Because you obviously had too much spare time.
Grow Tower is now up for your Grow pleasure. My best while tinkering this morning is 14, but already the animations make me want to try for higher.
Because you obviously had too much spare time.
Grow Tower is now up for your Grow pleasure. My best while tinkering this morning is 14, but already the animations make me want to try for higher.
Someone on a chat channel mentioned this site, and I've been browsing it off and on over the last few days.
The site is TVtropes.org, and is a vast collection of 'tropes' found not just in television, but in comics, manga, and film.
A trope, according to the home page:
Tropes are devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members' minds and expectations. On the whole, tropes are not clichés. The word clichéd means "stereotyped and trite". In other words, dull and uninteresting. We are not looking for dull and uninteresting entries. We are here to recognize tropes and play with them, not to make fun of them.
The site has a horrific amount of information on it, in wiki form, though they are careful to state they are NOT wikipedia ("We're a buttload more informal...").
Some choice bits.
Regarding the 'BerserkButton' trope:
Marty McFly from the Back To The Future films: "Nobody... calls me... chicken!" This is a rare instance in which getting over the Berserk Button is part of the Character Development, or where the Berserk Button is even treated as a bad thing to have.
And, in the 'BarSlide' trope:
In Hudson Hawk, when Eddie orders a cappucino, the bartender slides it down the bar to him.
And it goes on and on and on.
I love the internet.
My Political Views
I am a left social libertarian
Left: 5.16, Libertarian: 3.93
My Foreign Policy Views
Score: -6.68
My Culture War Stance
Score: -6.67
Political Spectrum Quiz
I'm a little surprised at the strong libertarian side of things, as I consider myself a socialist. Some of the questions were... tricky in that I could have answered them in a certain way depending on the next statement. For example, "Do you support the death penalty if the crime is heinous enough" - I have to answer yes, but that is only under the assumption the legal system can be considered infallible. I have to answer the question as it's stated, so had to say "Yes, I agree, strongly."
I've had my iPhone for a few months now, and gone through the brain replacement that's sometimes necessary to use Apple products, so I think it's time to talk about some of my favorite iPhone applications.
At the top right now is AirShare from Avatron. It's a simple app that starts up on the iPhone and sets up an active WebDAV enabled HTTP server. With some tools under windows, mac, or linux, you can mount that DAV as a filesystem, and voila, you have your own portable wireless data repository.
Admittedly, what I really do is play a lot of games on the phone. So, here's a quicky list of some of my favorites:
The potential for the iPhone to be a powerful gaming platform I feel is only just being realized. More and more high resolution excellent games are coming out, and the phone handles them with great aplomb. I'm looking forward to finding more.
My current employer is looking for a senior Perl developer. We're located out in Littleton, MA. Full details of the position behind the cut. Feel free to poke me for any details. We use the standard LAMP (where P = Perl here) stack, in CGI / mod_perl configurations.
Hey, this could be fun. I've set up a script that watches twitter for the hashtag '#arisia'. When it finds a tweet with that in the message, the script retweets the message over to @arisia. So, if you're coming to Arisia, and use twitter, add @arisia to your follow list, and join the conversations in realtime with your fellow Arisians!
To have your tweet show up in the @arisia group, just add #arisia to your tweet.
Being home sick makes me turn my attention to gaming. I've gotten back into Puzzle Pirates, and that's been good for multiplayer, general quiet entertainment. I've backed off on Eve Online, for a number of reasons (not being home / in front of a windows game machine all the time is pretty key).
Last night I decided to do a little more involved gaming on 'algol', my linux laptop. HappyPenguin provided a couple interesting options, a few showing up in apt, so I installed one.
The problem is, the app I chose (SuperTuxKart), blinks like crazy when running. I'd seen this behaviour in the Compiz / Xscreensaver screens, but thought it was something specific to XScreenSaver's interraction with Compiz. Alas, that's not the case.
This is a known problem with Ubuntu installations that use Compiz as their default compositing window manager. According to this page on the Ubuntu wiki...
Summary
Currently opengl apps do not work correctly when composite is running. This is a BIG bug and annoyance for desktop users, especially as composite-by-default is set to be included for gutsy. This should be fixed via redirected direct rendering. It is especially important as modern applications use opengl interfaces, such as blender and google earth, but also for smaller opengl parts, such as the visualisations in amarok.
Rationale
Users of ubuntu, both advanced users and novices, find it annoying to have to disable the compositioning window manager whenever they want to run an opengl accelerated application. Solving this requires deep changes to the structure of the X server and the display drivers, and is a future plan for the Xorg devs: http://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/DirectRenderingToRedirectedWindows (A prototype for this has been developed by Kristian Hogsberg: http://hoegsberg.blogspot.com/2007/08/redirected-direct-rendering.html). However, it is a big job, so I believe that the Ubuntu devs should help out.
So, if you use Ubuntu and GL apps and Compiz, and you have the blinks, there's no known fix. I'm guessing it's specific to certain video drivers, because I know some systems work fine, but on this machine (which uses an Intel 945GM chipset), looks like it's no GL for me.
Well, I've gone and done it. Connect away, ya'll!
Still needs a lot of polishing and finessing, but it's a start.
When the workshop is up and functioning at Mosaic this will be one of my first projects. I see it now. I hope I can do half as good a job as this fellow has.
Giant Atari Joystick bedside lamp
Found via UniqueDaily.
I'm looking for suggestions on how best to set up filesystem services for my local network. I've built out a decent fileserver ('yawl', running Ubuntu Linux) with a series of external HD's, and I want to make those filesystem(s) available to client machines.
There's a couple caveats. Whatever solution I use has to have the following features:
Now, I already hear the cry. "Why not just use CIFS, the 'windows' fileshare protocol? Everyone uses it, and Samba is a great system." That's because from everything I've read, Samba cannot use an external authentication system OTHER than active directory. It vaguely supports Kerberos, and vaguely supports LDAP, but only to the level that an Active Directory server provides. I can find no clear documentation or even loose information that states how to configure Samba to authenticate in a non-windows Kerberos realm.
So where's that leave us? Well, there's a couple to consider:
So whadya think, world, what should I look at? Is there hope?
It's certainly no secret that I've been a KDE fan for ages. I've been using KDE as my primary Linux desktop for going on 10 years now. In all that time, I've made occasional forays into GNOME, but every time ran in fear at the sheer idiocy of the interface. Either it was too 'smart' doing 'really cool stuff!' or it was dumbed down to the point where it was impossible to use. A steady litany of "Oh, just edit gconf to fix that" or "you need to recompile such and such a module, that's been patched" made me run back to KDE's stable, consistent, powerful interface.
When Ubuntu 8.1 came out, I installed it onto a Dell D520 that I had available. Being a KDE geek, I said "Sure, lets run KDE4."
What a disaster.
KDE4, despite the fact that it has been marked as stable and ready, is a complete mess. Unusable, unintuitive, unstable. I spent 2 days trying to make sense of the frequent crashes and missing componentry, and gave up. It was time to try Gnome
Gnome, on the other hand, was delightful. They had finally struck the balance between "make it as simple as you can" and "make sure all the necessary functionality is there." The package managers are sane and work, the configuration tools are consistent and do the job, the desktop, while sparse, is eminently useful, and it's fast. I have done 4 Ubuntu 8.1 installations now, and each has gone without a hitch. The only 'missing' bit I've had to deal with involved a missing package from my first Kubuntu -> Gnome upgrade.
This bothers me in a bunch of ways. What happened to KDE? I think it can best be summed up as 'Gnome grew up'. KDE stayed ahead of Gnome for a decade. It took that long for the Gnome folks to get it together and come up with something that actually works. What I worry about is that didn't happen through careful UI design and deliberation, but the result of years of trial and error. The fear is that just when they get it right, they'll either stop working on changes to the desktop (thereby stagnating the environment), or will try more radical 'upgrades', breaking things again.
Time will tell. But for now, I'm pretty happy with Gnome.