Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category

It Continues…

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

The iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch coverage continues… as a request to Verizon to hurry up and get their act together and start offering the damn iPhone!

It’s Gonna Be Big

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

The iPad is going to change the world.

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If you don’t yet know what the iPad is, check this out.

Yes yes, when it was announced everyone was a skeptic. No USB, no Flash, no camera etc. The biggest dismissal: “It’s just a big iPod touch!”

I was unsure myself at first, although less critical than some. I was wondering what the plan was, but with a few weeks gone I think I’m starting to see the big picture.

For instance, Microsoft is thinking about putting Office on the thing, Disney is talking about releasing apps that work with their TV shows (ie. you watch the show via the app and interact in some way). Hulu.com’s making an app for it (this should silence the ‘no flash’ naysayers somewhat) and who knows exactly what Apple has planned for magazine delivery on the device?

All this is well and good, but my reason for being so excited about it is exactly because it’s just a big iPod touch.

On my iPod touch I have a browser, an RSS reader, a mail app, and apps for music, video and photos. In addition I have a slew of games and all sorts of nifty productivity apps (like a pdf reader, a password app and a dictionary). I often use the device in lieu of my computer, since most of the time when I use the computer all I do is check the web and/or email, and I can do that just fine on the iPod touch. In fact the thing is so useful that I’ve often thought of an obvious way it could be improved: give it a bigger screen.

I’d wager that the vast majority of home computer usage – worldwide – boils down to email, web and quick, simple games. The iPad does all of this as good as any PC, but much easier. For most common activities I suspect it will be an simpler solution that turning on a computer or laptop. Since we, as humans, love ‘simple’, it seems only natural that this will be one of the big draws of the iPad.

In time, new iterations of the device will (I suspect) add such things as a USB slot or card reader (both could remove the need for a PC with regards to digital photography), a stylus (a korean sausage perhaps?)  and maybe even a camera (for Skype). Furthermore the price can only go down, which will make it a more attractive purchase for those looking for a new solution to their needs.

Unlike those that say “this is hardly a replacement for your laptop”, I don’t subscribe to the idea that we need all the gizmo’s we have on our PCs today, and that it is only natural the way we use the internet will change as our interface changes. I see the iPad as the first truly serious replacement for a computer, and if is only at least as good as a iPod touch but with a bigger screen, well then I’m convinced.

Brando Pineapple

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

In my life I have had, in my head, three books I believe are worth writing.

Of course I’ve never actually written one, although given the sheer amount of words penned both in such things as this blog and the reviews I wrote for years I certainly (probably) could have.

At any rate, two of those ideas will never ever come to fruition, and given that one is 20+ years old now I figured I’d air it out a bit on this blog.

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The title of this entry, Brando Pineapple, is what I used to think the tale may have been called. It was a story about a man named Brando, and his girl named Lemon (or Jelly). They were in a band with a few mates, a not-very-successful band that mostly played pubs and workers clubs. They lived in Newcastle, near the CBD (in an upstairs apartment somewhere up near Zaara street) and had a beaten up old van in which they drove their gear around in. I recall they were a bit of a covers band, Angels and H&C and Cold Chisel – stuff like that. In other words, not the music I used to listen to when the idea for the story was coalescing, but exactly the sort of music the pub bands of the day used to play.

Brando was quiet but charismatic, and was devoted utterly to Lemon. This was reciprocated, but Lemon herself was troubled. For reasons she couldn’t understand people used to often remember her even when they hadn’t met, and she found that quite often memories of her and Brando would surface that she herself couldn’t rationalize. She was also very afraid of water and specifically the ocean, which was troublesome for someone living in a port city!

Brando himself was not oblivious to Lemons travails, but the extent of his concern he kept only to himself. During the story, after a relatively short passage of time, the curious events surrounding Lemon increased in frequency. People would call her by other names, or sometimes look right through her as if she wasn’t there. She herself was forgetting things, and found that where once there were inexplicable memories now there were none at all.

As Lemon was the singer of the band they were forced to stop gigging at this time, and Brando took her for some quiet rest to the house of a friend who lived in Redhead. This friend was an ancient man, old and wise, and clearly possessed of knowledge about what was really the cause of Lemon’s anguish. Brando and this man spoke at length. Brando clearly respected his opinion, but the man told Brando nothing he did not already know.

For Lemon was not real. The band was not real. Redhead, Newcastle – even Brando’s friend – none of these were real. The only truth in the tale was Brando himself, and everything else in all creation was an invention of Brando. He had created the universe, all of it, all the stars and planets and minerals and animals – everything. The reason was as an escape from a life of utter isolation, so he (or it, because I never really decided what Brando actually was) made this life and inserted himself into it.

Only his creation was not perfect, and after some time would break down, would come apart at the seams. Various ‘constants’ in his endlessly recreated worlds – including Lemon – were usually the ‘first to go’, and when the evidence presented itself Brando knew it was time to reset and start all over again. And so he would do this, over and over again, every time hoping that he would get it right, and eventually be able to (perhaps) ‘live a normal life’, albeit one of his own creation.

The story I was going to write was the description of just one of these attempts, from just before things went bad to the very instant before the reset.

Now, as I said, this story was kicking around in my head about 20 years ago. Some small portions of it were written down, including the name and the names of the characters. I’m not sure now when I did this exactly, although I think some would have been in Australia and maybe some shortly after arriving in the US. I don’t know where that writing is today. However what is true is that, at the time, I believed this an original and fascinating idea that could have made a good book (which, you may realize, is an obvious allegory for my life as a young man). But, as some of you may realize, the ‘original idea’ behind my 20-year-old story has become quite famous these days…

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If you don’t understand that reference, then I won’t spoil it for you.

I have a very vivid imagination. I’m also supposing this, and “what if-ing” that. I’ve read a lot of books and remember an awful lot of stuff. It’s typically not that common that a piece of fiction truly surprises me, or doesn’t just retell a story I have seen or read somewhere before. Hence the fact that I saw the events of Haruhi coming before the big reveal, or that (during my recent trip) I sussed out the ‘secret’ in the film ‘The Prestige’ within, well about 5 minutes! These things happen all the time to me.

But the basis of Brando Pineapple has become so well known now, that I’d guess a good chunk of potential readers would probably perceive it as a Haruhi rip-off. And for that reason alone I doubt I’d ever write the book. Maybe.

(And, for the record, I don’t pretend to admit I ever though my idea was 100% original, it’s just that at the time I hadn’t read any other works with the same idea.)

So… what about the other two books!

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The first is an over-the-top piece of tokusatsu nonsense, catering purely to my own whims. It would be terrible, since I would be attempting to write, in book form, what should only be filmed. However I believe it would be worth a try, for were it to succeed it could be grandiose indeed. My powers of hyperbole would help in this endeavour. It would be called “Not On My Earth“.

And the other story is the one that would have the most chance of ever being written, so for now I will keep the details close to my heart. If Brando Pineapple is an allegory of young me, then this latest work is an allegory of the me as I am today. The story tells of a man with endless time on his hands, and the world as his playground. But there is (as there always is) a catch…

Maybe some day I’ll actually get around to writing it, and you can read for yourself.

(Addendum: See this post, in which I describe a different tale using the same characters (and even the same name). There were others as well, but in reality the one described here was always the ultimate.)

It Was A Very Gamey Year

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

In the tradition of previous posts – and a bit late this year – it’s time once again for the year in review, game collection style!

I purchased a total of 102 games in 2009, spending just shy of $2200. Both of these totals were an increase from the previous year.

However other numbers decreased: the total number of systems for which I bought games dropped, as did the average cost I spent on each game. The dominant system was still the DS though, with outlier purchases on the Mac (WoW subscription fees) and the PS2 (a single game purchased in January ’09, which I haven’t even played yet!). Here’s the figures in a handy-to-read plot:

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^– The above is the % totals per system (games bought)

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^– % totals per system, dollars spent.

102 purchases mean an average of 2 per week, but there is a notable increase in purchases after August. This is almost certainly due to cancelling my World Of Warcraft subscription, and playing more console/handheld games thereafter. There’s also a peak in May/June, corresponding to the Japan trip (on which I averaged one game bought per day). The system for which I bought the most games – the DS – is away and beyond the system for which I own the most games in total; 234 at last count.

It’s interesting to note I purchased far more PS3 games than Wii games and yet the dollar amounts are essentially identical. This is because I buy a lot of downloadable games from the Playstation Network, and rarely spend more than $5 for each. In fact the predominance of downloaded games this year (about 20% of purchases) coupled with the (typical) abundance of DS purchases is what drove the average spent per game (about $21) to the lowest value ever.

So a record year for amount of purchases (only in 2006 did I buy more games) but not even top five in dollars spent. What does this mean? I’d say I buy (and play) more (or at least as many) games as I ever did, only I try and be a bit more cost effective about the process.

And in those 102 games, what – you surely must be asking – was the best? What would get my medal for Game Of The Year 2009?

Here’s the answer:

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A bit of a no-brainer actually, since it’s easily one of my favourite games of all time!

“And now you find yourself in ’82…”

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

When I was in Australia, I forgot to attend a particular exhibition at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney. It was about growing up in Australia during the 1980’s, and damn me for not going.

Because I’d love to be in the 1980’s again.

I wonder, does everyone – as they age – fondly reminisce about the decade of their youth? Is there an inexorable allure to the what-once-was, strong enough to wipe away any bad memories (not that I have any) and make one recall only the good times? It’s silly to suppose anyone would want to forsake the comforts of today, but it’s also very easy to believe that life wasn’t so bad without them as well!

The 1980’s were my formative years (ages 8 through 18) and were an era of great music, great movies, great TV and truly awesome video games. Almost everything I am ‘into’ now builds upon the foundations of the 1980’s, when anything that matters started.

I lived those days. I lived them well and enjoyed them as best I could, but I can’t help dreaming about how greater it could have been had I perhaps known how great those days truly were.

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