Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Half of 2 is?
My son reliably informs me that 'The Orange Box' is a bargain, containing, as it does, several first person-based games for the PS3 at a low price. The connection with oranges or orange boxes escaped me... (other than orange being the main colour on the box!)
I was more intrigued by the concept of it including 'Half-Life 2', which should surely be called just 'Life'? (Although there would be the possibility then of confusion with 'Conway's Game of Life'...)
There again, is the next in the series called 'One Third Life 3'?
Labels:
Conway's Game of Life,
Games,
half-life,
Half-Life 2,
orange box,
PlayStation 3,
ps3,
video game
The train now making a lot of noise is the 11:16...
Sometimes you have the right tool at the right time, in the right place. But this is a rare event.
So I was rather gratified when I was travelling by train recently, and I tried to listen to a podcast on my iPhone. Headphones in, I turned it on and listened... and strained to hear...and turned it up to max, and still couldn't hear it unless I cupped my hands over my ears.
The problem? Not my hearing, but the train I was travelling in. It was a single carriage train - the 11:16 from Ipswich to Cambridge. And it was loud inside. Very loud. So loud that listening to an iPhone turned up to max volume was not really audible on headphones against the din coming from the diesel motor.
For once, I had the right tool - well, almost the right tool. I had downloaded 'Decibel' from the App Store some days earlier, and had casually seen how noisy it was at work and at home, but nothing more than casual use, and I hadn't calibrated it. But now I had a noise to measure, and the highest average reading I got was 89, although it was consistently above 86 for most of the journey. The conductor was very good at SHOUTING to the travelling customers, or is that victims of ear assault?
Now I'm not an expert in environmental noise, but it was very noisy in that train, and it made the 88 minute journey all the longer to have to put up with a loud companion... Not a pleasant experience.
Tuesday, 23 June 2009
Anyone for Tennis?
Just a quick word about one of the latest projects that I've been working on recently at work - the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour Hero Powercards game is now live and available for people to play. Produced for the Women's Tennis Association, 'Hero Powercards' is a video-rich interactive game that uses real-world player statistics and rankings. It has been developed as part of the "Looking For A Hero" campaign for digital agency Analog Folk, with game programming by Bloc, and Real Time Content as the video partner.
Labels:
Bloc,
Real Time Content,
tennis,
video game
Monday, 8 June 2009
Squirrels, Peacocks and Coffee
There I was, enjoying a decaf mocha grande at the Starbucks Lakeside Suite at the Elveden Forest Center Parcs resort in Suffolk, UK (possibly one of my favourite locations in the world to have a coffee, with perhaps the Starbucks just around the corner from the Jim Henson Company in Hollywood as a close second), when up strolls a peacock.
Now Elveden Forest is in that large assembly of trees known as Thetford Forest, and so wildlife isn't that unusual, but peacocks have that stately 'look at me' attitude rather more than your run-of-the-mill moorhen, mallard or grey squirrel.
Center Parcs has long been one of my favourite holiday destinations - an amazing way to get away from it all without getting too far away.
As you might expect, people put down their coffees and got out their cameras, and the peacock was suitably fawned over, admired, and talked about in hushed whispers. No sign of his peahen, though - perhaps her preference is for another brand of coffee?
Once all the fuss was over, a squirrel ran around the patio, weaving in and out between the chairs and tables, looking remarkably similar to the one that I'd snapped earlier in the morning from the villa. But this one was moving rather swiftly, and I only managed to catch a shot from behind my mug, and another of a twitching tail zipping away to the left behind a chair...
The squirrel that morning had turned on 'uber-cute' mode as it looked around the patio table...
Digital cameras and blog do enable the most remarkable uses of technology, don't they?
Labels:
center parcs,
coffee,
elveden forest,
peacock,
squirrel,
starbucks
Tuesday, 2 June 2009
Setting up a new Mac
I've set up two MacBooks recently, and I thought it might be a good idea to gather all of my background research into one place. There's no magic or imposition here, just my personal opinion on some of the things to consider when setting up a new Mac.
1. Leopard
Tiger (10.4) is good, but Leopard (10.5) is better in some key areas - the ones that I found significant (and upgrade-worthy) were Time Machine (incremental backups) and the improved Quartz Composer (Which I would definitely recommend for anyone who wants to play with interactive graphics).
2. Security
The basic approach here is to create a 'Working' user account with no administrator privileges and to use that for everyday use, and to have an 'Admininstrator' user account with administrator privileges. Different passwords and some adjustments to the default settings should give you a pretty safe computer. I followed these intructions from MacGeekery:
http://www.macgeekery.com/tips/security/basic_mac_os_x_security
3. USB Boot Drive
It is possible to install a bootable (on Intel Macs) version of Leopard onto a 16 Gig USB Flash drive. It can take a while to install on slower drives, but the resulting portability and assurance is great. All I did was follow these instructions from Maciverse:
http://www.maciverse.com/install-boot-os-x-leopard-from-a-usb-flash-drive.html
Once done, you insert the USB drive, hold the alt button and power up, then select the USB drive.
4. Bootable Time Machine Drive
Time Machine makes incremental backup easy, but the default setup means that you have to do a restore when things go wrong. I'm much happier if there's the minimum to do when stressed by one failure, and so here's how to make the Time Machine drive bootable:
http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=2008011623365026
http://www.thegraphicmac.com/create-bootable-time-machine-backup-drive
The one point of concern here is that when Time machine fills the drive, then there is no space for working files. One solution seems to be to store a sacrificial 1 Gig (or more) of files in a folder that can be deleted when required. Time Machine does not overwrite files, so this should help.
5. Applejack
When Mac OSX falls over, then probably the worst circumstance is when something is wrong during the Unix start-up, or if you don't get as far as the GUI starting up. Applejack provides a simple trouble-shoot or clean-up without requiring any knowledge of the Unix command-line at all.
http://applejack.sourceforge.net/
http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=2005041817191411
Note that you access Applejack by holding down Command+S (Command is that 'propeller' symbol) during a reboot, and then typing 'applejack' when the text prompt on the black screen appears. Then type 'a' for auto. I've only used it twice, but it rescued me each time!
6. Cocktail
Cocktail does all of the Unix routine maintenance jobs that should happen when a machine is left on all the time - but if you turn off your Mac then they never happen. It also does a lot more besides!
http://www.maintain.se/cocktail/index.php
I'm told that a partial free alternative is Maintenance ( http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/16790 ), but I've always used Cocktail and have no experience of Maintenance.
7. SuperDuper!
SuperDuper! makes backups easy - and once you've done that first backup, then only changed files are backed up, so it is much faster for the second backup (unless you have changed a lot of files in between the two backups!)
http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
8. QuickSilver
Quicksilver provides a way to control applications on a Mac with the qwerty keyboard instead of the mouse. Once learned (and it isn't difficult) it can really speed up many common activities. Definitely worth trying out, and persisting with, especially on a MacBook.
http://docs.blacktree.com/quicksilver/what_is_quicksilver
http://vjarmy.com/archives/2004/03/quicksilver_a_b.php
http://www.blacktree.com/
9. Blogs
You will have noticed that there's quite a few links to Mac-oriented blogs in this post - you will find them an invaluable resource for finding out, keeping up to date, and more...
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