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  • Dark Liquid 1:35 pm on June 26, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Doing stuff 

    Okay, I wont deny it. Yes, I’m a miserable bastard. Even my own Dad has told me this on one occasion and rightly so, for it is most certainly true.

    Generally I dislike pretty much everything, I enter into things expecting disappointment. I’m a natural pessimist, I guess because I really dislike the feeling of disappointment and so going in with extremely low expectations makes it far less likely I’ll be disappointed (or it will at least take the sting off).

    I rarely watch new films nowadays. Why? Because I will be inevitably disappointed. I have a pretty eclectic taste in films and can’t really pin-point what it is about a film I find enjoyable but I know what it is I don’t like. I don’t like so called ‘blockbusters’ most of the time, since generally the idea there seems to be to tie together as many cliques and special effects as possible with just enough narrative to justify calling it a film. Once you’ve seen one set of flashy explosions and special effects you’ve seen them all. Sometimes, I do find those kind’s of films amusing when they bring something new to the table, or a also contain a particular brand of wit I enjoy but this seems to rarely be the case.

    I rarely leave the house. There is very little I’m interested in actually doing outside that doesn’t require my own method of transport beyond merely walking to get there. There are places I enjoy going to but don’t because it’s either to difficult or expensive or just takes too damn long, by which time if changed my mind or become interested in something else.

    It’s not even really about the money, though I am quite miserly and dislike what essentially amounts to gambling on the entertainment industry in the hopes I might get a payoff of enjoyment when I know the odds are not in my favour.

    Consequently, I tend to play it safe, sticking to things I know and own because I have a reliable source of entertainment there at (after the initial investment) essentially zero cost which appeals to the miser in me as well as placating my fear of disappointment. This generally restricts me to reading – something I enjoy immensely, writing, roleplaying, watching films and TV I have already seen before, listening to music, programming, designing electronics hardware and playing computer games.

    That’s not to say I don’t like trying new things is just that when I do, I like to do a proper assessment rather than just dive in only to find out I’ve wasted a bunch of my time and money. I consume media having never seen them before based on whether I have enjoyed other products by the same creator in the same genre, whether they are related (sequel/prequel) to things I have enjoyed before, whether I find the concept intriguing enough to take a gamble, whether the cost is low enough to justify such a gamble, whether or not there are already things I’m enjoying that will keep me occupied enough not to need yet another new toy right this instant, opinions from people with proven similar tastes as me on said media when they’ve consumed it and reviews from critics as well as the standard marketing material in the form of trailers, etc that are provided.

    That might sound like a lot of work but really it amounts to maybe 30 minutes in total at the very most, usually I can make a snap judgement pretty quickly and then I just happen to change my decision later as new data becomes available and I happen to come in contact with it. It isn’t as if I sit down and exhaustively calculate whether or not I will enjoy something, rather I make a quick judgement on readily available information to me as to whether I’m interested enough at first glance to investigate further, after which (if I am) I then look for some extra info.

    Most things don’t get past that initial first check because I have pretty exacting standards and wildly differing standards for exactly interests me. Most actions films like, say, Transformers 2, have very little information about the quality of the actual film instead giving short snippets of action sequences many of which just aren’t entertaining enough for me to want to invest my time in, considering I’m not much of a generic action film fan.

    The last film I paid to see at the cinema was Watchmen, I believe and I only did that because of information I received on various news feeds I read, the fact that I like the comics (which I read based on recommendations from friends and based on my own research into comics since I wanted to see if there were any I might enjoy since I’m generally not a comic book fan but wanted to try something relatively new) and that the trailers and associated marketing material appealed to me, as they didn’t all seem to be portraying just another generic action film. Some material made me reticent to see it, such as finding out the ending was different to the comic, which I found somewhat unnecessary, but I felt that the information I’d gathered, plus the fact I could go see it with friends who wanted to see it as well meant that I’d give it a go. I was glad I did as I enjoyed it very much and have preordered it on bluray.

    Musically, I like to try new things quite often, mostly because it’s very easy to do so at basically a zero cost in both effort and time (since I can do stuff at the same time as listening to music) via services such as last.fm and spotify. Occasionally I’ll come across music not available but from a band that sound interesting based on how similar they are to stuff I already like and reviews, etc and I might gamble downloading the mp3′s via amazon or occasionally buying an album if it’s cheap enough or I’m intrigued enough.

    Books are very easy for me to ‘gamble’ on, they have an extremely low entrance point, since they need no other equipment to use, just my eyes and hands. They are portable and can be enjoyed pretty much anywhere. I also like reading because I like getting inspiration for my own writing and ideas elsewhere. Books generally inspire me, so intriguing me isn’t that hard, I essentially like books by virtue of them being books so, yeah, low entry barrier there. Saying that, there is an awful lot of books out there I will never read and for most of the reasons I’ve stated for other forms of media, being bad marketing material (cover art, blurb) and bad reviews or me simply not being aware of their existence.

    So yes, I’m a miserably, miserly bastard because I do anything without weighing it up against several factors, some subconsciously, some consciously. I really do want to enjoy things, but I have such high standards for what qualifies as enjoyable and such a dislike for the feeling of disappointment that I rarely do anything new at all.

     
  • Dark Liquid 7:42 am on June 21, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , mobile, web   

    Titanium and other developments 

    I’ve been playing around with Appcelerator’s Titanium system and so far it’s been interesting. I haven’t done very much in the way of app development yet as I am still learning the APIs but I finally managed to get it to run under Linux (Ubunty Jaunty specifically) which is a plus!

    How to get the Titanium Installer to run on Ubuntu Jaunty

    Basically, I needed to run the following command:

    which installs the libcurl4 with OpenSSL library and associated development bits that the Titanium Installer needs to run. The error message that pops up isn’t the most helpful for working this out, complaining about a missing CURL_OPENSSL_3 symbol or some such thing. Perhaps some better explanation would be useful in their installer so it can suggest how you might fix these things.

    I just need to install the android SDK under Linux now (I’ve already tested things out under OSX with both the android and iPhone 3.0 SDKs and it all seems good).

    I might try working on developing Windows apps (which I need to do as part of my course) under Linux using wine for cross-compilation. That would be awesome.

     
  • Dark Liquid 6:31 am on June 18, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Windows 7 Rant 

    Okay, so I’ve used Windows 7 a bit on and off and I’m fed up with it. Like all other versions of Windows it’s basically shite.

    Why?

    Because Microsoft seems to want, for the most part, to not actually be in the computing industry, but more in the ‘computing appliance’ one. Windows 7 I’m sure works great if you have a box built out of 100% certified and Microsoft-approved hardware and you just want to load stuff onto it and use it without a moments thought.

    I don’t. I’m running it on a Black Macbook, I want and need to be able to fiddle with various settings and dig under the surface for when things go wrong. I want to understand how my machine is actually doing what it is doing so I can optimise things. I’m a developer, I want and need to access to the tools to tune my system and monitor it, not just from a coding perspective but from a user’s one as well.

    Windows 7 just gets in the way, like all the Windows OSes before it, trying to dress things up, hide them away or just refuse to acknowledge they exist so they don’t have to put them in the hands of users. It’s incredibly frustrating.

    Yes, Windows 7 is in beta so it can’t be expected to have full driver support for everything but if my linux install can do it, so can Microsoft. I mean seriously, people have to pay for this shit.

    Nothing I’ve done has managed to get everything to work on Win7. The performance is abysmal, the sound doesn’t work and the brightness and volume controls don’t work, which is very annoying when suspend turns off your backlight and there is no obvious way to re-enable it. It’s shit like that which I find mindnumbingly irritating. Surely if you could turn it off, you have enough access to the device to turn it on again, why wont you let me?

    I’ve tried multiple versions of the boot camp drivers, hacked up drivers, custom drivers. Nothing bloody works and the so called ‘troubleshooting wizard’ just flails around impotently like a blind idiot, flailing at the walls in the hope it might hit something to make things better.

    I take back all the nice things I said about Windows 7. It’s nice if you want to buy a computing applicance, not if you want a computer. Then it sucks and it sucks hard.

     
    • Jonas Wisser 1:44 pm on June 18, 2009 Permalink

      Have you tried the Boot Camp drivers from a prerelease of Snow Leopard? It takes some fishing around to find the right installer in the image (particularly if you’re running 64-bit Windows—the top-level 64-bit installer may proclaim that you can’t run the Boot Camp installer on your hardware, but there’s another 64-bit installer in there that will happily run if you double-click it), but I’m running a MacBook 5,1 with Snow Leopard/Windows 7/Jaunty and that solved all my Windows driver issues.

      My triple-boot is based on your walkthrough, by the way—so thanks for that!

    • Dark Liquid 6:10 am on June 19, 2009 Permalink

      No I haven’t. Good thinking there, I’ll try snow leopard and see what happens. It’s incredibly frustrating though.

      Glad you found the walk-through useful though. Glad to be of service :)

    • Dark Liquid 10:44 pm on June 19, 2009 Permalink

      Just tried those drivers and they worked a treat. Thanks for the advice.

    • me 10:51 pm on October 2, 2009 Permalink

      dude….get linux…end of story
      I only use windows whe I need my Adobe apps. After that it’s debian.

    • Jammerg55 11:48 pm on April 2, 2010 Permalink

      Since the advent of Vista and W7 I have decided until they fix their stupid sound issue that I refuse to upgrade from XP Pro, Why you might ask? Well because if for some reason you are listening some music watching a show/movie/anime episode or playing a game, if you just so happen to accidentally unplug your sound device it either causes the program to crash or simply not work, Which is extremely aggravating especially if you have many cats and are in the middle of a 2.5h movie and it crashes. Oh and another thing that stupid comsurrogate that handles pictures in windows plain sucks as it takes for ever to go between pictures when you are looking at more than 10 at a time. So far i see no improvement in speed or anything and being seemingly based off of Vista tech i don’t like it.

    • Jammerg55 11:49 pm on April 2, 2010 Permalink

      oh yeah i dont run linux because it doesnt support direct draw which is required on many of my games.

    • Sam 6:25 pm on December 12, 2011 Permalink

      Oh for the love of GOD!! I cannot believe we live in the year 2011 and Microsoft still can’t get it right!! Who the -ell wants to pay this much for a new pc and not be able to install games from xp. I for the life of me just don’t get it. What year is Microsoft living in? Window 7 is nothing but a piece of crap that sits here with me having to hunt and dig for stuff that should be easy to find. Don’t even go to ‘Windows xp mode” that is not for the every day common people but for businesses only! What a piece of crap! JMO

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