Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Film: Newswire: All the news comes together in story of Zombieland writers t...

via A.V. Club on 10/18/11

Tying the morning’s reports together in one giant thematic bow, Hasbro and Paramount have hired Zombieland writers Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese to pen the screenplay for its big-screen adaptation of Micronauts, Hasbro's next bid for creating a Transformers-like franchise out of one of its decades-old toy properties. “If you’re going to play with your Micronauts, you should pick up your Transformers and put them away, please,” Hollywood’s mom says. “But we’re not done playing with them yet!” Hasbro replies. “And Jason Statham might be coming over!Anyway, as we were reminded yesterday, Micronauts ...

Friday, October 14, 2011

Amusing Similarities: Herman Cain's 999 Tax Plan and SimCity 4's Default Set...

via GamePolitics blogs by james_fudge on 10/14/11

An amusing post on the Huffington Post from senior political reporter Amanda Terkel posits that Republican presidential candidate and former Godfather Pizza CEO Herman Cain's 9.9.9 tax plan draws was inspired by a video game. According to HuffPo, Cain's plan is identical to the default settings in SimCity 4.

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Thursday, October 13, 2011

Team Bondi to Close

GOOOOOOOOD!!!!!

via GamePolitics blogs by james_fudge on 10/5/11

Entry Image: 

It's game over for Team Bondi, the Australian development studio that helped create LA Noire for Rockstar Games. According to papers filed with the Australian Securities & Investments Commission, Team Bondi will close its doors and its assets will be sold off to pay creditors. Liquidators have been appointed at the company to sell off assets and pay off the company's debts, documents show.

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Cheese or font?

Pro tip: if it has a Romance root, go with cheese

via kottke.org by Jason Kottke on 10/13/11

You're given a name and you have to guess if it's a cheese or a font. This might be the most difficult game I've ever played. (thx, @ziggy444)

Tags: cheese   food   typography

Stroke Victim Stranded At South Pole Base

Saw this on House

via Slashdot by Soulskill on 10/10/11

Hugh Pickens writes "Renee-Nicole Douceur, the winter manager at the Amundsen-Scott research station at the South Pole, was sitting at her desk on August 27 when she suffered a stroke. 'I looked at the screen and was like, "Oh my God, half the screen is missing."' But both the National Science Foundation and contractor Raytheon say it would be too dangerous to send a rescue plane to the South Pole now, since Douceur's condition is not life-threatening. Douceur's niece Sydney Raines has set up a Web site that urges people to call officials at Raytheon and the National Science Foundation. However, temperatures must be higher than -50 degrees F for most planes to land at Amundsen-Scott or the fuel will turn to jelly. While that threshold has been crossed at the South Pole recently, the temperature still regularly dips to 70 degrees below zero. 'It's like no other airfield in the U.S.,' says Ronnie Smith, a former Air Force navigator who has flown there about 300 times. A pilot landing a plane there in winter, when it is dark 24 hours a day, would be flying blind 'because you can't install lights under the ice.' The most famous instance of a person being airlifted from the South Pole for medical reasons was that involving Jerri Nielsen FitzGerald, a doctor who diagnosed and treated her own breast cancer. Using only ice and a local anesthetic, she performed her own biopsy with the help of a resident welder. When she departed on October 16, 1999, it was the earliest in the Antarctic spring that a plane had taken off."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Film: Newswire: Man claims Drive inspired him to throw hot dog at Tiger Woods

I think I have to see this movie, finally

via A.V. Club on 10/12/11

While the connection between Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive and the rise in violence against Jews remains pure speculation, at least until the October statistics come in, the Ryan Gosling-starring film is already culpable for at least one world-stopping hate crime. According to the Santa Rosa Press Democrat, Brandon Kelly, the California man who threw a hot dog at Tiger Woods last weekend, did so not just because “hot dog equals penis!” but also because he was inspired by Drive to “do something courageous and epic.” So, after taking a personal inventory of the most courageous, epic actions he could ...

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Music: Newswire: Hank Williams Jr. has been officially dropped from Monday N...

Are you ready for obscurity!?!?!?

via A.V. Club on 10/6/11

Now when Hank Williams Jr. tries to make an analogy about the supposed silliness of Republicans fraternizing with Democrats, he can say, "That's like me playing golf with ESPN!" The sports network officially ended its association with the country music star in the wake of his Obama-is-like-Hitler comments on Fox & Friends. In a brief statement, ESPN said it "decided to part ways with Hank Williams, Jr. We appreciate his contributions over the past years. The success of Monday Night Football has always been about the games and that will continue." As for Williams, he and his rowdy friends insist ...

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Unicorns and wheels: Apple's two types of products

via kottke.org by Jason Kottke on 10/5/11

A common reaction to Apple's announcement of the iPhone 4S yesterday was disappointment...Mat Honan's post at Gizmodo for instance.

I was hoping for something bold and interesting looking. The iPhone 4 was just that when it shipped. So too were the original iPhone and the iPhone 3G. If I'm going to buy a new phone, of course I want it to look new. Because of course we care about having novel designs. If we didn't we'd all be lugging around some 10-inch thick brick with a 12 day battery life.

Mat's is an understandable reaction. After I upgraded my iPhone, Macbook Pro, and OS X all at once two years ago, I wrote about Apple's upgrade problem:

From a superficial perspective, my old MBP and new MBP felt exactly the same...same OS, same desktop wallpaper, same Dock, all my same files in their same folders, etc. Same deal with the iPhone except moreso...the iPhone is almost entirely software and that was nearly identical. And re: Snow Leopard, I haven't noticed any changes at all aside from the aforementioned absent plug-ins.

So, just having paid thousands of dollars for new hardware and software, I have what feels like my same old stuff.

Deep down, when I stop to think about it, I know (or have otherwise convinced myself) that these purchases were worth it and that Apple's ease of upgrade works almost exactly how it should. But my gut tells me that I've been ripped off. The "newness" cognitive jolt humans get is almost entirely absent.

For me, yesterday's event, Apple's continued success in innovation *and* business, and the recent CEO change provided a different perspective: that Apple makes two very complimentary types of products and we should be excited about both types.

The first type of product is the most familiar and is exemplified by Steve Jobs: Apple makes magical products that shape entire industries and modify social structures in significant ways. These are the bold strokes that combine technology with design in a way that's almost artistic: Apple II, Macintosh, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. When they were introduced, these products were new and exciting and no one quite knew where those products were going to take us (Apple included). That's what people want to see when they go to Apple events: Steve Jobs holding up a rainbow-hued unicorn that you can purchase for your very own.

The second type of product is less noticed and perhaps is best exemplified by Apple's new CEO, Tim Cook: identify products and services that work, continually refine them, innovate at the margins (the addition of Siri to the iPhone 4S is a good example of this), build interconnecting ecosystems around them, and put processes and infrastructure in place to produce ever more of these items at lower cost and higher profit. The wheel has been invented; now we'll perfect it. This is where Apple is at with the iPhone now, a conceptually solved problem: people know what they are, what they're used for, and Apple's gonna knuckle down and crank out ever better/faster/smarter versions of them in the future. Many of Apple's current products like this, better than they have ever been, more popular than they have ever been, but there's nothing magical about them anymore: iPhone 4S, iPod, OS X, iMacs, Macbooks, etc.

The exciting thing about this second type of product, for investors and consumers alike, is Apple is now expert at capturing their lightning in a bottle. T'was not always so...Apple wasn't able to properly capitalize on the success of the Macintosh and it almost killed the company. What Tim Cook ultimately held up at Apple's event yesterday is a promise: there won't be a return to the Apple of the 1990s, when the mighty Macintosh devolved into a flaky, slow, and (adding insult to injury) expensive klunker and they couldn't decide on a future direction for the their operating system (remember Copland?). There will be an iPhone 5 in the future and it will be better than the iPhone 4S in significant & meaningful ways but it will also *just work*. And while that might be a bit boring to Apple event watchers, this interconnected web of products is the thing that makes the continued development of the new and magical products possible.

Tags: Apple   business   iPhone   Mat Honan   Steve Jobs   Tim Cook