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Archive for the ‘Geekery’ Category

Body Parts ‘n’ Crafts

03 Oct

I went to IKEA today to pick up some more coffee, having drunk (drank?) the last of mine yesterday. I’m down to finishing the espresso Christine left in the freezer. She thought it was instant coffee… connoisseur that she is, she enthused about the taste but declared it was strangely gritty.

Cowboy coffee made with espresso grounds is actually not that bad, especially if you’re patient. The fine grounds eventually settle to the bottom of the cup, where they form a thick muddy paste that is reluctant to budge even when you’re tipping the cup back for the last dregs of — admittedly sludgy — coffee. Yes, I am actually too lazy to decant into another cup. Nevertheless, effete as I am, I prefer normal coffee grounds that I can put through my Swissgold filter to effect that marginal, but essential, degree of separation that keeps me just above "hobo" status.

IKEA, being fairly nearby, stocking halfway decent coffee grounds, and not least having 3RMB hot dogs that are actually discernibly made of Meatâ„¢ rather than the slightly gluey, spongy concoction that normally passes for sausage filling around here, was the natural choice.

Incidentally, I still haven’t been able to figure out what’s inside the Chinese version of hot dogs. The flavor is not unlike an American hot dog of the lowest possible order, but the sensation is acutely peculiar. The entire experience is somewhat like eating a wet, hot, Saran-Wrapped, meat-flavoured sponge cake. I have also seen lifelong vegetarians (a couple of whom who are vegetarian for religious reasons) tuck into these with aplomb, which just adds to the mystery. But I digress.

I hopped the subway, worked my way through the crowds, got some coffee, a couple of kitchen implements, and a hot dog. Perfectly normal, aside from the 300,000 or so Chinese shoppers who accompanied me on my expedition; which, this being a Shanghai IKEA, does not quite lie outside the norm.

So, nothing special.

Fairly ho-hum.

Outside, on my way back to the subway, I walked past some guys crouched on the sidewalk, selling feet.

vlcsnap-2010-10-03-16h17m49s50This is also not actually an unusual occurrence, given certain specific thresholds of unusuality and foot origin. Feet are a regular appearance on menus here, and chickens, ducks, and pigs regularly sacrifice their lower extremities for the ravenously snackaholic Chinese public.

These, though somewhat dessicated, were the size of saucers. They had large, black claws, along with some patches of dark fur and stringy-looking flesh. There were three sitting there on a yellow towel, one just a stub with all of the phalanges missing.

I glanced briefly at them and moved on, not really registering what they could be. Then, halfway across the street, I stopped and thought for a moment, then turn around. Pulling my camera out of my backpack, I started recording video and held it casually as I walked back towards them.

Sadly, there were now a couple of cops approaching as well, and the men were being harangued by a guy in a slightly pink shirt, possibly an incensed citizen or some kind of official in plainclothes. The paws had been packed up, and the men were looking distinctly shifty and eager to get away.

vlcsnap-2010-10-03-16h18m11s239The policemen seemed uninterested; I am willing to bet all the coffee I have in the house that the poachers were simply lectured for a while longer by the Man In The White Shirt That Was Washed With A Red One By Accident At Some Point, and then skulked off to find some other Scandinavian big box home goods store outside of which to vend toes.

I made two passes with the video camera and walked away; I didn’t get any good footage, but I was able to pull a couple of barely usable stills.

So that was my weird story for today; i.e., I’m Pretty Sure I Saw Some Guys Selling (Panda?) Bear Feet Outside IKEA.

———————-

When I’m not coding all night and sleeping for two hours and then coding all day, or surreptitiously videotaping poachers, I have to occupy my time. My latest little obsession has to do with my Kindle 3, which has arrived thanks to the good graces of my parents’ friends, who were kind enough to bring it in their carry-on luggage from the States.

My obsession is actually not with the device itself. While I’m happy to be able to read long-form documents in comfort again, what I’m actually obsessing about is the fact that it didn’t come with a case.

Even my old Sony Pocket Reader, which I partly picked because it was the cheapest reputable one I could find, came with a basic but perfectly serviceable neoprene slip cover.

The Kindle, despite supposedly being a "premium" reader, comes with nothing. I suppose this is in order to help defray hardware costs by way of increasing sales of their self-branded covers, which by all accounts are satisfactory in that they perform the function they are meant to, but provide little in the way of real value to justify their cost. They’re also fairly bland, and have some serious flaws; for example, you can apparently crack your Kindle if you try to open the cover the wrong way.

So, even though I’m using (and quite happy with) my velcro wrap for the time being, I decided I wanted to try and make my own cover. I mean, I have an entire fabric market next door, complete with two tailor friends, and I just met a custom leatherworker down there the other day.

Making a case should be the easy part; I’ve made some cardboard cutouts from the Kindle box for the covers, and have mocked up a basic pattern already. I just need to set the measurements, ask the leather tailor to make a rawhide back and a suede inner, and stitch them together over the cardboard. Believe it or  not, the Kindle box was the stiffest cardboard I could find; ‘hard-back’ books and journals here are about as robust as an unwrapped Kraft single, and I can’t find classic 3-ring binders with chipboard inserts anywhere, they’re just sheets of semi-rigid plastic.

The conceptual problem I’ve been having is how to attach the Kindle itself to the cover. Most commercial solutions I’ve seen use elastic bands, but I feel like they’re kind of flimsy, don’t hold the device in place very well, and cover up parts of the interface. Plus they look kind of ugly.

Most DIY solutions I’ve seen just make a big pocket for the Kindle to slide into, which is even worse, since it covers up most of the keyboard and all the ports/switches/buttons on the bottom. And it’s hideous.

Up till now, the front-running candidate for me was adhesive velcro strips; stick one side to the back of the Kindle, stitch or stick the other side onto the case, and you have a velcro-attached Kindle. The problem is, that glue is industrial strength, and I’m not at all sure I want a permanent velcro strip on the back of my Kindle. There’s also no telling how well the glue would hold on the suede inner, and the solution is far from elegant.

Other options seemed unlikely to be effective and/or outside the scope of my capabilities. Ryan C. suggested fabricating some metal pieces, but I seem to have temporarily misplaced my metal shop. I briefly thought a grippy silicone back with retaining tabs and snap fasteners would be perfect, but of course I don’t have any silicone, molds, or knowledge of how to even begin going about anything like that. Most other options would have required drilling holes/notches/grooves/slots in the Kindle, at which point having some permanent tape on the back of it started looking pretty attractive.

Today, walking through the supermarket, I think I found my answer. It was so simple, I was shocked it didn’t occur to me earlier:

Baoke brand "Sagacious" ballpoint pens.

They have 0.5mm tips, black gel-based ink, cost 4.9RMB per pair, and they’re made in Shantou City, Guangdong. Appropriately for their stature, the words "FINE PEN" are etched into them in no less than two places. They are, by far, the pinnacle of gel-ink based writing technology that can be had for 4.9RMB at the Nanpu Bridge branch of HaoYouDuo Supermarkets (a Wal-Mart company) in central Shanghai.

Yeah, I don’t care about any of that. I just want the pocket clips. Note the little plastic bumpers on the end, those are important too. Maybe. I originally bought these because the standoffs would help prevent scratches, but now I think I may remove them and epoxy on a piece of rubber to help grip the Kindle in place, or cover the whole thing in leather or fabric and stitch/glue on some kind of grippy surface.

I bought a pair of pens (5RMB), long-nose pliers (10RMB), and shuffled off home to… actually screw this, I’ll just post a few pictures, this should make sense:

image001 image002 image003 image004

I was initially pretty dumb about bending the clips, I didn’t realize how difficult it would be to get the right kind of leverage. Luckily, the bottle opener on my Gerber Curve ended up being the perfect size and shape for the task.

I’ll eventually need six of these for a secure fit, two pairs on the sides (I may Dremel two clips short to fit in the pre-cut slots on the Kindle’s left side) and one slightly off-from-center pair for the vertical. I’ll have to sacrifice use of either the USB or headphone port while the case is in use. Since I don’t intend to use the headphone port, that’s probably what will get blocked.

Then I’ll find an old seatbelt (or a new one, it’s not like anybody uses them here anyway) or some kind of good strappy material, and cut it up to make straps; cut slots in the suede inner, ask the tailor to put buttonhole stitching around the slots for reinforcement, and thread the straps through them. Attach the straps to the clips, slide the Kindle onto the clips — which I will also wrap in something for appearances/scratch proofing (heat-shrink tubing would be perfect, if I could find it), and that should do it.

Anyway, I mostly posted this part for Ryan to see, since he wants to copy me.

Nerd love, bro.

 

Kindle Community

27 Aug

Not that I’m all that interested in this feature — though it does have potential for the future, as I’ll explain — but apparently highlighting in the Kindle can be tracked by Amazon, and you can have some of those highlights show up in your local version of the book as well, on your own Kindle.

I’m normally fairly against things like Twitter, endless Facebook status updates, and so on, just because I think they add noise without content to an already cacophonous communications environment. Nevertheless, I think this is a great first step towards a more social reading experience, something I’d actually be really interested in using.

I’m guessing Amazon or some enterprising social network developer already has plans for this, but here’s what I’d like to see in the next few months:

  • You have an option on the Kindle and its associated apps, to send the relevant information to Amazon when you highlight or annotate a book. Yeah, that feature’s already in place, but I don’t know if there’s an opt-out yet.
  • Amazon has either: further developed their own social network ("Friends and Interesting People"), or partnered with someone (ostensibly Facebook would be the best partner for this) to provide a social framework and userbase for them.
  • You then have an option in the Kindle software/app to display: a) Top comments, b) Comments from your friends, c) Comments from selected friends, or d) No comments. I don’t know how the Kindle handles annotations yet, but hopefully they’ll come in unobtrusively, like a footnote.

While I generally don’t like things messing with me while I’m reading, I can think of certain books I’d like to see my friends’ opinions on, and a few people whose opinions I’d certainly like to read (Charlotte, Tishna, etc, I’m looking at you guys).

Even if the literary overlaps I have with my friends are minimal, it basically turns every installation of Kindle software into a portable book club, without the bad wine, crudité platters, and having to listen to the endless cat stories of the guy who invited himself.

Just for clarification, I’ve never been a member of a book club, but I still have pretty negative conceptions about them.

Anyway, this feature would give people new communities to join within the literary field; instead of just adding a "Libraries" app to your Facebook or Amazon Social page, you could join content-oriented groups to get relevant annotations.

Nobody you know is reading that new scifi novel? No problem, just load up the Slashdot book club’s comments. Paging through some physics textbook and not getting some context? Join an AP&M group to see what you’re missing.

And of course, when it comes to monetization, that shouldn’t be too challenging… there’s always additional ad revenue from more social network page views, and you can pay authors and/or celebrities to add their own annotations, and charge an extra buck or two to download them, or have for-pay subscriptions to those special groups.

For me it’s a no-brainer, and I’m surprised there isn’t more noise around the Net on this already. It builds on their existing technologies, it’s something that would resonate both with technophiles and reading purists, and it has two profit vectors; advertising revenue from the social network(s) and payments for premium content.

And it turns every single book on Amazon into a wiki of itself.

Personally I can’t wait until I can see this in action… I just hope they don’t mess up the implementation with format standards and DRM squabbles.

 

Kindley indulge me for a moment.

05 Aug

Now my only problem is getting it over here from the States, when it actually does ship.

kindle

 
 

This article/speech is AWESOME

27 Jul

No, not this one.

This one.

I was having dinner with a group of friends about a month ago, and one of them was talking about sitting with his four-year-old daughter watching a DVD. And in the middle of the movie, apropos nothing, she jumps up off the couch and runs around behind the screen. That seems like a cute moment. Maybe she’s going back there to see if Dora is really back there or whatever. But that wasn’t what she was doing. She started rooting around in the cables. And her dad said, "What you doing?" And she stuck her head out from behind the screen and said, "Looking for the mouse."

Here’s something four-year-olds know: A screen that ships without a mouse ships broken. Here’s something four-year-olds know: Media that’s targeted at you but doesn’t include you may not be worth sitting still for. Those are things that make me believe that this is a one-way change. Because four year olds, the people who are soaking most deeply in the current environment, who won’t have to go through the trauma that I have to go through of trying to unlearn a childhood spent watching Gilligan’s Island, they just assume that media includes consuming, producing and sharing.

It’s also become my motto, when people ask me what we’re doing–and when I say "we" I mean the larger society trying to figure out how to deploy this cognitive surplus, but I also mean we, especially, the people in this room, the people who are working hammer and tongs at figuring out the next good idea. From now on, that’s what I’m going to tell them: We’re looking for the mouse. We’re going to look at every place that a reader or a listener or a viewer or a user has been locked out, has been served up passive or a fixed or a canned experience, and ask ourselves, "If we carve out a little bit of the cognitive surplus and deploy it here, could we make a good thing happen?" And I’m betting the answer is yes.

 
 

Top X

16 Jul

I’ve discovered that there seems to be a "Top" show for almost everything. A "Top" show is what I call all these new semi or wholly scripted shows coming out that feature, say, 16 contestants competing in some kind of loosely defined skill discipline, and getting voted or judged off until some finalist wins a prize, usually money and a title nobody really cares about.

Let me be clear:

I LOVE this.

That’s actually not easy to admit; it’s kind of on par with admitting that I spent at least a couple weeks’ worth of hours just watching MTV reality show marathons. It’s like putting a bag of salt & vinegar kettle chips in front of me; I can’t help myself. I’m not proud of it, it’s just one of those aspects of my personality I need to deal with.

My helplessness is at least partly due to the fact that these producers seem to be churning out these shows almost in tune with my current or past hobbies/passions. The only difference is, there’s a bunch of drama in these shows, which in all fairness makes them really trashy, but you know… fun.

So here’s a list of shows I’ve seen and enjoyed, even though I’m kind of ashamed about it (kind of a weblog confessional of televised guilty pleasures):

- Top Chef (and Masters, etc)
- Top Shot (thanks Vicki)
- Top Sniper (haven’t actually seen it yet, but I can tell it’s going to be good)
- The Shot (a photography show that was only on for one season)

I feel like there should be more in this list, but maybe I just watched too many episodes of Top Chef. I can at least say that I haven’t been watching Top Design, etc… thankfully that crap isn’t even on my radar.

I like to think that I’m watching these shows ironically, like a good little hipster, but when all’s said and done I’m fairly certain that these shows are really just an excuse for me to watch what are, essentially, soap operas.

I guess at some point I just have to admit to myself that I just plain like trash TV. The drama queen contestants, the goofy judges/hosts, the awkward attempts at injecting tension, and the sometimes laughably inept demonstrations of skill… it’s as if somehow this all feeds some kind of deep-seated decadent urge.

And tonight, instead of going out and getting hammered with my roommate Christine, I’m sitting here at home waiting for a client to get me some info in order to hit their deadline.

So, cut me some slack. I need some of my urges fed.