7.31.2005

Lucky Guy

Mike Matas (the designer of Delicious Monster and the Life Poster) has recently moved on to bigger and better things: Apple.

While I don't know the guy personally, I think at the age of 18 to be working for Apple he's going to go places. A quick look around the Delicious Monster website reveals this:

As an 18 year old, most people expect me to go to college, but instead I am starting a software company. I think there is more to learn from real world experiences than from a lesson in school.

I can't agree more with this statement. While college may be a great place to get a piece of paper that says you know something, it sure as hell can be expensive, boring, and very uninspiring. Ironically, according to what I learned in Business 101, this kid already has the makings of an entrepreneur because of his against-the-grain spirit.

While I never had much personal use for Delicious Monster, I can definitely see where some people would. Besides that, the software interface is intuitive and easy to use and his website designs are top-notch. Apparently his icons and graphics are what Apple has hired him for.

Some people would kill to have the opportunity that he has at such a young age. Lucky bastid.

SSX 3

Edit: this is the most addicting video game I've ever played.

SSX 3 is by far the most addictive GameCube game I think I have ever played. Snowboarding with hot chicks. Cool soundtrack. Great graphics. What more could you want?

9

Ecto

I just found this awesome new desktop tool called Ecto that I'm now using to update my site with. 1000X better than using the Blogger website.

Also, there's this new thing...

What's on iTunes: Pete Standing Alone from the album "D I G I T A L L Y - I M P O R T E D - Chillout - ambient psy" by Boards Of Canada

7.28.2005

Windows After a Week

Two guys swapped Windows and Macs for a week and wrote about it for the Times Online UK. Here's what the Apple guy said about Windows:

After a week with a Windows machine I get the feeling that this system is designed by people who know a lot about computers. Macs, on the other hand, seem to be designed by people who know a lot about people. -Nigel Kendall

I'll go you one further. I think Macs are designed by people that know about BOTH computers and people.

That is all.

We are the Web

This is an excellent article from Wired magazine about the past, present, and future of the Internet. Probably the best article about the Internet I've ever read. It's a 5-page read, but well worth it.

Some great moments in the article...

The accretion of tiny marvels can numb us to the arrival of the stupendous. Today, at any Net terminal, you can get: an amazing variety of music and video, an evolving encyclopedia, weather forecasts, help wanted ads, satellite images of anyplace on Earth, up-to-the-minute news from around the globe, tax forms, TV guides, road maps with driving directions, real-time stock quotes, telephone numbers, real estate listings with virtual walk-throughs, pictures of just about anything, sports scores, places to buy almost anything, records of political contributions, library catalogs, appliance manuals, live traffic reports, archives to major newspapers - all wrapped up in an interactive index that really works.

This view is spookily godlike. You can switch your gaze of a spot in the world from map to satellite to 3-D just by clicking. Recall the past? It's there. Or listen to the daily complaints and travails of almost anyone who blogs (and doesn't everyone?). I doubt angels have a better view of humanity.

Why aren't we more amazed by this fullness? Kings of old would have gone to war to win such abilities. Only small children would have dreamed such a magic window could be real. I have reviewed the expectations of waking adults and wise experts, and I can affirm that this comprehensive wealth of material, available on demand and free of charge, was not in anyone's scenario. Ten years ago, anyone silly enough to trumpet the above list as a vision of the near future would have been confronted by the evidence: There wasn't enough money in all the investment firms in the entire world to fund such a cornucopia. The success of the Web at this scale was impossible.

And this gem:
What could be a better mark of irreversible acceptance than adoption by the Amish? I was visiting some Amish farmers recently. They fit the archetype perfectly: straw hats, scraggly beards, wives with bonnets, no electricity, no phones or TVs, horse and buggy outside. They have an undeserved reputation for resisting all technology, when actually they are just very late adopters. Still, I was amazed to hear them mention their Web sites.

"Amish Web sites?" I asked.

"For advertising our family business. We weld barbecue grills in our shop."

"Yes, but "

"Oh, we use the Internet terminal at the public library. And Yahoo!"

I knew then the battle was over.

And this sums up what I think about what other people think about the Internet:
We should marvel, but people alive at such times usually don't.

While the Internet is booming exponentially every minute, there are still people who don't get what a precious resource the Internet is. People growing up now kind of take it for granted, but I still remember the first time I ever went on the Internet at a friend's house. And I remember that not long after that, I was on the Internet at my own house. I knew from the very beginning that I would be on the Internet all the time. I haven't gotten tired of it yet, and I don't think I ever will. I still find things on the Internet that amaze me. And good old-fashioned information about day-to-day things is free and in large supply.

Another way of explaining this is from the article:
In 2015 many people, when divorced from the Machine, won't feel like themselves - as if they'd had a lobotomy.

This is basically the way I felt when I first got to Montana and I didn't have high-speed Internet. There were things on the 'Net that I needed to find out and not being able to get to the information fast enough bothered me. Not having the Internet on tap at any given moment was a hindrance.

The article points out a huge idea about the way the Internet is today compared to the way we thought it would be: we the people are creating what the Internet is. It's like a sort of weird time capsule. The vast majority of the 'Net is still user-driven, not commercial. eBay, for example, is almost completely user-driven. Flickr uploads thousands of pictures daily from our own digital cameras, not a photo company. And blogs...well, you know.

All in all, a great article. I don't know that I agree with the ending that the Internet will eventually be this mass-confusion of hyperlinks, where every article posted is nothing but hyperlinks and eventually 'the Machine' will learn enough about us to almost replace our brains and identities. Stranger things have not happened. I think we will eventually lead extremely digital lifestyles, but I still think it's just a digital version of meatspace.

7.26.2005

Watch My Rabbit Hump

The weirdest thing happened today...my rabbit finally started humping this $.99 stuffed teddy bear that we bought him instead of our legs. Check it out...

Bruno mounting the unsuspecting teddy bear:


Violently humping the teddy bear (Quicktime Movie):


Post-coital bliss:


The funniest thing is that he tries to hump it from every angle possible, circling it, then going at it again. All the while dropping pellets all over the carpet.

7.23.2005

Link Dump

Oishii is pretty cool and just got me into understanding more about Delicious. Oishii is:

I frequently find things that people are linking to very interesting, and thought it would be nice to slap together a system that could tell me, automatically, what lots of other people have just bookmarked. Thus, oishii was born. Oishii is kind of a del.icio.us mini-zeitgeist. oishii! polls the del.icio.us front page every 5 minutes, and returns all sites bookmarked by at least 30 people.

Family Guy Blog

Writing Guide from the Economist

Flickr Booty: Flickr's Fabulous Females

Google Blog

Google Maps has a new feature in addition to satellite - hybrid: maps and satellite simultaneously.

How to make the perfect Omelette

How to make the sandwich from Spanglish

Everything you Know About Grilling is Wrong

100 Quick and Easy Healthy Foods

NY Times 50 Best Websites of 2005

Wired Story on Housing Maps, a way of mixing Google Maps and finding apartments.

50 Smartest Things to do with your Money

The Girlfriend Pics Archive

Saved the best for last.

Windows Vista?

So, the successor to Windows XP is going to be called Vista. I don't care for the name too much because my fiancee used to live in Vista, CA and it was a dump, so naturally I associate the two. Besides that, that name just doesn't work for an operating system. It's an operating system, not a rehab center. Not to mention, the video of the announcement was probably the worst quality video I've seen in a while, especially coming from the worlds largest software company.

Anyway, it didn't take long before the Macheads to start bagging on it. Hasta la Vista, Baby seemed to get a lot of laughs. But my favorite is this:

VISTA = Vastly Inferior System To Apple

And this:

V= Viruses
I= Intrusions
S= Spyware
T= Trojans
A= Adware

Ha!

Someone even found a nice screenshot of the new OS on Flickr.

7.17.2005

Photos from Montana

Here are 36 of the best photos that I have taken since being in Montana.

From the I-15N border of Montana to Dillon, MT (this first photo kind of sucks since it was taken through my dirty bug smashed windshield):









On the road to Missoula:








Downtown Missoula:




They love biking in Missoula...



Quad riding in the mountains: