Reflection on being 40

I turned 40 on March 7th. I took the week of nominally to celebrate this, and one of the things I did was tinker with a post trying to capture where my head is at these days. I’ve written in entire sections and then redacted them and I’ve played with a couple of different themes. I’ve finally concluded I should just keep it simple. I happened across a Kurt Vonnegut quote that sums up how I feel about it all better than I could write, so I think I’ll share it:

The greatest peace comes from the knowledge that I have enough.

When I boil it all down, that’s where I’m at at present – content with my lot, challenged by and enjoying my career, surrounded by the material comforts I need and fortunate enough to be in a position to acquire the ones I simply want, and looking forward to at least another 40 years of it 🙂

Podcasts worth listening to: In our Time

I use my ipod constantly, pretty much every day for at least a couple of hours, yet I almost never listen to music on it. Most everything I listen to on it is spoken word, and of that a goodly percent is podcasts. It occurred to me that despite this being the case for over a year now I’ve never really highlighted any of the spoken word content I’ve been enjoying, and I’ve never highlighted the podcasts I like. Time to start doing it. For my first entry I’ll point to one of my absolute favorites, the In Our Time podcast. It’s a podcast of a weekly BBC radio show. Each week they examine an issue, historical figure, period of time or any of a number of ‘big ideas,’ and break it down for discussion with a panel of experts. The host is pretty good about keeping things moving, and there’s a great variety of subject matter. You can subscribe directly using this link.

If the concept is unfamiliar to you – you don’t need an ipod or any portable music player to listen to podcasts, all you need is a computer capable of playing mp3 files, which pretty much any modern machine can do. Tools like itunes or juice make it easier to subscribe and receive the content automatically though, and are worth looking into if the idea interests you.

I’ll link to some of the other podcasts I subscribe to as time passes.

How to spend a week’s vacation

So I took last week off. My original plan was to get three hikes in, but old man winter showed up with bitter cold, Soolin developed cracked and bloody paws last weekend, and the part required to fix my car still hasn’t arrived from Japan, so I had to develop alternate plans. Fortunately I’m an accomplished pajama-wearing slacker. In no particular order I:

  • Read Steven Furst’s ‘The Polish Officer’ – Furst is fantastic as usual.
  • Read Patrick O’Brian’s ‘The Wine Dark Sea’ – O’Brian has become one of my favorite authors and he did not disappoint.
  • Watched a number of movies. ‘Pans Labyrinth‘ stands out as the one exceptional movie.
  • Made level 60 for my primary character, Siven, in Worlds of Warcraft. This is the first time I’ve made max level in a MMORPG, despite playing a ton of them (DAOC, Asheron’s Call, Ultima Online, Everquest I and II, Horizons, Anarchy Online). Of course there’s the expansion pak and max level is now 70, so back to the treadmill I go.
  • Played a ton of UFO:Afterlight, which may be the first competent riff on the original X-Com, aka the greatest video game ever made. This is the third in a series by these developers and it appears the third time is the charm. My only concern is with replayability since the game seems event driven, with certain developments and missions always occuring in a certain sequence. The tech tree is also inscrutable.
  • Finally managed to get my huge classic games collection on shelves and semi-organized in a way which should not again end with them spilled all over the floor.
  • Scanned my entire collection of analog photos, which took three days and managed to depress me so much that I stopped the image editing work needed to prep them to put on the web. Revisiting one’s past loves and lives on one’s 40th birthday? Not a good plan. I’ll get back to it.
  • Updated this site and the server OS it runs on, which took the better part of a day. I am increasingly tempted to move to a hosted solution by someone else because of the timesink this stuff is. I want my photos and other resources online, but every time I tackle the maintenance required I question my approach to this.

All in all not a bad week, I loved it aside from the photo scanning episode. I’ll start putting up some of those photos over the coming week – coolest of the crop are all the photos I took during my road trip to alaska back in 1990.

What’s a Doujin shmup?

There’s a great, short write-up about Doujin shmups over on The Independent Gaming Source that’s worth a look if you grew up in the 80’s on a diet of quarter munching arcade games and are curious about how one of the genres that started in that era has evolved over the years. Since I can’t point to a resource about shmups without also pointing at a fun shmup to try, take a look at Warning Forever, windows only, free, and great fun.

Siven is me

Blizzard has added a cool new feature to their website to support World of Warcraft – the armory. It’s basically an online character sheet interface so you can show folks your character in the game. My main these days is Siven, a Dwarven Paladin who’s just about to hit level 60 and who has finally been able to make the trip through the portal into the expansion pak content that was released around Christmas last year. Check him out, and look him up if you happen to be hanging out on the Blade’s Edge server.

They’re still working on the armory and it’s been a bit flaky, so if you try to check out Siven and it fails, try again later.

Play echoes, achieve zen-like transcendental state

I’m a big fan of shmups, a legacy of a youth spent in arcades. Today’s find is the most recent release from Binary Zoo, Echoes. Take one part asteroids, one part robotron, and one part techno soundtrack, mix with simple, stylized graphics, add a healthy dose of frenzied pacing, and you have echoes. It’s terrific, the best of Binary Zoo’s releases thus far. Check it out – pc only, works with mouse/wasd or joypad, though joypad works best in my opinion.

Note that to get it running I had to muck with Windows DEP (Data Execution Prevention) settings and add Echoes to the exclusion list. Thanks Microsoft, for your arcane, crummy OS.

And then maybe it will all go hooey?

I’m on vacation this week in celebration of my birthday and one of the things I’m planning to do is a series of upgrades to the software and system that run this and other sites. As always there’s the possibility things will break, become unavailable, look funny, etc. Please bear with me as I upgrade everything.

Who needs a joystick?

Mind over matter baby! Who needs a joystick or a mouse when you have this thing: project epoc, which uses sensors mounted to a helmet as a control interface for computing and gaming devices. I’ve seen such devices before but my understanding is that the sensors won’t work through hair/without being firmly affixed to the skin of the head, so I’ll be very curious to hear how well this thing works after GDCthis year. Bring on the future! All I need now is my flying car.

How to replace that dead laptop battery

If you’ve had the same laptop for several years at a time, chances are you’ve noticed how the batteries slowly become less effective. Usually by year three and almost always by year 4, they suck. Manufacturers are required to continue making replacement battery packs for a number of years after they cease making laptop models, but these can be very spendy, and depending on the vintage of your laptop they also may no longer be available. If your model was popular you can sometimes find after-market battery replacement solutions, but again for a high price. There’s another alternative though for those who aren’t afraid to get their hands a bit greasy. Most folks don’t realize that if they cracked open the battery pack for their laptop, what they’d find inside was a collection of power cells – basically imagine 4 or 6 c cells or overlarge AA cells in series, kind of like what you’d stick into the back of your television’s remote control, but with a hard plastic shell wrapped around it. If you’re handy you can crack open the plastic shell and replace the contents with new non-sucky lithium ion cells at a significantly lower cost than buying a replacement battery for your laptop would cost you, and often you can boost the capacity of the battery pack beyond what it was initially designed for. There’s a handy tutorial here with some photos that uses and IBM laptop battery pack as an example, but the same principles would apply to other models. If you’re interested in pursuing this make sure to google your laptop model so you can determine what kind of cells you’ll need to replace the ones it initially shipped with.