Archive
March, 2009 Monthly archive

Hello World,

I thought I’d fill everyone in on a little project I’ve been working on in my spare time. The project is called Little Keys™ and it is basically a computer game we created for little kids so they don’t ruin their parents’ computers by bashing on their keyboards. We’re also selling recycled keyboards that we have custom painted along with the actual program (once I get pictures of they keyboards I’ll post them). The cool part is that we’ll have our own space at the Brooklyn Flea, this Sunday, March 15th. And as far as I know, we’ll also be featured in Cool Hunting (for those of you who keep up to speed with design-ish blogs). So if you guys are in the city this Sunday, Stop by DUMBO and check out the Flea (from 11-6 I believe). Also check out some screen shots and our little statement below if you’re unable to attend…

 

About Little Keys
Little Keys is a local art project-meets-computer game created for wee  
ones. Using recycled keyboards, Little Keys allows toddlers and little  
kids to bang away on brightly colored keys to create playful patterns  
of letters, numbers, and shapes. Kids can—and should—go wild on the  
keyboards, custom painted with non-toxic, kid-safe paint. The more key  
mashing, the better! Or, if you prefer, you can opt for the software  
only. Either way, it’s as simple as launching the application and  
plugging in your new kid-safe keyboard. And by the way, the program  
quits with a special key combo, so you don’t have to worry about your  
little computer whiz accidentally deleting your address book.  

Little Keys is brought to you by a group of Brooklynites working at  
digital agencies around NYC inspired to help little kids explore  
computers in fun and safe way (for parent, child & computer!). The  
kicker? They got to re-use hardware that would otherwise be thrown away.

Mac and PC compatible.

So thats the basics. It’s been fun, and hopefully some kids will have some fun and maybe learn something as a result of me and my friends extra time after work. Ya Dig?!?

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From lifehacker.

  1. Center Google maps on the place you’d like info for (right click > center map here).
  2. Paste the following into your browser bar:
    javascript:void(prompt(”,gApplication.getMap().getCenter()));
  3. Press ‘Enter’

Voila.  Provides 14 decimal places, in case you’re sending warheads.

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After the week long buildup, it all comes down to this…

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oh hello everyone. Turns out one of our favorite beverages (as pointed out by Solo Artist Adam Yeager), has a pretty amazing website. I haven’t stayed around until 5 yet (obviously), but i am excited to see what happens.

 

CHECK IT.

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Darkwind Media WebsiteLuster 3D Website

Darkwind Media just put up the company website & Luster websites for the public. Give us a few days to get some Luster applications up, we’re testing the web players extensively.

Please note if you do download the players, there will be new versions very frequently. Watch the Darkwind Media Blog, because we’ll be telling people when new versions are available.

The Mac version is just a newborn, it still has some soft spots on it’s head. Be kind.

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Today marks the end of my winter term, and the completion of my 2 minute previsualization final project. I busted this out in a grueling 48 hours of work, 40 of which I was awake straight. It’s a little rough here and there but overall I am pretty happy with it.

Things to revisit would be shadows fo’ sho, the flickering kills me. I couldn’t afford the render time to use raytraced shadows so I stuck with depthmap shadows. If I ever get around to it, I would love to add depth of field to the shots and include some sort of environmental fog. On this project I learned alot about Maya’s particle systems and really enjoyed creating the smoke trails. In a couple shots the particles are pretty rough due to some restrictions I was running into with ramp input nodes.

After the aerial dog fights it starts to fall apart a bit… When I was working on the tank/village shots I was starting to cut corners due to exhaustion and the need to meet a deadline. The most blaring issues I have with the final shots are the inconsistent lighting and the physically impossible motion paths for the planes. The 2nd to last shot of the spitfires peeling up after strafing the german column of tanks all I can thing of is this classic Star Wars quote, “Break off the attack! The shield is still up!“.

Anyways, I really just wanted to share this, I am relieved to be done with this term. I hope y’all enjoy.

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Oh hello there. Yes it’s me. It’s me Eric. It’s been awhile hasn’t it? You might be asking yourself, “What happened to Eric’s weekly (or close to weekly) blog/podcast reviews? I loved those.” Or saying something like, “Man, that guy really fell off the wagon.” Well the truth is, I did fall off a wagon. It was being pulled by horses. And it hurt. A lot.

But after however long that took me to heal up from or whatever, I’m back with yet another installment of the ol’ review. This week: Scanwiches!

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There’s a lot of information on this Internet thing, I’ve decided.  When it comes to chili recipes, hotel reviews, and news media, I’m very happy with the knowledge at my fingertips.  HOWEVER.  I just did a google search for my name (who hasn’t?), curious to see what sort of information a new employer, friend, or potential stalker might have access to.

HOLY SHIT!!!

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This kid plays 32 songs in 8 minutes almost flawlessly. Check, check, check, check it out.

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I hope a few of you remember this beauty of an American Hero. Way back in October I posted a video about a 400 lb (28.5 stones, 181 kg, or 0.18 metric tons) girl. Well guess what guys, She’s back…AND SHE’S BETTER THAN EVER.

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Jackie and I need a wedding website.

Any takers?

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David Frum doesn’t like where the GOP is headed:

In 1988 George H.W. Bush beat Michael Dukakis among college graduates by 25 points. Nothing unusual there: Republicans have owned the college-graduate vote. But in 1992 Ross Perot led an exodus of the college-educated out of the GOP, and they never fully returned. In 2008 Obama beat John McCain among college graduates by 8 points, the first Democratic win among B.A. holders since exit polling began. [...]

In 1984 Reagan won young voters by 20 points; the elder Bush won voters under 30 again in 1988. Since that year, the Democrats have won the under-30 vote in five consecutive presidential elections. Voters who turned 20 between 2000 and 2005 are the most lopsidedly Democratic age cohort in the electorate. If they eat right, exercise and wear seat belts, they will be voting against George W. Bush well into the 2060s.

I certainly will be.

His prescription?

We need to modulate our social conservatism (not jettison—modulate). The GOP will remain a predominantly conservative party and a predominantly pro-life party. But especially on gay-rights issues, the under-30 generation has arrived at a new consensus. Our party seems to be running to govern a country that no longer exists. The rule that both our presidential and vice presidential candidates must always be pro-life has become counterproductive: McCain’s only hope of winning the presidency in 2008 was to carry Pennsylvania, and yet Pennsylvania’s most successful Republican vote winner, former governor Tom Ridge, was barred from the ticket because he’s pro-choice.

We need an environmental message. You don’t have to accept Al Gore’s predictions of imminent gloom to accept that it cannot be healthy to pump gigatons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. We are rightly mistrustful of liberal environmentalist disrespect for property rights. But property owners also care about property values, about conservation, and as a party of property owners we should be taking those values more seriously.

Above all, we need to take governing seriously again. Voters have long associated Democrats with corrupt urban machines, Republicans with personal integrity and fiscal responsibility. Even ultraliberal states like Massachusetts would elect Republican governors like Frank Sargent, Leverett Saltonstall, William Weld and Mitt Romney precisely to keep an austere eye on the depredations of Democratic legislators. After Iraq, Katrina and Harriet Miers, Democrats surged to a five-to-three advantage on the competence and ethics questions. And that was before we put Sarah Palin on our national ticket.

The GOP needs a complete makeover.  Unfortunately, there’s no one in elected office willing to lead the charge and fight the civil war.  You didn’t make it anywhere in the past 20 years in the Republican Party if you weren’t loyal, and now, with a severely damaged brand, no one knows how to step outside the box.

It’s really kind of sad, but I doubt I’ll lose sleep over it.

[h/t Sullivan]

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Proving the NYT isn’t above the fray:

Q. The first six weeks have given people a glimpse of your spending priorities. Are you a socialist as some people have suggested?

A. You know, let’s take a look at the budget – the answer would be no.

Later on in the day, Obama called the NYT for a clarification regarding this question:

President Obama: Just one thing I was thinking about as I was getting on the copter. It was hard for me to believe that you were entirely serious about that socialist question. [...]

Well, I just think it’s clear by the time we got here, there already had been an enormous infusion of taxpayer money into the financial system. And the thing I constantly try to emphasize to people if that coming in, the market was doing fine, nobody would be happier than me to stay out of it. I have more than enough to do without having to worry the financial system. The fact that we’ve had to take these extraordinary measures and intervene is not an indication of my ideological preference, but an indication of the degree to which lax regulation and extravagant risk taking has precipitated a crisis.

I think that covers it.

Yes.  I think that does.

[h/t Ezra Klein]

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I must say, it’s great to be back home where we don’t deal with any clock changing bullshit.  I never got used to it when I was on the East Coast.  It always felt earlier than it really was in the summer, which drove me nuts.

I think this ends up being one of those more-trouble-than-it’s-worth kind of proposals.  I mean, how much energy does it really save?  I’d argue that it would actually be a net-negative here in Arizona, because it would add another hour of air-conditioning when people are home from work.  Since a lot of people have programmable thermostats that raise the temperature while they’re at work, I can see this drawing a lot of extra juice from the grid.

Besides, who wants the sun to set at 9pm anyway?  It’s just not natural.

(P.S. – Arizona is now synced up with Pacific Time, so I’m 3 hours back from most of y’all now.)

[Update]

There’s a rebellion goin’ on over at DKos.  Check the threads.

[Update II]

Yglesias is against it, too.

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