16 Jan 2012, 2:48am
Nerdy Computer Stuff
by x



Windows 7 overtakes WinXP even more

This is personally important to me, since when I was 17, I invested money in internationalized domain names. I own a European capital city name “.com”, several less important cities, and some nouns in Romanian. Their viability is promising only as people continue to use operating systems that support the correct diacritics for Romanian words. As even Wikipedia is wrong in several articles, it hasn’t been an easy thing to hope for.

Unless I get a substantial offer,  I will probably be developing most of my IDNs.

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THE WORLD IS BURNINGGGG!

The only thing that one really knows about human nature is that it changes.

Oscar Wilde said that. Oscar Wilde is an interesting dead man. His short, witty, to-the-point sayings have experienced an extreme revival with the advent of the internet. He’s quoted often by people who don’t even know who he was, or only know the Wikipedia summary of his life. He’s quoted because he fits into the construct of the internet: the quotes are relatively concise, interesting, and have an element of romantic elegance (“We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars”) that is easy to relate to. They are not very threatening to the neo-hippie-but-tech-saturated-generation that rules the internet today. They just fit, and they’ve become a staple overnight.

The internet’s ability to do this terrifies some people, notable Nicholas Carr, a self-preservationist Enyclopedia Britannica editor who wrote a piece in The Atlantic titled, “Is Google making us stupid?” In the article, he insinuates that short-span reading, like skimming articles or browsing facebook, is changing the neuroplasticity of the brain.

But I disagree.

Carr himself explains a chunk of my argument:

In Plato’s Phaedrus, Socrates bemoaned the development of writing. He feared that, as people came to rely on the written word as a substitute for the knowledge they used to carry inside their heads, they would, in the words of one of the dialogue’s characters, “cease to exercise their memory and become forgetful.” And because they would be able to “receive a quantity of information without proper instruction,” they would “be thought very knowledgeable when they are for the most part quite ignorant.” They would be “filled with the conceit of wisdom instead of real wisdom.” Socrates wasn’t wrong—the new technology did often have the effects he feared—but he was shortsighted. He couldn’t foresee the many ways that writing and reading would serve to spread information, spur fresh ideas, and expand human knowledge (if not wisdom).

The arrival of Gutenberg’s printing press, in the 15th century, set off another round of teeth gnashing. The Italian humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico worried that the easy availability of books would lead to intellectual laziness, making men “less studious” and weakening their minds. Others argued that cheaply printed books and broadsheets would undermine religious authority, demean the work of scholars and scribes, and spread sedition and debauchery. As New York University professor Clay Shirky notes, “Most of the arguments made against the printing press were correct, even prescient.” But, again, the doomsayers were unable to imagine the myriad blessings that the printed word would deliver.

These analogies are fitting for the internet. I do think the internet is changing things. For one, it’s making us way, way smarter. I learned programming only via free online resources. I learned a skill, which I sell as skilled labor professionally. I learned it for free. I sell it for money. Thank you, collective internet contributors. Just as the unforeseen benefits of the printing press outweighed the negatives, the internet will create super intelligent humans. We have essentially built a hive-mind of information.

Everyone agrees the internet is awesome in this sense, but what about the changing neuroplasticity of the brain? As Carr uses mostly anecdotal evidence for this, mostly of his own experiences with reading, I will use anecdotal evidence as well. I read articles online all the time, I program, I facebook. I love short snippets of information. But when Dance with Dragons was released, I spent 2 days devouring 1,040 pages of gritty, descriptive fantasy. I do read less than I did as a kid, mostly because I spend less time reading books I don’t enjoy. This means the quality of my reading has risen. And unlike Carr, I have no “mental fog” when trying to read a long complicated novel. (There are few things in life more complicated than the story lines in Song of Ice and Fire) On top of that, this series is fairly popular, meaning other people have no problem reading thousands of pages as well as posting online on the crazy ASOIAF forums and participating in the huge online community for this book. These are techy people, and they read. A LOT. Since Carr’s article also kind of attacks the younger generation, I’d say look at the readership of Harry Potter. Think about the sheer mass amount of tumblrs dedicated to Harry Potter. These kids (and adults) love short sweet info, but they also love reading Harry Potter, a considerably long series, renowned for it’s depth and quality of writing.

10 years ago you were limited to the information that fit your social class. Now, the limits are removed. But Carr should be worried. His position as an encyclopedia editor is under attack. Now we have hive-mind expertise contributing to Wikipedia for free. Like the scribes that were not needed after the printing press, Carr is no longer needed. I guess it makes sense to write a book about how you lost your job. We all gotta put food on the table.

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Re: There’s an App for that

This is a reply to DJ’s post, There’s an App for that

Sometimes when I’m hanging out with friends, there comes a time when we are all on our phones, tapping away. Someone sarcastically mentions, “Hey guys, let’s hang out so we can just play on our phones.”

It’s easy to see the disrupt that technology puts into “being human” and it’s easy to be opposed to it. But the benefits far outweigh these awkward moments.

The fact that people are using this increased connectivity to drastically improve their lives is the most amazing part of the internet. One example of this is the Wikimedia foundation that brings access to Wikipedia to Africans who do not have access to the Internet. They can use this information to learn about different subjects, especially science that when applied, can significantly improve their lives. Books were the first step towards this increased connectivity. They are massive amounts of information stored in portable devices that we can gift, pass on, share, and read. However, books can be limited to those with the money and education. Think about the college kids that skip out on buying $100 books to save money; can you blame them? What the internet does is offer information up to a much broader group of economic classes. Though not the whole world has access to this pool of information, many people in disadvantaged situations and countries do. Some of them have used the internet to learn and become self-taught. The educated upper-class looks down upon my internet-educated generation because it is terrifying to them how much we can know and learn for free and without a degree. The connectivity of the Internet granted two great new freedoms, the freedom to mass information and the freedom to easily publish information.

While sometimes, it may seem like you are in your own little world when you are on your phone or focused on the music blaring through your headphones, you are really in our little world. A world that has become larger through massive amounts of data yet smaller in the way it keeps us closer. A world we all created together, one byte at a time.

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29 Sep 2011, 4:06pm
Media Nerdy Computer Stuff
by x



It artists

Linux? PC? We are Mac-guys, Chuck. We are IT artists.

-Chuck, Pilot Episode

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Eye of the Tiger

image

What sounds better, Panda Escape or Zoo Bounce?

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24 Sep 2011, 1:16pm
Nerdy Computer Stuff
by x



My Android tinkering so far: Win7 inspired lockscreens & A Steampunk Slider [Keypunk]

Woo! It’s been fun doing this. The most hilarious part is it took me forever to figure out how to take screenshots. It’s actually quite easy now that I have the hang of it. There are 3 variations of this background. The classic Win7 Login page, The Orion Nebula, and a green version of the classic Leopard background. (A bit schizophrenic in today’s world of cutthroat Apple vs. PC.) So, the Win7 Style Lock screens you can download from here or the QR code below. For more info on how to install & use them, read this. You’re really really gonna want to read that thread.

And now, the first thing I made. My little baby.

The steampunk slider is a bit more complex. You actually move the straggler key to unlock the screen. The movement is smooth but since the keyring doesn’t rotate so it isn’t perfect. It actually kind of looks like the items in a really old RPG. MOVE THE KEY TO UNLOCK THE SCREEN. MOVE FORWARD 3 SPACES. By the way, that’s a fully functioning compass (Super Compass, free in the marketplace). I wish I found a better background. I think it would look really sweet on a desk background with candles, a gun handle, the edge of a glass of whiskey, with the keys just laying on the desk or an old book. This was my first experiment and I was basically testing the limits of the WidgetLocker sliders. This one you just download and install on top of WidgetLocker. You can get WidgetLocker from the Marketplace. Okay, enough chit chat. Here’s the download link for this slider! And the QR code:


If you’ve used anything I’ve made so far or you just pity me, feel free to donate:

 

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Losing your computer is kind of like a near death experience

You start thinking about the things you planned to do but never did. You remember programs you recently installed and didn’t use.

After the frustration of your newfound limitations subside, the regrets set in. The things I should have coded, the designs that should already be done. But I also remember the things I’ve done. The last few months I’ve been doing 2 drawings with my Wacom tablet per day on average. Now I’m limited to pencil and paper and blogging on a little phone.

Eventually the regrets pass away too and you’re left with plans of productivity. Maybe sometimes its good to cut off a limb and see what the world is like with limits. When your limits are removed, you’re like a spring released. At least I hope. I haven’t gotten a new computer yet. Although my phone is basically a computer. Especially for the time wasting stuff. I really miss drawing in illustrator. I miss tweaking my blog into eternity. I miss coding. I miss the working part of my computer, not the entertainment part.

That’s kind of scary. I’ve never been type A. I probably never will be but I’m leaning in that direction at a fast pace.

And yes I do realize I compared my computer to a limb. Don’t judge me. Or do.

I severely want to get things done.

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12 Sep 2011, 11:17am
Nerdy Computer Stuff
by x



Really digging my first Android phone… I almost don’t need a computer anymore.

I just got an HTC inspire. I love it.
All it needs on order to replace a computer for me:
Wacom screen that works with Wacom stylus and fingers only.
Full-featured PhotoShop + Illustrator.
Slightly bigger + with a slideout chicklet keyboard while retaining the same thickness.

And lastly .. all phones should come with a set of top-of-the-line screen protectors. Phone accessory shopping is a paiinnnn.

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