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Archive for 2003

Finger, Skinning And Tivo

Friday, November 21st, 2003

It’s about time for another random link post. Because I’ve been tied up with work this week, some of this is old news, but I’ll propagate it anyway.

  • Skinning in Seoul - A fascinating look at the things being done with mobiles in the East. I know I want the phone with the built-in TV,
  • Regex Blog - A blog about regular expressions. A bit of a dry subject, certainly, but this is the sort of thing that will come in handy for a lot of developers,
  • A Life Without Tivo - A child who has never known TV without a PVR thinks any other TV is broken. The marketing people will have a field day,
  • Devkit Advance - Programming GameBoy Advances. A bit niche, but interesting,
  • Nokia N-Gage cracked - Security on the new N-Gage has been cracked already, allowing games to be run on other mobiles,
  • Let Them Sing It For You - Type in some song lyrics, and you’ll get an interpretation back taken from words in other songs. Bizarre,
  • Family Guy could be coming back - Excellent news. Due to high DVD sales, Family Guy might be getting revived
  • First Galaxy Jedi - In the new MMORPG Star Wars: Galaxies, the first Jedi have appeared. Within hours, a bounty was on their heads. Very appropriate,
  • FOAFFinger - Using FOAF to provide a rich fingering repository (no jokes, please),
  • Ninja Monkeys - And finally, some pictures of my friends and I pulling ninja poses in the 3rd year computing lab of Glasgow University. Why? Why not.

Some really good stuff today. Enjoy.

Easy Drop Shadows

Friday, November 21st, 2003

Finally finished this week’s assignment, so I’ll be doing a link post later (from home). I couldn’t wait to post this though.

Easy CSS drop shadows provides a way of doing decent drop shadows for images, with no redundant markup. Very nice.

Better though is the hilarious picture of the waving cat. I laughed for a good ten minutes.

UGC Feeds Down

Tuesday, November 18th, 2003

It has been brought to my attention that the UGC RSS feeds are broken. Unfortunately, I won’t have any time to fix it until next week at the earliest. Sorry for any inconvenience caused, I’ll get on it as soon as I can.

Mental Blocks

Saturday, November 15th, 2003

Up until relatively recently, I didn’t think I had a strong mental block (except whilst sitting in exam rooms). As can be inferred, it turns out I do.

For me, it is absolutely bizarre and foreign. Not being able to think about something (for whatever reason) is just so very odd. You start vaguely thinking about the subject and forming questions, but before they get anywhere it’s all gone. Nothing quite like it.

It irritates and interests me. Thinking about it clearly doesn’t help (and neither does not thinking about it). What can one do?

Hill Side

Saturday, November 15th, 2003

There is a hill.

To most people, I imagine it is exactly that; just another hill that they pass every day. I, however, am fascinated by it.

Every curve is perfectly rounded, flowing into the next as easily as it slid out of the last. Each concavity reveals itself as a product of angle, increasing shade once approaching, disappearing as one passes. The lines are beautifully bezier; elegant yet simple.

In summer, before the harvest, long wheat blows out a wonderfully dynamic representation of the underlying hill; billowing those curves as sails.

In winter, after the harvest, short grass grows back, shivering back and forth as the cold wind pushes against it. Resolute, it stands.

I’ve never stood on the hill. In truth, I see it for 20 seconds a day, at most, yet still I admire it. Nature is a remarkable thing.

Sharp, Very Sharp

Friday, November 14th, 2003

For various reasons, I’ve outgrown nntprss as my default RSS client (not least because it is sadly lacking in features due to the lapse in releases). So, I recently switched to SharpReader.

I had my first realy “holy shit, that’s cool” moment with it a few minutes ago. When subscribing to Stuart Langridge’s feed for Kryogenix, I decided to look at a few of the recent posts. SortTable is one item I posted about recently (and is still in my RSS feed).

I was shocked to see, that in the item for his feed, the full text from my piece referring to his. SharpReader knew they were connected and did some implicit comment magic. Very nice.

Sorry for the geeky gush, but it took my by surprise, and I like that.

REST, Multiple Explorers and Toys

Tuesday, November 11th, 2003

The rather belated end of week random links post. We’ll just call this a fortnightly special (with nothing special added) and leave it at that:

  • PHP and REST - A good read for those planning on setting up the Atom API,
  • Ze’s page - An interesting mix of random stuff. The games and toys are good; particularly “Simple Game”,
  • Multiple IE instances - How to run multiple versions of IE. Very handy for web design,
  • On Search: Internationalisation - Another part of the essential On Search series. This time dealing with the problems inherent in making search work in different languages,
  • Bit Rot - Data always outlives hardware. So just what lengths will people go to to get information from old systems? Probably about this far,
  • Misusing Irony - A personal pet hate: the misuse of the word “Ironic” (Via Derek),
  • Advanced RPS - Want to get better at Rock, Papers, Scissors? The professional guide is available,
  • IE 5.5 Band Pass and IE 5.0 Band Pass - After last months mid pass filter, Tantek brings two more filters to make applying styles to particular browsers easier. He never sleeps.

And that’s it for a few days.

New Chainsaw Massacre

Monday, November 10th, 2003

It is always a bold move to remake a classic cult film. Some would say it is a pointless move; trying to beat something that is loved by a dedicated group of fans is certainly an unenviable task. It was with this in mind that I saw Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

It is, in a word, laughable.

Maybe I’m overly desensitized to these things, but it wasn’t particularly scary or gruesome. It tried to be twisted, it tried to be sick, it failed on both accounts.

Not worth seeing. Find yourself a cheap copy of the original. It’s an order of magnitude better.

Matrix Revolutions (Spoiler Free)

Thursday, November 6th, 2003

After failing to secure myself a seat for yesterdays opening screenings, I was forced to see the final part of the Matrix series today: The Matrix Revolutions.

With the lacklustre second installment still fresh in my mind, it was with slight trepidation that I went to see this part. I was surprised to find it was significantly better than part 2. Without wanting to spoil any of it, all the action that was missing from Reloaded had clearly been shunted into the series’ finale.

Good parts:

  • Lawrence Fishburne has thankfully decided to start acting properly again, after the ham that was produced last time,
  • Great action sequences,
  • Some (minor) surprises,
  • The sections in Zion.

Bad parts:

  • A particular part near the end (saying any more would amount to a spoiler),
  • The new characters being largely pointless, and many old characters being superflous,
  • The ending - it was lacking, but probably how it had to be,
  • The bits that weren’t explained or that just happened.

All in all, a good film. Not up to the first, but good nonetheless.

Alien: Director’s Cut

Thursday, November 6th, 2003

The new director’s Cut of Alien is as chilling as the original: full of bizarre organic architecture, aliens that just work, and the single greatest use of sound effects in cinematic history. The film is great. See it.

However, the particular showing I went to was not so great. About half an hour into it, the film stopped playing, the lights went up and the adverts they show during cinema dead time (usually slides) started showing. Many people were confused and annoyed. A few minutes later, it restarted; having totally killed the tension that had been building up.

Another half hour later, someone in the second row’s phone went off. He let it ring a good 6 times before answering it. By answering it, I don’t mean that he switched it off embarassedly. No, he had a bloody conversation. If he had gotten the beating that so many of his fellow audience members obviously wanted to give him for being a “twat”, he would have sorely deserved it.

I’m of the understanding that this happens on a semi-regular basis in cinemas in America, but it’s the first time I’ve ever seen someone answer their phone here (and I go weekly - you might have noticed the reviews). Believe me, if it escalates, their will be violence.