Posts Tagged gaming

Equipment Failure

My aging desktop PC is starting to come apart: today is the first time I have ever heard the click of death.  I had always imagined it would sound like the disengaging of the head whenever I shut down the computer.  In the middle of reading a research paper, I was interrupted by a violent, pounding racket that came screaming from the case.  It was so loud that for a few seconds, I was actually afraid my computer would explode or catch fire.

Fortunately, the drive was mostly unused and had nothing really useful in it, while most everything remained safe on the primary WD Raptor.  The really important stuff is already backed up on my network drive or on my department disk space, so if anything else blows up I’ll still be okay.  When I removed the offending drive and tried to boot, only the power supply and CPU fans started spinning, leaving me with only a blank screen.  Somehow I managed to have unseated the video card from its connection to the motherboard and after I reseated it, everything returned to normal.

Quite a few people try to salvage failing computer components, but I don’t think it’s worth it.  The main idea is to patch stuff up just enough to transfer off any important data.  There’s the legend of  sticking the drive in the freezer overnight to get it working again.  Someone even got their video card working by baking it in the oven.  The fear of losing data is so great to some that there even exists a sound library of hard drive failures.

I don’t think my computer has much life left in it.  I don’t want to switch to my laptop for everything since it only has a VGA output and no digital connection, rendering my monitor useless.  I suppose I could get a docking station, but I can’t believe that Lenovo still makes laptops without digital outputs for external monitors.  Despite buying it last year, it even came with a pile of serial ports, a dial-up modem, and a PCMCIA slot that nobody would ever use.  A new desktop would be good for games but that was the purpose of buying an Xbox, and besides, high end desktops are still pretty expensive.  Of course something beefy would also be good for my schoolwork, since the last two projects had implementations that were extremely CPU intensive.

Regardless, I think I’m running on borrowed time.

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Ubiquitous Computing: The Nag Factor and Bad Design Decisions

Yesterday, the guy from HP came back and delivered a monitor that seems to be in working order. Finally, after ordering the monitor in January I get replacement number three in March that doesn’t have any problems. But everything wasn’t in working order for long. This morning on the bike, my iPod ran out of batteries and shut down after about five minutes. I have a feeling its Nickel-Cadmium battery is about finished. It was a rough hour and it got me thinking.

As I see it, the ultimate goal in the computer science community is to provide systems that improve our lives without us even being aware of it. Stuff should just happen in the background that we don’t even know about to provide drastic improvements in general areas like productivity, entertainment, and communication. All the background noise should be filtered out by these hidden systems so that we only see things that are important to us. For now, it seems, nothing is being filtered out and we are subjected to an increasing amount of information, almost all of which we really don’t care about. For example, this morning I searched Google for “mp3 players” (as in the physical devices) and only got hits for software programs. Problems like this shouldn’t happen, and I shouldn’t have to type in some weird query to specifically exclude certain results from my search. Some serious work has to be done to limit the scope of what we see to only the things that matter, and do it in such a way that isn’t annoying. Basically, operating systems and software should just work and not require any hacks to get solutions we want.

The first issue that comes to mind is with today’s operating systems. Gigabytes of patches and updates are released each month and harass the living daylights out of the end users to install them. This is one of the best examples of the Nag Factor. An operating system should not endlessly nag the user about installing updates and allowing administrative privileges. Ideally, the user shouldn’t even be aware that he or she is using a computer at all. Updates should be automatic and occur in the background without the user even knowing. Nothing is more annoying than to be deep into writing a paper or watching a movie when up comes a nag balloon demanding that some updates be installed and the machine rebooted.

Windows is far and away the worst when it comes to the nag factor. I’m almost completely off Windows at this point, with the exception that I use a partition on my laptop for my USB TV tuner, which unfortunately doesn’t have Linux drivers. It seems every time I start up the machine, about five nag balloons pop up telling me what wireless network I’ve connected to. About once a week another torrent of nag balloons pop up telling me to install software updates. When I finally install the updates, Windows forcefully reboots my machine. Nothing, I mean absolutely nothing, should ever forcefully reboot your machine. It’s a complete disruption of anything resembling the mantra of ubiquitous computing. A professor I had for a software engineering class once told me that it takes about eight minutes for someone to become completely engaged in a task. When some moron at Microsoft thinks it’s a good time to make your machine reboot, that’s about five minutes of lost productivity due to the reboot, and another eight to get back to where you were. Even Bill Gates complains about the forced reboots in Windows. Since I’ve never used Vista, I’ve heard another annoying “feature” is the User Account Control system, which ceaselessly has you type in your administrative password for stuff as simple as connecting to a wireless network.

Next up is OS X. Two years ago, I started the shift away from Windows with a Macbook. My Windows desktop began rusting from disuse almost immediately. Unfortunately, OS X suffers from the update nag almost as badly as Windows. Nearly every update is hundreds of megabytes and requires a reboot. iTunes updates even require reboots — what were they thinking? And when you install the stuff, it takes forever. Sometimes on an OS X update, my machine has rebooted two or three times over about ten minutes before the login screen comes up again. The updates first make their way to you through the extremely aggravating dock icon jumping out at you. While the dock is a good feature, the jumping icons are not. I can’t describe how irritating it is to be doing something and have a dock icon start leaping out into the center of my vision, ceaselessly pushing my buttons until I deal with it. There is probably a way to disable the icon jumping, but I’ve moved on from OS X, so it doesn’t matter at this point. UAC is also present in OS X but the designers did a decent job of only prompting you when changing administrative settings or installing software.

For the past year, I’ve almost exclusively used Ubuntu Linux for all of my computing. Finally, a group of developers has the right idea. It works almost seamlessly. An operating system should do its best to get out of the way and let the user do what he or she wants. Ubuntu is really close to doing this. The package manager is excellent — you can install anything under the sun (for free) and it updates automatically. You can’t even do this with the Mac by default, unless you install something like DarwinPorts, and even that is a real hassle to set up. The downside is that since every program you install is controlled by the package manager, there are frequent updates that require your authorization to install. Nearly every day something has a patch, but the package manager does its best to be minimally invasive. Nag balloons are infrequent, and a small icon appears in the task bar indicating that an update is available. Reboots are almost never required except for things that affect the kernel and nothing is ever forced on you. For now, I’m extremely satisfied with my Linux experience and will probably not switch back to Windows or Mac unless some serious revamping occurs.

The nag factor isn’t present in operating systems alone. The devices that are beginning to make ubiquitous computing a reality are providing irritations of their own. Whenever I miss a call, get a voicemail, or receive a text message, my cell phone beeps and hums to no end until I touch the screen acknowledging its nags. I’ve had two phones, and they both did this. Neither has the option to turn it off. I can check manually to see if anything came in while I was away from my phone and would prefer to do so instead of being constantly annoyed. I’ve also noticed that late model cars now beep at you if you start the engine and have your seatbelt off. Apparently, this is mandated by the federal government, but it’s just another irritating nag. Some cars will nag at you after the mileage counter gets beyond a certain amount since your last service.

It isn’t just the nagging that’s a problem, though. Some poor design decisions really limit the usability of computing systems and ubiquitous computing devices. The worst of this is proprietary software and hardware, with Apple really standing out as the worst culprit. The iPod that’s starting to die on me has a proprietary USB jack to plug it into my computer. What makes me mad is that it didn’t come with a wall plug to charge it — I’ve got to use the proprietary adapter to charge it via USB or for over $40 for a wall adapter. Since I don’t need to sync my iPod every day and would like to be able to travel with it without bringing my computer, a wall plug would be great. Thanks to the wall plug adapter scam, I don’t think I’ll be getting another iPod if I can help it. Apple’s computers also make use of proprietary headphone jacks and video outputs such as mini-DVI and mini-DisplayPort. I had to fork over $20 to get a mini-DVI to DVI adapter so I could use an external monitor with my Macbook. Universal hardware standards would make ubiquitous computing much more of a reality, with devices seamlessly integrating with each other and providing minimal headaches to the end user.

With respect to proprietary software, the iPod/iTunes combination also takes the cake. When I first got my iPod, I was using Windows, and installed iTunes on Windows to keep my music and iPod in order. After I got my Mac, I tried plugging the iPod into the Mac and using the Mac to keep everything synced. Did this work? Of course not. iTunes on the Mac whined that my iPod was formatted for Windows and that it couldn’t write anything to it unless it was reformatted. I don’t see why the geniuses at Apple could have written some drivers so that the iPod’s file system could be accessed from any operating system. It all seems to be about control. Downloading songs from iTunes only allows you to have those songs installed on three machines simultaneously and you can only load them onto an iPod in a proprietary format.

Cell phones are another example of this walled garden approach. You not only pay for the access to a cell network, but you have to get a proprietary operating system running on a proprietary phone to go along with it. You can’t just build your own cell phone out of spare parts, install your own operating system, and expect to connect to Verizon’s network even if you’ve paid for it. Google’s Android seems to be a step forward to breaking down this situation by permitting custom applications, but there’s a long way to go. Without all this proprietary junk to get in the way, you could see some seriously interesting applications, such as P2P file sharing on cell networks, refinement of video and text messaging, and the eventual integration of portable gaming, media, and communication into one device (the iPhone still sucks). For now, I’ve got to carry around my laptop for web browsing and programming, my cell phone for telephone calls, my iPod for music, and my PSP for gaming. Oh, and maybe a watch to tell time.

Finally, coming back to my dying iPod, battery technology needs significant improvements in order to further the goals of ubiquitous computing. Reducing I/O and computational complexity on the software side can only help but so much. The typical Ni-Cd battery, regardless of the device, lasts about two to three years and only runs for a few hours under full load. This is crap. Until batteries last for a week under full load and hold a full charge for nearly ten years, we’re just going to be throwing away perfectly good equipment. My iPod, which is perfectly fine with the exception of the battery, could last an indefinite amount of time. It seems really wasteful to toss cell phones and other mobile devices every few years just because a battery died. Reduced reliance on proprietary hardware and software could help this problem as well, for parts could be easily interchanged or upgraded if new features become available.

If the tech industry would focus on reducing the nag factor and increasing the openness of design standards, the shift to ubiquitous computing could be faster and more seamless. Until then, we’ve got to deal with the endless OS nag balloons, proprietary devices, and terrible battery life.

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Upgrade Headaches…

Yesterday I installed Intrepid Ibex 8.10 on my aging (now ex-gaming) desktop machine in an attempt to breathe new life into it.  I wound up biting the bullet and ordering a new monitor and Xbox 360 for games, so now I’ve got two monitors.  Neither the Lenovo nor the Mac laptop I’ve got support two external monitors, so I thought I would give the desktop a try.  Though the installation went fairly well, two really annoying things weren’t working correctly, and a third I’m still dealing with.

First, the mouse.  I have a Razer Copperhead USB mouse that’s been great for years and when I first booted after the installation, it didn’t work.  The lights came on, but I couldn’t move it.  If I unplugged it and plugged it back in, it worked fine.  This would happen every time I rebooted the machine: no movement, unplug, plug back in.  After some digging around, I found the problem was that the mouse firmware had to be upgraded.  Of course, Razer only has the update software for Windows, so after some screwing around with that, I rebooted with the Linux machine and it worked fine without having to unplug the mouse.

Second, the dual head support for my ATI video card was lacking after the initial install, just mirroring my primary monitor onto the other.  I was able to fix this by installing the proprietary ATI drivers and using the ATI Catalyst Control Center to “merge” both screens into one.  Of course, this didn’t entirely fix the problem since every time I rebooted, the mirroring came back.  I finally found out that after I set the displays correctly in the ATI Control Center that I had to open up the Ubuntu Display Settings panel and hit “Apply”.

Both of these problems were really annoying, kept me searching and frustrated for hours, and have rather quirky solutions.  While I really like Linux, stuff like this doesn’t seem to happen as much with Mac or Windows.  However, community support is pretty good so after some extensive research I was finally able to find others with my problems that had found solutions.

Now everything seems to be working well, except that the stand for my monitor arrived bent.  It’s only a couple millimeters out of shape and the box it came in seemed undamaged, so I’m not sure what happened.  It’s bad enough that when I type sometimes the monitor wobbles.  It’s something I could probably live with, but the wobbling is annoying and I paid for a new product (not refurbished) so I don’t feel like letting it go.  So, I spent two hours with phone tree hell HP tech support about returning it and then filed an RMA request from the online vendor.  It would be best if I could just replace the stand since the monitor is fine — there’s only one stuck pixel.  Shipping the whole thing back is going to be expensive if the RMA is approved.  I guess the question is if the bent stand is worth another $30.

I still haven’t gotten to the Xbox yet because of all this (and some other annoying legwork type stuff for a research proposal that is due this week).  It also turns out that I got the wrong RCA to mini-stereo adapter and will have to try to exchange that so I can plug in the Xbox sound to the line in on my PC.  The whole thing is kind of funny because part of the reason I went with an Xbox was to avoid dealing with putting together a new system and troubleshooting the whole thing when a bunch of stuff doesn’t work.  Instead, I got more than I bargained for.

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PC vs. Console: I think I’m crossing over to the dark side…

Over the past few years I’ve lost some of my interest in gaming and as a result my desktop PC is several years old and rusting under my desk.  I don’t use Windows for anything anymore and I’ve heard so many bad things about Vista, so I’ve been using Mac and Linux exclusively for awhile.

I would really like to get back into more games, but I just can’t see myself throwing out $2000 for a computer that I would use exclusively for games and be unable to carry around anywhere without a lot of effort.  It just isn’t worth it anymore.  So, I’m pretty sure I’m going to get an Xbox.

It seems that a real shift is taking place with developers placing emphasis on console games over PC, making most PC games a buggy port of their console counterparts.  Most new PC games are packed with nasty copy protection rootkits that are nearly impossible to remove.  Finally, new PC games all seem to have extremely steep system requirements, meaning you have to undertake a massive and expensive upgrade in order to get acceptable performance.  All these are things I don’t want to deal with, especially when I can get a top of the line Xbox for less than the price of a halfway decent video card.

My main concern over console games is the controller.  I started on PC games and feel natural with keyboard and mouse.  At my height of gaming, I became one with the computer, leveling the crosshairs on an opponent and blasting away without the slightest thought of what keys to press and how much to move the mouse.  I’ve played on a fair number of consoles and I’ve never adjusted to the controllers.  I always feel sluggish and usually have to remember where the buttons are and what they do.  Because of the controller, many RTS and simulation games are exclusively developed for the PC, which is a drawback in and of itself.

Regardless, I think I’m going to make the switch anyway.  With enough practice, I can adjust to the controller.  It’s also going to be a huge cost savings since it’s far easier to shell out $400 every four or five years for a new console compared to several thousand for PC upgrades.  The additional money for PC upgrades would be more justifiable if I were to use the computer for work, but Windows is useless for development and the lack of portability is also detracting.

This leads into my proposed setup: get a new monitor with DVI and DisplayPort for my laptops and HDMI input for consoles.  This way I can use the monitor for computing and for games.  My current external monitor has a 4:3 aspect ratio with only one digital input and I would also prefer something widescreen.  With only one digital input, it’s a real pain when I want to switch the Mac laptop for the Linux one or on the rare occasion that I want to boot up the desktop.

It seems that 16:9 1080p monitors are rare and are pretty limited in terms of functionality.  The only one that remotely interests me is the Dell S2409W and I’ve it uses the poor quality TN panel which gets a lot of complaints. It may be okay for the Xbox, but I don’t know about using it with the computers.  So, it seems 16:9 monitors are out since all the other ones I can find are also TN panels.  Larger 30+ in TV-style monitors are also out since the cheapest of those runs about $800, which is out of my price range, especially for something that may not fare well as a computer monitor several feet from my face.

So, this means PC-oriented 16:10 aspect monitors.  I would prefer something at least 24 inches and I can’t really get anything with a resolution greater than 1920 x 1200 since my laptops have terrible video cards.  Being 16:10, it means that when I plug in the Xbox, I’ll get 100 pixel black bars on the bottom and top of the screen, but that’s something I can live with since the screen will be large enough.  Two 16:10 monitors interest me: the Dell 2408WFP and the HP LP2475W.  Of those, the HP seems the better buy since its panel is the highly coveted IPS and it also seems to be nearly $100 cheaper depending on the vendor.  Both have an HDMI input, two DVI inputs, and a DisplayPort input.

Then, I can pick up a Pro Xbox for about $300.  I can’t see the advantage of the Elite except for the 120 GB hard drive (vs. 60 on the Pro).  Games are a bit more on the expensive side compared to the PC, but it’s probably all worth it not having to worry too much about endless installs, wasted hard drive space, and hardware-specific bugs.

So, I get an XBox Pro for about $300 and a 24 inch monitor for about $600, which is quite the savings over a massive PC upgrade.  But there’s one problem: sound.  Consoles are oriented towards those with dedicated 7.1 surround receivers to make it sound like a battle is being fought in the room.  I don’t have that — I would prefer to just plug in some headphones, but the Xbox doesn’t have a headphone jack.  This leaves me with three options, none of which I really care for:

1) Get a receiver.  My dad’s got an old receiver that could handle the analog AV from the Xbox.  I would really like to avoid this because it means yet another large piece of electronic junk sitting in my room.  Furthermore, it would do nothing except provide me with a headphone jack for my games.  This seems like a waste.

2) Connect the analog AV cables from the Xbox to a pair of headphones with some adapters.  This isn’t really a good option either since there is no way to control the volume.  I’ve heard of at least one person doing this and having it work, but as he said, there’s no volume control.  You’re just stuck at whatever volume the Xbox puts out.

3) Connect the analog AV cables to the line in on my Macbook.  I can also do this with some adapters and then plug the headphones into the Macbook and use the laptop as an amplifier.  I’m not sure how well this would work either in terms of losing signal clarity and whines from the laptop making their way into my headphones.  Also, I’m not even sure if the line in on the Macbook is stereo.  I really don’t care about surround on headphones, but I would at least like to have stereo.

At this point, the third option is probably the best bet, and if that doesn’t work, try the others.  I can’t seem to find many others on the Internet with this kind of setup.  Most who use a PC monitor with their console still connect their sound to a dedicated receiver or a powered set of PC speakers.

I’ll probably wind up doing more research before I settle on something.  Or, I might just forget it if it really looks like this won’t work.

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Losing interest in games

It used to be that I would sacrifice hours of sleep in high school to play computer games every night.  Many nights I would stay up past 11 playing Counter-Strike or the latest Command and Conquer.  I could stay on the computer forever and then be a zombie in class the next day, nodding off as early as 9 or 10 in the morning.  During the summers, it would be the same thing: suffer through a run in the late morning heat and then play games the rest of the day.  I don’t think my mom cared for that, doing nothing most of the day, and was probably relieved when I started working after my junior year.

Those days are over and I don’t think they are coming back.  Something happened when I started college that has really changed my interests in nearly everything.  I’m not sure what it was or exactly how it happened, but it seems to have been a slow, gradual process that probably completed its transformation by the time I finished undergrad.  I’m different now and I wish I knew why.

I want to play video games, but I just can’t get into it.  I’ve started playing stuff occasionally, such as the latest episodes of Half-Life 2 and Portal.  Those I finished because of their brevity, but longer stuff, like Call of Duty 4 and some recent RTS games I just started on, got stuck in one place and then just said: "screw it".  None of them are nearly as exciting as they would have been eight or ten years ago.  The most recent stuff that’s out there now would have been mind-blowing to me back then: the latest GTA, Fallout 3, and possibly Spore.  I would have spent most of my life playing them, but not anymore.

It appears as though I’m not the only one that this has happened to.  Some of the research says it’s to do with social networking; that everyone would rather play games with people they know rather than against unknown opponents online or a computer in single player.  I do notice a correlation between the time I spend on sites like Digg and Facebook and the decrease in time I spent playing games.  However, I still notice tons of people about my age and older that still play a fair amount: the assistants at PT talk occasionally about meeting up after work to play Halo, the physical therapist (in his 40s) even says he plays Madden on the weekends, my roomate plays plenty of PC games, and even my dad finished Crysis when I just dropped it after the zero-grav part.

In some ways, programming replaced the satisfaction I got from playing video games.  It’s better because I have complete control over the environment.  In video games, you are forced to live in the environment the developers create and play by their rules.  It’s like the first Matrix movie: why play by the rules when you can bend them or even create your own?  Why should I be restricted to use a shotgun to solve the problem of a developer-imagined monster when I can solve much more interesting problems of my own creation with tools of my own creation?  Yesterday, I spent all day thinking about a job-scheduling type scenario for wireless sensor networks.  Last night, I finally figured out a solution.  While the problem wasn’t entirely my doing, coming up with the solution was much more in-depth and satisfying than blasting the crap out of a few enemy soldiers with a C-130 in CoD 4.  And, my solution may not be the best.  My adviser or the other guys in our group may come back with some constructive criticism to help with a better answer.

Again, I would really like to get back into gaming.  Doing work can be satsifying, but it is also draining and it would be great to have some kind of release since I can’t run.  Some of the stuff that’s out there right now sounds like it could be fun, but I don’t even know if my PC can handle it.  Possibly, I’d have to upgrade the video card at the least, and of course that’s a slippery slope to just upgrade the whole desktop that’s been rusting under my desk.  It’s too loud when it’s on and generates a ton of heat, so there’s a massive incentive to figure out how to make the whole thing quieter.  Furthermore, I’ve only got one monitor that I use with my laptop, so I’d have to unplug it, the keyboard, and the headphones and put them all into the PC whenever I want to play anything.  There’s also the cost issue: right now I’ve got to save since my surgery/rehab is expensive.

Maybe I’ll try once again to get back into gaming, and maybe I won’t.  Maybe there will be another sea change that will shift my attitude and fun factor when I play, but I’m not so sure.

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Fake PSP Memory Stick: Paypal Refund

I was lucky, the seller of the fake 8GB Memory Stick Duo for my PSP gave me a refund, as I returned the item.

I doubt this happens to many people. I think I’ve learned my lesson and will have to do more extensive research the next time I think about buying something on eBay.

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It starts again

Fall Break was pretty short, but it was great not to have to go to school or do much work. I watched a couple movies and played some Counter-Strike Source. The new version plays almost exactly like the original and is just as addicting. The only problem is that I’m not nearly as good as I was in high school and sometimes get it handed to me. I used to stay up late on school nights and sacrifice sleep for gaming. On the weekends I would play for hours at a time. Now I’m lucky if I get in more than an hour a week. The game runs pretty well on my computer with everything on high at 1600 x 1200, but I sometimes get serious framerate drops in big firefights. I also had to turn on vsync because the LCD was tearing at anything above 60 FPS. The physics are impressive too, but don’t play much of a role in gameplay.

I also got to see my girlfriend for a bit, which was nice, since I think we’ll both be pretty busy through Thanksgiving. I also watched Fahrenheit 911 for the first time. The film had very little factual evidence to back up its arguments, in fact, the last half of the film was basically an emotional appeal. In the first half, Moore tries to give evidence that there is some kind of conspiracy between the Saudis and both Bush presidents, but it really falls short when you do some searching (http://www.davekopel.com/Terror/Fiftysix-Deceits-in-Fahrenheit-911.htm) and realize that most of the stuff was taken out of context. I’ve heard that he did the same thing with Bowling for Columbine, but haven’t seen that one.

It also turned out that last week there was a fiasco at one of the regular season Cross Country meets in my district. Apparently 20 some runners were disqualified for wearing those Lance Armstrong wrist bands. It even made national headlines (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=1901312). There was some new rule that went into effect banning jewelry but nobody was told about it and only the officials knew. There seems to be mixed opinions on a couple message boards, but considering that none of the runners were told before the race started, the whole thing seems asinine. My sister even got in trouble for stud earrings in her race.

We got our next project for Networking — we have to implement our own version of TCP with the handshaking, reliable data transfer, and connection closure. That should be interesting since we are essentially writing a library that also uses multithreading. Supposedly all we have to do to test it is to put a single line of code in another program that uses Java TCP and it will switch from using the Java TCP to our TCP. I also have a midterm in that class on Monday and this Freecell project for Software Dev due on Tuesday. I haven’t even played Freecell before and probably suck at it, but I’m just adhering to the rules the professor gave us. Hopefully it will work out, because I’m going to be real short on time this weekend.

Tomorrow it’s off to Indiana for Pre-Nationals. I’m hoping it will be a good trip, unlike two years ago. It’s supposed to be fairly cold for this time of year though, but nothing like Iowa.

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I am so sick of having to become a ‘member’ of a gaming site just so I can download a mod from their mirrors. This member crap was unheard of a couple years ago, but now I have to register a username, password, and email address (all of which I will forget if I ever come back) with each site so I can download. Give me a break.

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Gaming and Running

Looks like a lot of cool stuff is or will be released soon. The first stable release of PHP 5 was unveiled yesterday, which apparently adds a lot of C++ like functionality. We probably won’t be using it at work anytime soon, but maybe by next summer. I also hear Doom 3 just went gold and will be available in August. And then there is S.T.A.L.K.E.R, which looks like a cool FPS/RPG combo that seems like it will play a lot like the System Shock series. There is also HL 2 of course, but we all know its history of shaky release dates. Last weekend, I got a good deal on the UT 2004 DVD Edition, mainly so I could look at all the modding tutorials that come with it. The guy in the cube next to me is working on a part of the America’s Army game and is using those tutorials for help. He said they are quite good.

Basically it looks like all these new games will be out by the time I get back to school. Oddly enough, I might have more time at school than I do now since I won’t have to work 8 hours a day.

I also watched Kathy run the 5000 in the Olympic Trials last weekend. It was pretty cool to see someone you know run on national TV like that. Sean Graham and Matt Lane, who were also on the team, ran the 5000 Monday night and both made it to the finals, but it was on at midnight, so there was no way I could watch it without sacrificing a lot of sleep. The finals are on Friday, though, so I should be able to see that. Last fall the idea was thrown around that a couple guys were going to take a cross country road trip out to Sacramento to watch it, but that kind of fell apart. That would have been a cool trip. Maybe if I get an internship on the west coast next summer or something I will get to do a trip like that.

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Oh, the fun

Now I’ve got to sort out the mess of the company intranet website. This thing has just grown and grown and been pieced together without too much consideration to the site as a whole. Now its corresponding database has over 200 tables. 200! Last summer it had like 30. And I have to clean this thing up. Some of the tables aren’t even being used. It would make a lot more sense and be a lot more interesting to start from scratch and only put in the stuff that is absolutely necessary. No more of this ‘that’s a good idea, let’s just pile it on’ kind of philosophy, because sooner or later it’s going to pay.

In the last 24 hours have you:
01. Cried: no
02. bought something: yeah, gas = $$$
03. Gotten sick: no
04. Sang: no
05. Eaten: Had a ham and cheese sandwich for lunch with pretzels, and then some pasta and fish for dinner
06. Been kissed: unfortunately not
07. Felt stupid: I don’t think so
08. Wanted to tell someone you loved them, but didn’t: I told them
09. Met someone new: yeah, a new Sys Admin at work
10. Moved on: I guess not
11. Talked to an ex: I don’t have any
12. Missed an ex: No exes
13. talked to someone you have a crush on: yeah, if you count my girlfriend
14. had a serious talk: At work we talked about some of the stuff I was working on
15. missed someone: yeah
16. hugged someone: no
17. Fought with your parents: no
18. Dreamed about someone you can’t be with: yeah

Social Life:

01. Best girl friend: Sarah
02. Best guyfriend: not really sure on this one … Schoener?
03. Boy/Girlfriend?: girlfriend
04. If no, current dating partner: same as above
05. Hobbies: running, but I consider that an integral part of my life and way more than a hobby. I consider my hobbies to be: computer gaming, programming, hacking, plots to take over the world, etc.
06. Pager/Cell: I hate cell phones, they are as prolific and as annoying as smoking in the 70s
07. are you the center of attention or the wallflower: the wallflower, blending in with the crowd so I can do my own thing
08. what type of automobile do u drive: Ford Mustang GT
09. would you rather be with friends or on a date: on a date
10. do you have a job: yeah, bottom of the totem pole intern
11. do you attend church: when I’m not at school
12. do you like being around people: if I know them well

Personal:

what are some of your pet peeves: well, cell phones for starters, people yell and scream on them at school all over campus, even in the library, my next project is to buy or build a cell phone jammer. Muhahahaha! I also can’t stand people who can’t drive and either tailgate you or cut you off.
have you ever liked someone you had no chance with: yeah, I guess
have you ever cried over the opposite sex: yeah

who broke your heart: my girlfriend broke up with me a couple years back
do you have a “type” of person you always go after: hmm not really
have you ever lied to your best friend: probably, not that I wouldn’t regret it
ever wanted to get revenge on someone because they hurt you: yeah
rather be dumper or dumped: dumper
rather have a relationship or a “hookup”: relationship
want someone you don’t have right now: no
ever liked your best guy/girl friend: my girlfriend is my best friend
do you want kids: not right now, it just seems like trouble to me
do you believe in psychics: not really
do you believe you know the person whom you will marry at this point in time: of course

what is your favorite part of your physical appearance: the hair, short so I don’t have to mess with it
what is your favorite part of your emotional being: emotional being? I don’t know, I try not to let everything control me, I am in control of my life, not the other way around.
are you happy with you: yes, but there is always room to improve
are you happy with your life: same as above
if you could change one thing : change my attitude when it’s bad

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