The lows are low, but the highs are home

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September 2011

Off the Facebook-gridlifehacker.com

S'been two weeks since I last posted something, and I’m really sorry ‘bout that. See, this whole time I’ve been planning a big post, but I haven’t been willing to sit down and work on it and wound up deciding it was too much reading for too little benefit. I’ll try to salvage it sometime soon, with as little text as I can get away with. Realistically, sharing my introspective monologues doesn’t benefit anyone other than me, and I figure if I’m going to be selfish, I may as well be quick about it.

Instead, I’ve got a Lifehacker post about Facebook that links into my post from a few weeks ago about Google collecting your information. Basically, some people found out that Facebook will track your browsing information and stuff, attached to your Facebook account, even after you’ve logged out. To deal with it, you have a few options: a list to load into AdBlock Plus, a Chrome extension just for Facebook, or a more radical option - the Disconnect extension for Chrome and Firefox.This has the added benefit of disconnecting you from more than just Facebook - it’ll hide you from Google, Twitter, and everyone else. When it turns off certain captcha services, Gmail, and other useful stuff, you can just toggle it off I think.

So there you go. Now you can opt-out, if you want. Seems fair to me.

edit: Oh and my Final Fantasy Thing was posted! I laughed really hard when this line came up, it’s the perfect hilarious SNES villain line. FF VII and VIII went all serious, but V (at least, the FF V Advance translation) has just completely absurd moments like this. You’ve got a villain who is, no joke, a tree that got really angry and decided to destwoy evewyfing.

“I turned myself into a tiny splinter, waiting for just this moment!”

Sep 26, 2011 1 note
#links
Give me a break.

lacealchemy:

So, I told myself I wouldn’t pull “Condescending Second-Year Science Kid” in my PSYC1001 class. BUT. Butbutbutbutbut.

The first-years on WebCT are so annoying. 

“You know guys, it’s not high school anymore! We have to step up our game!”

Step up your game?  He gave you 20 pages of reading, sweetie. Come on. 

If my PSYC 1001 course is any indication: Wait for the deluge of messages from people asking for notes. “My computer got a virus and crashed so I like lost everything”, or “I got super sick for the last six weeks and since the midterm is coming up…” or “Somebody stole my laptop!” Sometimes they just post on the message boards, but other times they take the slightly more subtle route and just send a message to everyone in the class roster. Often, they’ll post on someone else’s topic and say “can I get the notes too plz”, or not include any way to actually send them the notes.

It’s awesome because I know the names of a few people who were too dumb to keep checking my website even after I sent it to them once. And some of them are in my classes this year. Good luck out there, you trooper, you. Glad I could give you notes for three of our five classes. Hope you know how to write an essay by now.

Sep 12, 2011 2 notes
#Carleton
Sarah SaturdayThe Bouncing Souls

Sarah Saturday by The Bouncing Souls, from their album The Gold Record. It came up on shuffle while I was driving to work the other day, and it was great. Really enjoy listening to these guys.

Lyrics here, if you care!

Sep 11, 2011
#music
Card Hunter!

Ars Technica wrote a great piece you should really read about game developers leaving the AAA industry to make it on their own. Inside, they mentioned a game called Card Hunter, which is being funded by the co-founder of Irrational Games - the guys who made System Shock 2 and Bioshock. I looked it up, and found out it’s being worked on by other people you might have heard of. Farbs makes some pretty cool games, and I actually bought into the Captain Forever series when the first game was in beta. On a slightly more famous note, does the name Richard Garfield ring any bells?

        There’s no definite release date yet, but it seems pretty fascinating. They’ve got a couple of developer diaries talking about deck building in the game: one here, and another here. I pretty much like everything about this game, but the deck building is particularly interesting. Rather than adding specific cards, you equip items, which give you a specific “suite” of cards. Should make for some good strategy.

        I guess I probably shouldn’t post about a game that isn’t out yet. But I’m eagerly awaiting its release, and I think some of you might be interested too. After all, you probably played Magic years ago. Remember the good times? Yeah, me too. Card Hunter will probably have more good times! Play it with me when it comes out!

Sep 10, 2011
#gaming
Sep 9, 2011
#writing
Play
Sep 9, 2011
#gaming
Play
Sep 8, 2011
#gaming
Sep 7, 2011
#gaming
My Schedule, Do You Want It?!google.com

Classes start again tomorrow, so I thought I’d post my class schedule. I’ve already posted about which classes I’m taking, so available/busy information should be good enough. This is a public link, indexed for Google searches (required in order to have a public calendar, sadly), but I guess I can give you - specifically, you, because you’re my favourite reader - the private link if you absolutely must know where I am and what I’m doing at all times.

If we ever want to organize group MMO playing or anything like that, Google Calendar is a good tool for it. It handles multiple calendars pretty well, and you just have to look for an open spot between everybody’s schedules.

Sep 7, 2011 1 note
Fix Your Wireless Internet Problems Yourself7tutorials.com

Dear various parents, grandparents, co-workers, and other “Not Computer People.” We don’t magically know how to fix everything.

First of all, this XKCD comic will make you just as good as I am at helping you figure out how to do things I have no idea how to do, like wrapping text in Photoshop. Second of all, the article this post’s title links to will actually make you better than I am (well, until I start consulting that chart) at correcting wireless internet problems.

Although you might want to download the .pdf version, available below the “Related Articles” section, so you can consult it when your internet isn’t working.

Sep 6, 2011
Work It OutBeat Crusaders

Work It Out by Beat Crusaders, from their album Popdod.

I think it speaks for itself.

Sep 5, 2011
#music
Do I trust Google? If it's convenient

As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, and have mentioned far too many times to my friends, I got an Android phone recently. It’s working beautifully, by the way - CyanogenMod 7 is far better than the version of Android 1.5 that came with the phone, and LauncherPro is a whole lot faster than CM’s default launcher ADW. Despite the pretty weak hardware, things run pretty well, though I can’t play many games beyond Game Dev Story. But do I really need anything else…?

        As I was setting up my new phone, I gleefully entered contact info to Google’s servers - allowing me to get everything back if I flash a new ROM, or even buy a new phone - I realized just how much data I was handing over. Am I ok with letting Google know who my friends and family are? For that matter, are my friends and family ok with it? Should I enter their addresses for my own convenience, or would that be a breach of their privacy? Would I start getting ads in Gmail for flights to New Brunswick around Christmas time to visit family, and to PEI in the spring to visit friends? I’m already telling Google which contacts send me e-mails important enough to notify me about. When I’m busy because of class or meetings, and for that matter, where they are. Between my phone’s GPS and cell phone tower information, they can categorize the places I spend most of my time as “Home.” When I post to Facebook from my phone, it’s probably going to say “Posted from Facebook Mobile near Carleton University.”

        A few days later, Lifehacker linked to an article declaring that “Google wants to own your online identity.” Eric Schmidt, formerly CEO of Google, declared that Google+ was built primarily as an “identity service,” and that they planned to build further services based on that information. The article quotes some guy who summed the situation up pretty well: who did Google build this for - you, or them? And maybe it’s worth asking that same question about everything else they do. After all, they certainly don’t make money by providing an awesome alternative to calendar software, or Google Analytics, or a web browser, or their Public DNS service. No, as the GigaOM article reminds us, Google makes money through advertising. And advertising gets easier and easier the more information they can get about their potential customers.

        And yet, this doesn’t really bother me. So long as they sell advertisements, but keep the data to themselves, I don’t really mind. Unless you’re a supar haxxor, nothing you do on the internet is ever completely hidden. Your ISP logs everything, if they’re ever inclined to take a look at your internet usage. Any web-based e-mail service you use will have access to your data that way, and every site you visit probably leaves three cookies in your browser’s cache. If Google collects that data from me and makes some money off of it, that’s more or less a fair trade for the services they offer. What would I do otherwise? Keep track of four different e-mail inboxes in Thunderbird? Use Rainlendar or a Thunderbird extension to manage my calendar, but be restricted to accessing it on one computer? Fact is, Google’s products are a whole lot better than similar software you might otherwise pay for, and somebody has to pay the engineers who create them.

        I guess some people might prefer to pay with money rather than personal information. I’m not that worried about my imagined sense of privacy, though. The day hackers do to Google what they did to Sony, I’ll start worrying.

Sep 4, 2011 6 notes
#Android #Google
You have [2] games remaining

(Although, 1.5 games might be more accurate, since I’m about to finished the second I’ve just finished the second - of three - worlds in FF V, and after that, FF VI - see my previous post from May)

Sorry for the lack of real updates recently! Here’s part of the reason why: I’ve spent the last couple of weeks playing through FF VIII. Final play time was just short of 70 hours. Couldn’t be bothered to level up the characters outside my main party, or track down a couple of Level 7 Boss Cards, but other than that I did everything there was to do. Except play a no-level game and maximize my base stats using Devour/Boost items, but that’s for craz… dedicated fans. Yeah.

        Anyway! I’m not 100% sure what I should say about it, seeing as the game is a dozen years old by now. I can say that I didn’t care in the slightest about Squall and Rinoa’s relationship - sorry, was there development there? Because it seemed like someone just flipped a switch, and off they went. The thing about the orphanage and the memory erosion of the GFs was pretty silly, but whatever. And what the hell is up with NORG…?

        I admit, though, I have to really look for things to dislike about the game. I definitely had a lot of fun playing it, and the section with Squall commanding Balamb Garden into battle was awesome. Even though I selected “prepare for attack” first, since the game hinted you should ambush them, and later scolded me for not attacking first. But yeah, I never really appreciated the direction of these action-movie-esque scenes (being chased by the robot in Dollet, the fight between Gardens, or the reactor sequences in FF VII) as a kid, but now I’m impressed that the game manages to create a real sense of tension in jaded ole me. Not to mention things like Quistis’s declaration that “Seifer’s sentence was carried out in Galbadia,” and following Sephiroth’s trail through Shinra - the music and everything else just come together for an intense feeling of dread and foreboding.

        I especially liked the way the game’s systems feed back into each other. If you’ve played Persona 3 and 4, much as I love the games, the social link stuff is more or less totally separated from the dungeon crawling stuff. But in FF VIII, everything has a useful purpose. I originally thought that Triple Triad would be dumb or a waste of time, but then I found out what you could get from the rare cards, and so I set out to collect them. The Cactus Thorns you collected a hundred of from hunting Cactuars turn into Hundred Thorns, which can teach some ability called “Return Damage” or be converted into other stuff. Point is, the game rewards you in a lot of ways, and that’s a smart decision. Also, super twinkable, delivering ultimate min/max joy. Final boss casts Meteor? Good thing I only take 20 damage from each hit!

        Oh, I do want to mention the weird as hell part of the ending that comes right after you beat the final boss. It goes on for way too long, and it’s just… weird. If you’re ok with spoilers, watch the first 5 minutes of this video. I think they’re trying to make you think Squall was erased from existence? Not really sure whose bright idea that was.

        To tell you the truth, I actually almost finished FF VIII when I was a kid (roughly age 7). I’d made my way to the fourth disc, and then… my dad saved over my file when he was playing later that night. HOW COULD YOU DO THIS TO MEEEEEEEEEEE?! I swore revenge, and retaliated by ripping up some of his old socks with scissors. And never touched FF VIII again, until now. Do you think I secretly have bonus nostalgia for the game, even though I’d forgotten everything about the game except the section with the robot in Dollet? It was like I was playing the game for the first time, but maybe somewhere in my mind I knew I’d been there before. Liek wif Squall and da GFs amirite? But yeah, now I’ve actually finished the game, and it only took me 70 hours to undo the effects of his save file confusion.

        Thanks, Dad.

Sep 2, 2011 1 note
#Final Fantasy #gaming
Descartes, please do not rise from the grave and murder me
  • Me: I can't help but gaze wistfully at beautiful phones, which must surely be attached to beautiful people.
  • Vael: Likely. As you know, I have an ugly phone, and I am an ugly person. And as you know, people who don't have cell phones don't exist at all.
  • Me: iPhone, therefore I am
  • Vael: Wow.
Sep 1, 2011
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