9.30.2006

Happy Birthday Pikachu


A very happy Mew catcher.
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

September 30 marks the 8 year aniversary of the release of Pokemon Red and Blue in the United States. IGN has a great retrospective of the various Pokemon games for various platforms (although the Pocket Pikachu line is absent). Toys Backwards R Us had an in-store event to celebrate: distribution of lucky #151: Mew! Jetchie documented the affair.

9.29.2006

NaNoWriMo Draws Near

On (or around) October 1st registration will begin for the 2006 Nanowrimo competition. I'm know some of the readers of this blog have got outlines already, and frankly I'm a little jealous of such capacity for preparation. I'll write mine the same way I do it every year: come up with the first sentence shortly after midnight November 1st, write halfheartedly and doubt myself for the first two days, gradually lose interest and finish the last 45,000 words in a caffine and alcohol induced haze in the waning days of the month. It's what I do.

Anyway, it's my ability to finish my normal October ritual that I'm questioning: watching 31 movies during the month of October. Lately, I have a hard time sitting still for more than about thirty five minutes, let alone focusing attention on images on a screen. Right now, a movie feels like a special treat. Thirty-odd seem like a chore. How will I fare in this self-imposed goal? Stay tuned!

How To Read Fortunes

Here's the fortune I got after my super-romantic one year anniversary date:

You will have no problems in your home.

So, that could mean, "Lucky you, your home life will be easy and uncomplicated."

Or it could mean, "When a tree falls on your house, it will do so in the gentlest, least damaging way possible."

But it could also mean, "You will not tolerate anyone trying to make trouble in your house. Anytime someone does, you'll kick 'em to the curb."

Words. They're slippery little buggers. Sometimes I wonder if the invention of writing led to the decline of civilization. Damn those Sumerian accountants! (See? Personal property leads to tragedy yet again!)

9.28.2006

Five Books I'm in the Middle of Reading

...in the sense that they're opened facedown on my desk.

The Game Inventor's Guidebook by Brian Tinsman
Everything Bad is Good for You By Steven Johnson
Lost Girls by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie
No One Cares What You Had for Lunch by Margaret Mason
Etiquette for Outlaws by Rob Cohen & David Wollock

9.27.2006

I forgot how ugly it looked before...







9.26.2006

Driving Licking Missing Sideways


Driving Licking Missing Sideways
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

West Plains, MO

9.25.2006

Outtawhack Day Pack Field Test

As I mentioned in July, I got a new backpack slash briefcase slash messenger bag. I had to wait until September before I could give it a proper test in actual travel conditions. Here's the baby, the Timbuk2 Outtawhack Day Pack, as photographed at the Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport.



Now, I dislike the appellation "daypack" for two reasons. First, it connotes something a child might take to day care, something I have many unpleasant (though not disturbing) memories of. Secondly, if I'm going somewhere for just a day, I can fit everything I need in my pockets. For my testing, I took it on a five day trip as my only bag.

Modern travel works best if one travels lightly. I hate checking bags at the ticket counter (or storing them under the bus, of one's travel inclinations tilt towards the Greyhound side). I'm usually carrying enough electronics that I don't want to let my bag out of my sight anyway. The Outtawack loves electronics almost as much as I do, as it gladly swallowed everything I wanted to take with me (MacBook, Nintendo DS, iPod Mini, digital camera, card reader, cell phone, extra batteries and chargers). It's got a huge padded pocket for laptops and myriad slots and pockets for other gear. There's a small grommet in the flap where one could run headphone wires if they had a music player that wouldn't fit in their pocket. Some sort of Victrola, I imagine. A zippered pocket just under the flap is the perfect size for a compact camera and keeps it at the ready. Being a daypack, the bag isn't designed with clothes in mind. My plan was to take half the number of clothes I would actually need, as my hotel would have laundry services on site. Clothes in one compartment, laptop in the second, small gear in the outside, flapped pocket. Unfortunately, even half my allotment of clothes taxed the capacity of the pack, and it was completely stuffed before I even drove to the airport.

The backpack straps are soft and wide and very comfortable and there's two handholds when one wants to carry it. In backpack mode, the straps sit at a jaunty angle, giving the bag the hip "worn on one shoulder" look while evenly distributing weight across the shoulders. There's a secret fourth pocket that I thought was for storing newspapers and magazines. It's actually for stuffing the backpack straps into when the bag functions as a briefcase. And the whole shooting match fits neatly under aircraft seats.

On my return trip, instead of washing my clothes I just bought new ones. I was able to stuff three more shirts and a medium sized toy hedgehog into the bag. Airport security pulled me out of line to hand check my bag and immediately regretted it. "I may not be able to get this closed again", the hapless screener said. But we did and I was winging my way back home.

This would be a great bag for a weekend trip and an outstanding supplement to a dedicated suitcase. It worked just fine for a primary bag for me, but some travelers may prefer to bring more than one pair of pants. It's an extremely comfortable backpack and seems very well built. Timbuk2 has a wide variety of bags and backpacks and will custom built many of their items to your color specifications. I really like this backpack and it's replaced my Kensington bag for traveling.

9.24.2006

Links I want to save

This is just a handful of recent links I want to be able to access in case my bookmark menu asplodes. It's so much fun using a global information tool as a personal notepad.

The most indepth pizza recipie I've ever seen.
Sheet Suspenders (to keep elastic sheets from coming detached from matress corners).
Free movies fallen out of copyright.
Record voice and post to blog via telephone: AudioBlogger
Away from digital? The $20 Holga film camera
Ten dollar infrared googles

9.23.2006

Public singing continues.

Three new songs to add to the Sung at Karaoke list:
Black Crowes - She Talks to Angels
Wilson Pickett - Mustang Sally
Len - Steal My Sunshine

Mustang Sally is a great karaoke song: just the right length, audience participation and there's enough room in there to improvise a bit (or sing the Commitments version, if that is what one's more familar with). It even earned me a free beer!

9.22.2006

My handwriting's really not that bad

From my travel journal:




Click to enlarge.

9.21.2006

Ready to fight: Understanding and Making Comics

As many know, I'm rather slow to anger most of the time. It takes a lot to piss me off: weeks of annoyances or intentional obtuseness when I'm supernaturally tired or sick. Unless someone happens to pick just the wrong subject to argue with me. I've nearly come to blows with my uncle over the role of the United Nations. Now I've found another subject that will rile me.

I'm a introverted, technically oriented male. That's a polite way of saying dork. As such, I find myself at home in a comic book store. I've spent years in comic stores, on both side of the counter. I've got thousands of comics stuffed in boxes. I am a fan. Thus, I very rarely encounter the arrogantly superior staff members that many people, particularly female people, report seeing when entering a comic book store. I like to think I know my stuff.

Yesterday I went down to our local comic shop. Scott McCloud recently released a second sequel to Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, called Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga and Graphic Novels. Understanding Comics is one of those books I keep buying. I can't help but lend it to people and I know that I shouldn't expect to get it returned. It's a book about visual language and how the mind processes words and pictures when they're placed together. It describes how sequential art is a unique medium for storytelling; how what happens in between the panels is as important as what happens within them. It's a work that rewires the way the reader thinks, in the way all true education does.

To quote Dr. Lawrance M. Bernabo:

"Understanding Comics" works for both those who are reading pretty much every comic book done by anyone on the face of the planet and those who have never heard of Wil Eisner and Art Spigelman, let alone recognize their artwork. Which ever end of the spectrum you gravitate towards McCloud incorporates brief examples of some of the artwork of the greatest comic book artists, such as Kirby, Herge, Schultz, etc., as well as work by more conventional artists, including Rembrandt, Hokusai, and Van Gogh. "Understanding Comics" is a superb look at the form and functions of the most underexplored art form in popular culture.

The second book in what is now a trilogy, Reinventing Comics, was a highly speculative work. It dealt with sequential art in non-static media such as the internet. It also spoke to the commerce side of the comic world that Understanding Comics ignored. There remains a lot of good ideas in the second book, but it's very disappointing after the majesty of the first.

Making Comics, on the other hand, has been getting rave reviews. A counterpart to the analysis of Understanding, Making Comics deals with the nuts and bolts of comic creation, writing with pictures and visual storytelling. I've been dying to read it.

I went into the comic shop expecting either an enthusiastic discussion on how good the book is or else that all the copies were sold out. I asked the clerk:

"Have you got in Making Comics? It's the third book in Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics series?'

"Never heard of it. We don't stock stuff like that."

"You've never heard of Understanding Comics? It's like the bible of our artform!"

"No, that'd be the Overstreet Price Guide. As you can see I have a whole shelf of Overstreets on that wall."

"I realize the Overstreet is important for understanding the value of comics, but McCloud's work deals with the artform itself."

"If you want a book on how to draw comics, Stan Lee did a series in the 70's. There's no one that knows more about making comics than Stan Lee."

"I know Stan Lee has created a vast body of work. Understanding Comics talks about what makes comics special. How the juxtaposition of words and images can tell a story in a way no movie or book can."

"Listen, we don't carry stuff like that."

By this time, other staff members were coming up to us, as voices were starting to raise. I broke off the argument by having the clerk follow me down a tangent of how trade paperbacks are superior to loose comics. By the time I left the store with a handful of underwear pervert stories the staff was friendly with me again, offering to add me to their subscription program. They didn't offer to order Making Comics for me, so I guess I'll just get my copy on Amazon. Maybe I'll get another copy of Understanding and bring it in for them to read.

9.20.2006

An End for a Road Warrior

Sam, who draws the incredible Exploding Dog comic (incidentally the genesis of a certain red robot) has retired his PowerBook G4 after five years of service. Those titanium PowerBooks can take a lot of abuse!

(via kottke.org (who, incidentally, designed the font used in DS))

9.19.2006

Aah! Offline content

One of the nice things about modern air travel is the waiting. It's not the hardest part, Tom Petty, I find it affords me that rarest of modern gifts: unstructured free time, absolutely guilt free! In my new backpack (review forthcoming) I have my laptop, now-antique iPod mini, charmingly-retro Nintendo DS non-lite and my new favorite, my aforeblogged travel journal. Magazines have a shockingly low content-to-volume ratio (except Make, of course) and books just go by too quickly. But I love pulling out my travel journal and making a short (or long) for-my-eyes-only handwritten blog post. They don't make me shut it off during takeoff and landing and there's never a shortage of batteries (although I did have to buy a three dollar pen at the Phoenix airport because I traded my regular pen to Xylinia for a Gameworks card.

The other drawback is I want to refer to aforeblogged material that is actually aforejournaled. Three days worth of writing that isn't on the internet? Time to get the scanner out (or better, rewrite the enteries for greater readablity).

9.18.2006

KoL Con Days 2 and 3

I'm not even going to get into all the verbs for day two. I'm just listing nouns for now.
snowcones
mariachi band
sock puppets
barbecue
beer
blank white cards
pinatas
nerf guns
balloons
celtic rock music
belly dancers
signed certificates of participation
Loathers!

in the evening:
open bar
ketchup hound
poolside
Minibosses
autoplunger
tentacles and Abu Graibs
Guitar Hero
fire
cupcakes
Loathers!

Day Three:
Triage (I told you)

9.17.2006

KoL Con 3-D: Day Two

9.16.2006

KoL Con 3-D: Day One

So my day started normally enough, waking up at five AM. Being in a different time zone messes up my sleep cycles. Did you know the Soviet Union had eleven time zones? In any case, the previous night on the forums I commiserated with fellow Loather and forum mod stargazer67 about the state of the hotel at which we both happened to be staying. Although both of us had registered online to a Holiday Inn Express, the actual hotel is a Best Western. Even the taxi driver that drove me from the hotel that I thought I was staying at thought it was a Holiday Inn. She was also going to AYCE sushi in the morning and we met in the lobby around eleven today. We found Ninja Sushi without problem and met up with phyphor and Umbra_Angelus from the KoL Player Pics Page (who, coincidentally, stargazer67 was meeting to drive them to their clan house) and proceeded to TEAR THAT RESTAURANT DOWN! I mean, consume incredible amounts of vinegared rice. 39 KoL players in total enjoyed the succulent sushi that Ninja had to offer. I ate so much I nearly died (not really) as did everyone else. phyphor and Umbra_Angelus regaled us with the many differences between the UK and the US, including the irony of the penny. The two had also brought 25 pounds of chocolate over from the UK with them to distribute to, among others, the Asymmetric staff.

Hence, Xenophobe invited us to the Asymmetric Publishing World Headquarters.

Since we were expected, the security guards didn't trouble us too much as we parked the car in the secured lot. We took the gleaming chrome express elevator to the glassed-in offices on the 37th floor. We met Armak and Riff and got a tantalizing glimpse of one of the Eight New Zones, as well as the October item of the month and the list of things to nerf. I gave Riff the Tiny Plastic Riff from the Lego Cannon Museum and he set it on his desk (next to his thirty inch Cinema Display). Yay! We also happened to meet Xylinia as she stopped in to oversee the state-of-the-art shipping department. We hadn't gotten our preregistration packets so she hand-delivered them. I gave her the Tiny Plastic Xylinia and she put it next to her computer (a Cray of some sort, I didn't recognize it because it seemed to be a prototype of some kind). On our way back down we stopped in at the legal department on the eleventh floor and signed non-disclosure agreements so we wouldn't talk about the [redacted] and the [also redacted], not to mention Riff's Un-botable puzzle. I seriously didn't mention that right now. Everyone please stop by the pikamac dot com legal department for some signing when you get a chance.

Armak had a fantastic coffee place/hookah bar called Coffee Society but he was used to driving in LA traffic and stargazer67's rental car was not as nimble. We went back to the hotel, found directions, and made our way to the coffee bar. There we met Thor and Adra and I enjoyed a white mocha and several pulls on the hookah. Even though I don't smoke, the flavorful shisha tobacco (leaf tobacco mixed with molasses and flavoring) was smooth and stimulating. Fun!

Then off to Gameworks for free food and seven dollar Guinness and ciders. I got to shake Jick's hand, gave Skully his Tiny Plastic etcetra etcetra had two beetles fight each other, drew a ASBM comic, and got a 30 minute lesson in the finer points of the Tron arcade game from a non-KoL stranger. Also, I won three stuffed hedgehogs from the claw games (after offering to bribe the attendent he gave me many pointers).

Now it's four in the morning and I know there's so much I'm forgetting. I'm so wired from the espresso that I may not sleep at all tonight. But sleep I must, as the BBBQ starts tomorrow at eleven. After that is the costume party at a house rented just for the purpose of partying. I found out today the Minibosses will be playing at the party. Yeah. Also: open bar.

The official purpose of Sunday is this: Triage.

9.15.2006

Harry Potter and the Transportation Security Administration

TSA officials on New York nearly prohibited JK Rowling from carrying the handwritten manuscript for the final Harry Potter book onto her flight to London. From her page:


The heightened security restrictions on the airlines in August made the journey back from New York interesting, as I refused to be parted from the manuscript of book seven (a large part of it is handwritten, and there was no copy of anything I had done while in the US). They let me take it on, thankfully, bound up in elastic bands. I don't know what I would have done if they hadn't; sailed home, probably.

Curse these muggle transit regulations!

Word of The Day

ANADROMOUS

adj., migrating up rivers from the sea to breed in fresh water. Used of fish.

Found in my American Heritage Dictionary while I was trying to find the proper spelling of "analogous," which has one more O in it than I thought it did. (And two more than the average person uses in pronouncing it. Of course, it may not be a word the average person pronounces very often.)

I wonder how many English words are specific to fish. They have their own special grammar rule: When you refer to multiple fish of the same species, they are called "fish." When you refer to mutliple fishes of different species, they are called "fishes." Thus it would be appropriate to say, "That's a nice tank of fishes you got there." (Although the use of the word "got" is of debatable appropriateness.)

9.14.2006

09-14-06_1359


09-14-06_1359
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

Even though No one cares what I had for lunch (good book, Maggie!), here's what I had for lunch at the Springfield Airport: an imported beer, a soggy club sandwich and hard, mouth-hurting chips. Only twelve dollars!

9.13.2006

Happy Birthday!

Roald Dahl!!!!


I'm going to make you a birthday cake tonight. And I'll eat it for you too.

Hog Blog

Is it odd that I've been blogging a lot about other people blogging about their hedgehogs? Anyway, today I ran across Hog Blog. The hedgehog featured in the blog has a wheel with a magnet glued to the back to run his odometer, and this information is captured by a computer and automatically posted to his blog every day! He's an active little fellow.

9.12.2006

Seating assignments

When I was booking my seats for my upcoming flights they airline's website asked me to choose the location of my seats. My first choice was "inside the plane, preferably" then a window seat (which, of course, are the seats closest to the outside of the plane). Outside of those two options I didn't care. But only because I wasn't informed. Now I find Seatguru a page with seating charts of every seat on every plane on every airline. The seats I was asigned are just fine, but next time I have to pick where I sit I'll know what to avoid.

Actually, the whole concept of assigned seating is pretty cool. The last few times I flew Southwest, which eschews the assignment of seats in favor of a "first in line gets first pick" also known as "the bus method". This forces people traveling together who would understandably like to sit together to camp out at the front of the line. Queueing up seems to bring out the worst in strangers, everyone reverts to elementary school rules: no cutting, no saving spots, step out of line and lose your place. I much prefer assigned seating.

9.11.2006

Then and Now

I heard about the attacks driving to work. It was a beautiful Colorado autumn day and I was driving with the windows down listening to what would have been Democracy Now, broadcasting from a former firehouse blocks from where the towers stood (an mp3 of the broadcast is available here). When I got to work, the president of the company had a five inch black and white television set up on his desk and everyone gathered around to watch the news reports. Since our company had offices in New York, all locations were shut down (except for Colorado locations). We all went back to work, but because there was no air travel we couldn't actually ship anything. We all sat around and listened to the radio and didn't know what to do.

Five years later. Let's look at my crude map of Iraq (which has nothing to do with the attacks of September eleventh) and see what's under al-Qaeda control.



This according to The Washington Post:
...[Col. Pete] Devlin reports that there are no functioning Iraqi government institutions in Anbar, leaving a vacuum that has been filled by the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has become the province's most significant political force, said the Army officer, who has read the report. Another person familiar with the report said it describes Anbar as beyond repair; a third said it concludes that the United States has lost in Anbar.


I still don't know what to do.

9.10.2006

Random Wiki Trivia

Several bands have names referencing themes, characters, or places from The Simpsons. Some examples are Noiseland Arcade, I Voted For Kodos, Evergreen Terrace, Daddy's Soul Donut, Jebediah, The Canyoneros, Pinmonkey, Fall Out Boy, Vote Quimby, Stupid Sexy Flanders, Hot Rod Circuit, Poindexter, Maggie Speaks, and Malibu Stacy.
...from The Simpsons

Phil Hartman was a classmate of future Manson family member Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme at Orville Wright Junior High School and the two took an acting class together.

Conan O'Brian is six feet four inches tall.

Nancy Cartwright, the voice of Bart, also voiced Rufus the Naked Mole Rat on Kim Possible.

9.09.2006

Stick it!

I got a PDF of an extremely preliminary layout of Stick It Notes: 100 Funny Insults to Write & Leave Behind and was urged to share one with the world. Here it is: the world premiere, sneak preview of the new book!

9.08.2006

Lego Hedgehog


Lego Hedgehog
Originally uploaded by minifig.

Two of my favorite things!

59 Lines About 59 Foods-on-a-Stick



Minnesota State Fair! Why must you be in Minnesota? Alas!

NSFV
(Not Safe For Vegans)

(via Boing Boing via Belly DuJour)

9.07.2006

Big Springs


Big Springs
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

Black and white mode on the old Panaphonic camera. Seaching for what Ansel used I found one of my favorite articles on photography equipment: Your Camera Does Not Matter.

Love It!

This weekend, an album caught my eye and I bought it. (An anomaly, I know.) It's called "Where's Neil When You Need Him?" and is full of songs written and performed by bands I've never heard of (because I'm not cool like that, not because they aren't well known I'm sure). All the songs are inspired by Neil Gaiman's writing. Of course, being a sucker for an allusion, I knew I had to have the album. And I LOVE it. My current favorite song: "Trader Boy" by Tapping The Vein. It's based on the story "The Day I Traded My Dad for Two Goldfish," which I love.

Incidentally, the album I was looking for was the new Ani DiFranco album. I brought it home too. I'm not that into it. I know it sometimes takes time for me to warm up to an album, but I'm a little annoyed with it. (Of course, I can't get the Neil Gaiman album out of my CD player or my head.) It irks me when people claim whatever it is that they happen to be doing is "the most RADical thing EVEh." Perhaps I will retract this later.

9.06.2006

Tuesday Fact Checking: Black Holes



Black holes: what's the deal? I said that black holes are something from which nothing can escape, not even light. (true) Also they don't act like a drain on a cosmic bathtub. (true) Then I said that as one gets closer to a black hole, things get really strange and mumbled something about time slowing down. Not entirely accurate. It has to do with Einstein's Theory of Relativity (specifically special relativity). Don't worry, we'll keep things simple. Well, as simple as gravitational time dilation gets, anyway.

Light is affected by gravity. That's what makes a black hole black, the velocity needed to escape the gravitational pull of the center is greater than the speed of light. But before light reaches the "point of no return" (what's call the event horizon) it's still affected by gravity. In fact, gravity can shift the color of light as it slows down. Imagine a person standing on a nearby planet watching a spaceship fall into a black hole. As the spaceship gets closer to the center of the black hole, the light emmited from the spaceship gets slower and thus takes longer to reach the eyes of the observer. In fact, since the closer it gets the slower light travels, to the person watching the spaceship will never fall into the black hole. Does this mean the occupants of the spaceship can start breathing easy? Nope. To them, time is still traveling at the normal rate of speed. I wouldn't think it would take more than a few minutes to crash into such an object.

The above image is from Step by Step into a Black Hole showing what one would see if one were to be so unlucky as to stray into the gravity well of a black hole.

For further information regarding black holes, Disney's first PG movie The Black Hole is pretty exciting. Plus, Slim Pickens and Roddy McDowall voice the robots!

9.05.2006

Cardiology Center


Cardiology Center
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

More playing around with infrared.

9.04.2006

ROCK OUT! Diesel Sweeties to be a newpaper comic, too.

This just in: on January eighth, Maura, Clango, Red Robot C-63, Indie Rock Pete and all the rest will join Marmaduke, Opus, Frazz, and the Wizard of Id in the ominously named United Features Syndicate. That means internet hero R Stevens, author and artist of the megapixelated Diesel Sweeties will be making actual, factual sunday funnies. This is awesomeness incarnate! Here's one of my favorite panels:



R Stevens is also a tshirt genius (his shirt is featured in the new James Kochalka video), and he's called me a rock star in his own handwriting. I ought to mention that as well.



Red Robot agrees to the good news! His "agreement" face is very similar to his "about to crush humans" face. Be aware.

In the midst of everything


In the midst of everything
Originally uploaded by nekosoft.

Testing out my Hoya infrared lens with the wide angle lens I captured Calico in a rare state of repose.

Nundinaenym?

For anyone that asked Jeeves about the word nundinaenym, the reason results were so lackluster is because I just coined it the other day. It describes a word that used to be a trademark and that has now fallen into common use. The suffix -nym means "word", of course. The prefix "nundinae" refers to market day on the Roman weekly calendar prior to around 19 BC. This was the only day of the week that the markets were open and that legal affairs could be conducted.

In my mind, a word that describes active traders and lawyers is perfect for terms like aspirin, kleenex, moxie and now asking jeeves.

9.03.2006

New Guitar Hero II Tracks

The October EGM has a big Guitar Hero II writeup. The current, though incomplete, tracklist is as follows:

Nirvana; "Heart-Shaped Box"
Primus (original recording); "John the Fisherman"
Stone Temple Pilots; "Trippin' on a Hole in a Paper Heart
Anthrax; "Madhouse
Motley Crue; "Shout at the Devil"
The Police; "Message in a Bottle"
The Pretenders; Tattooed Love Boys
Spinal Tap; "Tonight I'm Gonna Rock You Tonight
Heart; "Crazy on You"
Allman Brothers Band; "Jessica"
Lynyrd Skynrd; "Freebird"
Avenged Sevenfold; "Beast and the Harlot"
Dick Dale; "Misirlou"
Lamb of God; "Laid to Rest"
Alice in Chains; "Them Bones"
Reverend Horton Heat; "Psychobilly Freakout"
Black Sabbath; "War Pigs"
KISS; "Strutter"
Butthole Surfers; "Who Was in My Room Last Night?"
Van Halen; "You Really Got Me"
Guns N' Roses; "Sweet Child O'Mine
The Rolling Stones; "Can You Hear Me Knocking?"
Rush; "YYZ"

May I be the first to say, "Yes yes yes!"?

9.02.2006

Belated Tuesday Fact checking

Every Tuesday night, Nick and I hang out: go geocaching, to the local cinema or just stay at home and play with Lego bricks. Each week he asks me questions about the world and I try to answer them as best I can. I always wish I had a wireless Wikipedia to see how accurate my addled memory is. Last week I was smart and had Nick write down the questions so I could check my work. Here we go:

How do we know how far away stars are?
Astronomy for Kids gave half the answer I did, which is parallax (observing an object from different locations) but I also brought up red shift/blue shift to illustrate our universe's expansion. One nice thing about talking about abstract concepts in the field is that there's no shortage of examples to help visualize matters. Our GPS uses triangulation to locate our position in a manner of reverse parallax. Passing cars illustrate the doppler effect which is the best way to get one's mind around red shift/blue shift.

Are there any pills (of medicine) that cost $100
Leaving aside $275 art pieces the pharmaceutical industry is famous for Byzantine and bizarre pricing structures. To begin with the cost of developing a new drug is an estimated eight hundred million dollars and every drug needs production facilities and thorough testing before it enters the marketplace. The fact that insurance will pay for many medicines leaves little cause for lowering of prices. In addition, hospitals must raise the price of even common drugs to subsidize the high cost of patient care. Ten bucks for a single dose of aspirin is not unusual.

This Google Answers thread led to some interesting drugs, including Enbrel: a rheumatoid arthritis drug. From a linked article:

Unlike chemical compounds such as aspirin and other prescription medications which are taken orally, biologicals such as Enbrel and insulin are currently derived from human proteins grown in live cells taken from bacteria or mammals. The long production cycle and limited shelf-life of biological drugs encourage manufacturers to underestimate demand, while the expense of just building the production facilities, as much as $500 million, means an individual dose can cost up to $20,000.


The linked article is a few years old and Enbrel currently doesn't cost anything near $20k a dose. Still $250 for a twice-weekly medicine is pretty spendy.

"Dino, short for dinosaur? Remember to ask Jeeves."
A quote from The Simpsons episode "Mobile Homer", asking Jeeves has replaced googling as the nundinaenym of choice for referring to searching the web. Ask.com (Jeeves is no more, as of early 2006) gives the following results. Pretty disappointing.

Hedgeamablog



(via Cute Overload)

9.01.2006

Geotagging now integrated into Flickr

Nifty! Flickr has added a drag-and-drop map to their photo organizer to speed geotagging. In addition, each geotagged picture now shows the location taken along with the date, camera used and all that good stuff. They say they support older geotags, but mine are still waiting to be updated. I'm looking forward to vacation this month so I can add some new pictures to my map.