- Flickr Photo Download: dowconzki apple ad — Lovely Photoshop job on the Mitchell & Webb Apple ad.
Tagged as: apple microsoft mac pc mitchellandwebb peepshow funny - Obie Fernandez : Weblog : SEO Optimization of Rails URLs — Neat trick from Obie on mixing Rails primary keys with readable URLs.
Tagged as: ruby rails rubyonrails routing urls seo
- SampleSwap.org – Download 4.6 GB of free audio samples (drum loops, vocals, synths, instruments, sound fx…) — When I have a bit more time (ie, the weekend) I should probably check this out.
Tagged as: free samples music audio production - Tony Comstock’s Blog » Porn in HD, or Why When Porn Sucks the Media Sucks on it Harder. — Nice article (and blog, in fact) from a maker of porn, debunking the whole porn-looks-bad-in-HD argument. Reasonably worksafe, too.
Tagged as: film technology video hd porn
- SimpleLog. A simple (and free!) Ruby on Rails weblog application. — Simplelog hits 2.0 – nice going, Garrett. It’s looking really polished, but resolutely maintaining its attitude of doing the bare minimum for a blog. In this day and age of spam and similar, that still means quite a bit – but it’s a good philosophy.
Tagged as: rails ruby rubyonrails cms blog simple software free - Freeverse : Think — Let’s limit our attention to one application–any application–at any time. Let’s make it easy to change focus when we have to. Let’s allow ourselves to bring other apps up quickly if we need them, but put them out of sight again just as quickly.
Tagged as: productivity software macosx free
Great Gaming Moments of 2007 #2: Crackdown
06 February 2007
Crackdown seems so unremarkable to begin with. A large city; free-roaming run, gun, and drive action; roughly-stereotyped gangs that need taking down. That hint of cel-shading isn’t enough to lift it in your opinions.
And then you start to level up, and the game unveils its true majesty. When that comes, it’s hard to say: perhaps it’s when you turn to face a carful of Los Muertos thugs and just pick the car up, with them in it, and hurl it off a bridge. Perhaps when you leap from one ten-storey building to another, raining death from above on casual gang members. Perhaps when you stop “playing” the game, and take the time to go for a run.
Like San Andreas before it, Crackdown allows your character to level up abilities; but unlike San Andreas, Crackdown takes the physical limits of your character well into superhero territory. And when that happens, the city that is the game’s playscape transforms.
From street-level, it seems perhaps bland, stereotyped; it doesn’t have the instantly familiar locations (as Dan Hill points out in a marvelous City of Sound post) that Rockstar is so capable at creating, and is perhaps harder to navigate as a result. But as your agility increases, the streets fade away as you spend more of your time on the rooftops. From above, everything makes so much sense; it’s a much higher-rise environment, full of windowledges and awnings, offering handholds to reach you to the skies. And then the traditional structure of the city falls apart. No longer is it delineated by roads and pavements, and obstructed by buildings; the buildings themselves become the fabric, as you leap from roof to roof, impervious to the regimented town planning below. In so many ways, it’s Grand Theft Parkour : like the traceur, your agent deconstructs the urban environment, remaking it in a shape he prefers.
I can’t help but call to mind this Frieze article about the Israeli Defence Force, describing the process by which they (literally) deconstruct the city in order to move through it, ignoring existing paths to create their own. Through that, the soldiers gain…
a conception of the city as not just the site but also the very medium of warfare – a flexible, almost liquid medium that is forever contingent and in flux.
And, of course, that’s exactly the sensation Crackdown generates – the feeling that you are no longer moving through the city, but that you are moving the city around you.
It’s then that the other subtleties of Crackdown rear their heads. The fact there’s no traditional meet-a-guy-and-get-a-mission-structure – it’s all radioed in to you, meaning you can ignore it from the get-go; whilst completing the missions will earn you experience on the way, the city is truly free-roaming from the start. The mini-map, initially perhaps too small, too clumsy, pales into insignificance as you become more agile; a far better perspective on your destination can be had from scaling the nearest tower block.
And, of course, there’s no better way of playing about in an unfamiliar city than with a friend. Crackdown supports a co-operative mode, and it’s a real treat: almost entirely lag-free, with the whole city to roam in, it captures the joy of playing with someone else perfectly. Alex and I spent a good hour of the demo charging around the city to absolutely no end, taking it in turns to set up piles of cars to perform ludicrous stunts, and charging about over the rooftops looking for fun “lines” and new challenges. Like I said: fun.
Crackdown will shift a lot of copies when it’s released later this month, because it includes a free invite to the Halo 3 beta. Hopefully, Halo fans will take the time to play the game they shelled out for, because it’s shaping up to be very fine in its own right. Whilst perhaps not as polished or slick a game as Rockstar’s classics, it refines the urban-sandbox genre – mixing in the athleticism and playfulness of Spiderman 2 and Hulk: Ultimate Destruction – and stands strong in its own right. Crackdown encourages – and, to be honest, demands – to be played. And isn’t that what games should be about?
- Billings 2: Time tracking and invoicing for Mac OS X — Rather nice-looking invoicing app for OSX; worth comparing to Billable, for sure.
Tagged as: billing software osx application apps timetracking - sevennine | WP Audioscrobbler — One of the better looking WordPress plugins for dumping out Audioscrobbler data.
Tagged as: blogging wordpress plugin last.fm audioscrobbler music
- David Seah : The Printable CEO™ VI.1: Emergent Task Planning — Probably the most useful – for me – of David Seah’s Printable CEO series.
Tagged as: gtd productivity pdf printable form lifehack - Unhappy Meals – Michael Pollan – New York Times — Eat food. Though in our current state of confusion, this is much easier said than done. So try this: Don’t eat anything your great-great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.
Tagged as: nutrition food cooking toread diet culture society
- New Statesman – Sex, snobbery and sadism — "There are three basic ingredients in Dr No, all unhealthy, all thoroughly English: the sadism of a school boy bully, the mechanical two-dimensional sex-longings of a frustrated adolescent, and the crude, snob-cravings of a suburban adult." Wonderful 1958
Tagged as: newstatesman bond jamesbond ianfleming fiction novel review criticism for:vincennes
- OmniNerd – Articles: Processing Credit Cards with Ruby on Rails — This might come in handy at somepoint.
Tagged as: rails ruby rubyonrails ecommerce creditcard paypal processing plugin payment - Server move autopsy (Phil Gyford: Writing) — Phil kept pretty detailed notes on moving hosts. Worth bearing in mind, as I think about doing the same…
Tagged as: dns server hosting procedure process web
- Malcolm Gladwell – The Talent Myth — "Are smart people overrated?"
Tagged as: business management gladwell economics hr society toread for:vincennes - pasta and vinegar » Blog Archive » An interview with Adam Greenfield — Nicolas Nova presents his take on the interview.
Tagged as: everyware ubicomp design interview - Interview with Adam Greenfield — First half of the interview at WWMNA.
Tagged as: interview everyware ubicomp design research - Selenium rocks – and you don’t need it | magpiebrain — There is a place for browser drivers (like Selenium or Sahi) and for suites based on browser emulation techniques (such as HTTPUnit or Twill). Knowing which to use and when can result in significant time savings when running your test suites.
Tagged as: for:dotcode http testing html selenium dom application web development - MonsterID [splitbrain.org] — MonsterID is a method to generate a unique monster image based upon a certain identifier (IP address, email address, whatever). It can be used to automatically provide personal avatar images in blog comments or other community services.
Tagged as: identity image library avatar script - Userscripts.org: Flickr – Multi Group Sender — Awesome little greasemonkey script that overrides default send-to-group behaviour, and replaces it with send-to-multiple-groups-at-once.
Tagged as: flickr greasemonkey hack script tool groups - ericappel.net – Project: SmartSetr – SmartSets for Flickr — Remotely-run service to generate smart, daily-updated sets based on metadata. Nifty.
Tagged as: flickr hack sets photography application
- I Don’t Feel Like It, Why Don’t You // RailsTips.org by John Nunemaker — The "delegate" method: "the User model says I don’t feel like dealing with the inbox method so why don’t you deal with it Action."
Tagged as: rubyonrails rails activerecord tips delegate