Akismet a few days in

It is like rain after many hours of sti­fling humid­ity: it is like falling onto bed and being asleep in moments, paus­ing only to realise the sat­is­fac­tion of being still after a long day.

I can check my email again and be excited to see a new mes­sage, because chances are it’s from a real per­son. (Com­ment noti­fi­ca­tions are now worth hav­ing turned on and gen­er­ally sen­si­ble). At first it was sim­ply too strange to com­pre­hend, but now I am rev­el­ling in the bril­liant relief it pro­vides. Per­haps, now, using web pub­lish­ing soft­ware will be enjoy­able again.

I’ve been think­ing a fair bit of late about the psy­chol­ogy of brand con­trol (be that per­sonal or cor­po­rate brand­ing), per­plexed from a few months back when bands first started putting their myspace URL next to (or in place of) their expensive-developed-by-Sony/BMG/Universal/…-records-Flash-powered-yuppie web­site. In doing so I nearly went (nearly being quite a few times), “you know, the Live­Jour­nal crew never expe­ri­ence the kind of crap I’m putting up with” and switched. Of course, WordPress.com users exist behind a mag­i­cal wall, too, but that’s beside the point — If I was going to switch, it would be (at least in part) for social rea­sons, and there’s no-one cool using WordPress.com. (“Cool” is in the eye of the beholder — for me, Robert Scoble is not cool, or, at very least, not some­one to be emu­lated)
So, any­way, I’m not spend­ing an hour a day mod­er­at­ing com­ments. That fig­ure is truly obscene given that on an aver­age week I might only get ten to fif­teen gen­uine com­ments, if that. A lot for very lit­tle in return. I nearly switched off the com­ments alto­gether a cou­ple of times, but I’m too much of an ego­cen­tric prick to deal with that very well. So now things are better.

I’m now free to do more of… some­thing. I’ll prob­a­bly find out exactly what that is about the same time as every­one else. Besides, all the cool kids use Myspace or Face­book nowa­days, any­way, so the audi­ence isn’t a big deal much — only Face­book is smart enough to import my RSS feed as “Notes”, whilst Myspace is still gush­ing generic Cold­Fu­sion error pages. It is the biggest piece of crap hack­job high pro­file web­site I’ve ever seen. It’s a good thing their only rev­enue comes from adver­tis­ing part­ners whose ads are hosted on other servers, oth­er­wise I would so be expect­ing a mas­sively expen­sive class action law­suit when they get their crappy web­site pwned by some script kid­die who’s mess­ing around with a spot of SQL injec­tion for the first time.

Not that I’m even a pro­gram­mer. But I nearly found one today. Please be pray­ing that I get geeks bet­ter than the ones at Myspace for the cur­rent thing that’s qui­etly bak­ing away. I’m hop­ing to present it to nearly a thou­sand peo­ple over the next two weeks and haul in some unemployed/looking-for-more-exciting-work pro­gram­mers in that process.

Ran­dom obser­va­tion — It’s funny how I talk about that project on here with a com­pletely dif­fer­ent voice to the one I use on the other blog. I haven’t got any issues with com­plete strangers read­ing what I write here, so long as it’s taken in con­text (i.e. I’ve ranted about spam before, I’ve ranted about cool/uncool Soc­Nets before, I’ve ranted about how hor­ri­ble I find Myspace from a usability/technical per­spec­tive before, so my hold­ing them up as Thebes to my Athens is entirely accept­able). The prob­lem with writ­ing for a blog read once off by com­plete strangers is that every arti­cle has to stand alone. It actu­ally ceases to fit within the “blog” genre, because chronol­ogy is pretty much left for dead. Which is kind of a shame, but whatever.

In sum­mary: Akismet saves san­ity. Los­ing con­trol is some­times a good thing. Myspace is hor­ri­ble. Josh/CYIADA nearly might pos­si­bly maybe have a pro­gram­mer so please pray for “us”. Myspace is hor­ri­ble. Corporate/project blog­ging nec­es­sar­ily takes a dif­fer­ent form (mode, style, what­ever) to indi­vid­ual blog­ging. Myspace is horrible.

So I succumbed to the allure of normality

That is, an inter­est­ing way of say­ing “I have a new phone that doesn’t require a con­certed weights train­ing regime for sev­eral months before you can begin car­ry­ing it around with you”.

Sony Ericsson V630i next to an iPaq

Noth­ing amaz­ing, it’s a fairly aver­age look­ing Sony Eric­s­son V630i. My ratio­nale in buy­ing it was that it’s not as though it’s part of the same busi­ness units as the DRM morons, any­way, and actively sub­verts their cause by offer­ing MP3 & WMA sup­port, instead of retarded ATRAC spe­cial­ness. It does use an M2 card instead of microSD, though, which is a bit of a shame.

Sony Ericsson V630i

Its PC Sync­ing is ade­quate, though obvi­ously not up to the Win­dows Mobile per­fec­tion to which I am accus­tomed :P

Mostly I just wanted PC sync­ing to make con­tact trans­fer pain­less. The “PDA” func­tion­al­ity (if one even dare call it that) is very much a sec­ondary thing: I’m vaguely con­sid­er­ing buy­ing a Palm, but not until I’ve got my head around this com­pletely. It’s rather on the usable side, but the inter­face is obvi­ously more lim­ited than a touch screen would ever be.

Sony Ericsson V630i

It cost me… noth­ing, on a Voda­fone con­tract. I didn’t mind that because I’m not locked into the hand­set for the con­tract length — I can unlock it from the Voda­fone net­work today if I want, with­out any charge, and stick my (3G, but, alas, I’ve only got par­tial 3G cov­er­age at my house — with both 3 and Vodafone/Optus, haven’t tested Tel­stra — so there’s not a great deal of UTMS going down here at the minute — reg­u­lar triband GSM wins out) SIM into any other phone.

Yes, that’s right, petty 3 users. I can change phones with­out hav­ing to go grov­el­ling to my net­work provider. Howdya­likethathuh? *gloats* :)

Any­way. It’s still good fun. It also has an MP3 player, but the probably-prohibitive cost of M2 media for this thing, com­bined with the supremely uncom­fort­able bun­dled head­phones (they’re designed for like, ele­phants or some­thing) and lack of reg­u­lar 3.5mm jack (*tear*) mean it’s not likely to get used much. ‘cept to say it sup­ports WMA & MP3 ring­tones, which is about as much fun as I had with the iPaq, only Win­dows Media Player actu­ally sup­ports this as a media device.

Yes, friends, that too is irony.


Bravia Paint


New ad from Sony Bravia. The Sony brand doesn’t get much of a work out this time around, it’s only dis­played sep­a­rately from the Bravia and “like no other” brands. It seems they’re link­ing like no other and Bravia more with this cam­paign? Any­way, it’s great test-reel fod­der with a 720 HD down­load avail­able from their site. Only 90 sec­onds, I’m hop­ing they’re going to release a longer one. As with the last one, the making-of is worth watch­ing. I actu­ally found it way more emo­tive than the slightly-austere real thing, because there was a cheer­ing crew (of 200!!) and crowd and real explo­sion sounds. The real ad is bril­liant, sure, but the making-of is more moving.

# by Josh on October 18th, 2006 Tags: ,
| 2 Comments »

Vinyl 45 arrives





It’s here.

DFI Lan­Party UT NForce4 SLI-DR VENUS, AMD 64bit 3200+ (939) @ 2.4GHz, 2GB (2 x 1GB DIMMS) OCZ Plat­inum DDR PC4000, 256MB GeForce 7600GS PCIe, 250GB Sata2 Sea­gate, Pio­neer DVD Combi drive, OCZ Pow­er­stream 520 Watts… and XP Pro still sucks. Nec­es­sary evils, I sup­pose. 2221 3DMark ’06, don’t remem­ber ’05 score.

All this fire­power and I’m sit­ting here play­ing seven-year-old RTS games any­way. Sigh :P Next stop, another hard drive (just so I don’t have system/data on same disk… I’d com­plain about the page­file — wow it’s weird call­ing a swap par­ti­tion that — but some­how with 2GBs of tasty mem­ory — mmm brains — that shouldn’t be too much of a con­cern just yet ;-)).

Also, I’m rather sold on the dual core myth so if any­one has an X2 939 they’re try­ing to get rid of… PWTB. Not that I need it right now so it’ll wait a while. I’m plan­ning on sav­ing again and get­ting some decent video hard­ware to go with my new Sony PVM-411CE :-)

I’ve got some case mods planned but am think­ing they’re going to have to wait until sum­mer break for rea­sons of time and money. And it’s now 1.30 in the morn­ing and I’ve got to be up in five and a half hours. Doh… com­put­ers suck.

# by Josh on October 5th, 2006 Tags: , ,
| 4 Comments »

Twelve/Six Four Six point Eight

Hours/Kilometers trav­elled for a mag­i­cal chunk of sil­i­con we like to call ‘teh b0xxen’.

I picked up a per­spex case and an absolutely kick-arse Pio­neer DV-344 DVD player. It’s region 4 only, which sucks, and no RGB out­put, which also sucks — there’s YPbPr though. On the good side, a 118dB SNR with 0.0016% THD means it sounds pretty darn good. Only stereo ana­logue out­put, but I don’t care too much about that… there’s opti­cal dig­i­tal out­put if sur­round is required. See­ing as I fairly lit­er­ally ‘found’ this, there’s no remote… which is a lit­tle bit of a bum­mer but what­ever. I mostly wanted it for CD play­back (*lis­tens to Steve crying* — shut up, it sounds freakin’ excel­lent) so it’s no big­gie. How­ever, on the video play­back side of things, it’s absolutely won­der­ful for events in that it doesn’t have any stu­pidly con­spic­u­ous Pio­neer splash screens, etc., instead sport­ing only text-based “Play/Pause/Stop/Open/Eject” titles. The default back­ground colour is black. So that’s rather mag­nif­i­cent. It doesn’t even have a screen­saver so it’s quite safe for use pretty much every­where. A thing of beauty indeed.

Speak­ing of things of beauty, Selo’s com­puter (3800+ DC 939, Asus A8N-SLI, 1GB King­max DDR400 (512MBx2), 6800GS PCI-E, Lightscribe DVD-RW, 120GB, 300GB, 19″ Fujitsu 8ms) is hawt. Heh, espe­cially the Lead­tek 6800GS ;-) Gonna need that Fujitsu screen to cool things down eh? Okay, enough of the air­con­di­tioner jokes! It’s actu­ally quite good. But his case is pretty banged up after being wedged in the boot of a BMW for a cou­ple of months (seller = afflu­ent IT sup­port dude that sells few-months-old hard­ware for cheap!)

Any­way no pho­tos yet because my cam­era is on loan to Budd who will return it soon (or else :)) and then there’ll prob­a­bly be a cou­ple. Some­thing rather shiny should be arriv­ing later this week for me, and there’ll be prob­a­bly pho­tos aplenty of that.

In other acquis­i­tive news, I came by a Sony 4x4” PVM-411CE for cheap (time­code screen burn, really minor) last week and it’s doing fan­tas­ti­cally. It’s the rea­son I’ve actu­ally been able to see DVD out­put from this player thing and hope­fully it’ll mean I need to carry (and, as a pre­req­ui­site to that, beg/borrow/steal) less TVs for var­i­ous applications.

# by Josh on September 27th, 2006 Tags: , , , ,
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Bravia

Okay, if this isn’t already all over the web it should be, and I’m post­ing about it any­way because Sony/the agency that did it deserve all the viral mar­ket­ing they get over this ad.

Capture from the commercial

No CG (well, prob­a­bly in the tran­si­tion at the end, but that doesn’t count). Lots of bouncy balls. The making-of fea­turette (on the “Behind the Scenes” page) is worth a look, too… the cam­era oper­a­tors are wear­ing head gear, and there are peo­ple with those plex­i­glass riot shield things. All the cars were props, but in the mak­ing of you can still hear alarms going off… I imag­ine that could be a byprod­uct of the small earth tremor released by 250,000 balls pelt­ing down a hill.

I’m not in the mar­ket for an LCD TV, but… damn. I don’t know quite how these things can be tech­ni­cally sig­nif­i­cantly bet­ter than any­thing else on the mar­ket, but I’m now inter­ested to find out. And have a pro-Sony bias, at least for this prod­uct (def­i­nitely not for their audio equip­ment or their record label or dig­i­tal cam­eras or… the list goes on).

The video is in H.264 for­mat but even the broad­band ver­sion isn’t mas­sive. I dig the music, though.

# by Josh on November 4th, 2005 Tags: , , ,
| 11 Comments »

Record companies suck

In today’s news, iTMS Aus­tralia launches with­out Sony, pre­sum­ably because they’re greedy, uncom­pro­mis­ing bas­tards. I’d like to be sued for defama­tion on that com­ment (because, you know, they’d get awarded such mas­sive dam­ages for a blog this size), because then at least the real rea­son would come out, either way. I’m inclined to think they’re far more evil than Apple, but per­haps that’s just PR spin. Hav­ing said that, here’s evi­dence to the con­trary from an AppleTalk Aus­tralia inter­view with CD Baby founder, Derek Sivers:

Keep in mind : Apple is not screw­ing musi­cians. Labels are screw­ing musi­cians. Apple pays 70 cents per 99-cent down­load. If the artist has signed their music over to a label, they don’t own their music any­more. The label does. So Apple pays the label 70 cents per song, and the label pays the artist… what… a penny? Two? Noth­ing at all? But when an artist is NOT signed to a label, when they’re going through CD Baby for exam­ple, we only keep a 9% cut and pay 91% of all income directly to the artists every week. Our account­ing is wide open so they can see every dol­lar every day, and it all goes to the artist every week, with­out fail, for over 7 years now.

Also, I’ve just dis­cov­ered that iTunes users, even on Win­dows, can rip CDs with sup­posed “Copy Con­trol” tech­nol­ogy with­out even hav­ing to resort to the typ­i­cal Shift key “hack” (heh, and, in the US, press­ing Shift at that point in time is entirely ille­gal. Remove those copy­right cir­cum­ven­tion devices from your key­boards, Amer­ica!!) to pre­vent the load­ing of sup­posed restrict­ing tech­nolo­gies. I guess this means iTunes is now ille­gal under the DMCA, too?

For the record, the CD in ques­tion was Placebo’s 2003 “Sleep­ing with Ghosts” album, pub­lished by Vir­gin. At least they didn’t have the audac­ity to use the stan­dard CD logo on it (because these copy-control things are out­side of Red Book spec).