The Battle for Wesnoth

This week’s friday fun link is The Battle for Wesnoth, a free, cross platform strategy game that’s most similar to the older Warlords games. If you loved Warlords I or II on the old os 7 era macs, chances are you’ll like this. Note that the graphics are equivalent to those of the older Mac era too, so you need to look beyond the visuals a bit, but the gameplay is solid fun and it’s got cross platform networking built in too. Anyone think they can take me?

Remember – you saw it here first

Something’s put me in a whimsical mood of late. I keep stumbling across oddball stuff that makes me laugh. Imagine a pogo stick that lets you launch yourself 5-6 feet in the air. No joke. You’ll be able to buy one soon enough, and shortly after you’ll be hearing about the wrongful death lawsuits on the evening news 😉 Seriously though, depending on how much these end up costing I would consider getting one. The concept sounds like an absolute blast. Who wouldn’t want to bound down the street in 6 foot high hops?

Get behind the EFF

There’s a short piece over on wired about an EFF proposal to handle the legality of file sharing. It’s a basic system I’ve proposed before – have all ISP customers pay (or opt to pay in this case) a small monthly fee, in return for which they can file share to their heart’s content. The money goes into a pool that’s payed out to the artists on the basis of popularity. I love this idea. I think it neatly handles the issue of compensating the artists, it sidesteps the middlemen (the big music companies) and it would enable a broader and more diverse sharing environment as the small indie artists could start to actually earn money, whereas right now they’re basically locked out of the music industry. Plus it emulates a model that’s already known to work, ie Canada where a large surtax is paid on recordable media to compensate the industry for the music you’re presumably copying.

Another item for the geek lust file – killer headphones

So I am just starting to emerge from a post-christmas state of being profoundly broke, thanks in part to the recent Waynflete presentation and a host of ebay auctions I held. Of course this means I’m starting to eye toys for myself again. Today I’m thinking I really want a set of these killer headphones, the ER-6’s from Etymotic Research. Everyone who has a pair raves about them, and I sit in my office 6-8 hours a day listening to tunes on headphones and wishing they did a better job of noise blocking. My birthday is coming up and between now and then I’ll be picking something out for myself – this is the first candidate.

Did you score your ‘free’ $20?

A little over a year ago I pointed out that if you registered you would be entitled to as much as a $20 rebate as part of a lawsuit settlement dealing with price fixing in the music industry. You did pay attention and register, right? I got my check in the mail on Monday. Unfortunately it was for only $13.86 because of the number of people that did register for compensation. I’m thinking I will donate the money to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (the EFF) so they can spend it defending our rights against the predations of industry groups like the RIAA. I urge you to consider doing the same, assuming you did register and got your rebate.

When Dave talks, people listen

Well, at least if the people in question are the history faculty at the Waynflete Private High School in Portland. I participated in a professional development day they held for their staff on Monday as part of a ‘No Child Left Behind’ grant they got. All in all it went really well. If you’re interested you can go to my homepage or to waynlfete.blogdns.com to see an overview of the presentation and links to various related resources, including several that you can actually play around with. Those that are interested are encouraged to check out the Wiki, since I plan to bring one online here.

Of course the best part was my fee, I was paid $250 for my participation and there’s a possibility that more consulting work will emerge from this. It’s interesting, I used to do a lot of consulting back when I made a lot less money than I do now, and I grew to hate it. But back then I was doing mainly desktop tech support and website consulting. I liked the preparation for and process of giving the presentation a lot better. I guess it’s mostly because I have a passion for the material and I enjoy playing around with it and showing folks how it works, whereas with the tech support stuff was just a means to an end, it was about the money and not about the material.

Dave’s place about to get a little wierd looking

This Monday I have a speaking engagement at the Waynflete school. They’re paying me to come talk to their history department about ways to use technology in education as part of a grant they got. As part of that presentation I’ll be using a lot of different web-based resources, some of which will be installed on Dave’s Place. While the weblog isn’t going away, the links to it from the homepage will be, and the homepage is going to look radically different. I’ll be leaving that page in place for at least a couple of weeks so the teachers attending the presentation can refer back to it for links and so on. So… if you haven’t already done so, bookmark the weblog, or subscribe to the RSS feed, because you won’t be able to find it from the homepage starting shortly.

I really need to re-learn how to install virtual hosts in Apache. Sigh. I knew this stuff 4-5 years ago.

Once again, a warning to stop using Internet Explorer

It must get tiresome listening to me ramble on repeatedly about the dangers of using Internet Explorer. But man, once again there is a critical flaw in the code that could compromise your machine if you’re running IE. This one is preposterously dangerous – visit a website with a specially created image on the webpage and BAM, your box is compromised. Folks….go get whatever your favorite flavor of mozilla is and abandon IE. There are more attacks to come along the lines of this exploit too – the leak of MS’s source code opens up a world of potential exploits.

Specifics, in case you can’t be bothered to read the article I’ve linked to – if you’re running IE 5, your machine is vulnerable. If you won’t switch to Mozilla, at least upgrade to IE 6 using Windows Update.

Changes to the site

I made a bunch of changes over the weekend to this site. The most visible is the new icon in the URL bar, which you may need to clear your cache to see. It was time for a matching color scheme 😉 The icon is courtesy of Jesse. I also fixed the comment system so that it no longer uses popups, and I eradicated the last tables in use for presentation in the site. It still isn’t quite validating, I’ll get to that eventually. Oh and I fixed the line heights so headlines aren’t running into each other. Lastly, I upgraded MT to the latest version.

Anyway the point of this post is, if you see something broken let me know so I can fix it.