic timing made for an amusing picture.  Seriously, though, I wanted to put my hand on her ass.

Saturday:

Woke up late again, but no one really cared.  Walked across the street to get some breakfast at Panera Bread.  Managed to get mildly lost again on the way to the con.  I definitely know how to get there now.  There wasn’t a lot I wanted to see, so I spent most of my day in the exhibition hall.  Unfortunatelly my incredible susceptibility to distraction caused me to miss the screening of Nerdcore Rising, and the PA make a strip panel and autograph session.  Played a little Pirates of the Burning Sea, drooled on some Fallout 3 and watched some more SC2 action.  Saturday night, though, oh damn.  Talk about a badass concert.  Anamanaguchi surprised me by rocking pretty hard.  Take music from NES games (run through an actual NES connected to a Macbook Pro), run it through a mixer for some minor effects processing, and then add in some pretty solid guitar, bass and drum playing.  They’re definitely a fun band, and you could tell that they were totally blown away by the crowd’s response.  I hope to see them again next year for sure.  After them came another band I’d never heard of: The Darkest of Hillside Thickets.  Someone in the crowd described them to me as “Lovecraftian power punk”.  I went into this skeptical, but they didn’t disappoint at all.  The rest of my group disagrees with me, but I thought they put on a pretty awesome show.  Definitely Lovecraft fans, definitely rocking.  They’re basically the reason I lost my voice (more on this later).  Once Thickets was done, though, the real show was up.  None other than MC Frontalot.  Basically the biggest reason I go to this convention.  Well, the biggest musical reason.  By this point the crowd had shifted enough that I was only about six feet back from the stage outlets.  I don’t think I’ve ever had so much fun at a live show.  Front graced us with his usual awesome dance moves, and a few tracks from his as-yet-unreleased (but purchasable at PAX) album Final Boss.  Including a joint venture with JoCo.  My glee was indivisible.  I’m not into The Minibosses, so once Front was over, I shuffled out and met up with the rest of The Group and we headed home.

Sunday:

Oh god, everything in my throat is on fire.  I rocked out so hard my voice decided to move out and trash the place as it went.  I basically sounded like Mickey Mouse and Selma from The Simpsons put together.  Hilarity ensues.  (Sparky shot this as we were walking back from The Taphouse after dinner, for reference.)  Caught the “Family Feud” game before the second PA Q&A panel.  I’d avoided this in previous years, but there’s so little going on on Sundays, I think I’ll catch it again in the future.  Serious comedy value here.  Q&A panel was better this time around, culminating in the guys getting sniped by the Bad Horse Chorus, which was awesome all over.  The relatively small amount of stuff going on culminated in all of us deciding to leave the con early and go get some lunch at The Taphouse.  That poor waitress.  From there we walked back to the apartment and got some more serious drink on.  Uller definitely wins for fastest trip through the stages of binge drinking.  He basically just grabbed a bottle of Whaler’s and started tossing it back.  He passed out pretty early on…in the hallway.  Not a traffic obstruction at all.  It was funny, though, so we left him there.  The rest of us attained various stages of drunk and played some eight way Halo 3 for a while.  Mostly just hung out and had a totally hilarious time.  Definitely something I look forward to at next year’s gathering.

All in all, I’d have to say this was the best PAX for me so far.  It’s my third consecutive, and by far the most fun of the three.  I’m hoping we get some more people next year.  I’ll probably get a shirt designed and printed off so we can spot each other more easily in the crowds.  To everyone that came, thanks a lot.  You guys really helped make this a lot of fun.  I think our goal for next year is to make it even more epic.  I think we’re up to it.

PAX writeup is totally coming

September 4, 2008 – 3:33 am

I promise.  It’s just 3:30 and I’m still writing it.  I’m going to sleep now, but it’s totally getting finished in the morning.  In the meantime, here are the meager handful of pictures that actually turned out halfway decent from this last weekend.  http://flickr.com/photos/pandalike

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Where I’ve Been: Redux

May 7, 2008 – 1:10 pm

Somewhere between shortly before my last entry and now, a lot of things have kept me occupied.  A relationship ended; a new relationship began; my work situation has changed (mostly leaving me on the looking for work end of things).  A lot of things that just weren’t conducive to staying focused an on topic for any given thing long enough for me to write about it.  Excuses aside, things have calmed down a bit, which leads to me getting more things done.

Currently I’m working on a new forum system, using Django as the platform.  Development has been a little slow up to this point, but I’ve got most of the overarching features hammered out and I’ve been cranking out a lot of code over the last few days.  It’s led me to some interesting thoughts on existing systems and their continued use.  Most commonly I see phpBB, with a handful of Invision Power Board setups floating around.  Two solid forum options…five years ago.  Why haven’t there been any better systems turned out?  Maybe my field of view is too narrow and I just haven’t seen any cool projects come to light here, but it seems to me like people are happy with the existing contenders.  That seems…odd to me.  Call me crazy.

At risk of seeming horrifically arrogant I’ve set about designing my own, and I’m pretty happy with it so far.  We’ll see how it stands up when it’s being used in a real deployment (which I’ll be doing soon for my WoW guild).  The major points at this time are eliminating unnecessary redirect pages and implementing a better permissions and organization system for threads and users.  I’ll probably put up a link to a generic testing version if people are interested in checking it out.

MySpace: Now with religious discrimination!

January 30, 2008 – 12:28 pm

http://www.secularstudents.org/node/1933

MySpace deletes a 35,000-strong user group of atheists and agnostics, “due largely to complaints from people who find atheism offensive…”

This is the second time, that I know of, that MySpace has deleted a large atheism and/or agnosticism group and refused to restore it, while providing extra protection to christian user groups. To quote the article:

“It is an outrage if Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation and the world’s largest social networking site tolerate discrimination against atheists and agnostics– and if this situation goes unresolved I’ll have little choice but to believe they do,” said Greg Epstein, humanist chaplain of Harvard University. News Corporation, Murdoch’s global media corporation which also includes Fox News, purchased MySpace in 2005.

An outrage may be overreacting, in my opinion, but I certainly think that users should be aware that they aren’t free to use MySpace as a medium for discussion of their religion of choice. Rupert Murdoch strikes again.

Where I’ve Been

January 23, 2008 – 4:12 am

December was a pretty rough month all around. Aside from the general hustle and bustle of the holiday season - I come from a rather large Scot-Irish family - there were a lot of family health issues. Two of my uncles are no longer harassing women half their age and telling us about crazy shit they did to our aunts as kids. A third uncle is recovering from a prostate cancer operation. January was more or less a kick back and recover and take things easy month for the most part. I did start a new job, though.

I’m working as a web designer and some times writing some Python and Django stuf. It’s for a startup company that wishes to not see their name in print, but maybe in the near future I’ll be able to talk about that more. I’m enjoying it, largely because I still get to work from home, and I get to work with my roommate. Aside from that, my free time has consisted of a lot of Rock Band, Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance and a little bit of photography. I think it’s time to get back into gear and start writing more frequently, as well as writing more code.

I’ve been rolling around some sample code for a few different projects, and learning quite a bit about some solutions to problems I’ve run into in the past. Nothing too specific yet, largely because I’ve got too many projects vying for my attention right now. Currently kicking around ideas for a Source Engine mod, as well as a short comic (written by me, illustrated by InkyPhil) and, of course, always churning away gradually on Photopiles.

In the meantime, I’ve got some ideas for things I’d like to talk about over the next few weeks. Mostly related to developing and designing things in the web world. I promise, no politics.

Dear MySpace: Don’t become Facebook.

November 27, 2007 – 4:29 pm

Before I get started, let me first say that I do understand the value of social networking sites.  I think that they will become more and more integrated into society over the next few years.  I just hope someone develops a good one soon.

Right now we have two primary options: MySpace and Facebook.  Both of them have their deficiencies and setbacks, and both of them seem to have camps that clearly prefer one over the other.  No one seems to approach this from a meritocratic perspective.  If they did, I think they’d find that, while MySpace certainly needs some work, Facebook is pretty terrible all around.  It’s terribly over-cluttered, with mostly useless information.  Facebook apps only serve to compound the clutter problem, while adding nothing useful to the mix.  The whole concept is broken.

MySpace, while not spectacular, is at least mostly clean, most of the time.  This leads me to wonder about the decisions behind today’s update, which adds a widget to the middle of the home page that provides updates when your friends add new photos, videos, blog entries, etc.  I tihnk it’s useful information, and I like having it, but what a terrible UI decision.  It could easily be contained in a sidebar item, which could replace some of the existing sidebar.  What’s there now strikes me as nothing but space filling junk that serves no purpose.

Why not take it a step further, though?  In the age of AJAX, there’s no reason it couldn’t be provided as a label that generates a content container window on mouseover.  The label indicates that my friends have updated their content, I mouse over to it, and I get a small overlay that shows me who updated and what they added.  It’s pretty trivial to implement, and it serves to declutter the UI nicely.

Ultimately that needs to be a primary goal in the development of any application, social networking included.  If MySpace and Facebook can’t seriously declutter and decruft their user interfaces, someone else is going to come along with some New Hotness and replace them.

Hell, I might just do it myself.

Got some things fixed

October 8, 2007 – 12:53 am

Well, after spending a week trying to figure out why the permalinks and RSS feed weren’t working (everything returned a 404 error), they finally work. Thanks to STL and his mastery of Apache URL rewriting, everything works perfectly now.