Cooling

The heat is finally beginning to arrive in Southern California. It’s 9PM and the temp is still in the high 70s inside, even with the air conditioning on. Once the long summer starts, the heat will be a daily battle. I need to install that attic fan ASAP.
I’ve been burning the candle at both ends lately. Too much of everything and too little rest. Add to the fact that I’m off of caffiene and I’m dragging. People at work told me I’m looking ragged. It’s mostly my eyes, but I need some rest.
Amazingly, the Planetside servers went down tonight for some emergency patch or what not. I’m playing that game way too much. It’s great, but I need to rest first.
Blogging
I’ve been reading a bunch, but not linking much.
My mother posted a great item on Memorial Day. You should take a look.
She’s using Blogger which I have determined is the suck. Props to the Blogger crew for being innovative, but the archives, tag systems, and lack of flexibility is a problem. I need to convince my Mom to move to Movable Type. MT would solve her issues about wanting to upload and post photos. Blogger just doens’t handle it. Where’s Typepad when I need it?
I hope the learning curve isn’t too steep. Matt’s against it, but agrees that Blogger is a pain in the ass.
I’ve been doing some thinking about reputation system for the net, but I haven’t written them up yet. Soon.
Martins’ Computer
Update on Martin’s hard drive: I prepped a backup drive for him and had him install it. No worky says Martin. I think the computer is toast. I’m guessing a mobo/processor upgrade would fix it up, the OCed Celeron 533A is probably giving up the ghost.
He told me to forget it. When they get to Kansas he’s buying a new computer. He’s going to buy a Mac. Et tu Martin?
Alright, about 30 minutes until I head to bed. TIme to go see if the Planetside servers are up.

Defeat

Martin’s computer broke.
The computer is a hodge podge of parts going back to ’97 and an old e-Machines box they had. I’ve been the tech support for a while and been able to keep their PC running most of the time.
Recently Martin had problems and it looked like it was time for a reinstall of WinXP. The computer wouldn’t boot correctly and I was hoping the reinstall would fix things up. It did not.
I took a look at the computer first hand today and could get nowhere. The hard drive looked unresponsive. The hard drive home came home with me so I could look at it with a couple other tools.
After bolting it into one of my systems, I saw that the drive was a bit fubarred. Partition Magic kept finding read errors and was unable to even diagnose the problem exactly.
I called Martin and told him the drive looked like the data was not salvageable. He said to go ahead and do a clean install. Even with his go ahead, I tried for another 90 minutes to find a way to save the drive. No dice. It’s hosed.
As I type, the drive is reformatting for a fresh install. I only hope the problem is fixed with a reformat and it’s not the drive going bad…

Clubhouse

It’s Sunday and again we are not doing much. I edged, trimmed, mowed the lawn and Michele took the kids to Target for a new mop. I asked the girls if they wanted to go to the play, but they didn’t want to go. We didn’t go yesterday and I was hoping we would get a chance today. No luck.
Mira wanted to play with her new Barbie and Zoe wanted to play her new Pacman videogame.
Zoe has made a clubhouse in the girls room. Here is the sign on the door.


“What is password? Roll the dice!”

If you knew the password, you could gain entrance. Inside you would find this scene.

(clockwise from the left) Kleenex, stuffed animals, books, pillow, makeup head, blanket, rock collection, money stash

Once inside, you were invited to roll the dice. No matter the outcome of the dice, you ‘won’ a hug or kiss.
Good times.
Planetside
I stayed up way, way too late last night playing Planetside. On a trip to Fry’s yesterday, I broke down a bought the Prima Guide to Planetside. Some good info, but I long for a few more details.
This could be my new game that takes hold of me. It has the community that’s fun, but lacks the drama++ that takes over other RP style games. The mission is clear, kill the enemy, kill them all.
Books
I finished the Tranquility Alternative yestday while Zoe was in the bath. I sit in the bathroom while htey bathe reading a book most nights. The ending was OK, but I wished for a little more heroic ending than simply being told that that the CIA had wrapped everything up without any details.
The ideas about an alternative space program were interesting. The path the military would take if running the space program as a defense system as opposed as a pure exploration system. I don’t know what it will take for America to get reinvigorated by the space program. Perhaps it will be the Chinese attempts to reach the moon. I can only hope we get a President with a bit of vision for the future that understands the value of moving forward into space.

Home Day

In my girl’s minds, the week is divided into school days and home days. Today is a home day. I plan on a quiet morning and am going to take the girls to a play of the 3 Little Pigs this afternoon.
Planetside
The last two days I’ve played Planetside. It’s damn good. They’ve taken the best of Tribes converted it to a MMOAG (massively multiplayer online action game). There’s no role play, just combat.
The experience you gain helps you raise your certifications and gain access to more and more hardware. The skills go in a few different routes. You can rais eup on vehicles or armaments or on utiltiy hardware like hacking and repair tools.
There’s not big delay on getting to a fight. There’s an Instant Action button that takes you directly to a combat zone to reinforce the people already fighting. The actual fighting is good, but not great. It allows for traditional FPS skills, but lacks the fluidity of Quake and UT. Lag does not appear to be an issue. I see occasional lag burst while running from once place to another, but never in combat.
I think I’m hooked.
Pinging
Once again I’m going ask those people that read Cruft to make sure that they ping weblogs.com or blo.gs or blogrolling whe they update their own weblogs. Yes, I’m taking about you Keith, Yoshi, and Travis.
Reading
I’ve been reading The Tranquility Alternative by Alan Steele, which I found on sale at a bookstore in Burbank. Good so far, but predictable. I’m sure there’s a few twists coming, but I’m on the scent of what’s going to happen.
I subscribed to Asimov’s Science Fiction, the pulp style sci-fi magazine. Amazingly, the latest issue has a story by John Varley, one of my favorite authors.
E3
I still haven’t finished the pictures from E3 yet. Too much gaming. I hope to finish it today and post ’em.

Democracy Works

Tonight instead of putting my girls to bed and goofing off, I went to a City Council Meeting.
In South Pasadena, my town, we have a law that prohibits parking from 2AM to 6AM without a permit. Many towns have the same thing. In the past, it was simple for me to get a permit. In 2001, they changed the conditions to get a permit, and I started getting denied. It sucked.
I got a letter from the Police Department telling that the Overnight Parking Ordinance would be discussed at tonight’s council meeting. Michele and I agree that I should go. Those that know me can attest that I can be somewhat of a bulldog in discussions and arguements.
The meeting started at 7:30PM. The part I was interested in was #20 on the agenda. Yuck. I had to sit through quite a bit of business.
The first big deal was the ‘tree crisis’. Evidently at my daughter’s school, there are two trees that an arborist determined should come down ASAP. A second arborist agreed. Simple eh? Not so. THe Board of Education and the City Council came into conflict over the tree issue. If the BoE cut down the trees without consulting the Natural Resources Committee of the Council, there was going to be hell to pay.
The plan was to cut down the tree this Saturday as long as the Planning Commission agreed. At somepoint the Council got so frothed up over the issue they were discussing whether the threat was some dangerous that we ought all run over to the school with chain saws right now so that we wouldn’t have to wait until Saturday. The City Manager, the sanest of the bunch said, “I think the trees have another 24 hours in them.” I see the trees every day. We probably have 5 years before they posed a danger.
After the tree crisis, we moved onto the dramatic issue of filming on Hanscomb. They filmed a movie scene up there and parked two trucks near the filming. A guy who lives on the street, Dr. Yet, was very, very upset.
He did a lot of stomping and blustering. The City Staff knew he was going to through a hissy fit and had all their rebuttals lined up. Dr. Yet was not happy. No matter what they said he got redder and redder in the face. Anger++
Next a guy sat down in front of me with a laptop. He turned it on and linux popped up. No Gnome of KDE for this guy, looked like oldschool window managers for him. I’m wondering what he’s doing and I see him bring up EMACS. EMACS? He then proceed to start fixing code. He did this for two hours while the meeting rolled on. Now I can see taking a laptop to surf or blog in the meeting to kill time, but coding? Wierd.
Finally we got to the parking issue. There were about 10 people asking for changes so they could get permits and 3 people asking for no change so the ‘aesthetics’ would be preserved. I said my peace and sat down waiting to see what they would do.
After much blustering about why change was bad, one councilman presented a compromise plan to allow each household a minimum of one parking permit. More wrangling and talk of garages, bad neighbors, and who’s awake at 2-6AM.
Finally at 11:30PM, FOUR HOURS after the meeting started, the council voted 3 to 2 to modify the ordinance to the compromise. Victory.
You can fight City Hall.

Coffee

On the way back from lunch the other day we were discussing places to get coffee. The place we had just been, The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, had refreshingly clear names for things like Small, Medium, and Large for sizes.
We soon launched into assigning geekness to coffee places. Here’s what we came up with.
Starbucks is Windows
Peets is Mac OS
The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf is Linux
Doughnut shops & gas stations are DOS
Work coffee is AS400 mainframe
Wrong? Right? Better suggestions?

An hour to late

I’m up an hour too late. I should be sleeping, but instead I’m in front of the computer.
We must be nearing the weblog apocalypse. My Mother has got her weblog groove on and is posting now. Today, she wrote about my brother’s post. I have no idea where this is going to end up.
Think about it, my 60-something year old mother is BLOGGING.
I went to Fry’s today at lunch and didn’t buy a thing. I joked that what I wanted to buy was more time. Time to do things. I was checking out the new micro-rockets that need 50 ft to launch into. Maybe next time.
A few days ago I posted about the icon buttons I made in the mold of Tay McKnight’s. I made a Powered by Linux button for my own use and it got post on the main Steal These Buttons page. Today I saw someone using the button I made at HitorMiss.org. I felt happy that someone liked the button enough to use it.
Night all.

E3 2003

It’s Saturday morning and the kids are playing up front. I’ve got some time to write about E3.
First of all, what I looked at is what interests me. PC games, specifically PC games with multiplayer. I don’t really care much for console games, not because they are bad, but because I don’t play them much. So don’t ask me why I didn’t update you on Mario Kart 4 or Final Fantasty XXVI. I don’t effing care about those games.
I took a number of photos, but haven’t whipped them into shape. You can see the pictures later.
In no particular order:
MaxPac – A transportable PC. Not a laptop. This PC is size and shape of a briefcase. Slip off a side cover and there’s a 17″ LCD screen backed by top of the line CPU & video cards. Looks to be great for LAN parties or even takign it places where you want to do video editing.
World Cyber Games – It’s the Olympics of video games. Players from all over the world compete in various games heading toward the World Championship. From Counter-strike to Starcraft to Age of Mythology to Halo, all gamers can find something they can relate toin the WCG. The US finals are at the UGE this summer.
Ultimate Gamers Expo – Imagine E3 for the general public? The UGE is going to try to through a convention for the gamers, not the gaming industry at the LA Convention Center on August 15-17. I’m going!
Halo for PC – Yes, the game looks great on an Xbox and i did have much even when it was released. I played the game on PC. It’s OK, but still feels like a slow, chunky console game. There’s no precision ala Unreal Tournament or smoothness ala Quake. There isn’t really much that distinguishes Halo from the horde of other FPS available on the PC. I’ll probably still end up buying it, but my enthusiasm is low. Still undecided if they will have a co-op play mode fr the game like Serious Sam. Also, there’s no commitment yet to a mod SDK.
NVidia – The NVidia booth was great. They had demos of most of the great games on the floor in one place. When I first walked up, there was Gary Coleman talking about video cards with an NVidia guy. I saw demos of the FX series of cards and they are simply unbelievable. Smooth as glass and great textures. Too bad they are going to be $400+…
Battlefield 1942: Secret Weapons of WWII – BF1942 is a great game and deserved all the Game of the Year awards it garnered. The new expansion is basically fantasy stuff that might have been on the drawing board in WWII. I played the demo for about an hour total at the show. The secret weapons are all a blast. I dig the rocket pack the most. The cargo plane is cool because it becomes a mobile spawn point once in the air.
Uru – I hated Myst. I’m gunna hate Uru. Utter garbage.
Coaxsys – Coaxsys systems makes system that converts the coax wiring in your home into a 100 megabit ethernet network. With a hub adapater and seperate adapters at each end you want ethernet, it appears to work seemlessly with cable TV. At the Coaxsys booth, fatal1ty was playing UT2003 against all comers. Noone had killed him once all week. Amazing.
Play TV – Radica has a PlayTV line of games that are standalone. You plug the game into the video and audio in of your TV and you are good to go. Each game is designed for kids and is a physical object. The fishing game is inside a toy fishing pole. The snowboarding game is inside a snowboard.
Star Wars Galaxies – I saw this at the NVidia demo booth. All they showed was a guy running around in his underwear. They need to do better than that. I can run around in my underwear already.
Lineage II – I tried playing the original Lineage a while ago and was unimpressed. I saw the demos of Lineage II and the graphics are much better, but I saw nothing that would differentiate it from any other MMORPG. I know the Koreans love it, but I don’t.
Tron 2.0 – I saw the Tron demo last year and it ws impressive. It’s almost ready for release now. The graphics look good, but lack any texturing like other FPS games.
Toontown – Disney’s version of an MMOG for children and Disney fans. I tried the beta a while back and it wasn’t for me. It’s tightly controlled to protect children from anyone that would try to interact with them in an inappropriate way. Looks like a blast for tweens to play with other kids online.
Wireless Controller for Gamecube – I don’t know it took E3 for me find the solution to our problems. The girls like playing the Gamecube, but the controller cords are always a problem. With the new wireless controllers, it makes things much simpler.
Dark Age of Camelot: Trials of Atlantis – Seeing the Mythic developers demo the new Atlantis expansion for DaoC was fun. “Show me how to ride a shark. Show me how you swim.” and they did. I haven’t played DaoC in while but the new expansion look pretty fun. Instead of riding a horse you can ride a shark. They haven’t came up with an explanation of how everyone breathes underwater, but they are working on it. I suggested a James Bond style mouth gadget.
Worlds of Warcraft – Holy Crap! This game looked GREAT. I was really suprised when I saw the demo at the show. The graphics are fantastic, like Warcraft 3, unlike the standard graphics in EQ/DaoC/Shadowbane. Smooth and fluid, the action looked arcade-like with all the options and flexibility of MMORPGs. I hadn’t thought I would look forward to WoW, but I do now.
Guild Wars – NCSoft, makers of Lineage, showed a new game called Guild Wars. This MMORPG attempts to do awaya with the constant leveling and running from place to place that exists in other games. Evidently you’ll be able to group instantly and jump into the action easily. Amazing concept, making a persistent world game that is more play than work. If you can distract a few of the EQ players from their food pellet levers, this game might catch on.
Magic the Gathering Online – Back in 1995 I started playing Magic the Gathering, the collectible card game. For several years it consumed my free time and my thoughts. I played in tournaments and collected box after box of cards. Unfortunately, Magic was a game that you needed to play in person. As I became a father, I found my time for playing severely crunched. Eventually my attention drifted to video games I could play from home and away from Magic. The online version of the game looks like perfection. Collectibility, rule adherence, and a good engine make Magic Online a great game. I met a guy from Wizards at the show and we discussed things a bit. I’m energized to give it a try.
Half Keyboard – I’m n ot sure why I’d want this, but it’s done well. The company founder, Edgar Matias, explained the halfkeyboard to me personally. Smaller than a PDA, you can type on the thing in a somewhat familiar way. While I tried to type on it, I could feel my mind snapping as I tried to mentally flip the letters in my mind. Edgar can type very fast on the halfkeyboard. He had a few other products like full size keyboard that let you type onehanded when you wanted and two handed at other times. The wearable one hand keyboard that goes on your sleep looks like something straight out of cyberpunk fiction.
City of Heroes – NCSoft is publishing the game that appears to actually be headed for shelves. The game looks interesting, but in the limited test of combat I tried, the NPC kicked my superpowered ass easily.
Good things about E3: Pizza vending machines, booth babes, and Datafloss in full effect
Bad things about E3: Sold-out pizza vending machines, neckbone chicken and rice, Nazi registration folks
Games that were hyped but sucked: Black 9, American Idol, Tomb Raider: *.*, Sims Expansion 27, Mario anything, driving games, Counterstrike on a console
Companies that sucked because I could not play demos: id for not having playable Doom3, Valve for not having playable Halflife 2, Activision for not having a Return to Castle Wolfenstein booth
Companies that sucked because of their booths: Infogrames/Atari since their areas was appointment only. Sony Online Entertainment for their black box booth that made you wait in line to enter like a friggin Hollywood nightclub. I hope they lose money on all their games for their attitude.