Comment Re:cool idea but why? (Score 1) 197
Color differences are something else a small proportion of the population has trouble seeing, so I guess everything should be in black and white?
Color differences are something else a small proportion of the population has trouble seeing, so I guess everything should be in black and white?
Two Thousand Five Dollars (US $2,005) or Two Thousand Five Hundred Dollars (US $2,500)?
Nice that the settlement form is not even clear...
Eh, heard all this before. Initially I'm pretty sure color and sound (and movies themselves) sold on the basis of gimmickry before they really took off as solid art forms in themselves. My point is that it's pretty premature to judge and most of this is the same sort of reactionary ranting that leads to guys like Murdock going on about how they prefer their news on dead trees and so on. 3D will come into its own, in time, that's all I'm saying. People need to stop freaking out that it isn't all Citizen Kane yet.
...that you youngsters are trying to add to my moving pictures? You already had to go and add sound to it, so I can hear all the yapping instead of the music, and now you want to add color? Damn it, I like me some intertitles. What's next? You'll try to add smell, or make it all Three-Dimensional or something, won't you? Or replace it all with something drawn by a com-PEW-ter. Get the hell away from my moving pictures, damn it. And GET OFF MY LAWN!!
You can see this on their website: http://www.icontrolpad.com/
Looks like the posts date back to May 2008.
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2009/08/dna-samples-used-by-crime-labs-faked-in-research-lab.ars
Granted, they say it carries markers of having been lab-tampered, but that detecting the markers requires currently-unusual sophistication. Interesting, though.
I reviewed this guy and his lifestream idea back in 2004 (http://www.natesimpson.com/blog/archives/2004/08/10/scopeware/) and ultimately found myself pretty unimpressed. I mean, the core ideas are interesting but so patent-encumbered that it will be a decade before they are touchable, and the man himself holds some pretty irritating/intolerant views (cited a few in that post) that left a bad impression on the whole. Sad then, sad now.
I was presuming that it would be untouched simply because that's why people value typewriters from authors. Take one of those typewriters the submitter mentions, sand off all the keys so that they're evenly worn, take it back to factory state, and I doubt anyone would care about it. Same for a stripped laptop. Could be wrong, but I don't think I am.
I suppose you could do this if you never bothered to do any research. Personally, I find having the internet accessible while I am writing means I can easily look up technical details about something that I didn't anticipate needing to look up, and my writing is ultimately better for it. I suppose it depends on your personality and ability to concentrate, but I've never found it to be an issue.
Sorry, I missed this last night.:)
Typically I write in OpenOffice.org and save to
I was using Gmail drafts to keep ideas (so that I could access them from anywhere) backed up as well, but lately I've switched to Wave, which is incredibly useful for me since I can easily tweak them and move them into a proper writing program after they are somewhat more fleshed out.
I am a writer (or at least, I've written a couple of novels and a few hundred thousand spare words that are lying around waiting to be turned into novels, plus assorted other writing), and I have always written exclusively on a computer.
I should be clear that I'm not trying to compare myself with Stephenson or McCarthy; I'm fully in the amateur rank, but I would say that this is mostly a personal aesthetic thing. It's sort of related to the reverence people who hate "digital books" hold for paper copies; they'll give you loads of ultimately irrational excuses down to the smell of the paper as to why they prefer to read a "real book." I've been reading novels on a screen for years, and I've discovered that I quite like the ability to zoom in on small-font text or to hold thousands of books in the footprint of one on my desk (it's really a coffee table but shhh!).
Anyway, as for writing, it's like anything else on a computer. I don't think of it as "using a computer" - it's just a tool that lets me do what I want. Personally, I'd think that the ability to get a peek into how these guys organized their lives would be quite interesting (stumbling over their porn stashes, probably not so much, but undoubtedly revealing (hah!)). Think about all of the incidental stuff you could learn; art preferences (screensavers and so on), unfinished and aborted works, etc... I'd buy one from an author I liked, if I wasn't guaranteed to die poor by virtue of trying to be an artist myself.
...it seems to me that anyone intelligent enough to be particularly interested in chess wouldn't be overly enthusiastic about the possibility of brain damage over time from being struck in the head repeatedly. Concussions aren't funny. I mean, I'd hate to lose a game of chess to some 400-lb gorilla who got in a few lucky shots, and if you did this with any serious enthusiasm, your game of chess would almost certainly degrade over time.;)
I train in martial arts, but I avoid schools where being struck in the head is seen as a core part of training (I think MMA is fairly idiotic for this reason), and I think go is a much more interesting game overall. Combine go with something like a triathlon and I might find the idea more appealing as a mind-and-matter competition.
This article seems to imply that he "got rich" by investing, which is true but misleading. As far as I can tell, he made about a quarter of a million dollars in two months, and it was this capital that enabled him to play the stock game in the first place, since that ~six-fold increase means he invested at least $125,000 or so in order to get to a million (I'm not really sure what he has now, didn't bother watching the video and won't, but I'm guessing he has at least a million now or they wouldn't be calling it "riches"). He could have just as easily lost the money, in my opinion, this way.
Point is, if you don't have $100,000 to throw at the market (and possibly lose it all), it seems fairly intelligent to spend your free time making something you can sell to people, which the summary seems to be discouraging.
One of the most useful pixel art tools I've found so far is mtPaint - I did a lot of little isometric drawings for a game project I'm working on (e.g. this one of a park) entirely in this program. Far easier than using paint or a full-fledged image tool (although I did use GIMP for compositing layered tiles into final images at times).
Not everyone who is "college level" at that age is autistic. I passed the ACT exams at significantly higher-than-highschool-grad levels when I was 12, and my parents only held me out of university because they were afraid that I was too young to deal with the social aspects of it (code, more or less, for worrying that I'd have my pentecostal values corrupted by the evil liberal crowd that tends to frequent such places). They had no problems, though, letting me work "part-time" in their computer store, though, of course, starting about a year later when my dad opened one.:P
In any case, considering that one of his interests is martial arts, I think presuming that he has motor coordination issues is premature. I do agree, however, with a number of commenters who suggest that his "dislike" of video games is probably coming from adults around him who are pressuring him with notions that he shouldn't "waste" his time on such things.
Speaking from experience, I'm a bit torn on whether or not to be happy for him that his parents haven't held him back, or concerned for him that all of the exposure will cause him to have some sort of meltdown when he is a bit older (a scenario I consider pretty likely). It's pretty hard to go from being "kid genius" to "regular guy," which is pretty much the case as soon as you exit the academic world no matter how intelligent you are, since you are accustomed to people actually paying attention to what you say based on the merits of what you are saying and the novelty factor of hearing someone so young say "intelligent things," not how much money you have or how good you look. Like age differences, intelligence differences seem to look a bit less extreme when you get older, realistically, in pretty much all shallow social encounters, and only longer-term interactions with people tend to pull out the differences unless you are dealing with someone who really is suffering from some sort of ASD.
An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.