12.31.2007

Pikamac Year in Review: 2007

First up, let's give people what they want:



That's right, the most popular post on the blog this year was March's Mudkip post. In fact it's Google's top image result for Mudkip (ironically, it contains very little Mudkip information).

Oddly, ten times more people viewed that page than the actual piece of journalism I did last year (April's Space Elevator post). Not too bad a year though, even with diminished blog content.

And now, the Of the Year results:
Game: Portal
Movie: Darjeeling Limited
Book: (tie) Insult Stickies & Limerick Stickies (I'm not sure any other book I read was published this year)
State: Colorado
Album: (tie) Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga & Rilo Kiley - Under the Blacklight
Tech: iPhone

12.22.2007

R4DS - Sounds like, but isn't, Star Wars

Inspired by James Kochalka's enthusiasm:



I googled it and lemme just say the R4DS is awesome.

Here's what it is: a little cartridge-sized doohickey that plugs into your Nintendo DS. Inside this doohickey is room for a tiny off-the-shelf miniSD memory card. The R4DS runs software from this memory card, like homebrew DS software, mp3s and movie files. It'll also run any and all DS software, so you can load it up with copies of all your games so you don't have to... uh, take all your cartridges with you when you're on a trip? I'm sure readers of this blog would only use such a device to play games they've purchased legitimately and not load up their R4DS with games they don't already own. Games like Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney and Electroplankton.

I bought my R4DS from an outfit called Sky2K and they shipped swiftly (though appear to be out of stock at the moment). I paired it with a 2gig miniSD card I picked up for $30 bucks at Staples. And every (legally purchased) game I've tried on it has worked perfectly. There's word that games that use the DS internet connection can be flaky, though I haven't tried those yet.

As someone who's misplaced those tiny DS carts, it's refreshing to have every game in my collection in my DS (while the physical carts are packed away safely in a box). nds-roms.com has proved to be a reliable source of game ROMs (but be sure not to accidentally download a ROM you don't have the right to play).

Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got to tend my Electroplankton.

12.20.2007

Community Generated Advertising

I think this "internet" is here to stay.

Sure, there was doubt for a few years that it might go the way of Citizen's Band Radio and the party line, but few would argue that the world is going to become unmeshed from the data tubes that now weave through every facet of life.

In fact, I'm betting you're on the internet right now.

Furthermore (and perhaps more controversially), I think there's still money to be made on the internet.

Yeah, I missed out on the original wave of everything on the internet turning to gold. And the second wave too. I've comforted myself with the fact that I'll never have to worry about the value of my stock options.

No, the road to squeezing nickels and dimes out of the internet these days is through hard work and creative output. And I'm betting there's a million ways to do it. Well at least 365. In 2008 I'm adding a new blog to the Pikamac infotainment network dealing with squeezing these nickels: trying out the myriad ways of making money with one's computer and writing about it in the Pikamac trademark humorous and infotaining fashion.

As a sneak preview (since I haven't finished the design work for the new blog) I'd like to talk about a company called PayPerPost today. PayPerPost bills itself as a "marketplace for Consumer Generated Advertising". What this means without the buzz-speak is that they pay bloggers to write about stuff. Not stuff like the nature of reality or what David Leisure is up to, but actual stuff. Products and services.

Plenty of bloggers have criticized PPP's business model is getting bloggers to "shill" for their clients, but the idea of user-generated advertising is an interesting one. Since a particular advertiser is sometimes most interested in improving their Google PageRank, in many cases the comments a blogger is generating need not be positive. No such thing as bad publicity.

On some level I'm bothered by advertising on a personal blog, even though I've got the ubiquitous GoogleAds and such in the margins of this one somewhere. They're tasteful. Is generating content to order tasteful? PPP has very stringent disclosure policies which seem to dodge most ethical issues with "shilling". And the rates aren't bad either: not enough to quit one's day job, but enough that an occasional post can cover webhosting costs.

But there's where the fine line comes in: presumably if a blogger posts nothing but paid-for content I imagine their readership is going to sink like a stone. In that sense, outfits like PayForPost could be self-regulating (since many opportunities require a high Google PageRank). The company, perhaps proactively, is very concerned with blog ethics.

I'm getting Paypaled twenty bucks for writing this post. Is it "selling out" more than adding the GoogleAds (which I've yet to see a thin dime from)? There's a shiny disclosure bar at the bottom. And I promise not to make a habit of writing content to order. This one's for science (and the aforementioned $20).



12.04.2007

Overheard...

...in the parking lot of the Humane Society Thrift Store:

"Well, they can cure that now, so even getting malaria wouldn't be so bad... The guy in the parking lot is laughing at me."