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Personal

Again with the blog delays

This time it’s all my fault. The weekend was spent in Anaheim, CA, attending GenCon SoCal for the first time. Got a good deal on the trip, so I decided to head out and help out running the booth and tournaments for Comic Images. While there, I picked up a couple of Utilikilts, some of the coolest clothing ever. At some point I’m sure there will be kilted pictures, but not today. 🙂

This week is back to work, trying to wrap up old projects and get into new ones. The tech here at MTSU is less than cutting edge, and we’re fixing the sins of the past about half the time. But it’s still going well…I like the people I work with, and aside from the drive it’s a great job.

Next weekend we’re heading to B’s family, to help her dad do some Xmas shopping. Seems like we haven’t had a weekend without an event in so long…don’t remember the last time the two of us were home together on a weekend.

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Digital Culture

Recovery and travel (and Richard Dawkins)

Been a bit longer than I like since I’ve blogged…I try hard to record something every day, just for myself (and the half-dozen brave readers who keep coming back). Thanksgiving caused some of the delay, and the fact that I’ve been fighting off a chest cold for a few days hasn’t helped. Nothing makes you feel down quite like being unable to breathe.

On to more interesting matters: Slate has an interview up with my favorite scientist, Richard Dawkins. The fact that I have a favorite scientist should come as no surprise to any of you (I also have a favorite poet, a favorite fantasy author, a favorite way to eat chocolate, and a favorite Iron Chef. My life is full of judgement and hyperbole.). If readers of this blog haven’t read him, go thee forth to a library and get a copy of The Selfish Gene (a book that literally changed the way I understood the world the first time I read it) and The Blind Watchmaker (another book that caused me no end of philosophical re-thinking).

During the interview, there’s a discussion of things evolutionary, among them the role of losing hair during the course of man’s journey:

As for the hair in our armpits and pubic regions, that was probably retained because it helps disseminate “pheromones,” airborne scent signals that still play a bigger role in our sex lives than most of us realize.

I know that scientists are still arguing this, but I’ve never read any suggestion that seems the most obvious to me. Why would there still be hair only around those parts of humans that lose the largest amount of heat to the outside world? Oh…I don’t know…maybe insulation? Maybe the axiliary hair deals with heat loss/retention in ways that we don’t quite get yet. Just an idea (but it seems a good deal more likely than waving the idea of “phermones” around.).

I also appreciate the end of the article, where the interviewer asks Dawkins about his critiques of religion:

“You’ve called religion a ‘dangerous collective delusion’ and a ‘malignant infection,’ ” I said. “Don’t you think you’re underplaying it a bit?”

Dawkins turned, smiled a small fox smile, and said, “Yes!”

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Digital Culture

Even more *drooool*

But for a different reason, this time not for beauty but for pangs of youth.

Behold! The wonder of the 30 in one Commodore 64 Game Joystick! Evidently QVC has purchased ALL of these that the manufacturer made, so the only place to get one is via them. The list of games is awesome though (well….there are a few crap games, but mostly): you get Impossible Mission AND Impossible Mission II, Summer Games, Winter Games…Sumo…just tons of good stuff. If I could tell you how many hours I wasted playing those first four games during my youth, I would, but I can’t currently count that high due to a turkey hangover. This is WAY up on my “cool shit for christmas” list.

EDIT: evidently QVC has completely decided to eliminate deep linking via a screwed up method of javascript redirects. In any case, if you go to qvc.com and search for Commodore it will come up. I tried a link edit above, but I’m not sure it will work.

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Digital Culture

Happy Turkey Day everyone!

Happy Turkey Day, in which we eat fowl, hang with our family, and try desperately not to remember that we invaded and destroyed the native cultures of this country through starvation, war, and disease. Oh, and we watch football. But not that football, this football.

🙂 Happy Thanksgiving 🙂

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Digital Culture

Robocoaster

You got a rollercoaster in my industrial robot! No, you got an industrial robot in my rollercoaster!

Those that know me know my love of the adrenaline. That leads me to do stupid things like this and this and this. However, this new coaster concept looks….insane. A fully operational robotic arm extended from the track attachment, with a full range of motion, which means that at any one time you could be moving on the track, being moved side-to-side or forward or backward, all the while spinning on a horizontal axis. That’s something I’d stand in line for.

Check the wicked looking photo of the “car”:

robocoaster

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Digital Culture

Alternative textbook stickers

This site has a list of very amusing alternatives for people who wish to sticker textbooks, in reaction to this news piece about the neverending battle of evolution vs idiots. Very amusing. My favorite:

Library Sticker

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Digital Culture

Kong is King

Don’t know if anyone else has become addicted to this site, but if you haven’t, take a look.

Kong is King

It’s the production blog for the Peter Jackson remake of Kong. Included are incredible video shorts about what they’ve done each day (doesn’t quite count as a vidblog, but there’s an incredible amount of both video and text on here). Fascinating to see behind the scenes of such a huge production.

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Digital Culture

Watchmen

The many-storied making of the film Watchmen evidently took another turn today. Darren Aronofsky was attached to the film, which I thought was brilliant. Now it appears that he has some conflict and Paul Greengrass has taken over. Greengrass directed The Bourne Supremacy, which was a fine action film, but didn’t convince me that he can do Noir Superhero.

That said, I do sincerely hope that whoever makes this film does it some justice. Hollywood has gotten better at the superhero movie (see: Spiderman I & II, Hellboy, and hopefully the upcoming Batman Begins) in recent years, but Watchmen is a different beast. For anyone who hasn’t read it, go pick it up. It’s one of the most compelling stories ever told in the comic medium, full of darkness and despair and real characters rather than archetypes (ok…we’ve still got archetypes in Dr. Manhattan and Ozymandias).

In a related note, I just checked the Wikipedia entry on Watchmen, and the director had already been changed. Amazing.

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Personal

Ryan Adams…

Ryan Adams

Last night we got the chance to see Ryan Adams perform in the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. The Ryman was amazing…such history in that place! Originally the Union Gospel Tabernacle, it opened its doors in 1892 , and the pews that were installed then are still in use today.

Ryan’s performance was amazing…he performed with a backup band, The Cardinals. My only problem was with the encore. I was hoping for something rockin’ to send us out, but we got a very low-key encore. However, in honor of the Ryman, he ended with a beautiful acoustic version of Johnny Cash’s “I Still Miss Someone.”

All in all, a great night seeing a performance of an artist we didn’t actually think we’d ever get to see, given his random touring history.

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Digital Culture

My favorite slashdot comment…

…about the new Google services: Keyhole and Scholar.

google does snow crash

Indeed they do…indeed they do. Get on that, will you, Google?