3.31.2006

A skinny, messy, list-making chain-smoker

Bob Dylan's lyrics seem so timeless that it's easy to forget that many of them were written about contemporary figures. The events described in Hurricane took place in 1966 while The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll happened in 1963 (William Zantzinger is still alive and well, as Ian Frazier reports).

It's fitting then that Billy Bragg updates Dylan's tune to map out the fate of Rachel Corrie, a peace activist from Olympia, WA who was killed in the Gaza Strip trying to stop a bulldozer from destroying the homes of settlers. The eyewitness accounts are heartbreaking. But one of Bragg's lyrics underscores a deeper tragedy:

...that the spilt blood of a single American
Is worth more than the blood of a hundred Palestinians


According to The Guardian, 9 Palestinians were killed the same night as Rachel Corrie, 220 killed by violence in the town where she died since the start of the Al-Aqua intifada. I'd like to think Bragg's song is about these people too, even if he doesn't mention them by name. It would be easy to ignore the deaths of people halfway around the world, just as it would have been easy to ignore the death of Hattie Carroll in 1963.

Billy Bragg's song, The Lonesome Death of Rachel Corrie is available for free here.

3.30.2006

95% Compatible

I've been messing around with some of the social sites lately: MySpace, Friendster and OK Cupid (I also consider flickr to be a social site, of course).

MySpace is a universe unto itself that I don't feel I'm qualified to talk about, Friendster is fun and well-designed and the OK Cupid one (done by the guys behind thespark.com who came up with all those tests) has this interesting deal where it asks each user potentially hundreds of questions to get a feel for their personality. It then compares these results to other people of a similar age and gender and gives the results.

As is to be expected, I'm less old-fashioned, thriftier, more artsy, sloppier, kinkier, more trusting, and more progressive than most guys my age. No surprises there. But my little profile dealie says I only match myself at 95%. I guess if there's a clone of myself, there's a 5 percent chance that we wouldn't get along. At first blush that seems odd, but upon reflection I imagine that I would hate my clone. Always saying the exact thing I was about to say. Any success the clone has I would bitterly think, "I could have done that". And what would we talk about? Ourselves? How boring.

No clones for me, thank you!

3.29.2006

Cheap Potato Heads!

The aforeblogged Artoo Potato Head still won't be released for two months but Hasbro has it available for preorder today. Why order today? There's a coupon code for 25% everything at HasbroToyShop.com: "SPRING25" That makes a Star Wars Potato Head only six bucks, with free shipping.

Hasbro also makes Xevoz and GI Joe, so I'm resisting spending all my money there today.

3.28.2006

New Puppy


newpuppy
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
There's a new puppy down here and his name is Regal. He seems very nice and sweet and all dogs seem to like him (although Brown Bear yells at him when he plays too rough). He's going to be a big dog someday but right now he's just a tiny puppy.
Supercute!

3.27.2006

Tales from the Bar

In addition to discussing such weighty matters as when hospice care is appropriate and intergenerational parenting skills, Z coined a new term tonight:

Lordiest

Pronounced LOR-di-est

Usage: that is the lordiest one of those I have ever seen

It's one of those words that looks and sounds like a real word, but is not.

Songs Saved in the XM

Someday I'll get around to writing up a post on how great XM Radio is but in the meantime one of the features is a button that one presses to save the name of the currently playing song into memory. These are the songs that I have saved so far.

Cry Cry Cry - Last Thing on my Mind
Lumidee - Never Leave You
Sean Cullen - Food of Choice
Morningwood - Nth Degree
Sia - Breathe Me
Matisyahu - King Without a Crown
Ryan Adams - Carolina Rain
Leo Kottke - Sweet Emotion
Eva Cassidy - Fields of Gold
Butterfly Bouche - Another White Dash

Pikey Suspended


IMG_4590
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
Home safe and sound after 3 days and 30 hours of driving.

Duluth in the winter


Duluth in the winter
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
A shot from the top of the hill at dusk on a Saturday. Coppertop would be off to the left. Turns out Jerree Small was playing in town tonight and I missed out. That's what I get for reading Perfect Duluth Day after I come to town, rather than before.

All flicker photos tagged with Duluth. How can I be homesick when I'm sitting in my house?

3.26.2006

Buttload of Artillery


Buttload of Artillery
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
I've never seen anything advertised by the buttload before. On my way back through I might have to stop and pick up a couple buttloads of fireworks.

(Northern Missouri)

3.24.2006

Kitchen Science

This morning I saw a headline about global warming that raised my personal temperature—because bad science irks me. The article (which I’m not blogger savy enough to link to) starts of by saying that sea levels will rise as the ice caps melt. This is a fairly common sentiment expressed in many global warming articles written for non-science people. And it’s not true.

Not that I’m disagreeing with global warming: I’m disagreeing with the melting ice caps=rising sea level equation.

Melting ice caps won’t significantly raise the sea level. The rising temperature of the water will do that quite efficiently though. (Melting ice caps do fuck over the polar bears, penguins, and many other creatures.)

Here’s a little experiment you can do in the comfort of your own kitchen.

Fill a plastic bottle with water. Fill it all the way up so there’s no air left. Screw the cap on. Stick it in the freezer. While you’re waiting for it to freeze, get out a pot and a measuring cup*. Pour 1 cup of water into the pot. Stick it on the stove. Apply heat until the water boils. Pour the water back into the measuring cup. It looks like there’s more water now, doesn’t it? No one snuck into the kitchen and added poured more water to your pot. When the bottle of water is completely frozen, take it out of the freezer. The sides of the bottle are distended and the cap may have popped off.

Water expands when it is heated and when it is frozen. Now, if you think about global warming in the context of the properties of water you’ve just observed, it makes sense that the rise in sea level is going to happen because water expands when it is heated.

(Oh, and because water’s rather specific specific heat, it takes water a lot longer to cool down than most substances. I'm sure you can figure out what that means.)

*Non-measuring types can eyeball this, or just leave the water on the stove until it boils over. Same thing.



Bonus Science Fact: If you fill a lasagna pan with two or three inches of ketchup and jump into it, it will hold you up. If you step into it, you’ll get ketchup all over your shoes. (The proper response to the latter is to make a disparaging comment or two about non-Newtonian fluids.)

Let's Get Back to Back in Black

Recently I and a person of the younger set (let's call him "N") were talking about Steriogram, his favorite band. Steriogram is best known for their Michael Gondry directed music video for their song "Walkie Talkie Man". N named a few more songs that he enjoyed and mentioned that Steriogram did a cover of AC/DC's Back in Black that was, in his words: "better than the original".

I said (paraphrased), "That's an interesting opinion, and I respect your opinion, but if you're presenting that statement as fact, then you're just wrong".

He said (paraphrased), "Nuh-huh".

To which I responded (again paraphrased), "Yuh-huh".

And we went back and forth in this manner for a while. My thesis was this: AC/DC's Back in Black can be scientifically determined to rock harder than Steriogram's version. I realize that one's opinion that one song is better than another cannot be argued with. Matters of opinion, like matters of faith, sneak out the back window when logic starts knocking on the door. That's fine. I can cherish one's opinion, even as I disagree. But it can be proven that AC/DC rocks out harder.

For those about to rock:


To begin with, let's examine the context the each song resides in. Australia's AC/DC released "Back in Black" as the title cut from their third album in 1980 as an unspoken tribute to Bon Scott, the lead singer of the band who had recently passed away. The C of D was listed "Death by Misadventure". Brian Johnson was selected as the band's new lead singer and because of his voice, Angus Young's lead guitar, Malcomb Young's rhythm guitar, Cliff Williams's bass guitar and Phil Rudd's Drums the album became a cultural touchstone for the 1980's and the fifth bestselling album of all time in the United States (selling over 21 million copies). The album has sold 40 million copies worldwide, making it second only to Michael Jackson's Thriller. Adam Williams of PopMatters.com states, "The importance of Back in Black to ... the overall musical landscape of 1980 cannot be overstated." Indeed, harder rock and metal music was a marginalized genre prior to 1980 and mainstream radio appeal of this style of music was unheard of before Back in Black. The song is listed as song #187 on Rolling Stone's 500 Best Songs of All Time list. Rolling Stone also called the album "the essence of unrepentantly simple but savagely crafted hard rock." Google lists over 70 thousand people listing this album as one of their desert island discs (including Martin Tielli of the Rheostatics).

Steriogram hails from New Zealand and is best described as a new metal or street punk/rap band. The bands lineup consists of Tyson Kennedy (rap vocals and sounds), Tim Youngson (guitar), Brad Carter (vocals and guitars), Jared Wrennall (drums and vocals), Jake Adams (bass guitar). According to Wikipedia, in April and May 2002 they did a tour throughout New Zealand playing free shows at school during lunchtime which began their grassroots support. Their song "Walkie Talkie Man" was featured in advertisments for Apple's iPod. They have a MySpace.com page (warning: loud sound). Wikipedia also says regarding their most recent tour: "Unfortunately their live set was not the fullest, and often they had to repeat songs." Their cover of Back in Black can be found on 2004's Walkie Talkie Man EP.

And now let's rock

Some might argue that determining what song rocks more is a subjective experience, something each listener must determine by oneself. This is simply not true. If we peel back some of the layers of music we can get down to some hard data we can compare. First off is tempo, measured in beats per minute (or BPM). AC/DC's original clocks in at a somewhat leisurely 90 BPM. This tempo is actually fairly typical for a waltz and for good reason: it's the rhythm of the human heart at rest, the pace that many of us walk at and a natural tempo of certain other essential human activites outside the the scope of this article (but well within the scope of rock music). Steriogram turns up the tempo to 97 beats per minute. Music over 90 BPM produces an adrenaline response in humans. However, this physiological response should not be confused with true "rocking out" any more than one metronome can be said to rock harder than another. This increased tempo gives a pop-y, false sense of rock, associated solely with an increased heart rate, rather than the natural rate of rock that AC/DC delivers.

Second of all, let's look at song length. In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida is 17 minutes long. Bohemian Rhapsody is almost six minutes long. The point is, it takes time to rock. AC/DC's version clocks in at an ample four minutes and fifteen seconds while Steriogram's version is a mere two minutes and thirty nine seconds. AC/DC's length is squarely within the range of nearly any rock song you will hear while Steriogram seems to have recorded a shorter, top-forty radio friendly pop song.

Thirdly, it is difficult to compare AC/DC's version to any song, as it is the quintessential archetype of all that defines rock in the minds of an entire generation. According to Steven Tyler (upon inducting AC/DC into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame): "AC/DC became the litmus test of what rock does". Against this measure, any song falls short. Steriogram's version, while obviously a competent cover, plays to a different audience then rockers. The vocal stylings draw from their street punk roots while the short rap verse towards the end of the song points to a hip-hop background. The higher tempo and shorter length, as described above, are hallmarks of pop music. Not rock. Part of the reason the Steriogram version an adequate cover is that the song is so easy to play. From Amazon:

Angus and Malcolm Young have created a lot of the catchiest guitar phrases in the entire body of rock music. Their masterpiece is the collection of gut-wrenching licks on the title song here. These will achieve timelessness because the average guitar player can learn to reproduce them--but never with the Angus touch. -Edvard Odessia

It Makes Good, Good Sense

In the final analysis, is the measure of rocking truely subjective? Yes and no. While everyone must decide for themselves what they favor, AC/DC's Back in Black has been decided to be a touchstone for all that rocks. I would imagine that part of the reason that so many copies of this album have been sold is because cassette tapes are so easily destroyed on a dash of a black, sunlight-heated Trans Am. Certainly, 40 million fans could be wrong, but there's something to be said for the wisdom of crowds. At the very least the definition of rock is culturally chosen by the listening audience around the world, and AC/DC's version rocks! Under any criteria beside personal preference the original is the superior version.

Case closed, but judge for yourself.
Fair Use MP3 samples

3.22.2006

Hello?

This post is a test.

If this doesn't work, I will be mailing handwritten posts to Erik and he will work some sort of technological magic (probably involving nacho cheese, but these aren't the questions one asks) to post them.

Housekeeping and Welcomes

I've added four never-before-added custom lego pages to the custom lego pages and added a easy to find link on the sidebar to the left. I've also added a similar link to the Blank White Card pages as well as adding a handful of new Blank White Cards.

This little bit of tidying up is to welcome my long-time friend Rain to the Pikamac blog. Rain and I have collaborated in the past on such memorable works as this series of plays, circa 1993, presented in their original monospace fonts: As It Is Itself, Deliver Him Now, Non-scratch, Snowball's Chance in Hell, Strengthless and Unstrung, and This is Your Mother, Too, You Know.

For easy reference, Rain wrote the funny lines and I made most of the typos and spelling errors. I mean: intentional avant-garde explorations of non-grammatical ways of communication.

Welcome, Rain!

The Continuing Quest to Catch 'Em All

There's a new game in town that's bumped Animal Crossing: Wild World out of the cartridge slot of my Nintendo DS, at least temporarily: Pokemon Trozei. This a puzzle game that utilizes the pen motion of the DS to slide Pokemon around to complete lines of four. Reminds me of Bejeweled, but the tiles aren't "sticky". The puzzle action isn't quite as addictive as Tetris, but the Pokemon icons are adorable - all rounded and cute. I mean, even cuter than normal. The cut scenes are a lot of fun too, the look a lot like those esurance.com commercials that have been showing on TV: very stylized. It's a different look for the Pokemon world and it works well. No online play on this one, just local wireless, which is a bit of a downer. Nintendo's online wireless is such a marvel it should be included on every possible game. Oh well, the rest of the game is so full of energy that inviting friends over isn't a big deal.

So I've got a Pokemon puzzle game in the top slot of my DS and a Pokemon pinball game in the bottom slot. Why am I not surprised at all?

$35 at Amazon

3.20.2006

Online Settlers of Catan

According to the Wikipedia, there are like six different ways to play Settlers of Catan online.

I haven't had a chance to try any of these out yet, but Online Catan is always a good deal.

3.19.2006

KoL St. Louis: Aftermath

It's been a long, liquor-soaked weekend at the Kingdom of Loathing get-together. As I headed to St. Louis, I realized that I had forgotten not only to get directions to the hotel, but I had forgotten the name of the hotel as well. The Clubhouse a bit of phone calling revealed and after a stop at 7-11 for some added directions and beer I made it.

I checked in and announced myself to all the Loathers gathered that I was "the Lego Cannon Museum guy". This made me a bit of a minor celebrity as none of the Asymmetric staff had yet arrived. Actually, the game community is so strong that everyone in attendance was a minor celebrity. From the radio DJs to people that smite newbies in chat for meat begzoring to artists in the forums, it seems that everyone knew everyone for doing something. Two or three beers later, Mr. Skullhead arrived and shook my hand. I was quite thrilled. He offered to take the Tiny Plastic Lego guys back to the Dev staff that couldn't attend, but wanted to wait until he was soberer. Of course, this never happened. Rumors abounded that Jick had also arrived but I went the entire weekend without seeing him. He may be a myth.

Let me clear up some misconceptions about the hot tub on Friday night. It's a fact that the hotel staff closed it for "maintenance" Saturday morning. I witnessed nothing but Loathers behaving themselves. Even in the presence of small children and strangers, I saw no nudity in the hot tub. It's true that many of the so-called "hot tub rules" were broken (appropriate swimwear required, no alcohol, no glass, pool closes at ten PM) but Loathers always maintain an air of decorum. Even when the police showed up, we all walked back to our rooms in a dignified manner. The most plausible explanation for the pool closure was a reaction from a player's hair dye that turned the water purple. Any other rumors one might hear are no doubt fascinating, but untrue.

If anything cool happened Saturday morning, then I missed it. I was nursing a hangover until about four in the afternoon. Then it was drinking time again. Saturday afternoon had an awards show (everyone got a trophy!), a burlesque show and then DDR and Karaoke Revolution were set up in the meeting room. Somewhere in there and Applebee's trip was arranged and we piled twelve people into my Suburban (after careful selection of a not-yet-drinking-age driver). We stormed the restaurant. The staff was helpful and patient, the food was adequate and the drinks were flowing. I picked up the check for my table and was treated to a round of shots by my new extended clanmates! Then back to the hotel but not before pressing one of the waitstaff to give us directions to the nearest Karaoke bar. Even though the hotel had a "bar", it was only open for two and a half hours a day and they were not equipped to serve complicated drinks, such as a Black Russian.

Not less than two dozen people piled into three cars and after a couple of wrong turns (my fault, I'm afraid, as the navigator) we made it to the Lackland Inn, an unassuming local tavern with three or four regulars who wondered where this army of oddly dressed people came from. The bartender was very friendly (although the draft beer selection was limited to macrobrews... I say ordering a Budweiser in St. Louis must be considered "drinking locally") and the woman running the singing equipment did an excellent job. I have to say that KOL players have excellent voices. Nearly everyone had a turn at the mike and everyone rocked. I myself explored what it would sound like if Elvis Costello sang "Angie" with the Rolling Stones. The flickr link in yesterday's posting is mostly pictures from Karaoke. We shut down the bar, winded our way home (again, sober drivers are the key) and spent the rest of the night getting to know each other.

I had to leave a little earlier on Sunday than I would have liked and didn't get a chance to say goodbye to everyone, but I know that I'll be at the next shindig too. I tried to explain to curious civilians how everybody knew each other and saying "we play the same game together online" didn't really cover it. It was more like a family reunion... if everyone in the family in question was supercool. I met some really really great people and I know next time I'm in /radio I'll have a lot of faces to put with usernames.

Nekosoft

3.18.2006

St. Louis KOL get-together photos




Flickr stream.

Like a dummy, I forgot to hand off my camera to someone when I karaoked.

Balloon Haxzors


Balloon Haxzors
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
Using a balloon tool to find alternate ways of winning claw game prizes at the KOL gettogether in St. Louis.

Balloon Martini


Balloon Martini
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
A balloon martini complete with cocktail olive and tiny plastic sword as seen at the KOL gettogether in St. Louis.

3.16.2006

Closet Theater Vol 2.75

Girl jumps through basketball hoop.
DS Lite side by side with regular DS
Honda's ASIMO robot is lifelike and creepy.

3.15.2006

An Oxidized Crayon

When I was going through a sealed box of 1990 vintage Crayola crayons for a Psychospectral Wax Placement in Young Children project (or "why do I know how the crayons ought to be arranged), I came across a color not typical to the 64 count box:



As you can see, that's not the classic copper. Perhaps because this particular box was sealed into a tin box for 16 years, the copper (and to a lesser extent gold) crayon has aquired a thick patina. Here's where I scraped away a bit of the patina to reveal the familar color below:



That's cool.

3.14.2006

Apple amazes me every day

Just a quick shout out to Apple computer for manufacturing a computer into which I can install a hard drive without using any tools whatsoever (PowerMac G5). No screwdrivers, no antistatic wrist strap... nothing (although a person should always wear an antistatic wrist strap when mucking around in a computer. A quick trip to InterfaceLIFT to pick out a new drive icon and I was ready to go. Now my main drive has a little breathing room and my Annex drive is living the proverbial vida loca. When I plug in my iPod I have over half a terabyte, which is only enough to store 1/40th of the Library of Congress. Quite a far cry from the 40 megabyte drive in the old eponymous Pikamac.

3.13.2006

Rural Internet Options

Recently someone asked me what the options were for high-speed internet access in a rural setting. Very few areas "in the sticks" are served by cable or DSL and I've run into people with poor telephone service that can't manage more than a 28k connection. Today's modern internet nearly requires high speed connections and internet (or lack thereof) could a the deciding factor in locating a rural small business. Fortunately , there are options that are suitable almost everywhere.

Satellite modems are an expensive option that is available almost everywhere. They work by receiving and transmitting a signal to a geosycronously orbiting satellite. They require a dish similar to a DirectTV receiver. This receiver requires a clear view of the southern sky (where the satellite is located). Service starts at $60/month plus hardware (around $600) from DirecWay, VSAT, StarBand, and Ground Control. Residental service plans share bandwidth among all customers while more expensive business plans assure the customer of a constant speed. Most connections are suitable only for email and web browsing; applications such as VoIP, video conferencing and filesharing (read: bittorrent) are possible with additional cost. Ground Control also offers a mobile satellite solution intended for RVs.

WiMax, the wireless service with the 25 mile range, is still available "real soon now" in the vast majority of rural areas. AT&T is testing their service in New Jersey supporting two customers in anticipation of a larger rollout. However, setting up a community
WiMax
system could ofset some of the cost of a satellite connection while providing a valuable local service. Here's a guide to starting a Wireless Internet Service Provider.

A shotgun modem is a two modem two telephone line system. This method used to be the last ditch option for higher-than-dialup speeds as it doubled the speed of a conventional single modem, but this method has fallen out of fashion with the widespread deployment of cable modems and DSL. The cost of the second phone line, plus ISP fees, make a shotgun modem setup's cost on par with that of satellite. However, if a property is without a clear southern view and not within range of a WiMax network, it may be possible to find a local ISP able to host a shotgun modem setup, especially if a customer is willing to buy the appropriate hardware.

None of the methods for obtaining high-speed internet service outside of a city are cheap, but access has become a necessary utility for many people with rural homes. No one with a small business, home office or desire for faster web surfing need do without high-speed service, no matter where one lives.

3.12.2006

Lego Minifigs Transfered.

As promised, I've ported the custom Lego Minifigs from applesaucebrainman.com over here to pikamac.com. The index is available here. I spent a lot of time stripping the awful Tripod code out of my nice clean html but if any of the images are broken or the links don't work please comment to this post.

3.11.2006

Five Recently Bookmarked Pages

The fantastic magazine/book/whatever Make has a fantastic blog as well. I got a steal on the Make Box Set last week. It's a bit higher now but still a substantial savings over the $15 cover price.

wunderground.com has been a constant fixture on my desktop this evening as tornado sirens sound all over town. Clearly Nexrad doppler radar indicates that the storm is going to miss us. I may not be a professional meteorologist, but I am an amateur meteorologist.

An utterly fantastic article on game design as it relates to WarioWare, comparing it to Understanding Comics.

A good summary of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's book about "flow", the term the author uses for the feeling one gets when concentrating on something interesting and enjoyable marked by a loss of time and sense of self, and how it relates to the business world.

Table of Malcontents: Lore Sjöberg's miniblog on creative web types and what they're working on. Lore is best known from the now-defunct Brunching Shuttlecocks site and only slightly lesser known from the Cyborg Name Decoder, Lore Brand Comics and my favorite: The Book of Ratings. Back in the day (pre Y2K) I compliled a list of all the things to which the Book of Ratings gave an A and thus are inherently good. This is that list:

Quarters
The Queen
Conjuction Junction
Gnomes
Frosty the Snowman
Wasabi
Sushi itself
Pumpkin Pie
Mashed Potatoes
Factory Air
Winch
Catnip anything
The Constitution
Pronouns
Woodcarving
Magic Pencils
Legomania Magazine
Bear and Doll Supply Catalog
Thor
Super Balls
Throwing Stars
Oreo-o's
Smoke Bombs
Jelly Doughnuts
Glazed Doughnuts
Veruca Salt
Violet Beauregard
Shirley Jones

Ah, Ozarks...

Everything about the Ozarks is funny to me. This morning I was listening to a staple of the area: Swapline. The Swapline is like the classified ads of the radio. The program accepts a certain number of paid ads each day, but the real meat of the show is people calling in with things they have to sell or want to buy. School Bus, 1987, We lived in it while we were building our house, great shape $850 417-555-blah blah blah, that sort of thing. My favorite part of the show is people calling up asking the disc jockeys to repeat a previous number. Swapline's on at 10 AM every day, callers. Have your pencils ready and pay attention. Or just read it on the internet.

But I literally almost fell out of my chair, and when I say literally I mean it in the dictionary definition rather than the common usage (which means "figuratively"), to see an ozarks couple on Trading Spouses tonight. One of the couple is from the town of Licking, which is by Boiling Springs, which isn't pronounced the way you just read it (Bolin' Springs is correct). And while the family is actually rather typical of many in the region (self-employed rural folks) they're such a contrast to the other family. The ozark family cooked and ate one of their pets, which sounds bad, sure, but the pet in question was a turkey and it had been hit by a car. Plenty of farm animals have names, and the novelty of eating something that one has fed quickly wears off. The guest mother (from Arizona or such) could not deal: "In our culture, we don't eat roadkill". It's a two part episode, so tune in next friday to see midwesterners being subtitled.

3.09.2006

Low content post: site update

No time to type much lately but I had such fun with the coloring book that I may do a few more. They're dead simple to do (I may still write up a how-to) and I'd like to make a couple full of family photos. How cool would that be to give to a kid?

In other site-related news, I joined friendster.com and myspace.com today and I finally understand the Tom is not my friend shirt. I still think that flickr is the best social application, but I might be biased because I have three contacts on flickr and none on any of the others. If nothing else, my adblocking software is getting a workout.

I also renewed the domain for applesaucebrainman.com and started collecting all the pages from the tripod account so I can reconstitute them under my blissful ad-free pikamac domain. Exciting news, I'm sure, but not every day can be a forest fire.

3.08.2006

What I'm Drinking

Here's what I drank on my recent trip to the west coast:
Biere de Mars, New Belguim Brewery, Fort Collins CO
Longboard Lager, Kona Brewing Company, Kona HI
Alaskan Amber, Alaskan Brewery, Juneau AK
Dick's IPA, Dick's Brewing, Centralia WA
Copperhook, Red Hook Brewery, Woodinville WA
Blind Pig Dunkleweizen, Leavenworth Brewery, Olympia WA
Manny's Pale Ale, Georgetown Brewing Company, Seattle WA

Also, this Fat Tire Neon Sign is now on my wishlist. As well as a greater understanding, and thus enjoyment, of the many beers of the world.

Time to grab your crayons and your pencils.

From the infectious Saturday Night Live short Lazy Sunday (better known as The Chronic-what-cles of Narnia), here's an exclusive 13 page, printable coloring book.




Lazy Sunday Coloring Book.pdf

3.07.2006

Closet Theater Vol 2.5

Emergency update: Red Vines plus Natalie Portman equals Crazy Delicious!

Toy Story 2: Requiem
The Most Exciting Way to Peel a Potato!

Live action Simpsons opening

3.06.2006

Is Chicago


03-06-06_1623.jpg
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
While the photographer maintains that he is indeed, not Chicago. God, I hate air travel...

Guest House


Skip's Guest House
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
Here's a photo of the guest house seen in the first episode of Northern Exposure. Maurice Minnifield (right) rapelled down it. And an abandoned car. The car wasn't in the episode. I ate dinner where Maurice is standing in the linked photo.

3.05.2006

Duvall, WA


Duvall, WA
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
The sign says: "Gifts That Help Salmon". The car is a Toyota Solara.

3.04.2006

Superdawg at O'hare


Superdawg at O'hare
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
Superdawg hot dog stand at O'hare Airport in Chicago. Jane and Michael Stern discuss the greatness that is Superdawg (includes better picture).

Flickr isn't autoblogging my pictures like it ought to so I'll have to step in an tweak. That's OK, as I can't add more than the most rudimentary information via a mo-pho keypad. Certainly not any links. I'm in Washington state tonight and I didn't take another camera besides my cell, so this should be an interesting trip.

3.02.2006

Anime has fully penetrated American culture

Snapped this on the mopho at the Walmart the other day:



Never in my wildest dreams did I ever think I'd see Perfect Blue at Walmart. In fact, I'm pretty sure I've used the example of "Perfect Blue at Walmart" to be the time in the far-flung future when Anime is no longer a niche market. While not considered to be a hentai anime, Perfect Blue is certainly not intended for children. It's a psychological thriller with a level of violence, though not gratutious, on par with a film like Seven. It's an entertaining, disturbing story of a pop singer who becomes an actress, an obsessed fan and a series of murders that cause the protagonist's world to spiral out of control. There's stabbings, optocentesis and a simulated (but still distressing) rape scene. Nevertheless, it's a fascinating story about fame, fiction and the nature of reality.

I describe Perfect Blue to be a movie like Requiem for a Dream, a great movie to see once, but once is enough. Research reveals that this comparison is more apt than I originally thought. According to Wikipedia (warning: spoilers) Darren Aronofsky purchased the US remake rights to Perfect Blue so he could reproduce a scene shot-for-shot in Requiem.

The director, Satoshi Kon, is most recently known for Paranoia Agent, a series with perhaps the most jawdropping opening sequences I've seen in a long time. Perfect Blue gets a high recommendation, but I wonder what a lot of Red Staters would think if it if they brought it home.

Desktop photo


Desktop
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.
Just a test of mobile blogging via my new cameraphone. The idea is to message my photos to flickr which is supposed to autoblog them for me. This one didn't work so I'm manually automoblogging it from the comfort of my own desk. How retrofuturesque!

3.01.2006

World's Largest...

Crap boobs crap: I forgot to bring Manders her present when I was up there. Here it is:



It's a squished quarter from the World's Largest McDonalds in Vinita, Oklahoma.

Negatives from the Sixties Revisited

As longtime readers will recall, I scanned and recolored a handful of negatives I found in an abandoned house (detailed here). As it happens, I was looking through one of my favorite things, the photo album of other people's photographs, and found a developed version of the negative that I had colorized.



I was pretty far off on my coloring, as well as the orientation of the image. Here's my version and my original inverted negative.