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Strict Liability [Nov. 15th, 2009|04:04 pm]
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A former soldier who handed a discarded shotgun in to police faces at least five years imprisonment for "doing his duty". Paul Clarke, 27, was found guilty of possessing a firearm at Guildford Crown Court on Tuesday – after finding the gun and handing it personally to police officers on March 20 this year.
There's already some predictable outrage. English legal bogger Jack of Kent has a slightly more nuanced view:

If the facts are indeed as reported, the CPS should not have prosecuted Mr Clarke. The CPS should only prosecute when it is the public interest to do so. (And one should always be skeptical of newspaper reports of any court case). But on the narrow point as to whether that possessing a shotgun - and taking that shotgun through the streets (even if to a police station) - should be unlawful, then I think it should be.
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Stacking 117 objects on a Lego block, then knocking it over. [Nov. 15th, 2009|04:02 pm]
boingboingfd

Artist Walter Wick stacks 117 objects on a single Lego block, then sends little wind-up creatures toward it to knock it over. Fun! (Via Gurney Journey)

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an uncharacteristic moment [Nov. 16th, 2009|12:23 am]

rainsinger
[Tags|, , ]

Z and I talking about Apocalypse in the car, on our way home after watching 2012.

Z: If I think about the possibility of the world ending, it just... makes me more sad than I can tell you if I only start to think about the horrifying choices and lack of choices our children would face. How unfair it would be that they never got to flourish and live.

N: That's very moving. I was convinced that you were about to say how torn up you'd be inside about earthquakes and tsunamis ruining the plexiglass roof you spent all that time building in the garden.
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there might be a problem [Nov. 16th, 2009|12:14 am]

cleanskies
I've not really been posting about it because, heck, boring, but there may be a bit of a problem with my knees. The symptoms (crepitus, locking and giving way, pain exacerbated by inactivity, walking on slopes or steps) are suggestive of something called various things but surely the most ironic is "runner's knee".

I don't run. Well, sometimes upstairs, or for the bus, or if I'm late. But I don't run. You know, because I have to be careful of my knees.

pain )
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Hong Lauwai -- latest Internet Celebrity [Nov. 15th, 2009|03:47 pm]
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Hong Lauwai ('Red Foreigner') sings along with patriotic Red Chinese songs on various sites like YouTube. Alleged to be a New Yorker and stock trader, his true identity isn't known at this time. Since he appeared shirtless in his first performances (Without the Communist Party, There would be No New China; The East is Red), there was some doubt of his sincerity, and consternation among hard-liners in Beijing -- what if he was singing totally nude?
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Pinker on Gladwell [Nov. 15th, 2009|03:39 pm]
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Steven Pinker takes Malcolm Gladwell to task in a NYT book review. "But Gladwell frequently holds forth about statistics and psychology, and his lack of technical grounding in these subjects can be jarring." "The common thread in Gladwell's writing is a kind of populism, which seeks to undermine the ideals of talent, intelligence and analytical prowess in favor of luck, opportunity, experience and intuition."
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Alternate Star Trek pilot to be released [Nov. 15th, 2009|03:37 pm]
boingboingfd

The forthcoming DVD release of Star Trek: The Original Series - Season 3 includes a pilot episode previously only available on the bootleg circuit. Apparently a German film collector found a print of this alternate version of the second Star Trek pilot, titled "Where No One Has Gone Before," and brought it to Paramount. Above are some clips from that alternate version of the pilot, which has never officially been released until now. From The Live Feed:
The alternate version is in three parts with 1970s-style act breaks, an entirely different version of Captain James T. Kirk's opening monologue ("But now a new task. A probe out into where no man has gone before") and music that contrasts from the famous opening theme and an extended action sequence.

From the (press) release:

This version of "Where No Man Has Gone Before" was completed in 1965 and features archived footage that was not included in the pilot episode ultimately broadcasted.  Never-before-aired, this newly recovered version is believed to be what was originally screened for NBC, and the basis for their decision to broadcast STAR TREK.

Star Trek: The Original Series - Season 3, Blu-ray (Amazon, thanks Jason Weisberger!)

UPDATE: From Memory Alpha, more background on this alternative version of the pilot episode:
There is a different, pre-broadcast cut of ("Where No One Has Gone Before") in the archives of the Smithsonian Institution. This unique cut includes a few brief scenes trimmed from the aired cut of the episode, different opening titles, and a unique closing theme. The alternate closing theme can be heard on the GNP Crescendo CD Star Trek: Original Series (Volume 1) "The Cage" / "Where No Man Has Gone Before". The pre-broadcast cut is commercially available only in bootleg form, although it has been screened at numerous conventions. Paul Carr was credited as "Navigator" in the end credits of the original cut. The version on the first season box set may contain the alternate ending theme, but does have the changed credits. This cut will be finally be available commercially on the Season 3 Blu-Ray set.


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moments between posts [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:30 pm]

cleanskies
This also happened today:

  • 10:53 Swiss cuisine includes rosti and steak, ravioli and trout mousse and an anxious swiss chef who gave us amuse-bouches of plum and parma ham.
  • 10:57 It was a very odd thing to find tucked in the corner of a huge redbrick booze barn full of big screens, steady drinkers and occasional dogs.
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The Block [Nov. 15th, 2009|02:29 pm]
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History of a New York Block. A nearly complete record of the life cycle of Eldridge St between Stanton/Rivington. Click on the buildings for details.
via Gothamist.

Reminded me of Zwigoff's Crumb.
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So, does anyone know how to make an HTML regex parser? [Nov. 15th, 2009|01:31 pm]
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Every time you attempt to parse HTML with regular expressions, the unholy child weeps the blood of virgins, and Russian hackers pwn your webapp. Parsing HTML with regex summons tainted souls into the realm of the living. HTML and regex go together like love, marriage, and ritual infanticide. The <center> cannot hold it is too late. The force of regex and HTML together in the same conceptual space will destroy your mind like so much watery putty.

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Quack [Nov. 15th, 2009|09:52 pm]

nja
Welney evening

I arrived at Welney for the second time in the afternoon (having spent a couple of hours in Ely) just after the first feeding session, and sat in a dark hide as the sun went down, listening to the birds settling for the night. The wash isn't flooded yet, but there were plenty of swans around, hundreds of lapwing, pochard, mallard, teal and wigeon whistling gently. Cormorants and a solitary heron, and rumours of three or four cranes. Maybe one day I'll see a crane there, but I'm happy watching wigeon.

While I don't approve of shooting ducks, this video is one of the funniest things I've seen for ages.
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Vegan Week, day 4, or, RUIN. [Nov. 15th, 2009|09:39 pm]

shermarama
You know I drunk all that beer, right? Yeah. I had nothing at all to do with food until about 3pm, other than wishing my flatmate wasn't cooking a greasy fried breakfast. But when I could face anything, I had:
  • Beef & Tomato Pot Noodle and a can of 7 Up
  • Oddly, although the Pot Noodle is listed on Animal Free Shopper, and the vegan I mentioned in yesterday's post will eat them despite being seriously lactose intolerant, the allergy advice on the side says it contains cow's milk. I can only assume they've been fiddling with the recipe, the bastards. But there's nowt like a Pot Noodle for repairing a hangover. Also, I chose a 7 Up, made by Britvic, rather than a Sprite, for does not the gospel according to Scroobius Pip say, 'thou shalt not buy Coca-Cola products'?
  • Jacket spud with fried red onion and mushrooms
  • Not very imaginative but did the job.
  • Erm, that's about it.
Seriously, bad hangover. I have spent the rest of the day pottering around and doing small things, like sewing.

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Apple patents anti-user attention-complianceware [Nov. 15th, 2009|12:58 pm]
boingboingfd
Apple's filed a patent on a design for a device that won't let its owner use it unless that person demonstrates that she has complied with an advertiser's demands by paying attention to an ad and taking some action indicating her dutiful attention.

It's amazing how many of these vendors fail to understand Chekhov's first law of narrative: "A gun on the mantelpiece in act one is bound to go off by act three." That is, if you design a device that is intended to attack its user -- by shutting her out of her own files and processes against her wishes and without her consent -- someone will figure out how to use that device to attack its user.

Or as Mitch Kapor once quipped, "Architecture is politics." Designing your device ecosystem for 1984 gives you...1984.

Cue Apple Fanboys who want us all to understand that the infallible and immortal Steve Jobs would only use this power to show us lovely, interesting, and informative messages that we're happy to receive in 5... 4... 3... 2... 1....

Its distinctive feature is a design that doesn't simply invite a user to pay attention to an ad -- it also compels attention. The technology can freeze the device until the user clicks a button or answers a test question to demonstrate that he or she has dutifully noticed the commercial message. Because this technology would be embedded in the innermost core of the device, the ads could appear on the screen at any time, no matter what one is doing.

The system also has a version for music players, inserting commercials that come with an audible prompt to press a particular button to verify the listener's attentiveness.

The inventors say the advertising would enable computers and other consumer electronics products to be offered to customers free or at a reduced price. In exchange, recipients would agree to view the ads. If, down the road, users found the advertisements and the attentiveness tests unendurable, they could pay to make the device "ad free" on a temporary or permanent basis.

Apple Wouldn't Risk Its Cool Over a Gimmick, Would It? (via Warren Ellis)

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UN goons destroy academic poster describing China's censorwall [Nov. 15th, 2009|12:49 pm]
boingboingfd

JZ sez, "The OpenNet Initiative, a joint effort of U. Toronto's Citizen Lab and Harvard's Berkman Center, tracks Internet filtering by governments around the world. We published a book detailing such filtering in 2008 called Access Denied, and the sequel is about to come out, called Access Controlled. ONI colleagues Ron Deibert and Rafal Rohozinksi were at the Internet Governance Forum today in Egypt, where they hosted a reception about Access Controlled. It featured a poster describing the book. The poster contained the following sentence: The first generation of Internet controls consisted largely of building firewalls at key Internet gateways; China's famous 'Great Firewall of China' is one of the first national Internet filtering systems. That was apparently enough to trigger concerns on behalf of the Chinese government, and UN-liveried security guards knocked over the poster and then later removed it."

IGF 2009 event rattled by UN Security Office (Thanks, JZ!)

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"And so she and her friend and the wolves walk together around the base, quietly in the dark, the ic [Nov. 15th, 2009|01:01 pm]
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Olympic Flame Burns for Icy Relay
Canada is launching its countdown to the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics by boldly sending the Olympic flame farther north than it has ever gone before.
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Secret Diary of a Specialist in Developmental Neurotoxicology and Cancer Epidemiology [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:40 am]
boingboingfd

The author of long-running "secret diary of a call girl" blog Belle de Jour outs herself. Dr. Brooke Magnanti is a science blogger--and respected health researcher. And she really was a sex worker, for about a year and a half, while finishing her Ph.D. Takeaway lesson: Graduate school is expensive, yo. Takeaway debate: Is this good or bad for female scientists/science bloggers? It shouldn't matter at all. But does it?



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The Young Republicans who brought down ACORN [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:48 am]
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She is the Young Republican who "stung" ACORN. And he is her "pimp". Together they brought down ACORN.
This is the new generation of Republican operatives. If the GOP is to survive as a party, and thrive in the future, they'll need young people. And the young are coming.

"Above all, attack, attack, attack," she said, quoting Republican consultant Roger Stone. "Never defend."
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Piloting a bobsleigh while blind [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:43 am]
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You'd have to be blind to drive a bobsleigh. At least if you want to finish first, second, or third nine times in seven years. Since 2001, U.S. bobsleigh pilot Steven Holcomb has dealt with a degenerative eye condition that left him with 20/500 vision. He drove a sled hurtling down an ice track anyway, often winning. Now that his vision has been restored via an experimental operation, he fuzzes over his helmet visor so it's just like the olden days. Bobsleigh, it seems, is all about feel.
During the seven years he was more or less blind, Holcomb's sleds finished first four times, second four times, and third once (according to a PDF media guide, including results page).
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Retro light-grid obelisk thingy? [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:35 am]
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A friend owns one of these antique (?) clear-plastic, free-standing, quasi-lite-bright type hobby-kit devices. The label/signature can be seen here. Just what the hell is it? (besides the obvious trip-toy type device). Bonus = it still works.
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Jukebox Music [Nov. 15th, 2009|10:22 am]
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Doug Sahm was a country music prodigy.
Offered a full-time position at the Grand Ole Opry when only a teenager, he had to turn it down after his mother decided he should finish junior high. He went on to found the Sir Douglas Quintet. He produced a great deal of distinctive musice like Nuevo Laredo and Mendocino. He later played with the Texas Tornadoes. There's a buch of Doug Sahm music on this Youtube Playlist. He died in 1999. There is a hill named after him in Austin, Texas. Alt country band The Bottle Rockets released an entire album of Sahm cover songs.
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Let's Get Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigh! [Nov. 15th, 2009|10:06 am]
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35 Amazing Science Fair Projects. Electricity vs. Cat. Will There Be Minorities in Heaven? Let's Get Hiiiiiiiiiigh. Strange science fair projects, (Buzzfeed, via Andrew Sullivan. Just goofy and viral, but I cracked up more than once.)
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SAME we can believe in [Nov. 15th, 2009|01:03 pm]
boingboingfd
SAME WE CAN BELIEVE IN: The Obama administration has granted Defense Secty. Robert Gates new powers to block the release of 21 color photos showing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq being abused by Americans. The ACLU sued for release of the images. Federal courts previously rejected attempts to keep them secret. ACLU: "No democracy has ever been made stronger by suppressing information about its own misconduct."

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Vegan Week, day 3 [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:55 pm]

shermarama
Foods:
  • Fruit & Fibre with soy milk
  • Carrot pate, avocado and houmous butty
  • On an olive and sun-dried tomato focaccia from Arkwright's, the deli over the road. I believe they get them from Real Patisserie up on Trafalgar Street. Obviously it's not labelled, but I asked the woman who runs the place, who's probably been asked that sort of thing before, and she reckoned they were dairy-free. Also extremely tasty; I'd say it was an improvement on the original HAT.
  • Snacks as previously described
  • Tempeh Crumbles, potatoes with onion & shallot, peas
  • The tempeh recipe was from VwaV again. It's tempeh with just about the entire contents of the spice cupboard in it, and allegedly sausage-like. It was rather more like eating some sort of crumbled savoury flapjack, but I can see the potential of tempeh as a thing with a less weird texture of tofu. I'm not sure I'd make this again, though.
  • Some bottles of Old Peculier
  • Which might not be vegan - took a guess at it as a bottled beer, and according to barnivore probably failed. Mind you, I was drinking with a full-time vegan friend who wasn't worrying about it.
  • A couple of draught pints of Doom Bar
  • Definitely not vegan, but I don't think the Caroline had any bottled beers except Newky Brown which isn't vegan anyway. Also I'd had some beer by then.
I went out to the Hob, and there were some bands on; the first ones perfectly acceptable but not overly exciting slightly emo metal, the second a really very good doom metal bunch called Dead In The Woods from Nottingham and the third a seriously impressive, fast and tight hardcore band called Gasmask Terror, who I find from that are French. The drummer was amazing - there are several ways to play a fast beat with nowhere near as much effort as it sounds to a non-drummer, but he wasn't doing that, he was playing full beats very fast, while always looking like he was totally on top of it. And one of the guitarists had hair down to his hips, which I'm always pleased by. The Hob remains a funny old place, with so much of it in such a shitty state, but you get good bands there. Once the bands had finished the place emptied fairly quickly as people went to the Caroline, or other more salubrious places. There are two cubicles in the ladies; one has no seat and and the other has a seat held together with gaffer tape, the tiled walls have been painted black and then more-or-less scraped clean again leaving the grout still black, and neither of them had any toilet roll in all night. Expecting that sort of thing from the Hob, I'd taken some with me. And then we went to the Caroline once the bands had finished. Pretty much a fail on the vegan beer front then, last night, but a good night out.

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The Green Flash of the Sun [Nov. 15th, 2009|08:01 am]
boingboingfd
greenflash.jpg

Sometimes, from certain places, the light from the sun can briefly appear green. NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day explains,

Just as the setting Sun disappears completely from view, a last glimmer appears startlingly green. The effect is typically visible only from locations with a low, distant horizon, and lasts just a few seconds. A green flash is also visible for a rising Sun, but takes better timing to spot. A dramatic green flash was caught in the above photograph in 1992 from Finland. The Sun itself does not turn partly green, the effect is caused by layers of the Earth's atmosphere acting like a prism.

Astronomy Picture of the Day via Cliff Pickover.



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Got Wood? [Nov. 15th, 2009|08:12 am]
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Get a glass of Harvey's Bristol Cream, put on some funky 1970's music, sit back, and feast your eyes on some glorious Wood Porn! (SFW) "Oh, baby, you got some great vascular cambium!" "Yeah, that is some hard oak, drill me, baby!"
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Math education [Nov. 15th, 2009|07:28 am]
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How should math be taught? The Kumon Math curriculum provides a simple and clear description of one possible sequence of skills. Hung-Hsi Wu decries the bogus dichotomy of basic skills versus conceptual understanding (PDF, Google Docs). David Klein provides a detailed history of US K-12 math education in the 20th century. The NYT describes the 2008 report of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel (full text as PDF).
NYC HOLD, a conservative-leaning math education reform group, has a large collection of links to articles on math education. For the progressive side, see Hyman Bass and Deborah Ball.
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Please release me: Modern Warfare, Spore Islands, and Half Minute Heroes [Nov. 15th, 2009|06:53 am]
boingboingfd
For most, there will have been only one game released this week (and that most includes a number of major publishers, who, gun-shy from the competition, have pushed their own releases to Q1 of next year): Infinity Ward's return to the Modern Warfare franchise they laid down in 2007. Modern Warfare 2 [Infinity Ward, PC/PS3/Xbox 360] The developer has twice courted controversy in recent weeks, one for the very unfortunately devised viral video gag (for which IW has yet to offer a formal apology), and the second with early leaked video of what it surely intended as its most emotionally charged level -- a scene in which an agent embedded with an arms trafficker is present for a civilian massacre.

Infinity Ward were correct on one count: taking the scene out of context is misleading, as the premise is the hook on which the global geo-political fallout that guides the rest of the game is hung, and your involvement in it has its own twist of fate. But they otherwise squandered what could have been a multi-faceted moral quandary and flattened it into a paper-thin action scene with no real ramifications.

Players, who experience the scene looking down the barrel of their own gun, can easily simply play witness to the horrors around them without once pulling the trigger, but IW make it impossible to actually finish the level without killing at least a few of the SWAT team that arrives when the damage is done (unless I missed a route in my hour-long trial to do just that). But simply observing also never overtly raises the suspicion of the rogue team you're embedded with -- that only comes if you deliberately try to hang back away from the group for more than a minute (and, I don't know, say, distract yourself by taking a closer look at all of the hardcover jackets in the airport bookstore).

Devoid of any real freedom of choice, then, and coming -- as it does -- far too early in the game for players to first become emotionally invested in its world, its execution (no pun) falls flat. That's a shame, too, because its bombastic volume drowns out a number of more genuinely affecting subtleties. Chiefly, the return of 'Soap' McTavish -- the rookie recruit who served as the first MW's player-character -- as a vet seasoned by your own actions in that game, now guiding and protecting you as an even fresher face (whose approval I found myself actively seeking in our duo levels).

As a summer-blockbuster-esque rollercoaster (and one clearly made by a team in love with the essence if not the lessons of HBO miniseries Generation Kill), it's hard to come away unaffected by the thrill of its ride, and -- as with the original -- its true long term draw the unique lite-MMO structure of its multiplayer (that unlocks abilities as you level up through wins and kills), but it's a shame that it doesn't require more of you than thinking -- in the Colbert-ian sense -- from your gut, for as much as it chides you for shooting from the hip.
sporeislands.jpg

Spore Islands [Area/Code / Maxis, web]

Also recently launched and well worth your time is one of EA's first forays into the Facebook gamespace with one of its largest brands: Spore. Created by NYC developer Area/Code (the studio behind masterful iPhone puzzler Drop7) in conjunction with original creator Maxis, the game feels more closely akin to the direction the Spore franchise was headed in in the earliest days of development.

Influenced by the biodiversity (and the high number of evolutionary experiments that died in their tracks) of the Burgess Shale, Spore Islands is a numbers game of statistic modifications to create a creature that can withstand both the elements and the set of creatures that inhabit your island -- or, with its deep social hook, the islands of your Facebook friends.

The catch is that your observations (the simulations that let you see first hand how your character is faring and what weaknesses or strengths it needs to focus on) and the DNA point modifications to tweak your character to flourish in its environment are unlocked over real-time (or by purchasing them outright), but it's one of the games on the platform that's actually worth that wait, and easily the smartest time-sink on Facebook.

Half Minute Hero [XSEED, PSP]

And finally, another game released just a week or two prior but still eating up most of my time (in very tiny chunks) is the PSP release of XSEED's Half Minute Hero, a game which tells you more about its premise in its title than you'd first believe.

Created originally as a miniscule freeware indie release that would be expanded to a full commercial production, Half Minute's hook is that of a traditional RPG, shooter, and strategy game played out in a world where there's only 30 seconds before total demonic annihilation.

What this means as a player is that your 8-bit hero is tasked with leveling up via CPU-controlled random battles and player-controlled returns to town for better equipment while staring at a rapidly decreasing timer, desperately trying to save up the precious last seconds to defeat the inevitable time-controlling demon at the end (and undertaking various seconds-long missions in between to get there).

It's a slow-motion version of the three-second micro-games of Nintendo's WarioWare series, and -- split as it is into easily digestible chapter missions -- is the perfect addition to a platform that's been very much in need of more portable plays. Already too much overlooked even by the hardcore, there aren't many other recent games that are more deserving of your 30 seconds at a time.



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Cellphone contracts getting even better! [Nov. 15th, 2009|07:12 am]
boingboingfd
Saul Hansell suggests that hated U.S. cellular carrier practices such as text message markups and fee-packed contracts ultimately give American consumers what they really want: predictable bills. In pursuit of this we learn of the psychological "nuances" of pricing and the "supersized logic" of using fat overage fees to upsell customers to expensive all-you-can-eat plans. "This year," he writes, "the deals are becoming even better."

His piece even claims that the industry would love to give up the adhesive contracts, early termination fees and locked-in subsidy handsets that it won't give up, even when threatened by congress.

Now all the carriers are selling heavily subsidized smartphones. They hate this state of affairs -- and wish that American consumers would just pay full price for the phones, the way people do in Europe.

Hansell's evidence for this is the iPhone, which he suggests was unsubsidized when it was $600. It only dropped to $400 and then $200, he writes, when they attached contract subsidies. He implies that the iPhone launch was initially unsuccessful and that this shows Americans won't buy contract-free phones: "Consumers balked at the high upfront cost. By the second generation of the iPhone, Apple reverted to a traditional subsidy model."

But the only practical option with the $600 U.S. iPhone was to activate with AT&T on a standard subsidy contract, with a compulsory data plan to boot. In fact, my recollection is that AT&T itself wouldn't even sell you that "unsubsidized" iPhone without activating a 2-year contract on the spot. Buying one from the Apple store did not enforce activation, but everyday customers couldn't activate on other carriers (or on a pre-paid AT&T plan) without using warranty-busting hacks that emerged only later.

In fact, AT&T didn't market a no-contract iPhone until March, 2009 -- for $600-$700 depending on model, more than the original iPhone model ever cost "full price."

Throughout his piece, Hansell writes often of people's confusion. He claims that even economists find cellphone plans baffling. But they're not hard to understand except in the nickel-and-dime details. Hansell's repeated evocation of "confusion" is reminiscent of when characters in novels continually ask what's going on, or when they wake up in white rooms: it's because the writer himself doesn't know.

Excepting the Yale professor whose words introduce the article, the people quoted in it are carrier flacks and cellular industry analysts: a fair sign of a piece tossed off inside a snowglobe of PR.



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Struts & Frets: an indie-rock YA novel with heart and authenticity [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:32 am]
boingboingfd
Jon Skovron's debut novel, the YA book Struts & Frets, is a dynamite, nuanced story about fannish love, musical obsession, first romance and true friendship. It follows the adventures of Sammy Bojar, a small-town, midwestern high-school senior who's life revolves around his band, a trainwreck of ego and conflict called "Tragedy of Wisdom." The band means everything to Sammy because music means everything to him. He frames his whole world with indie pop, seeking out authenticity with a driven, blinding passion.

Sammy's at the turning point in his life. His best male friend is coming out, his best female friend is in love with him (and it turns out it's mutual, though he didn't know it). The frontman for his band is a roiling, angry bully who is ever on the verge of physical violence. His beloved grandfather, a minor jazz legend, is sliding into incapacity as age and a hard life catch up with him.

The plot-points are all pretty standard YA set-pieces, but there's never a stale (or dull) moment in Struts & Frets. That's thanks to the incredible nuance and heart that Skovron brings to the interpersonal relationships, using these familiar emotional scenes as pivots for a deft emotional acrobatic act that is as moving as it is engrossing.

I was never a (good) musician, but I've always been passionate about music. I remember what it was like to be in the band, to be wrapped up in all the issues around creativity, friendship and identity; to seek out answers to life's big questions in music, to worry at the unanswerable questions of commercialism, success and popularity. Struts & Frets will feel instantly authentic to anyone who's ever felt the pride and shame of being an outsider.

Struts & Frets


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Hacklab.to's laser-cutter really *does* play the Mario Bros theme! [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:28 am]
boingboingfd

I owe the Hacklab.to people an apology. Last spring I ran this post about how they'd tuned the motor on their laser cutter to play the Super Mario Theme as it repositioned itself, and I mentioned that it was too perfect, and wondered "if it's not just some video of a laser cutter with a flanged-out version of the theme cut into the soundtrack."

Yesterday, I dropped in at the Hacklab in Kensington Market (it's an amazing place), and saw the laser cutter do its thing. And you know what? It plays an absolutely perfect Super Mario Theme. Seriously.

Laser etcher plays Super Mario. It's real! Hacklab.to, Kensington Market, Toronto, ON, Canada.avi

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