Archive for October, 2005

Dell Unveils New Data Recovery System (AP)

October 26th, 2005

 Seems strange that I would see this first from Yahoo! News but its cool just the same.  Dell announcing today that they will offer a RAID option on some desktop models.  In short, for $99 you get a second 80GB drive preconfigured in a RAID 1 array providing a miror of your data which can be recovered if one of the hard drives fails.

Dell Unveils New Data Recovery System (AP) – AP – Dell Inc. announced an all-inclusive way Wednesday to help consumers who’ve accidentally deleted precious photos or lost valuable data because of a hard drive crash.

(Via Yahoo! Top Stories)

Adtron’s 3.5-inch Flash HD for under 2 grand

October 26th, 2005

 The Engadget folks can’t think of many uses for this but I sure can.  An 8GB flash harddrive will happily hold an operating system.  Plenty of performance enhancement there methinks.  Still too early for us normal plebes to be buying one.  But, as with all technology, that price shall fall.

Adtron’s 3.5-inch Flash HD for under 2 grand

Flash HDThe golden age is upon us: Flash HDs on the cheap (um, relatively speaking). Adtron is busting out a 8GB 3.5-inch SATA drive that should hum along nicely in you tricked out desktop system, serving up the goods at 80MB a second while keeping quiet and staying cool. Of course, there’s not really much you can fit inside 8GB anymore, but whatever you do cram in there is going to move around all lickity split-like. They’re targeting this at military and industrial applications, and the $1900 price point is for quantity purchases, but we’re sure once we manage the grub with a bake sale or three, we’ll find plenty of uses.

(Via Engadget)

I am your father!

October 25th, 2005

 Interesting list of shocking film moments. Apparently they have an interesting view of shocking.  While they do include some stratling plot moments(Sixth Sense,The Crying Game) most of the choices are about gore as a tool to traumatize the audience.  There are some serious ommisions in my opinion.  I would certainly include Primal Fear, No Way Out, and Fight Club in the list.

I am your father!The 25 Most Shocking Moments In Film History. Poop eating. Involuntary ear amputation. Shocking revelations. But did they forget any? (Spoilers ahoy!)

(Via Metafilter)

Leapfrog

October 25th, 2005

 My kids mentioned seeing the ad for this awhile back but I just blew it off as Cartoon Network drivel.  Now it seems that this pen will actually do the things that my kids were claiming.  *sigh* I am closer to becoming the Grumpy Old Man ("In my day we didn’t have these fancy computer pens.  Hell, in my day ink wasn’t even eraseable").

Leapfrog

4fly_pen1.jpg
We mentioned the Leapfrog FLY Pentop Computer before, but this time, it’s finally hit shelves. As we mentioned, this is a computer built inside a special pen "computer", and works with specially made paper. For example, you’ve got some crazy calculator function: you draw some numbers on the paper, a plus sign, and an equal sign. Then you simply tap a number, and it’ll say the number out loud. Tap 2, the plus sign, and 4, and the equal sign, and the pen will yell out 6. This also works if you draw out a musical keyboard; it’ll play out a tune depending on which notes you tap. I didn’t believe the hype until I actually saw a demo of this first-hand — the technology blew me away.

Targeted primarily for tweens, the FLY Pentop computer is intended as a learning device, with various educational applications and games. Some of it sounded quite cheesy (like a trading card baseball game, plus a password journal for teen girls) but maybe that’s just ’cause I’m an old and jaded 26-year-old. The rest of the apps sounded actualy cool and useful: a scheduler, a Spanish language translator, etc. I actually would like to see this technology upgraded for adult-use, perhaps as a PDA, or an advanced note-taking system… I would definitely prefer using this thing to grappling with stylus Graffiti.

Suggested retail price for FLY Pentop Computer is $99, while various accessories and applications range from $5 to $35.

Fly Pentop [Leapfrog]
Highly-anticipated US$99 Pentop Computer finally hits shelves [Gizmag]

(Via Gizmodo)

Sometimes all it takes is a word or two

October 25th, 2005

The art of the succinct zinger is something I have great respect for.  And Alice gets it exactly right.  let us all take a moment and revel in the wonder of well chosen words.


IGN reviewer enjoys himself playing Bratz: Rock Angels

This read is hilarious, on so many levels.

1. IGN reviewer is very uncomfortable reviewing games targeted to girls, Must Assert Manlihood Before Real Review Begins.
2. IGN reviewer asserts that "the purpose of woman is to create", and therefore any games with creation in will appeal to women. (I fell off my stool at this point, where do they find these gibbons?)
3. IGN Reviewer develops sudden sense of ‘teaching’ responsibility. Interesting.

Just look at how the Bratz earn money. After completing arbitrary assignments players are rewarded with the equivalent of cash. Okay. But, most of the time just walking around yields coin. Money appears on the ground! This is what we’re teaching our girls?

Dude … Sonic. Mario. Zelda.

 

 

Set: geeky card-game that rewires your brain

October 25th, 2005

 This sounds like the perfect game for me and my geeky spawn. Looks like I have somethign for my Christmas List now.

Set: geeky card-game that rewires your brainCory Doctorow: Last week on a rainy afternoon in Amsterdam, I ended up playing a few hands of Set on a friend’s houseboat. I’d watched the game played once before at a nerdy event, and the fiendish intensity of the players was a gigantic warning-sign — this was a game with an event-horizon, something that would suck me in and never let me out again.

It’s true: Set is amazingly addictive, a nerdy game of great fascination, one that makes your brain reel and reconfigure itself, so the whole world starts to appear Set-like after a few hours’ play.

The dealer puts down twelve cards, and players hunch over them, trying to find three-card sets. For three cards to form a set, each of their attributes must either match or diverge. There are three attributes with three possible configurations each: shading (solid, outline, grey); color (blue, red, green) and shape (rectangle, oval, squiggle). It’s a little like Boggle in that the winning strategy is a combination of directed searching and general unfocusing of the eyes and trusting to intuition to make the sets pop out of the well. Players are penalized for calling out false sets, which happens all the time, since once you engage the pattern-matching centers of your brain, they can’t help but see phantom sets in the cards.

Play this long enough and every bit of the world around you turns into Set — the three chairs are matched as rectangles, unmatched in color, but, darn it, shaded the same. No set. Link

(Via Boing Boing)

The Animated Gif Strikes Back

October 25th, 2005
Gif Wars

 For no reason whatsoever.  I just thought it was funny as hell.

 

The Animated Gif Strikes BackThe Animated Gif Strikes Back

(Via Metafilter)

 

And somehow I missed the first episode.  So let me correct that now. 

Gif Wars III

But do they follow the first law of robots?

October 24th, 2005

Fear them. Fear them!

 

Beware the Mac Mini bot! It’s just version 1.0, so we’re not too worried about it conquering our entire civilization yet—maybe only about 4% of us to start—but don’t say you weren’t warned. Beware the fully autonomous Mac mini-bot!

“best of the worst on the best”

October 23rd, 2005

 "best of the worst on the best" – "This book isn’t as good as Harry Potter in MY opinion, and no one can refute me. Tastes are relative!" A review of Orwell’s 1984 on Amazon, from a list compiled by Matthew Baldwin at The Morning News with a selection of the funniest one-star reviews of books from Time’s list of the 100 best novels.

(Via Metafilter)

Let me add my personal favorite..

The Lord of the Rings (1954)

Author: J.R.R. Tolkien

“The book is not readable because of the overuse of adverbs.”

 What is it they say about opinions and assholes?  Some pretty strange opinions on this page.

So She’s Holding Out?

October 23rd, 2005

 I think everyone who’s been in a relationship has gone through dry spells.  I haven’t read through the whole site mentioned below but after reading the introduction I will be back to read more.  Beyond the sexual part of a relationship, the blogger seems to have a good grasp on relationships in general as well as a great handle on the self-help culture that deludes people by making them think that all their problems can be solved by simpl making everyone involved feel good.

So She’s Holding Out?Why Your Wife Won’t Have Sex with You. That quack Dr. Phil says that while sex is only 10% of a marriage, it’s 90% when you’re not getting it. Or words to that effect. There’s some truth to that. This site discusses, from woman’s point of view, why a wife might not feel like sex–often for years at a time. She also goes into greater detail (with insights taken from her own life and experience) such issues as some

(Via Metafilter)

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