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August 18, 2008

Hello, My Name Is Werner

This is Werner, he's a red fixed-gear Iro Mark V. He's named after Werner Herzog because I expect the bike and myself to go on many adventures together and if there's anybody I'd like to adventure with, it's Mr. Herzog.

So far we've mainly stuck to my neighborhood as we've gotten acquainted with one another. Not being able to coast was a little odd at first but I'm quickly getting used to it. Cruising down 5th avenue on a nearly silent bike is pretty awesome and being able to get to Sunset Park for lunch in less than 15 minutes is a beautiful thing. My food foraging expeditions into Brooklyn had largely been confined to areas near subway stations but that looks like it's going to change. I'd already known getting around on a bike was generally considered to be the fastest mode of transportation in the city but I'm only now realizing just how much faster it is than taking the subway.

Werner did suffer his first injury yesterday on my trip back home from Sunset Park. The roads around there aren't in the greatest shape and after hitting a small pothole my front tire suddenly went PSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHAWWWWWWWWWWWWW~! Thirty blocks of walking later, I was at my local bike shop getting the tube replaced on my front tire. Note to self and others: Dixon's bike shop in Park Slope is one of the few bike shops I've been to where all the employees are not huge assholes.

Other thoughts, observations and opinions from the past couple months:

Modern sports stadiums are incredibly ugly. Faux-neoclassical columns do not lend a newly constructed building any sort of gravitas. Also, don't demand public funding for a stadium and then not offer any affordable seating. I'm looking at you Yankee Stadium. I'll let the Met's off the hook on this one because they're going to have a Shake Shack inside Citi Field and that makes just about anything okay.

San Francisco is a cool city but it's overrated. The public transportation there left a bit to be desired and it's a tough city to walk (probably why the bike scene there is so awesome). However, I did have some great food including a burrito in the mission and one of the best meals of my life at...

CHEZ PANISSE! Alice Waters, oh how I love you. Located in Berkeley, Chez Panisse is considered one of the best restaurants in the country (and the world) and it completely lived up to expectations. Lee and I ate at the cafe upstairs and were absolutely blown away by how fresh everything was. Sanddab, salmon, spaghetti, everything was perfectly and simply prepared, allowing the quality of the ingredients to do all the work. Lee's dessert was a fruit bowl consisting of one whole plum and a handful of berries. The plum was called "Harold's Miracle Plum," and it really lived up to its name. I assume Harold is a farmer friend of Waters'. I can only hope to have friends someday with gardens that yield such amazing fruit. Who would've ever thought an unadorned plum could be a revelatory experience? Fun Fact: Waters cooked the shoe that Herzog ate in Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe.

Another meal in SF was a huge letdown. In-N-Out burger was so horribly overrated that what I would normally consider to be a pretty good burger was disappointing and even annoying. So many people I know spend so much time gushing over how amazing the food is that I expected the sky to open up and start raining Skittles when I took my first bite. Needless to say, that didn't happen. The first two bites were pretty damn good though, I must admit. The bottom bun was nicely toasted resulting in a nice crunch. As the bun quickly grew soggy, the burger quickly became average. Better than an average fastfood joint but it certainly can't compete with Shake Shack. The animal style fries I had were pretty good but a bit much for one person to finish.

Portland has a LOT of hippies. I knew it was kinda known for that but I was still shocked by the sheer number of hippies on every block I walked through.

Le Pegion and Voodoo Doughnuts in Portland have opened my eyes to the magical combination that is maple and bacon. At Le Pegion, I had a dessert that consisted of cornbread topped with maple ice cream and bacon chunks. At Voodoo Doughnuts I enjoyed a maple bar with a piece of bacon on top. Genius.

I'm not going to lie, McDonald's cheeseburgers are teh hotness.

The Dark Knight was tons of fun but shockingly pretentious and clumsy in its attempts at being socially and politically relevant. Nolan appears to have a hard-on for Michael Mann and that's totally fine with me (because I do too) but his action sequences are nowhere near as well presented as those of Mann's. Ledger's performance is as good as everybody says but I found the Joker to ultimately be a pretty uninteresting character. A force of nature I couldn't take my eyes off, yes, but interesting? Not really. I hate to say this, but despite all the love Ledger is getting now, I'd be shocked if he's still as highly regarded a couple decades from now.

The X-Files movie was a pleasant surprise. Mulder and Scully ARE interesting and fun characters and seeing them again was great. The movie is just a big budget, glorified episode of the show but that's fine with me. The show was just a series of low budget short films. I've even admitted to many people that I enjoyed this movie more than the Dark Knight...

Why does all the coverage of U.S. Baseball keep calling them an "international superpower?" Everyone seems shocked by the lack of a dominating performance coming from team USA but they've done very little in international tournaments to warrant such surprise.

Cuban Wheat Shakes are the bomb diggity.

Ba Xuyen in Sunset Park makes the best Banh Mi I've had in New York. Saigon Bakery is pretty damn good but Ba Xuyen is out of this world good.

I recently went to Di Fara for the third time and can now say without a doubt that it's the real deal. Lee and I split a half green olive, half artichoke pie and ate for long periods in stunned silence as other customers watched us down the entire pizza.

Pineapple Express had some great moments but was overall a disappointment. David Gordon Green is capable of so much more and it's a bit frustrating to watch him waste his time working on something like this. That's not to say I wouldn't have done the same thing if I was him. James Franco does give a great performance but the movie ultimately felt like Harold and Kumar make an action movie, minus Harold and Kumar. One major thing the movie had going for it is a potential reference to No Retreat, No Surrender. I'm not convinced it was actually a reference but I also wouldn't be surprised if it was. I'd say there's about a 50/50 chance it was.

Scarpetta, a new Italian restaurant in the Meatpacking District, recently got a lot of much deserved press as the local food critics published their reviews. Lee took me there for my birthday and we had a great meal. While everything was good the highlight was the handmade spaghetti with an impossibly delicious tomato sauce. Who knew spaghatti could be that good?

I recently read the Watchmen for the second time and was better able to appreciate the brilliance of the book. Once you know the plot you get a chance to pay more attention to the meticulous craftsmanship that went into the construction of the book.

The trailer for the Watchmen is awesome but also very worrisome. The director of the 300? Really?

Lolita is a really really good book so far. Good but creepy.

Synchronized diving is one of the silliest sports in the Olympics. I find it so arbitrary considering that almost anything could be made into a synchronized sport. Synchronized shotput anybody? Nothing inherent to diving seems to indicate to me that it's more fit for synchronization than any other sport requiring precise physical actions.

The 2010 Winter Olympics are being held in Vancouver which is near Seattle. I'm so there.

Waking up at 5am to watch Olympic soccer is pretty rough. I'm a pretty emotionally stable guy but waking up at 5am and watching your team get eliminated on back to back heartbreaking games can be a bit much to handle when you're sleep deprived. Nevertheless, I didn't cry myself back to sleep. Seriously.

The Wire is an amazing television show but claims by others that it's "the most important television show of all time" are just silly. I mean, what does that even really mean?

I've watched the first episode of Mad Men and am impressed so far.

The idea that the Olympics are sacred and that politics shouldn't be a part of them are naive and misguided. If it's an issue involving the lives of millions of people, the time and the place for speaking out about it should be anywhere and anytime people are listening. The IOC needs to grow a pair.

The opening ceremonies by Zhang Yimou were pretty spectacular.

Metal Gear Solid 4 was tons of fun to play during the little actual gameplay that it contains. Most of the damn game felt like watching a really cheesy Japanese movie. I loved it but is a 90 minute cut scene at the end of a game really necessary?

Fixed-gear bikes are a popular hipster accessory and as a result, I've found myself being self conscious sometimes when I'm riding around. I probably look like the biggest poser ever but I figure any snob desperate enough to judge me is probably the real poser.

The Mariners are horrible and I don't expect that to change anytime soon.

The Red Bulls actually seem to be turning their season around. Perhaps I should look into booking tickets to this year's MLS Cup?

Going nuts in the U.S. Supporters section at the U.S. vs Argentina game at Giant's Stadium was one of the most fun experiences of my life. Hopefully, the U.S. vs Cuba game in D.C. this October will be just as fun.

Driving from Portland to San Francisco in one day while taking the scenic route down the Oregon Coast is a bad idea. However, if you must do it, be sure to stop by Voodoo Doughnuts in the morning and get at least a half dozen doughnuts to fuel you along the way.

Radiohead at All Points West was predictably spectacular but being surrounded by Kings of Leon fans so that you can save your spot gets old really really fast. It was worth it though (barely).

My brother got me an 8-inch Global chef's knife and it's super badass. I love it and have been looking for pretty much any excuse to cut something.

Bicycle helmets make my already big head look absolutely gigantic.

It's tempting to go riding without a helmet since I totally trust my own riding abilities but it's the abilities of other people using the road that I don't trust. With my cynical worldview in regards to the general intelligence of the average person, it shouldn't be surprising that I don't trust most people to safely operate big metal machines at high speeds.

The fact that female gymnasts perform their floor routines to music and supplement their acrobatics with dancerly flourishes is pretty regressive. Yes, I realize they're all 16 year old girls but still is that really necessary?

Some Barack Obama fanatics are so obnoxious that I almost don't want to vote for him just to spite them. They're lucky that John McCain is even more annoying than they are.

Welcome back to blogging Vadim. Hopefully this venture into the world of nerdom (as if it could get any worse considering the dumb sci-fi crap you're always reading) will last longer than your Myspace blog did.

I've got more stuff to add but this post is getting way too long and I should probably go to bed. More observations and opinions soon...

July 14, 2008

Google Officially Scares/Humiliates Me

magic the gathering recommendation

I opened up Google Reader today to find that my top recommendations list is headed by the official "Magic the Gathering" blog.

Shocked and humiliated I scrambled for an excuse but I had none. I then tried to isolate the cause of this recommendation within the list of blogs I'm subscribed to. No luck. I'm subscribed to some videogame related blogs but that's about it in terms of that genre of geekery.

Yes, I did play Magic in elementary school but I was unaware of the fact that Google has started crawling our actual histories and not just our browsing history. Freaky stuff.

Full screenshot here.

May 19, 2008

My Google Reader Addiction

When I first wrote about Google Reader a little under a year ago, I mentioned that I was subscribed to about 60 sites. I just checked my settings and I'm now at about 250. It would be much higher but I've been trying to exhibit some self control in an effort to keep my number of unread items within a reasonable range.

In Google Reader, there's a section called "trends" that displays information about your reading habits. Here's what Google is telling me about myself:

"From your 242 subscriptions, over the last 30 days you read 16,454 items, starred 11 items, shared 272 items, and emailed 6 items."

Yikes.

Other facts about my GR habits:

Most active time of the day - 1pm aka lunch.
Most active day of the week - Mondays
Most read - Kotaku, mainly because they post so damn much and to be honest, I often just scroll past them and Google counts that as having read them.
Most shared - Kotaku, this figure is a bit skewed for the last thirty days due to the release of Grand Theft Auto IV. Generally, most of my shared items are from Boing Boing, Gothamist, Gizmodo, Serious Eats, and Eater.
Friends - 13

May 17, 2008

Firefox 3 Release Candidate 1

Firefox 3

The first release candidate for Firefox 3 was recently revealed and I have to say I'm pretty impressed. Performance seems much snappier and it's much less of a memory hog now. What the debut of the first release candidate means is that the first non-beta release of Firefox 3 is coming soon, so if you don't want to run an app that's in beta on your machine, you don't have to wait too much longer to upgrade your browser. If you're not using Firefox at all, do it.

One of my favorite new features is the much improved image rendering. It used to be that when a large image was resized in the browser, it would look like total crap, diagonal lines would look jagged, edges would shimmer, it was gross. Now, if you take an image that's 300px wide and tell the browser to display it as a 200px wide image it looks almost as good as the original.

Here's a real life example, the following two images have been scaled down from their original size in a browser (which I then grabbed with a screen capture), the top one is Internet Explorer 7 and the bottom is Firefox 3. Firefox 2 looks just as crappy as IE7 while Apple's Safari has always had good image rendering and looks more like the bottom example.

Browser image scaling

Unfortunately, if you do choose to run the beta version, hardly any of your extensions will work. I haven't found it to be a big issue except that I don't have any of my del.icio.us bookmarks and I also need the developer's toolbar for work. As the first release approaches developers will start updating their extensions to work with FF3 but because the installation will replace Firefox 2 on your computer, if you can, it might be best to wait.

Edit: Just found a way to make your extensions work with Firefox 3 using the Nightly Tester Tools extension. It work but you might want to proceed with caution because it can screw up your installation to the point that it won't even start. If that does happen in the process of setting it up just start Firefox in safe mode and disable add-ons.

May 6, 2008

Michael Ballack and Jimmy McNulty

Michael Ballack and Jimmy McNulty

Separated at birth?

March 17, 2008

NRNS DVD Progress

Unfortunately, I haven't been able to devote any time lately to working on the No Retreat No Surrender DVD. It's high up on my list of things to do but I've got some freelance projects I'm actually being paid for that I need to finish up first.

March 11, 2008

Back from SXSW

Earlier today I got back from the Interactive Festival at South by Southwest in Austin, TX. This year's festival was way larger than last year's and seemed to have been a little watered down. However, this keynote by Henry Jenkins, the Co-Director of the MIT Comparative Media Studies program, and Steven Johnson, a Distinguished Writer In Residence at NYU and author of Everything Bad Is Good For You: How Today's Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter is really fantastic. It's not overly technical so it might be of interest to some people who read this.

Opening Remarks with Henry Jenkins and Steven Johnson

March 5, 2008

Autechre CSS

In the wake of the release of their new album, Quaristice, I took a look at Autechre's official website and their Myspace page.

The official site seems to be okay now but earlier it appeared to have some MySQL/PHP errors all over it. The catch was that they didn't appear to be real. In the midst of the "errors" there was a working link to another part of the page, albeit one that didn't provide much more information than the errors did.

The myspace page is still exactly how it was before and all I can say is that their web designer sure has a fun job and knows exactly how to get their web geek fans to fawn over them. The horrendous Myspace page is not only a great jab at the many many ugly Myspace pages that exist on the web, it's also the Myspace equivalent of Autechre's music. After poking around the code I found that it's done pretty cleverly using only CSS and this image. Bravo.

February 17, 2008

blim818329orgasm@dmotion.tv

daily motion orgasm

Thanks to the increasing ease with which people can take photos or videos on their mobile devices, uploading photos and videos has never been easier. Sites such as flickr and facebook are providing unique e-mail addresses to their users which will accept photos sent from phones and post them directly to the user's account.

About half an hour ago I signed up for an account at Dailymotion so that I could upload some videos I had taken and the unique e-mail address they assigned me was blim818329orgasm@dmotion.tv... WTF? The proof is in the screenshot above. I'm guessing they use some sort of dictionary and just randomly pick a word and append it to your username along with a couple numbers. I was just lucky enough to have the word "orgasm" assigned to me. NICE.

January 29, 2008

OMA = Agents of Sinistar?

Sinistar

On the left is a new building designed by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA). It's a 247,569-square-foot Science Centre for the Hamburg Hafencity located on the Hamburg harbor.

In the center is a screenshot from a classic 1982 arcade game known as Sinistar. In the game, you fly around in a little spaceship blowing up asteroids and collecting crystals. While you're collecting crystals, little "worker" ships are also meddling around in search of those same crystals. I'm not quite sure why you want the crystals but the worker ships are collecting them in order to build Sinistar, the "skeletal-looking boss" you see in the third image.

Could it be that the Rem Koolhaas and the rest of OMA are worker ships themselves? Is this the beginning of an all out attack upon the world by Sinistar? Why is he beginning by taking out the ships docking in Hamburg? There are a lot of unanswered questions surrounding this whole situation but the resemblance between the two is uncanny. Further investigation can be done at the following links:

Gizmodo's report on the "building" in question

The Wikipedia article about Sinistar
Play the full game online on Midway's website

Thanks to Steve for originally pointing out the resemblance.

January 27, 2008

The End

I'm sorry to report that Shampoo Hanukkah came to an end a couple days ago. It was fun while it lasted. In other news, there's been a lot of activity over at Lucid Screening which has been very encouraging. Hopefully we'll do a better job of keeping the site up to date this year. I've also been working on a site called Lunchboxr. It's still in heavy heavy development so I don't want to start publicizing it too much but once the time is right I'll unleash it upon midtown and the rest of the city. So far the it's been well received, even amongst some prominent NYC food bloggers. If you haven't noticed, I've also been better about posting here more often. That's all for now, gotta go practice some Pictionary.

August 24, 2007

More Google Reader Fun

So I discovered this morning that on Google Reader you can share items you come across and find interesting. By sharing them, they're collected at http://www.google.com/reader/shared/10386564782129555979 where people can see what you've decided is worth reading.

August 20, 2007

Ideas for some good Wikipedia reading:

The Seven Fortean Wonders of the World

August 9, 2007

One down a couple more to go...

So the freelance project I've been mainly working away on in recent months finally kinda came to a close yesterday with the relaunch of The Amateur Gourmet.

The site is running on Movable Type which I've become intimately familiar with through the process of building this site, Lucid Screening, and now The Amateur Gourmet. In addition to doing extensive configuring of the Movable Type installation, there was also also a lot of HTML, CSS, a tiny bit of PHP, and an even tinier bit of Javascripting involved. The beautiful design was done by Leah. You can visit her site, Pink Leahtard, and congratulate her on a job well done. All in all a very fun project and a great result.

July 24, 2007

From Boing Boing:

Here's the link to the original post on Boing Boing

Monday, July 23, 2007

Gamer kidnapped, ordered at gunpoint to release his password

John sez, "An armed gang of four kidnapped one of the world's top RPG gamers after one criminal's girlfriend lured him into a fake date using Orkut, Google's social network. After sequestering him in Sao Paulo, they held a gun against the victim's head for five hours to get his password, which they wanted to sell for $8,000. And yes, the story gets even better."

According to the police, the captive is the world leader in GunBound, a turn-based RPG-style multiplayer online game. Developed in South Korea, in this artillery game you get more experience points, offensive and defensive capabilities depending on your skills during battle, as well as money to buy more weapons, armor and all kinds of gear for your multiple avatars. You can only play with one of your avatars each time, but all of them belong to a single account.

The game looks to be quite popular, so the four gangsters decided they could make some quick cash if they kidnapped him to steal his user. Their plan: use one of the criminal's girlfriends, called Tamires, to get him into a date using Google's online social network Orkut, which is also extremely popular in Brazil. After contacting and seducing him, she told the GunBound wizard to meet her in a shopping mall.

Link

Gunbound. Wow.

July 18, 2007

The Magic of Feed Readers

With the mind boggling amount of information available on the internet, it can be pretty daunting knowing where to start reading. My days used to start out by going through my list of bookmarks one by one only to find that the majority of them hadn't been updated since the last time I checked. This is especially true for blogs.

In order to make my ingestion of information a little less painful and a lot more efficient, I've finally started using Google Reader. With the app you can subscribe to feeds supplied by the websites you normally read. Just about every website offers them nowadays. If you're not sure what I'm talking about just look for the little orange radar looking icon (or blue rectangle with 'RSS' in it) in the address bar of your browser the next time you're reading a blog. Clicking that icon will subscribe you to the feed and from then on you can just login to Google Reader to see which of the feeds that you're subscribed to have been updated. You can even read all the new entries right there.

I'm currently subscribed to over 60 different feeds and counting. Brilliant!