More Mazda ridiculousness

So I dropped my car off at Mazda Tuesday. They call me Wednesday, say it’s all set, come get it. I ask what was wrong and they say the same part that failed two weeks ago failed again. I express some skepticism. I start the car in the dealership lot, drive less than 10 yards and pop, the check engine light comes on again. What’s most surreal about this is this is the second time this exact thing has happened to me with this car. Thank god I’m pretty even keeled about things. I had to walk right back into the dealership and not lose my temper.

Anyway now they’re thinking it’s a short circuit in the wiring of the car and have ordered a wiring harness from Japan which will take a week or so to get here. The explanation seems reasonable, but so have several other explanations I’ve been given (defective gas cap, bad car computer that needed an update, vacuum hose leak), so I’m still skeptical.

Meanwhile I am driving the car around with the check engine light on. I complained about this at the dealership, along the lines of ‘can I get a guarantee in writing that if the temp gauge or oil or fuel systems fail and my engine pops while this is going on, you guys are buying me a new car?’ but they weren’t having it, basically their point of view is everything is still under warranty and I’ll be covered no matter what happens. I guess we’ll see. The biggest bummer is I am on vacation next week and was planning to drive all over the place to hike. Now I have to decide whether it’s wise to do that or not.

My next car?

It’s a bike, wait, no, it’s a car, wait, no, it’s a motorcyle. No, it’s a VentureOne, a damned cool hybrid car/motorcyle that leans dramatically into sharp turns, runs a hybrid or all electric power train yet is capable of 100mph and would, in theory, make a perfect little commuter vehicle which would be a total blast to drive. I can’t get a firm handle on the price, but it’s somewhere between 20-40k. The site has a selection of videos of the thing in action. If it is closer to the 20k end of things I would seriously consider getting one.

Keepassx gets a new site

I’ve written about Keepass in the past, it’s a fantastic little tool for storing and generating all the multitudes of passwords and login credentials one must keep around in the web world. Last time I mentioned it I linked over to the Mac/Linux porting project, and I noticed today that this has moved and it’s gotten a new and much nicer home on the web. Check it out if you need a really good password manager. Free, open source, etc. The windows version can be found here.

Play civilization in your web browser

Civilization is the second finest computer game ever made (X-Com being the finest). If you’ve never played it and you like strategy games, well, you’re missing out, and the barrier to entry just got even lower – go check out Vox Imperium, an impressive implementation of the core gameplay elements of the civilization series that runs right in your browser. Make sure you’re using a modern browser to check it out, as usual I’ll recommend Firefox.

I’m in the market for a new car

For more than the 12th time, and the 2nd time in the past month, the check engine light has popped on in my Mazda3. This is the final straw for me with this car. It’s had this history of doing this since the day after I drove it off the lot. My warranty is up at 50k miles and after that it’s going to cost me a minimum of $85 to get it looked into, so I’m going to get something else before I hit that number, which at the present pace would be sometime in the next 7 months or so.

It’s really a shame. Other than this issue, and the fact that Mazda stubbornly refuses to release its roof rack kit in the US despite offering it in every other territory (including Canada), I’ve loved the car. And to be fair to the car only one of the check engine light incidents have been serious (a part related to the fuel system failed, but it was a sensor), but the fact that they can never make the issue go away for good is troubling and at this point I’ve lost faith with the car. I’m also not going to eat the cost of getting it looked into every time it pops on when my warranty expires.

The question becomes what to get next. I have three cars on my list, all 3 from the last time I went through this – the Honda Element (practical but not very fun to drive), a Subaru WRX sports wagon (less practical but still fun to drive), and…a Mazda 3, but possibly the Mazda Speed edition this time. It may seem nuts to go for a car that’s done me wrong, but the issue I am having with mine is an abberation. No one else is confronting this kind of trouble, I just have lousy luck.

My plan is to see what the dealership will do for me (ie, give me a great trade-in on this car because Mazda sold me a lemon) and if they work a decent deal with me I will go for it. If they won’t, right now I’m feeling like the Honda is the way to go. It’s cheaper than the WRX is and most importantly it doesn’t take premium fuel, the cost of which really adds up over the lifetime of a car. Of course if Mazda does right by me, who knows, maybe I will go for the premium guzzling Mazda3 speed edition because hey, I’m 40 this year and deserve my mid-life crisis car 🙂

Feel free to suggest alternative models to consider. At or under $30k, no German cars, and some element of the practical ‘place to stick Soolin’ are all factors which will limit my choices.

Another roundup of outliners

I’ve written about outliners a number of times here, and today I happened across another great resource. It’s another directory of available outlining software. This one is pretty extensive, has write-ups for most of the outliners it covers, and tries to cover all platforms, including PDA and web-based tools. It’s wiki based so in theory you can contribute to the resource, and it also has coverage of ‘antique’ outliners. Check it out of you’re a fan of this kind of tool.

Groove on a shmup for your Friday fun

If you grew up playing quarter munching arcade games in the 80’s chances are good you have a taste for a well designed shmup, and if you do, you owe it to yourself to check out Shoot the Core and most especially their database of available shmups, currently listing 950 games and growing all the time. My fave for today is APOCALYSPE: DEUS EX MACHINA, a robotron-inspired 8 way shooter.

Almost all of this stuff is for the PC, sorry mac/linux folk. A lot of it is also demo or commercial, but there are free and open source ones in there and some of the demos are very generous. Besides, some of them are well worth the purchase price.

Enjoy!

Crave an adventure?

A computer adventure game, that is. The genre has mostly died off in the commercial space, but there are still plenty of fans, and Indy Gamer blog has pulled together a list of the top 20 free adventure games for folks to check out. Some of these rival the quality of commercial releases, and many of them are worth a look if you’re a fan. These are mostly PC only, sorry mac folk.

The indygamer blog is a pretty cool source of news on independent games development if you’re a games geek like me and such things interest you, by the by.

WTH is this file?

If you download video frequently you probably run into the problem of not being able to play back the downloaded file occasionally. Maybe the audio works but not the video, or the opposite, or maybe you get nothing. When that happens it’s time for forensics, and if you’re like me it also frequently means, ‘ehh, who has the time,’ and passing on watching the video. I noticed another tool you can use for analysis of these files today, mediainfo, a free, open source, somewhat cross platform (windows and linux) video forensics tool. Check it out if this is something you run into. It’s also useful if you frequently do transcoding so you can play files on your ipod, psp, gp2x or whatever.

Heating bills not as bad as I expected

When I was in NY, my monthly heating for my tiny little cottage was as high as $250 a month to feed the natural gas fueled stove that heated the place. Given this, I was afraid the heating bill for my 3 bedroom, uninsulated, no storm window, breezy 3 bedroom, turn of the century farm house were going to be north of $500. Happily it’s turned out that ~$300 is about as high as it’s going to get. Nothing to sneeze at but man, it’s a relief. Granted, I’ve had to make some sacrifices, sleeping in the living room for the last month and a half and sealing off the unheated (aside from by convection) upstairs rooms, maintaining a max 62 degree setting on the thermostat, and clothing myself in multiple layers to keep off the chill, but most of that I’m used to from my years in Maine anyway so all things considered this is great news.