I’m an Uncle

Technically I guess I was already an Uncle, but this is the first time it feels real. My sister Kirsten gave birth to my niece Isabella last night at some point – I woke to find a couple of messages on my answering machine about it. I don’t have much in the way of details – as soon as I do, I’ll post more. But for now, have a virtual cigar on me.

The living room of the future

Check out this gizmag.com article on the VirtuSphere, the best solution to VR immersion I’ve seen. It’s a roughly 9′ tall plastic sphere a human stands inside that rests on rollers. The person inside wears a headset that projects the VR environment onto their eyes, and they can walk and move somewhat naturally within the sphere while the rollers capture their movements. This thing is fantastic. The only component that seems to be missing is a manipulator, ie something you hold in your hands to interact with the VR environment. I’ve got to believe this is an oversight of the article and not the device itself. Anyway it’s easy to imagine an evolved version of these things showing up inside health clubs and amusement parks in the relatively short term, and not too hard to imagine a very refined version of it as part of your entertainment equipment. Right now they go for about $100k a piece though they expect them to be around ~$50k once they’re in full production. If I win tonights megabucks I promise I’ll outfit a room with a dozen of these for full-on battlefield 2 action.

Geeky bookmarks dilemma

Regular visitors may have noticed how I’ve been gradually sprucing up this site over the past month or so. New server, new design (crabbed from elsewhere this time), new tools (streaming music is back, a wiki, and others yet to be revealed) and more integration with public tools (most of which is invisible aside from the presence of commenters outside our social circle – I’m getting indexed in some engines I had kept blocked in the past – there’s more of this to come as well). Anyway one of the next things on my list is dealing with bookmarks. In the past I kept a sitebar installation going. I’m tempted to move everything over to del.icio.us but a little worried that the firefox extension is going to slow down my browsing tremendously. Anyone have any experience with this? The idea is you store your bookmarks in del.icio.us and use a browser plugin to synch your local browser’s bookmark list with the del.ico.us server. You can do the same thing with sitebar and your local browser, the difference is there is some benefit to maintaining a public profile in del.icio.us that you don’t get in sitebar in terms of traffic to my site. I’d prefer not to have to maintain two sets of bookmarks, invariably they get out of synch. So. Anyone running the del.icio.us extension with a huge bookmark list and synching it with firefox? How’s the performance?

Qumana gets an update

I’ve mentioned qumana in the past. It’s a fairly good weblog editing tool for Windows. It’s no ecto, but really it’s one of the better tools on windows. They recently updated to version 2.0. What’s most interesting about this is a feature they’ve added, which is all about integrating keyword ads into your weblog posts. I’m not a fan of this, really, and I’m not sure that their model of building their own keyword ad network will play out well for them, but if it helps subsidize the ongoing maintenance of a decent weblog editor and they don’t force their adword schemes on you (which for now at least they don’t), then more power to them.

Tag better

I’m on a tagging kick today. Let’s say you’re wanting to get started with tagging, but since you’re new at it you’re a little unsure what tags to use. You may find that tagyu can help. It’s a tag suggestion tool – paste in a block of text and tagyu will offer up some suggestions. There are tools to help you integrate this into your workflow, including wordpress and movabletype plugins and a bookmarklet.

I dumped the text of this post into tagyu and got the following suggestions:

tools del.icio.us blog tagging tags

All appropriate in my estimation.

I’ve already installed the wordpress integration stuff (Ultimate Tag Warrior), I just haven’t turned it on yet, I’m waiting for a few things to settle themselves before I integrate tagging into this site.

Promising open source 2d animation tool

Check out Synfig, a really promising looking open source cross platform 2d animation tool. There are binaries for Windows and MacOS and source for linux folk. The developer warns that this is a preview release and not ready for real production use, but some tinkering with the windows version suggests that this has a ton of potential. If you’ve ever wished you could play around with professional-level 2d animation tools, here’s your chance.

Treadle power

Check out the freeplayenergy Freecharge Weza, a power generator that uses a foot pedal to generate electricity. It’s a bit spendy at ~$300 but if you paired this with a ~$40 power inverter you’re basically able to power any device you need to through human power, from a car battery to your cell phone. This thing would be awesome on our annual camping trips and I already have an inverter. Their site doesn’t give you its weight, but with a lead acid battery in it I’m sure it’s too heavy for backpacking. It would be fine for our boat camping trips though.

[via futurismic]

NOBODY WANTS TO SEE PICTURES OF HAPPY COUPLES.

A laugh for a friday. I’ve been working on my site off and on over the past couple of weeks as time permitted (regulars will recall I migrated to a new server and from movabletype to wordpress a couple of weeks ago). Yesterday I finally got around to putting a real homepage in place, and whilst so doing I noticed someone had posted the unhappy sentiment that serves as the tagline for this post, along with some more unpleasantness. Check out the rest of her comments in my photo gallery, hers is the 4th comment. What’s most amusing about this is that the woman in the picture is my friend Marcia, who’s married to my friend Kevin (there’s a link to their site in the right-hand column of this site). Poor Heidi must have had a really bad day.