Planet SUCS

So, this year I started running and taking fitness seriously. I ran, ran and ran some more. I did pushups and star jumps in the cold and rain. I pushed, pushed and pushed. And lost 2 stone in the process. I can now run a 10k without much trouble and I’m marathon training for next year. The gut has vanished and has been replaced with something you might believe was muscle.

Feels good.

But what on earth has any of this got to do with coding? Well, I’ll tell you.

After sorting my health and fitness out, I have *bags* more energy than I did before. A year ago I lived on coffee and doughnuts and by the light of my screen I toiled away at code. And it was hard. I felt tired in the morning, I felt hungry all day and I felt tired in the afternoon. In a given day, I’d have maybe 4 hours of good coding time when my brain wasn’t struggling to focus.

Compare that with last Tuesday when I worked a *thirteen hour* stint in the office - wide awake the whole time. And today I feel I could do the same again. This would never have happened last year.

What scares me is I didn’t realise how poor my energy levels were back then and how badly it affected my quality of working. It’s easy to adjust to a situation and regard it as normal. When you realise you can change that normality - it’s a good day.

So, preachy moral time? A little, yeah.

I can’t claim that being a runner automatically makes you a better dev. You still need to put in the screen hours, do the reading, write the code. But if you want to be a happier, more energetic developer - get outside and run. Do a Couch-2-5k, get Runkeeper app, join a fitness group or something. I promise it’ll be worth it.

 

Posted by talyn256 on Dec 19, 2011 at 07:29 AM

Why do people take Jeremy Clarkson seriously? I mean, really.

Clarkson is a middle-aged clown in a nice car. He’s made a highly successful career in TV, radio and publishing by being a contentious, oafish prick. And, I’ll be honest here, I think he’s hilarious. The things he says are not witty, insightful or particularly imaginative but I don’t want all the humour in my life to be delivered as rapier-sharp quips, dripping with intelligence and sophistication. Sometimes I want to watch a clown throw a pie. Maybe this is my failing, I don’t know. It’s this very attitude that sees me walk into a McDonald’s occasionally. Sometimes I just want something base, uncomplicated and satisfying. Clarkson is that late night trip to Maccers.

The witch hunt surrounding him tells us far more about the people instigating it than it does about Clarkson himself. He says controversial things for a living and I have complete faith that he knows the reactions people will have and simply chooses not to care. If he were an elected official then I would understand why holding his tongue would be prudent but he isn’t. He’s a well-known public figure with a well-known (and predictable) persona and if he wants to (obviously!) make poor jokes about shooting people then why the fuck can’t he?

Every statement of opinion will be divisive but I still want to hear it. I may not agree with what you say, sir, but I will defend to the death your right to say it. These humourless animals don’t have the wit to understand Clarkson’s implicit assertion when he makes these kind of remarks. That assertion is "you are an idiot if you take these remarks seriously". Anyone who can’t see that assertion needs to re-examine their own perception of humour, subtlety and irony. Anyone who doesn’t see that assertion should avoid me because I don’t want to have anyone in my life who can only appreciate the world at face value, with all words understood literally. What dull conversation that would be. Spiritless, humourless, ball-less, soulless. This is not the humanity that I love.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to see the clowns.

Posted by talyn256 on Dec 02, 2011 at 08:06 AM

Against the advice of Milliways denizens and my better judgement, I upgraded to Lion on launch day. After having to wait an age for a pre-upgrade Time Machine backup to finish, the upgrade itself went smoothly and I used my computer intensively for work on Thursday and Friday with no problems.

Launchpad screenshotToday, I've had a chance to poke around in the settings a bit and have started noticing some nice improvements (such as invisible scrollbars) and changes that irritate me a bit (like the grey icons in Mail and Finder) and then there's the Launchpad.

Initially, I thought it might be a useful way of reducing the number of icons in my dock, but I soon discovered that it's ill-conceived, badly implemented and by all accounts just plain buggy. However, I have the menu bar (and therefore Launchpad) on a secondary monitor and don't suffer this particular bug.

Essentially, it is trying to be the iOS home screen, but there's no obvious need for it as you're not using a touchscreen and you can just go to the Applications folder. Were you able to only add a selection of commonly-used applications, it might be useful, but it seems that unless you installed an app via the Mac App store, you can't remove it from within Launchpad.

I've found a trick to solve this though - go into the sqlite database that stores Launchpad's data and nuke the apps table - and I may still use Launchpad as a page of favourite apps.

What gets me though is the lazy way that Launchpad has been implemented. There's no editor (that I've seen) like there is in iTunes for editing your iOS home screens so you have to tediously drag icons between a lot of pages of large icons (it seems every last app on your machine is added to Launchpad on installation and not in any sort of logical order). There's not even a search screen off to the left to find the app you want. Of course, you could just use Spotlight to do that - another reason that the Launchpad is rather pointless.

The only ways I can see Launchpad being useful is if Apple is planning on a netbook (which seems unlikely) or some sort of iPad Pro that runs OS X.

Edit (25/07/11): Having now tried doing this - using the trick above to empty Launchpad out first - I have discovered that at some point, OS X refills Launchpad with all your applications. It was possibly when I went into Recovery mode to try out Safari from there.

Posted by dez on Jul 24, 2011 at 12:22 AM

I wrote this short piece a few months back and felt like sharing. I’ve spoken before about how I’ve been able to just sit down and write something, how much I enjoy writing and how I am often surprised when … Continue reading

Posted by tri on Jul 17, 2011 at 11:01 PM

I already posted this over at my site: 8brit.co.uk, but wanted to post it here incase anyone missed it. FYI Most gaming related posts will now be appearing over there instead. Review: The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time 3D … Continue reading

Posted by tri on Jun 29, 2011 at 10:06 AM

Posted by foshjedi2004 on Jun 28, 2011 at 11:30 AM

This is kind of an overdue announcement but I am discontinuing my development of Twyt. It has not worked properly since Twitter switched off basic auth in favour of OAuth and I have no interest in making it work again. The bzr repository is still available so if anybody does have any interest in making it work, feel free. Perhaps it could be turned into a StatusNet client.

[Link]

Posted by welshbyte on Mar 25, 2011 at 04:38 PM

(Original article at London Evening Standard.)

Today, the protesters will be out again on the streets of London, marching against this Coalition’s plans for higher education.

Banners will be waved, slogans chanted, placards hoisted.

Of course these people have a right to protest.


Who are all you people? Get off my lawn!
But I also believe they have a responsibility to know the full facts about what they’re objecting to — and judging by the fury that’s been unleashed, there are a lot of misconceptions flying around.

At least that’s what Andy tells me.
Unlike our predecessors we won’t patronise the public by pretending there’s a bottomless pit of money we can dig into. There isn’t, and that means difficult choices need to be made.

Which is why we’re stealing from the future in as many ways as we can, and even some we can’t. Aren’t we clever? And brave! And so modest!
The public subsidy for higher education is massive — this year the Government will spend around £5 billion on teaching costs in English higher education alone — and in the context of spending restraint it cannot be exempted from cuts.

I impress you with arguing points I already know you disagree with using the obvious and uncontroversial.
A lot has been said in recent weeks about what is in the interests of students, but this government is also responsible for the interests of taxpayers — and at a time of real financial hardship, a time when we have no choice but to make cuts across public spending, I don’t believe it is right that we ask those on low incomes to pay taxes to prop up an unaffordable university funding system that they are not benefiting from directly.

I can’t see indirect benefits, therefore they are irrelevant. Tax avoidance is irrelevant too — if George does it, surely there can’t be anything wrong with it.
The second thing protesters should know is that these reforms are vital to maintaining a world-class higher education system in this country.

The free market can’t produce a world-class education system. Everyone knows that. But now we have one, the invisible hand will make everything better and cheaper.
A lot of the banners waved in Whitehall proclaim the importance of education, both to our economy and as an end in itself. I’m in whole-hearted agreement with them — but it serves no one to have underfunded universities with fraying resources and fading reputations. It damages our economy and it damages the prospects of students.

Okay, I admit, some indirect benefits are relevant. But anyway, I’m pretty sure a dozen or so rich universities and no poor ones should be enough to educate millions of young people. They’re the future, don’t you know.
These reforms are going to drive up the quality of higher education, because when more funding flows directly from the student rather than from government, universities will be pressured to up their game in order to attract more students — improving teaching quality, offering real value for money and offering better student support.

For my next trick, I will pull £5 billion out of this hat. Rumours of a secret tunnel to the Treasury under the table are completely unfounded. The money really will come from the students of the future!
These plans will mean that, like anyone else going to university, they get the burden of upfront costs taken off their shoulders — and that way no one will be locked out of the opportunity university brings.

My daddy paid for my coke habit while I was at Brasenose. Why can’t yours?
So this is a solution that is fair on the taxpayer in a time of financial anxiety. It’s fair on the student, who will get better teaching.

Speaking of coke, I am high as a kite.
Our Coalition partners have had a lot of stick for supporting this policy but their opponents should understand this: responsible politics is not about peddling fantasy policies without looking at the price tag and pleasing any crowd you’re playing to.

We didn’t have a fully costed manifesto, but by golly we’re glad they did, because now we can blame them for this mess. Even though they tore it up as soon as we told them to.

Posted by pwb on Dec 01, 2010 at 03:32 AM

Yes, I did it, I graduated, I am awesome... Maybe.. Possibly. Wait.. What? I GRADUATED? Does that make me like.. an adult now??

Its one of those questions that I've been wondering about for a few weeks. What do I do now I graduated with a 2.i in Materials Engineering. Well, lucky I've not had to find a job this year, which is good for 2 reasons, first being that I get to do a masters which will allow me to achieve Chartered Status and second that I am a student in Swansea for another year :).

I've been accepted onto my MRES in Steel Technology from Swansea University (God I'm becoming part of the furniture). My Timetable came in today.. No Freshers events for me it seems :( Monday all day I'm Enrolling and start a module straight away - Literature Searching in LIS - But Wait.. Didn't I have to do this for my UNDERGRADUATE Research Paper? Ah well, Just means I'll be busy Monday afternoon eh?

Then I look down to the next day - Tuesday of Freshers Week, I've got a Seminar which I have to wear business attire for and then a formal dinner in the evenings - So no going out on the Monday of Freshers week then.. or in the evening on the Tuesday - God I hope that there aren't any big bands playing in Swansea or else I'll be annoyed...

Wednesday - Freshers Fayre Day 1 right?? NOOOO - Safety Training.. Hopefully I'll be able to get into the Fayre for a little bit to renew my memberships with Comedy Soc and XTREME RADIO - And because I've got my first module starting on the Thursday/Friday - Elements of Material Selection A - I can't go to the Wednesday event (SAFE SEX BALL I'm guessing) or SIN SAVERS on Thursday or all day at the Freshers Fayre Day 2 :'(

Friday though of Freshers week is my Birthday Night out so that's gonna be good :D :D

But the next week... I have a WHOLE week of Professional Development... So no nights out this week (Good thing too, my birthday is Sunday 3rd)

Then from week 2 my lectures go down to being Monday and Tuesday with a week off W/C 25th October in which I am meant to go and meet the Industrial Partners = Trips to Corus methinks.

It defiantly seems to be a hectic timetable this semester, there seems to be a large ramp up from Undergraduate to Postgraduate in the shear level of work you have to do.. And do you know what? I'm ready for it.

Let's get this thing going!

UNI TIMETABLE - MRES STEEL RESEARCH ENGINEERS
2010 INTAKE

LECTURES COMMENCE PROMPTLY AT 9.30AM and run until 5PM
WEEK 0
27th September - 10am Enrolement
- EGTM76 Literature Searching (LIS)
28th September - STRIP Seminar/Dinner
29th September - Safety Training (Venue TBC)
30th September/1st October - EGTM38 Elements of Materials Selection A

WEEK 1
4/5 October - EGTM76 Professional Development
6/7 October - EGTM76 Professional Development
8 October - EGTM76 Professional Development

WEEK 2
11/12 October - EGTM85 Steel Processing Technology A

WEEK 3
18/19 October - EGTM85 Steel Technology Processing B

WEEK 4
WC 25 October - Free Week to meet with Industrial Partners

WEEK 5
1/2 November - EGTM38 Elements of Materials Selection B

WEEK 6
8/9 November - EGTM86 Corrosion and Coating Technology A

WEEK 7
15/16 November - EGTM87 Advanced Steel Metallurgy A - Stainless Steels Case Study

WEEK 8
22/23 November - EGTM86 Corrosion and Coating Technology A

WEEK 9
29th November - 2nd December
- EGTM77 Risk Assessment and Management A

WEEK 10
W/C 6th December - EGTM77 Risk Assessment and Management B

WEEK 11
W/C 13th December - Revision Week

W/C 20th December - Revision Week

24th December - 4th January - XMAS VACATION

4/5 January - EGTM87 Advanced Steel Metallurgy B

12 January - EGTM04 Project Planning

WEEK 12
W/C 17th January - EXAMINATIONS

WEEK 13
W/C 24th January - EXAMINATIONS


Posted by foshjedi2004 on Aug 14, 2010 at 08:54 AM

I got a slightly panicky phone call from my sister this morning because her laptop had suddenly decided to start asking for the Windows Vista install DVD.

It seems that a Windows Update went wrong and the computer suddenly decided that it was no longer activated. Rather than simply prompt to be activated, it wanted to be reinstalled from the install media. The dialog box appeared immediately after logging on. Once dismissed, you would be immediately logged off again, which means that an ordinary user now has no access at all to their files.

The computer, an Advent 5301, was supplied by PC World with no install media. There is the option to create a recovery DVD (actually, for some reason, it's two DVDs - despite the fact that one contains 4.1GB and the other contains just over 200MB, so it would all fit on one DVD) but I suspect this would just wipe and reinstall the system from scratch, and so would not be the install media that Windows was demanding.

With this in mind, I came round to my sister's with an Ubuntu Live CD, my laptop (OS X) and a USB caddy for 2.5" hard disks - the highest priority was to save all the user data. This was a beautifully simple task - I simply rsynced the entirity of c:\Users to my laptop. Having done this, I tried to perform a System Restore via the "Tech Guys" rescue partition that can be accessed by pressing F8 at boot time and selecting "Repair Your Computer". None of the system restore points worked and there was no option to do a non-destructive reinstall of the Windows files.

Had the computer been supplied with install media, this would simply have been a case of putting the DVD in when prompted and letting it get on with it. There's no excuse for PC World not supplying install media - including an OS install DVD (along with the other install media that was supplied) would have cost a matter of pennies.

Instead, I had to do a destructive reinstall, create the user accounts, then go back into Ubuntu and copy the Users directory back over the top (in fact I moved the "empty" Users folder to "Users-old" and created a new one which I then rsynced the contents back into). This, I discovered, prevented users from logging on. For some reason known only to Windows, it decided to display both directories as being called "Users" - sheer insanity. I suspect that the "genuine" Users directory was really called Users.{####-####-####-####} (the hashes being replaced by some cryptic string of characters) in the way I've seen Windows do in the past. If so, why didn't Ubuntu show this? If not, what was special about it? Back I went into Ubuntu, swapped the directories back again, went back into Windows then manually copied the contents of Documents, Pictures and Music into the user profiles, each time being told I had to have Administrative permission to do so. Getting such permission was simply a case of clicking "OK" twice - a meaningless gesture that provided no extra security. If it's going to force me to jump through these hoops for security reasons, it could at least have the decency to ask me for my password in the way that OS X does for such events.

Having got the user files restored, I then had to reinstall all the software that was on the computer previously.

A combination of Microsoft's, PC World's and The Tech Guys' decisions have made me waste a whole afternoon on a problem that didn't need to exist in the first place. It wouldn't have been hard for The Tech Guys to provide an option to run the Windows System File Checker to replace any damaged files. It would have cost virtually nothing for PC World to provide install media with every laptop they sell. Microsoft don't need to implement such strict piracy controls that they cause problems for entirely legitimate users who have done nothing wrong. If they are going to insist on reinstallation under certain circumstances, this could be done over the Internet using the Windows Update system.

Posted by dez on Aug 12, 2010 at 07:27 PM

So much has changed.

Posted by seymansey on Apr 14, 2010 at 05:13 PM

One evening last year I arrived home to find the master fuse producing a fizzing sound with smoke gently rising from it...
the emergency response team from western power distribution arrived two and a bit hours later (in flip flops) and found this, dripping wet...

The chared black bit should cover all but the cm or so at the end and be red.

We reckon water was getting in outside, running down the length of the cable and forming droplets of water large enough to bridge the gap between the +ve and -ve wires causing a short, slowly eating away at the plastic insulator as it went. The smoke starting when there wasnt enough insulator to keep -ve and +ve apart.

Minor disaster averted

Posted by rollercow on Mar 05, 2010 at 07:36 PM

Thats right... SONIC's BACK.. Tell a friend!

Gamespot have released an announcement that SONIC is back in 2010 with Sonic 4 - Episode 1.  Similar to how Sonic 3 and Sonic and Knuckles were linked this new title will be episodic content of a larger storyline.

Its going to be available via Wiiware, PSN and XBLA.

And the best thing about it...

Its 2D with 3D Visuals.. http://bit.ly/dgeinD

All I can say is.. THANK YOU SEGA!

One of the Iconic Figures of my Childhood restored.  Forgotten are the Horrors of Sonic 3D and the various other Sonic universe games which fundementally sucked.

Annoying thing is that its not out til the summer but eh well..  I've waited 15 years.. 6 months isn't going to be much harder :)

Posted by foshjedi2004 on Feb 04, 2010 at 10:21 AM

Since getting back from Cyprus (a whole month ago) I have been quite obsessed with GeoCaching, even more so than usual (as you should have guessed from my last post). Plus with more and more of my friends taking part I think it is one of those rare hobbies that isn’t going to slowly fade into the background. As a big bonus this hobby also gives me some much needed exercises (specially since I recently quit the gym). Anyways I had a great geocaching day yesterday with Nick & Rob, we walked down to Black Pill and found four caches (one was a multicache). In total we trekked over 12 miles (nearly half of that was done on a twisted ankle ouch!).

It was a really good day and even though I managed to twist my ankle I did find a good walking stick (thank you Nature) and as well as general geocaching we had a nice pint and some tasty food at the Woodsman pub (does that counteract all the good the walking did?).

You can see our path here if your at all interested (google maps FTW).

Other than Geocaching I have been doing lots of Halo playing (Halo 3, Halo ODST, Halo Wars) which is uber good fun. I have also just started to use blipfoto which was pointed out by frosty. I am not sure how long I will keep it up, but I have managed to post a photo entry the last three days. If you want to keep up with what I’m posting then you can follow my blipfoto RSS feed.

So there ends another blog post, what to do now?
Option 1: Tidy up before Jay gets home.
Option 2: Go get snacks from the corner shop namnam.
Option 3: Play Halo
Option 4: Read Halo

I will leave my choice a mystery

Posted by tobeon on Oct 04, 2009 at 02:20 PM

In recent years, I’ve become increasingly concerned about my scatterbrained-ness. I find it hard to focus on a single task for a prolonged period of time: for example, I find it takes me far longer to get through a book, or even read a short passage of text, than it ever used to. I don’t listen to the other person when I’m having a conversation – or rather, I try to listen, but the information somehow always seems to pass through my brain without being stored anywhere. I’m not really present in the moment. My brain gets distracted very easily, and I’ll swear I hadn’t had that conversation with you. My comprehension of texts is perhaps worse than it’s ever been, too. Not all the time, but often, I have to concentrate quite hard in order to actually take in the details of what I’m reading if I want anything more than a cursory understanding. When using the computer at home, I never seem to do anything productive – just follow an endless cycle of checking my feed reader, my e-mail, Twitter, and flicking through my open tabs. Sure, I get things done, but slowly, and piecemeal. My concentration usually feels scattered, my focus divided, my brain like it’s trying to juggle too many balls/clubs/knives/porcupines at once.

The first time I noticed this really happening was after starting university. My arrival at uni coincided (I think) with my first really portable, useful laptop (an iBook G4) with real internet-wherever-I-was; with the rise of update services like Twitter; with the rise of tabbed browsing. More and more things calling for my attention at any given time, and an increasing number of easy distractions. I think taking a laptop into lectures was a big mistake. What with web browsing, instant messaging, and the computer society chat room, I’d often leave lectures not having a clue what we’d just been told about. Closer to exams, I’d be going over course notes and sample exam papers and come across topics that I was sure I’d never been taught. Of course, I had – I just hadn’t been paying much attention.

It’s a problem that feeds itself. Checking your e-mail or Twitter account and finding a new message or some new updates from your friends is very… moreish. Each new ‘thing’ you discover is like a reward for your brain – well done!, it says, you checked for a thing, and you found one!. And so you check again. And again, and again.

Modern technology makes it easier than ever to be distracted; for your focus to be divided. Everything is at your fingertips. The problem is that if you’re trying to write a report on the computer and your brain keeps diving off to skim through some websites, or check your e-mail, or see what your friends are up to, it leaves very little time to actually devote to what you were trying to accomplish in the first place. And every time you check on one of these things, and your brain gets that little reward, it spends more and more time looking at more and more things. Ergo, you don’t finish that report – never mind, I’ll finish it tomorrow. But tomorrow, you’re just as distracted. You feel bad for not finishing, but your brain can’t help seeking its little rewards. It becomes a habit. An addiction. So the downward spiral goes.

I think multitasking’s partly to blame for this detrimental effect. As much as we like to think we can work on lots of things at once, the fact is we’re simply not that good at it - and I don’t think it’s particularly good for us, either. It’s stressful, and it trains our brain that it’s okay to only focus on tasks for a short period of time before switching to something else - but that’s no way to get things done. Even when relaxing, my brain still thinks it should be doing other things. For years, I’ve been overloading myself with information and trying to do too many things at once. Without even noticing it, I’ve been training my brain to always look for opportunities to perform this kind of rapid context-switching, which has left me less and less able to focus on any one thing for any length of time.

And lately, it’s been getting to me. I want to read more (I used to love reading books and would devour them ever-so quickly); I want to write more; I want to create more. Every time I attempt to settle down to do one of these things, that crack-seeking part of my brain gets excited by the slightest thing, pulling my attention away from what I want to do. What was that noise? Have I done this? I should remember to do that. I wonder if I have any e-mails? Are there any updates to my iPhone apps? Has anyone posted on Twitter recently?

I’m genuinely concerned about the effect it’s going to have on my long-term ability to focus on tasks and on my memory. The change I’ve described thus-far has arisen over a fairly short 4 year period. Current research seems to be backing up this idea that multitasking may well be problematic. A recent CNN article covers a study in which multitaskers did worse on attention tests than non-multitaskers. The multitaskers were more easily distracted by irrelevant information, and retained useless information in their short-term memory. Researchers aren’t sure whether these effects are reversible or not – I’m inclined to think they are, given enough time spent trying to correct them. So, I’m planning to do something about it and start trying to reverse the effects. It’s like realizing that for years I’ve been eating junk food on an alarmingly regular basis, and training my body to crave the taste of it. It’s time to throw away the Big Zinger Whopper, go on a diet, and start an exercise regime.

For starters, I’m going to be attempting to take up meditation on a daily basis. After all, applying single focus for a prolonged period of time is part of what mindfulness mediation is all about. Training my brain regularly in this way should help increase my mindfulness and focus when going about my day-to-day activities.

The goal of this kind of meditation is to bring an inner peace and a lasting happiness. Along the path to that goal, you get a lot of other benefits such as being more connected to your body, more aware of your feelings and emotions, and less caught by your thoughts and what’s called the “monkey mind” – a mind that won’t rest and that, over time, contributes to the kinds of anxiety and stress many of us feel each day. An Introduction to Mindfulness Meditation - Hivelogic

I’m also going to be trying to cut down on multitasking. If I’m doing something creative, or talking to somebody, or reading something, I want to give that my full attention. No aimless web browsing, or e-mail/Twitter/feed checking, whilst I’m trying to half-participate in a conversation with you. That doesn’t mean I can’t browse the web or read my feeds - but there’s a time and a place, and keeping these things distinct means that I should be more effective at whatever it is I’m doing. As with meditation, singletasking should help my ability to focus on a given task. It won’t be easy and it won’t be fast, but I guess it’s a bit like learning to run a marathon - take small, incremental steps, practice as often as you can, and you’ll get there.

After I began drafting this post I bought a book I’d read about online: The Power of Less. It may sound like a load more self-help nonsense, but it puts forward some useful ideas about applying meditation techniques to singletasking in your daily life. Simply focus on the task at hand – if you find your attention drawn away, be aware of what’s happening, breathe, and return your focus to the task. I’ve written the first draft of this blog post with no distractions whatsoever - just me and a text editor. I’ve written nearly 1000 words in about half an hour, because my attention has been on writing, and only on writing. Singletasking might just be the way forward.

I’ll let you know how I get on.

Posted by frosty on Sep 10, 2009 at 12:00 AM

I am as I am sure all of you know, very competitive which occasionally gets me frowns from some folk. This competitive streak runs through a lot of what I do, throughout my academic career I was very competitive with shepherdnick (every % counted!) and I am very competitive in my games (although sadly my game-playing skills do not match my competitive nature as no matter how much I “play to win” I inevitably lose). This mentality has followed me even in to the world of Geocaching as although I know that “the numbers don’t count” the fact that Trazer.W (someone I recently introduced to Geocaching) was rapidly gaining on my modest 26 finds filled me with dread! No way can I let him overtake me! The same goes for RicheJByrne, beechyboy, jwfrosty & Shepherdnick. RicheJByrne/Triard has had to remind me several times that Geocaching is not a competition (I can feel his distaste of my competitive nature even in his gtalk messages!).

You know what though? Being competitive is good! The friendly rivalry between me and Shepherdnick was the reason I got a First in Computer Science, I would not have worked nearly as hard if I didn’t have to keep up with him. It helped me get (and keep) each of my previous Jobs, it’s the reason I enjoy gaming, the reason I love arguing discussions and it is the reason I am going to keep on discovering as many new and exciting caches as quickly I can.

As I mentioned at the top, I have gotten more than a few frowns and scoldings about being “too competitive”. However I would argue that being competitive is not bad, but being unsporting. You must not cheat (obviously) and you must be HAPPY when you lose. You must remember that it is the competing itself that is fun. This does not mean that you don’t try as hard as you can to win as unless you “play to win” it’s not a real competition (and if it isn’t a real competition wheres the fun?). I should try to tone it down a bit when around those who get annoyed about it. However it is a big part of who I am so I don’t think I could ever get rid of that urge to compete and you know what? I wouldn’t want to.

Now I think with all this talk of competitions it is about time to start a new one, or at least restart an old one. I throw down the Blog-A-Week gauntlet to all you bloggers out there! Let it begin!

Posted by tobeon on Sep 07, 2009 at 07:51 PM

I asked, she said yes!

Here: 50.6896,-4.7046

Posted by rollercow on Aug 28, 2009 at 04:00 PM

... my parents have set me the task of selecting a laptop for them to buy, to replace their ageing desktop machine. The time frame is fairly generous: early 2010. (At this point it may be useful to note that we live in the UK). Now, listen closely because here comes the tricky part. The desktop machine has been running Ubuntu for a few years, which means they want the new laptop to run Ubuntu. No ifs, no buts. That’s what they want. They’re happy with Ubuntu.

Reading about David Woodhouse’s painful adventures in laptop purchasing (and others’) left a sour taste in my mouth. I don’t want to subject my parents to a similar experience. That is, I have no interest in advising them to buy a laptop with Windows installed on it, only to tell them they’ll have to contact one or more companies to request a refund, forensically and photographically document the removal of Windows from the hard disk, threaten legal action when said refund doesn’t materialise and jump through the other flaming hoops involved in buying a laptop without paying for an unused copy of Windows.

The fact that my parents want Ubuntu does not necessarily mean that they want it preinstalled; it simply means that they do not want to have to pay for Windows in the first instance. Focus on that small-but-important detail.

So, laptop vendors of the UK, you have until next year to offer my parents a good customer experience.

[Link]

Posted by welshbyte on Jul 11, 2009 at 01:43 AM

These days, my primary computer is a 15” MacBook Pro. It’s an amazing machine, but sometimes those 15” can be a little unwieldy (yes, that’s what she said).

Apple used to make a small, very portable laptop: the 12” PowerBook, which was unfortunately retired during Apple’s switch to the Intel platform. However, the transition did introduce the potential ability to run Mac OS X natively on non-Apple hardware. Whilst Apple don’t (currently) make their own netbook1, a big community has sprung up around running OS X on non-Apple netbooks. I should note from the outset that installing OS X on non-Apple hardware potentially violates the OS X EULA. If you’re going to do this, in the very least ensure you own a legal copy of Mac OS X Leopard.

The current netbook au jour is the Dell Mini 9. BoingBoing’s compatibility list shows it as the only device that currently supports every piece of hardware2 under OS X. And it does.

OS X on a Dell Mini 9

I bit the bullet and bought a Mini 9, which finally turned up a couple of weeks ago. It has a 1.6Ghz Intel Atom processor, 1GB RAM (user upgradable to 2GB), and a 16GB SSD drive. I ordered it with Ubuntu pre-installed - and let me tell you, this thing is fast. Ubuntu boot time was a respectable 30 seconds, and the user interface felt extremely responsive. In fact, I’m not sure I’ve ever seen OpenOffice load so quickly. I’ll go as far as to say that out-of-the-box, this was the best experience I’ve ever had with Ubuntu - things just worked, which has rarely been the case for me with desktop Linux before. I put an SD card in the Mini 9’s SD reader, and it instantly mounted on the desktop; I plugged an external monitor into the Mini 9’s VGA port, opened the display settings, and was able to rearrange the monitors / change resolutions / etc; Flash in the browser worked without needing to install or fiddle with anything; heck, even wifi just worked. If you’re not comfortable with sticking OS X on there, the Dell Mini 9 running Ubuntu is a lovely machine.

So, back to OS X. Aside from a few minor niggles due to my hardware setup3, installation was a breeze. This is one of the things that makes the Mini 9 such an attractive proposition as a Mac netbook - all of the wrinkles have been ironed out of the process by the clever group of people over at http://mydellmini.com. I won’t re-iterate the process in full here (I followed this guide), but in short it’s a case of:

  1. Create a DellMiniBoot boot disc (either CD or USB) and boot from it.
  2. Swap the disc with the Leopard installation DVD and tell DellMiniBoot to boot it.
  3. Install Leopard.
  4. When prompted to reboot, do so using the DellMiniBoot disc, and tell it to boot from your hard drive.
  5. Once you’re in OS X, run the DellEFI application to install the fixes that’ll make sure everything works ok.
  6. If you want two-finger trackpad scrolling, you’ll want to install these trackpad drivers.

It’s fairly straightforward, as long as you follow the guide. I had the odd problem crop up now and again, but a quick Googling saw me through - in particular, when rebooting after the installation, I had to boot into safe mode (using the -f flag) so I could get all the way through the post-install setup process. Other than that, it was pretty smooth.

The Mini 9 runs OS X beautifully. I’ve been using the Mini 9 a lot over the last 2 weeks and haven’t run into anything that hasn’t worked.

Things I like

  • Tiny and light.
    This is überportable. I’ve been chucking it into my work bag and taking it to the office with me every day. By comparison, I’ve taken my MBP in twice in the last 6 months because it’s just a hassle.
  • Silent.
  • Fast. Very fast.
    Fullscreen HD flash video gets a bit stuttery, but hey, this is a netbook. Streaming 480p H.264 movie trailers works brilliantly, however.
  • Convenient.
    For small tasks around the house, taking to work, to a friend’s house, going home for the weekend, surfing in bed, and assorted other scenarios, this is a brilliant solution.
  • A built-in SD card reader.
    Works flawlessly, and is extremely useful.
  • Cute.
    C’mon, look at it! It’s tiny!

Issues

  • Somewhat cramped keyboard on the right side.
    For some reason, our UK keyboard seems to have had an extra key squeezed into each row, meaning that the keyboard is a little more cramped than the US one. It took a little adjusting to - the tiny right-hand shift key, which is the one I usually use, was quite easy to miss at first.
  • Screen size is a limitation in some situations, although for what I’m using it for it’s generally fine.
  • I’ve had one occasion where the mouse didn’t work properly after waking, and one or two other assorted issues where it hasn’t-quite-woken-up-properly.
  • Very very occasionally, it doesn’t boot (the spinner doesn’t appear on the boot screen). If that’s the case, just turn it off and on again.

One final point it may be worth making is that this is not a replacement for a full-size Mac. This is a netbook, and a compliment to an existing machine - don’t go thinking you’ll get the same experience you will from a full-sized MacBook, because you won’t. Rumours are that Apple may be creating their own netbook-like device to be introduced later this year. Time will tell whether this is true or not - I’d be very much interested to see Apple’s take on the whole netbook thing.

I was going to finish off by filming a walkthrough showing how well things run on the Mini 9, but Mr Andy Ihnatko does a sterling job of it himself:

Dell Mini 9 Hackintosh Test Drive from Andy Ihnatko on Vimeo


  1. There’s the MacBook Air, of course, but that’s thin - whereas the most important factor for portability in my opinion is width and depth. A Macbook Air, whilst lighter, takes up essentially the same amount of space as a normal MacBook - you’d still need a > 13” bag.

  2. Note that their caveat beneath the compatibility table is incorrect - you don’t need a replacement SSD for sleep to work. Just make sure you get a 16GB or bigger SSD in it. 8GB just doesn’t cut the mustard.

  3. You need an external DVD drive to load the Leopard installation DVD, and I was using an internal IDE DVD drive with an IDE -> USB convertor. The Mini 9 didn’t want to boot from this, though - so I had to copy the Leopard DVD image to an external hard drive, and boot from that.

Posted by frosty on Apr 17, 2009 at 12:00 AM

I got a package from Dabs today:

bigbox

You'd think I must have ordered something pretty big, right? Think again:

emptybox

That's a desktop microphone and a USB sound card. If they'd packaged them correctly they could have just posted them through the letterbox!

Thankfully this isn't as bad as Dez's package from Scan which filled a box about that size with mostly bubble wrap, the payload being a 2GB SD card. But it still defies common sense.

Posted by pwb on Mar 11, 2009 at 11:43 PM

With the encouragement of a large German following, and news of the inclusion of Shtaggle on the next MACup magazine cover CD, I present version 1.2.1…

WITH POWER PC SUPPORT!

It isn’t as functional as the Intel version (the transport progress bar doesn’t work properly.) but it does the task it is required to do - tag sh..music.

For those that don’t know, Shtaggle is a music tagging app for OS X, with help from the last.fm community. It also gets lyrics (from lyricwiki.org).

In this version there is also support for Spotify, though limited, and better integration with Last.FM’s web services - including syncronising your tags from last.fm back to your library, so they match up in both places (no tags are deleted, only appended).

Download it here (or Direct link)

Oh, and, if you can, please do blog this or mention it in a post sometime - I’d appreciate the exposure!

-Steve

Posted by stringfellow on Feb 10, 2009 at 01:49 AM

Update on gardening: there is a *lot* of mint root in that little patch… all went well though, and Chris and I fashioned a compost heap out of rubble from the building of our wall. Its very homebrew.

Got some seeds and pots yesterday, so growage should soon commence.

Pinax Prettiness you ask? Well yes, yes indeed. Pinax is a sort of package I guess that is built on the Django project. Its a collection of Django apps which together make an ‘out of the box’ social site. Its what I built http://badlist.co.uk on (but was sorta bodged a little bit because I was finding my way around it) and it is now what I have built the new-look http://synfinity.net on.

It was far too easy.

My thought process went “Hm I could do with a repo for coursework PDFs (for comparative analysis with coursemates) and a place to sort of ’show off’ some bits (CV etc)…”

Django went “How would you like to do that really fast? Here’s a framework for you to store things and manipulate them. Files? Yeah we can do that. Files in different subjects? Yeah, no worries.”

Pinax went “Wanna be able to manage all that really quickly and not worry about the user-login-maintainence cruft? Oh I got some nice apps here if you wanna feed in all your media feeds too..? Oh your coursemates want to upload their work too? Yeah thats cool, I got some funky user profile things built in. Don’t worry about templating too much, I’ve got a nice standard styled template that looks pretty awesome. Change the logo if you like.”

jQuery went “Doc viewers? Don’t do it statically! Here, bosh a bit of AJAX in this page… yeah, then a little nav bar (oi Django, give us a hand!). Sweet, there we go. Oh, I got some rounded edges if you’d like that?”

Steve went “HOLY FUNK! It is done.”

2 to 3 days… could have been done quicker but for interruptions and hosting woes. Pinax is perfect.
Not to mention the creator and co-conspirator (’jtauber’ (James Tauber) and ‘brosner’ (Brian Rosner) respectively) are awesome, dedicated, bright, friendly, helpful… thats 5 characteristics you dont usually find together in the geek world… This project will go far and fast.

-S

PS - if anyone would like a demo/explore of Pinax I would be happy to acquaint you with it.
PPS - if anyone wants a project doing FOR them, and has a little cash to throw at me, I’ll do it for them!

This blog post was brought to you by Welti Productions.

Posted by stringfellow on Jan 25, 2009 at 04:27 PM

Nominations for the SUCS Exec are now closed and due to uncontested nominations the SUCS Exec of 2012 are as follows

President   Edward Smith (~Ed)

Treasurer   Safi Dewish (~zephyr)

Secretary   Robert James (~rjames93)

Congratulations and Good Luck to the new Exec who take over on January 1st.

Jessica Hunt  (~snowdrake)  Returning Officer

Posted by Election 2009 on Nov 18, 2008 at 04:19 PM

The iPhone 2.0 software was recently released, and with it came the ability for users to download native apps (i.e., not web sites) directly to their phones from within the iPhone UI or via iTunes. Developers (anyone who pays Apple 59GBP for the privilege) can then write their own apps and have them available for purchase in the App Store.

One limitation of the Apple-sanctioned SDK is that only one application is allowed to be running at a time. This presents a problem for apps such as IM clients, music players and other programs whose functionality relies on being able to run in the background. Another example (courtesy of James) would be an app that takes advantage of the iPhone 3G's GPS chip to create a log of all the places you visit.

However, there is a neat trick that I discovered: your app will only get terminated if you switch away from it, and hitting the iPhone's power button while your app is in the foreground doesn't count as switching away. The upshot of this is you can create apps which continue to run while the iPhone is in your pocket - perfect for the GPS example.

Achieving this is as simple as implementing two methods in your UIApplication delegate - applicationWillResignActive: and applicationDidBecomeActive:. Here's a simple example to demonstrate the effect.

In your UIApplication delegate header file, add a new ivar: BOOL activeApp. Then, in your implementation, add the following three methods:

- (void)applicationWillResignActive:(UIApplication *)application {
	NSLog(@"resigning active status...");
	activeApp = NO;
	[self performSelector:@selector(sayHello) withObject:nil afterDelay:1.0];
}


- (void)applicationDidBecomeActive:(UIApplication *)application {
	NSLog(@"becoming the active app...");
	activeApp = YES;
}

- (void)sayHello
{
	NSLog(@"Hello!");
	if (!activeApp)
		[self performSelector:@selector(sayHello) withObject:nil afterDelay:1.0];
}

Then run the app on your iPhone, hit the power button, and watch the log fill with pointless but oh-so-cool messages.

Of course, when the phone is put into standby mode by the user the expectation is that barely any juice will be drained from the battery, so it's a good idea for your app to reflect this. Indeed, you can make a big difference by halting your updating of the UI; the user isn't going to see it when the screen is turned off.

This isn't a perfect method, and won't be helpful in situations where the user wants to do other things with their phone while your app continues to run. However it might come in handy for certain scenarios.

Posted by davea on Jul 21, 2008 at 05:03 AM

In the unique style of the top five list, I proudly present The Five Best Comedy Instruments Ever:

1. The bagpipes

2. The tuba (even the name is funny!)

3. Er, drums? ("what do you call a guy who hangs around with a band? The drummer." Actually, all those jokes are about the man, not the instrument...)

4. The flute (I always hated American Pie. I think it was because they forgot to hire a writer.)

5. Sousaphone (like a tuba, but sillier. Actually, shouldn't this be higher up than the tuba if that were the case? Curse you, relentless one track mind!)


Next up, the The Five Best Comedy Fruit Ever:

1. The banana (phallic. Also slippery)

2. The melon (especially in pairs)

3. The raspberry (Monty Python know their stuff)

5. The grapefruit (as do Morecambe and Wise. Also, I guess you could have a pair like melons)

5.  The lemon, I guess? (Sometimes people make funny faces when they eat lemons... Ok, so it's a stretch. Man, this top five list thing is hard...)

 

And now, the Five Best Comedy Cars Ever:

1. The Skoda

2. Um, pink limousine? (Actually, I think that one has migrated from the Five Best Gay Comedy Cars Ever list)

3. Er, the Skoda again. (it's still funny, though, right?)

4. F1 cars (not actually very funny. Also, people have died driving them, which if you think about it is more tragic than comedic... yet, still funnier than...)

5. Clown cars (also tragic)

 

Er. The Five Best Comedy Dinosaurs Ever: (honestly, who is coming up with these ludicrous categories?)

1. Tyrannosaurus Rex (hehe, little stubby arms are funny)

2. Diplodocus (king of dinosaur stand-up. Inexplicably.)

3. Stegosaurus (funny plates are all funny)

4. Archaeopteryx (funny name. Funny looking. Negative points for possibly not really being a dinosaur.)

5. Those dinosaurs from Dinosaur Comics (is the comedy inherent to the beasts themselves or is it just the writing? Who knows?)

 

The Five Best Comedy Rainbows Ever: (what the fuck? Er, ok then. Here goes:)

1. Single Rainbow (Hilarious)

2. Double Rainbow (Doubly hilarious. Also inexplicably further down the list)

3. Bifrost Bridge (not hilarious. On the plus side, actually a rainbow, unlike...)

4. Dylan Moran (Hilarious)

5. My Sandman collection, which has colours on which are kinda rainbowy when they're all together. (Tragi-comic. No pun intended.)

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by wedge on Jul 02, 2008 at 01:52 PM

For all those people with those magical things called iPhones and iPod touches, you HAVE to check out Raging Thunder:

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrO65-jperQ

It's available to download from the installer app. It's bloody hard to get used to because you have to steer by tilting the iPod, and you can't slow down so if you get a boost you're almost certain to crash. I'm very impressed with the graphics though.

I stumbled upon it because I was researching openGL and the graphics in the game are generated with it.

Posted by grant on May 30, 2008 at 01:08 PM

In response to James's meme, I thought I'd join in the fun and share a few of my favourite games. So, in no particular order, here are five games everybody should experience at least once in their lives.

Lander

Lander Screenshot

Lander is, I believe, the first game I ever played. Calling it a game is a bit of a misnomer, perhaps, as it was really just a tech demo that was put together to show off the graphical prowess of the Acorn Archimedes. However, trying to explain that to my 8-year old self would have been a hard task, given the sheer amount of joy I got out of flying this little space ship around a rough-and-ready 3D terrain and blowing up trees and buildings. The game was notoriously difficult to control - you tilted the craft with the mouse and engaged the underbelly thruster with the middle mouse button, but the slightest twitch in the wrong direction or misjudged boost would send you crashing to the ground - but once mastery was achieved, you would be the envy of your friends who looked on in awe (silently hoping that you'd crash soon so they could have a turn).

Grand Theft Auto IV

GTA IV Screenshot

Moving forward a decade and a bit, this is perhaps an obvious choice but the GTA series are all fantastically well-executed, IV especially so. I've always been a PC gamer, but I couldn't help but join the console crowd when this was released for the PS3 and Xbox 360 without a release date for the PC version anywhere on the horizon. The tipping point came when I realised I'd have to spend about the same to upgrade my PC to be able to play this game as it cost in a 360 bundle deal from Play, so I took the plunge.

There's not a lot I can say about this game that hasn't already been put far more eloquently by others, and a Metacritic score of 98 (at the time of writing) speaks for itself.

Crystal Caves/Commander Keen

Crystal Caves Screenshot Commander Keen Screenshot

Putting two games together is perhaps cheating a little, but they're so tightly intertwined in my memory that separating them wouldn't be right. Both old platformers, both brilliant fun and both a great way to introduce my 8-year old self to 'proper' gaming. Many an hour was spent staring at the screen whilst my characters ran around collecting crystals, power-ups, jumping on bad guys and completely failing to understand the more intricate plot twists and subtle humour intended for the game's more grown-up audience.

In some ways, these games were more than mere entertainment, they were my introduction to computers and how they worked. cd, diring my way around the floppy disks' directory structure and tweaking settings in the games' configuration files piqued my interest in how it all worked behind the scenes, and it was only a couple of years later that I was writing my own programs in GW-BASIC.

Half-Life 2

Half-Life 2 Screenshot

No 'best games evar!' list would be complete without a nod to the epic created by Valve Software and its subsequent episodes. The original Half-Life was a phenomenal game so of course all eyes were on Valve to come up with something that surpassed that game's greatness. Of course, those geniuses pulled it off with aplomb. Never a dull moment in the game, and 3.5 years later the game looks fantastic as ever.

The deathmatch component, while taking a little longer to appear than people had hoped, is an absolute blast, and cutting people down by launching office furniture or broken toilet bowls at them never fails to bring a huge grin to my face.

Starcraft

Starcraft Screenshot

Warcraft II was a fantastic game, the multiplayer especially, but Starcraft improved upon it in just about every way possible. I'll admit that I never really got into the single player mode, but that was purely because I spent so many hours playing multiplayer with friends. It came along at just the right time - all my friends had PCs capable of playing the game, and we were at the age when there was nothing more exciting than congregating at one house and spending all weekend playing the game across a hastily-cobbled together LAN. Here's hoping Starcraft II is able to live up to the reputation of its predecessor (all signs point to 'yes', it seems).

Next, I tag Steve to share his list with us all.

Posted by davea on May 27, 2008 at 04:17 PM

Sometimes I see a bandwagon and some people jumping on it. Oftentimes, I jump on it too and we roll on to our destination, like an enormous, beautiful katamari. This is one of those times.

I'm rating the following games based on a few things: obviously graphical quality will only be worse the further into the past you go, so I'll try and rate them as they appeared at the time. Equally, they'll be rated partially on the influence they had on the games that followed them. I'm trying to avoid personal preference, so my list of my Five Favourite Video Games Ever would be different to this one. I'm obviously not going to include anything I've not played, that would be silly. I'm not keeping spoilers out of these, the most recent one came out around eight years ago and you've no excuse for never having played any of them. I'm only reviewing the games as they appeared on their primary system (i.e. for the first time), no GBA ports dated a couple of years later nor things appearing on the Wii virtual console.

With all that said, my own opinions do move back and forth a bit, it all depends on my mood. A bit like asking which my five favourite bands are. If I ever get around to playing GTA: IV then that might make this list. Spore too, depending a bit on what it's like. Anyway, enough equivocating, here's game number five.

5. Planescape: Torment (1999) Metacritic score: 91

You begin the game as a heavily scarred man, who knows nothing of his identity, waking up in a mortuary; your only companion, a sarcastic floating skull. Things get stranger from there. You discover you're immortal and are haunted by a question: "what can change the nature of a man?" Never before or since have I felt like every action I took had a consequence, for good or evil; law or chaos. The NPCs you can have in your party are a strange but massively compelling group. Some of the other people you meet are even more so. Highlights include challenging a rather arrogant preacher to a suicide-off (which, unsurprisingly and hilariously, you win.) and debating with a man until you convince him he does not exist. At which point he stops. The setting is a far cry from your standard D&D with Sigil, city of doors, an incredible place filled with different factions vying for control. Your group even finds itself in the middle of the Blood War on Baator and later in the Abyss at one point. The script is unparalleled, probably more dialogue than in any other game I've ever played and every single line worth reading. The very greatest thing about it? The name. Planescape is only the setting, as it were, the actual game's name is 'Torment', the one thing that drives every single character in it. Vital for heavily influencing Baldur's Gate and its sequel, which would take the importance of NPCs in your party to an even greater level, although few of them would be as cool and individual as Fall-From-Grace, Morte, Nordom, Ignus, Anna et al.

4. Super Mario 64 (1996 Japan/US, 1997 Europe) Metacritic score: 94

The level design is unbelievable. The graphics, for the time, were unbelievable. The sheer level of exploration required to get all 120 stars is unbelievable. The camera was innovative and having complete control over it was unbelievable. The entire damned game is pretty freaking unbelievable. Ok, so it lacks a bit in terms of the storyline, which is why the last few games beat it to the top, but this game did so much for the 3d platformer as a genre, I can't even begin to describe it. Oh, and the last ingredient? A healthy dose of fun. Few other games are more fun to simply jump into and go and grab a random star. This game showed the true power of the N64 and made it the must-have system (unless you preferred the Playstation, which I heard was good too). This game's existence was directly responsible for dozens of others, including the recent Super Mario Galaxy and the next one on the list.

3. The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1998) Metacritic score: 99

If Super Mario 64 gave some indications of what the N64 could do, then this game was the one to really let loose with everything it had. Again, the graphics for the time were absurdly good, especially things like the draw distance. This game, to my mind, took the series back to the quality of A Link to the Past, a game I have very fond memories of playing on my cousin's SNES, after the disappointing Link's Awakening. The time travelling and ability to move from being an adult to a child made was an idea that had not been implemented as well before. The dungeons were exactly the right length to dip in and out of and the use of music, not just the orchestral score (which naturally was brilliant) but also the use of the titular ocarina to teleport around. Without this, there would not have been any Majora's Mask nor Wind Waker nor Twilight Princess nor countless other similar games.

2. Deus Ex (2000) Metacritic score: 90

Terrorism. It's a complicated word these days. Deus Ex was fortunate in exactly when it was released, I doubt that a character who starts the game attacking terrorists (who have in the past blown up the Statue of Liberty) in said statue's ruins would have been approved of in late 2001. I'm reminded of the exploding buildings at the end of 1999's Fight Club film. Very much a product of its time, it owes the style mostly to The Matrix and cyberpunk more generally and its plot to numerous conspiracy theories and leftover fear about the Millennium Bug mixed with some incredibly interesting philosophical questions about the nature of humanity as found in Blade Runner or Ghost in the Shell. In short, then, these are a few of my favourite things. The gameplay is sort of FPS-y with added stealthy bits taken from Thief: The Dark Project and RPG inventory management and an experience system. Quite apart from all of that, however, Deus Ex has something that is all its own. It combines these things fluidly. In any one mission, you have multiple different ways to go about things. That was, essentially, totally new for the time. The choice to be extremely stealthy one mission and then blow up everything in sight the next still staggers my mind. I've not seen any game, not even the sequel, that attempted to keep up the multiplicity of choice throughout. Not only that, but the decisions you make have huge and lasting impacts on the game as a whole. For example, when I first played it, JC's brother Paul was killed. I assumed that was scripted and 'just what happened', but no. Paul can live. Right through the whole damn game. There are almost no characters you're forced to kill at all, in fact. You can go through the entire game and just tranquilize your enemies. This was beyond mindblowing. Combined with superb set pieces and a plot that dragged you in until you practically forgot that a world existed outside this futuristic globetrot, I was stunned. Shame the sequel sucked a bit. But the one thing that the game owes the very most to? The last game on my list, of course.

1. Half-Life (1998) Metacritic score: 96

This game brought me into gaming. Sure, I'd played other things before, but this was the catalyst that made me into who I am today. This totally rewrote the book on the first-person shooter. As revolutionary as Wolfenstein 3d or Doom or anything else, but perhaps more so. It took the rest of the industry years to catch up to Valve. Even simple things at the time, like the water effects, were very cool. The AI was the best at the time bar nothing. The fights and oh dear God the beautiful, beautiful set pieces. Each one like a short movie that defied you not to drop your jaw. An example: you're in a nuclear silo of some sort, where a rocket engine is being tested. But wait, what's that banging sound? No idea. Keeps getting louder the closer you get to the centre of things. You go through a door and see a scientist grabbed by an enormous tentacle thing. And then you realise that the only way out is past a whole bunch of tentacles. Oh, by the way, they were making the banging with their enormous, razor sharp nose things. Razor sharp nose things that kill you extremely dead if they ever make contact. Scary, immersive and wonderful. This was the first FPS I played where you didn't start with a weapon. No, instead you are a scientist. So you walk around, interacting with other characters and then the entire world goes to hell. It was also the first FPS I played where they actually took away all the nifty weapons you'd found up until that point and had to get them back again. This trick was used later in nearly everything ever. Even now, I still play the game occasionally and, even if it looks pretty dated, I am still immersed and sucked right into the gameplay. The sequel undoubtedly has its fans and I'm tempted to give that the equal first position. It brought a much-needed level of humanity and plot into a game that had previously been mostly "Kill aliens. Kill soldiers. Do a jumping puzzle. Kill a helicopter. Do a teleporter puzzle." although Valve did become quite keen on the physics puzzles. Still, the vehicle sections are great, the physics engine is great, especially the gravity gun and the set pieces. Oh my yes. Yesyesyes. If you throw in Episodes 1 and 2, you only get more of the character interaction I like so much and a bit more of a feeling of the world. I'll admit that the game has its flaws, but I'm not sure there are many games out there that really are totally flawless. Anyway, time for the Honourable Mentions.

 

Starcraft (1998) Metacritic score: 88

Any game that is still regularly played for its perfect multiplayer balance a full 10 years after its release is worthy of this sort of list. The single player campaign is brilliant too, especially the events of Brood War. And the cinematics conjure up the sense of an epic space war at least on a par with Star Wars. Seriously, look on YouTube for the Starcraft: Brood War opening and I dare you not to get a tingle in your spine when that music starts. I'll admit that it owes a lot to Warhammer 40K for the world, but it's still a damned awesome game.

Goldeneye 007 (1997) Metacritic score: 96

The game with a sniper rifle in it that meant that essentially every single game after it also had a sniper rifle in it. Also fantastic multiplayer, even if four of you were squinting at a tiny screen and jostling for position with controllers and whatnot.

Day of the Tentacle (1993) Metacritic score: 93

I like the Monkey Island series. I like it a lot. But I played this first. Sometimes that's enough in a game to change your mind about which is best. All the classic SCUMM games fit in here, though.

Baldur's Gate (1998) Metacritic score: 91 and Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn (2000) Metacritic score: 95

A much more accessible and traditional look at the world of Dungeons and Dragons. Following the life of your protagonist from random level 1 guy to the epic hero they become is a fantastic experience. If the isometric thing gets to you, play Neverwinter Nights, it's not as good, but I know how some people can't actually play games that don't have 3d graphics.

This has gone on for a long time. Rather longer than I'd intended. I guess I'll just have to revisit this list and see if there are many other games that I would load onto someone who had never experienced a game before. Probably a few. Thanks for reading.

Posted by wedge on May 26, 2008 at 05:59 PM

PC: And I'm a PC...

Mac: I look all white and sexy...*click*....

PC: I'm boring aparantly...

Mac: *click*...I have cool software like GarageBand and...*click*...iLife...*click*...

----------------------------------------------------------

I recently bought a MacBook and was very pleased with it. It took a while getting used to...twas awkward not having a task bar but I've got the hang of it. I'm mainly going to keep the MacBook for "fun", e.g. music, vidoes, photos etc. and then keep my Windows laptop for "work", e.g. programming, essay writing etc.

BUT...the reason for this blog is that I am having to take the MacBook back today! Every so often (ranging from every 10 secs to every minute" the MacBook was making an annoying clicking sound. I did some research and found out that it was due to the hard drive parking it's needle too often, something which should only happen in older hard drives. So seeing as the laptop was less than a week old, I was not happy.

I rang technical support first and they took me through a few things to try n fix it, but to no avail. The most annoying thing is that there isn't an Apple shop in the whole of Wales! So I'm taking the train home to Birmingham to return it there. Ah well, at least I get to see my girlfriend :D

So yeah...Gwant am cwy :'(

Oh...and, is it just me...or does anyone else feel reeeeaally guilty when they get a new computer? Every time I was using the Mac I could hear my laptop shouting at me going: "What about me Grant? Don't you love me any more?"

Posted by grant on Feb 01, 2008 at 09:14 AM

Anybody running for a SUCS Exec position should consider telling people why they are worth a vote. In previous years, candidates have written short manifestos, explaining why they are suited to the role and what plans they might have for the year ahead. If you write one, e-mail it to vote at sucs.org and we'll add it to this blog for everyone to read. Some questions you might like to think about:

  • Why Should I Vote for you as X?
  • What do you think you can bring to this role? / What are your strengths?
  • Where do you think the society is at the moment?
  • Where do you want to the society to be in a year? / What do you want to achieve?
  • How do you think you can make your goals for the society happen?

For more information on the structure of the executive, and rules of the nominations/election, check out the SUCS Constitution: http://sucs.org/About/Constitution

Posted by Election 2009 on Nov 14, 2007 at 03:36 PM



The dirty bugger.

Steve only went out and made a porn site.

*I might be lying here, the term 'porn' tends to attract a lot of traffic.

Posted by seymansey on Aug 25, 2007 at 08:01 PM

Is weird.

 I haven't been terribly bloggy have I?

Posted by worldinsideme on Aug 25, 2007 at 12:57 PM

On a random trawl through teh stuff and things that is the internet, I found this - check it out, it's rather cute, in a morph / pingu etc sort of way!

www.lejo.nu also available here

Posted by elsmorian on May 25, 2007 at 11:49 PM

I despise group projects. Ive had ones in the past, but this is awful. I have no idea how im going to pass it, and everything has to be in in 2 days. I dont see why i should have to do it and have pretty much no sleep but otherwise I cant see how its going to get done.

Fun times- suckstobeme™.

Posted by elsmorian on May 09, 2007 at 04:13 PM

I have started a blog, lets see how long this lasts, the odds of it lasting terribly long are not good, as I really don't seem to say anything anybody wants to hear, but we will see how it goes.

Posted by worldinsideme on Feb 07, 2007 at 10:04 PM

[...]

Posted by wedge on Dec 31, 1969 at 10:00 PM