Dear Flickrsphere


Take deep breath.
(Props to Alaina for the inspiration)
Yes, Flickr is making us old skool Flickr folk use Yahoo to log in. Many of you are acting like this is the end of the world. This is not the end the world.
You will recognize the end of the world by cats & dogs living together.
Besides the log-in name, you are also whining about being limited to 3,000 contacts and 75 tags per photo. If these limitations bother you, you are a fucking freak. Yes, needing to exceed 3,000 contacts and 75 tags per photo is a condition that only the seriously unbalanced are worried about. The Flickr people won’t tell you that, but that’s exactly what they are thinking.
Look, I’m old skool Flickr. Caternia herself personally told me to switch to Flickr from Photoamerica for this weblog. I understand the concern about Yahoo breaking Flickr, but nothing is getting broken here except for people that are a few Prozac shy of a pharmacy, kind of loons.
This ain’t hard.

I mean really. “OMFG, I have to use an 8 letter username instead of a 6 letter username! Grab the pitchforks!”
Everything is the same on Flickr except for the aforementioned freaks. To those freaks, I have no sympathy. Your requests are unreasonable. You are not losing your Flickr identity or your photos. You are simply changing your login in credentials.
Just stop with the “I’m quitting Flickr!!!1!!!1!” type posts on your weblogs. Nothing is better than Flickr for photos and you know it. You know your not switching to something else, so save your righteous indignation for something else.

A whole new level of Geek

My eldest daughter Zoe, loves herself some anime. As Loyal Cruft Readers may recall, we dressed as Naruto characters for Halloween. This weekend was the Anime Los Angeles convention. After gathering the approval of our family cosplay/anime expert Rachel, I decided to take Zoe to her first anime con.
Now, I’m been to sci-fi cons, gaming cons, all kinds of cons, but I had never been to a anime convention in costume to be part of the cosplay. Cosplay takes things to a whole new level of geek. I mean, I’m a corporate exec type, not a crazy cosplayer right?
Before I knew it, it was Saturday morning around 9AM and I was standing my kitchen dressed as Kakashi, drinking my coffee wondering if I was really up for this. Zoe was nervous in her Hinata costume and beyond excited to go. There was no backing out now.
Once we got there, I knew it would a different kind of convention as we walked in the door and someone yelled out “Yay! Hintata!” runs up and give Zoe a big hug. Zoe had to explain that the other girl was dressed as an older Hinata.
Within about 30 minutes, we were in the groove and I had been asked to pose with other people a few times. I was a bit perplexed by a girl wearing what appeared to be a bikini made of cotton puffs, wearing a mask like mine, and nothing else. She and her girlfriends were laughing up a storm. Zoe informed me that she was dressed as Sexy Jutsu Kakashi. It took me until the next day to actually find out what Sexy No Jutsu was.
Soon enough Zoe made friends with another group of Naruto cosplay kids and the rest of the day was spent following them around like some sort of ninja bodyguard.


We had a great time at the convention. I was a little bored at some times when Zoe was watching other kids play a Naruto video game while she waited for her turn to play. The highlight of the day was the Naruto gathering at 3PM.

Some of the costumes were fantastic in their detail and match to the ‘real’ anime designs. People put their hearts into this.
There are a lot of rules and procedures for the gathering and the immense amount of photos that are taken. More than once a teenager ordered me in and out of pictures and I simply obeyed. Who am I to mess with the system? 😉
You can view my set of photos on Flickr, if you want to see more of the gathering.
Overall the people were nice and inviting to newcomers. For many of the people there, the con is a place where they can enjoy their passion and noone thinks they are strange. Zoe is hooked and didn’t want to leave even after 9 hours. The next day she begged me to go back all day long.
The next big anime convention is Anime Expo in June (or ‘AX’ as we cosplayers call it…). We’ll be there, in fact I better go make our reservations now.

Six years of Cruftbox

Well, I missed the actual anniversary by 3 days, but six years ago, I started posting on my site as a weblog. I had been posting stuff on my site since 1997 in pure html, but I consider it a weblog when I started using software to post. Initially I used Newspro, since my hero, Lum the Mad, used it.
Take a look at the first postings. Hrrm, I was writing about video games and trends on the internet. At least I’m consistent.
The site came into being in 1997 as a family site, but in June 1998 I started fairly intensive work on detailing the adventures of my guild in Ultima Online. For the next four years, that was the main focus of my online presence. Cruftbox started in 2000, but most of my effort was on things like the Cookie Story, which in it’s time was considered hilarious. Just to claim the credit, I was basically blogging about events in a virtual world in 1998. How far ahead of my time was I, huh? 😉
While I wasn’t in the elite group considered as the first webloggers, it was still fairly early in the whole weblog thingie to have gotten involved. 1999 was the year that weblogging took off in it’s current form with people like Anil Dash and Rebecca Blood getting rolling. Cruftbox sprung into webloggedness six months after them. I’ve written about my theory of weblog origins, which differs from the idea that someone invented the weblog. Blogger launched in August 1999 and suddenly you didn’t need to understand things like CHMOD to have a weblog.
Looking back over the last six years, as you might imagine, I have enjoyed having this site. While I love my work, it does not offer me a great amount of creativity or chance to share what I do with many others. Cruftbox has been a way for me to put smiles on the faces of others. As the Dali Lama says, our purpose in life shoudl be to alleviate the suffering of others. If my weblog can even help a litlte in this manner, it’s worth the effort.
Despite what I just wrote, I still stand by my thoughts on why people blog. Even after six years, getting comments and trackbacks make me happy.
Things I’ve learned about weblogging
People at work will find and read your weblog.
Your friends & family will find and read your weblog.
People you meet will google you and find and read your weblog.
That being true, leads to:
Cruftbox’s First Law of Weblogging: Post only what you are OK with your co-workers, friends, family, and strangers knowing.
Consistently, the pages with the most hits are the following:
Loading Windows XP on a SATA drive
The Turduckhen
How to make a Smoker from a Trash Can
Images of GLAT – Google Labs Aptitude Test
Review of USB Coffee Cup Warmer
How TrackBack Works
In fact, the Loading Windows XP on a SATA drive page is the leading by far. Nothing else comes close. Who woulda thunk?
Cruftbox’s Second Law of Weblogging: You will never know what will be a popular post on a weblog, so don’t try to make posts you intend to be popular.
One thing that weblogs have proved is that a picture (or video) is worth a thousand words. Humans are visual creatures and seeing things is almost always better than reading things. Here’s a simple post where the story is OK, but the image is what makes it a good post.
Pictures, images, and graphics really help get your point across. Simply using other people’s images doesn’t cut it. Original images and graphics are what people want to see.
Cruftbox’s Third Law of Weblogging: Make your own images and photos for your weblog, because original visual content is what people crave most.
Lastly, I want to thank you, the Loyal Cruft Reader. Over the years I have made friends with many of you, enjoyed the comments and emails, and loved having an audience to share my fascination with junk food, science, video games, and technology with. Thank you for your support and continued reading.

Caddieclip, for the golfer who needs nothing

A college fraternity brother put his mechanical engineer skills to work and invented the Caddieclip. I bought a set and he sent me a bunch to test out. The Caddieclip is for golfers that like cigars or want to avoid putting their clubs on the ground.


Of course, I had to put the Caddieclip through Cruft Labs testing.

They come in five different colors. The purple one is a special version for charity.

Here is the putter suspended over the grass. For those that don’t play golf, often early morning games find the fairways and greens wet and it can get the grips all wet when you walk up with a wedge and a putter.

Sure enough, the Caddieclip keeps the club up out of the grass.

Next, I lit up a cigar and gave that a test as well. I enjoy a cigar on the links now and again, and having a place to put your cigar is a real problem. Once again, thanks to American ingenuity, the problem is solved.

I found that rather than taking the cigar in and out, I simply could smoke by using the Caddieclip as a holder. Functional and stylish.

Why CNN.com sucks

I check the news several times a day on the internet. In the past I have defaulted to CNN.com. They seemed to have good selection in lead stories and were never late with breaking news.
But now I’m looking for a new site to get my news from. Why? Here’s why:


The written word is gettting trounced by internet net video.
On the list of 12 Top Stories, only 7 of them can be read, 5 of them are video only.
I want to read my news, not watch it on video. Not to mention the time it takes. After clicking on the link, the video window pops up and the video starts streaming, then the advertisement plays. It takes 30 seconds to get to the actual video news story. That’s half a minute to wait for my link to complete, an eternity in web site design.
In 30 seconds, I could have probably read the entire news article if it was written, or after the first paragraph, decided I didn’t want to finish the story. Also, when you watch the news, you cannot highlight text and Google search to learn more about things easily.
I cannot understand why CNN is pushing video so much over text. Maybe they make more on advertising. Maybe they think it’s what people want.
So, I’m looking for a new news site to check. Any suggestions?

Heated coffee in a can

This morning I saw a can of Hillside Coffee in a self heating can. Of course, I had to give this a try. I’m a big fan of canned coffee, especially the iced Asian style.


I picked up the French Vanilla and Chai Tea flavors.

To heat the can is pretty simple. You simply pull the bottom cover off. The instructions say to wait until the pink dot turns white before drinking it. The pink dot is heat sensitive.

And punch down on that bubble with the greenish looking water in it. The bubble pops easily and the water flows out.
The simple reaction is water and quicklime. Quicklime is calcium oxide and the addition of water causes a exothermic (heat producing) reaction. The result is slaked lime (calcium hydroxide) which is a component of mortar in cement. Not exactly health food, but not deadly poison to be near your drink.

Sure enough, in a couple of minutes the coffee was hot and sure enough the pink dot was now white.

The heat of the can ws good, not boiling hot like you get a some places, but definitely a hot cup of coffee.

The flavor was good, but sweet. I was hoping for a little more coffee and a little less French Vanilla, but if you like those Starbucks frappa-latte-chinos with all that stuff tossed is, you’ll like this.

Obviously I had to open the thing up to see how it worked.


This video shows how the pieces go together. The water and quicklime mix in the central cylinder, heated the coffee that surrounds it. Good thermal distribution method. I did get a few strange looks at the office as I walked around with what looked like a marital aid.

The size of the whole thing is decieving. While it looks like a pint sized cup of coffee, it actually only hold 9.5 ounces of coffee. A typical small cup of coffee is about 12 ounces.
Still, it’s kinda fun and would make all the difference on a cold morning outdoors when there is no place to get hot coffee.