This report (via Physorg) looks at the deeper needs of gamers. Perhaps we are not just playing to have a life of decadence and fun, but wanting to explore, succeed and satisfy curiosity which it is impossible to achieve in the real world (RW). Personally I feel more comfortable training myself to do things in the digital world because I can fuck up all I need before I am up-and-running on a specific task. It also makes me able to take more risks in the RW.
Digital vs. Analog gaming and the true reasons we play
This report (via Physorg) looks at the deeper needs of gamers. Perhaps we are not just playing to have a life of decadence and fun, but wanting to explore, succeed and satisfy curiosity which it is impossible to achieve in the real world (RW). Personally I feel more comfortable training myself to do things in the digital world because I can fuck up all I need before I am up-and-running on a specific task. It also makes me able to take more risks in the RW.
The plight of the (nearly) 40-year-old gamer.
It brought me to a funny place. I feel insecure about being this old (37) and playing games like a 14-year-old. not wanting to feel guilt because it makes me have to crap, I made efforts to parse the feeling. With a little backtracking I realized it happened shortly after several people asked me a question.
"Do you do anything but play games?" Geez. I hope that is already clear, but here we go.
Three points, all of which put me at risk of sounding a little defensive:
1.) Some learn numbers. Some know people well. My job in life is to learn tools. I do it on many, many fronts, with gaming being the least accepted of the bunch. At the moment I am playing the DS and the Wii (two incredibly innovative tools), learning to sew on a machine AND by hand, learning how to construct and present sushi, learning to handle a culinary knife, teaching myself to be a better illustrator, organizing my home, learning Movable Type and carrying a full time job as a graphic designer. In the past I have mastered OSX, A/V systems, cleaning tools, graphic design hand tools, woodworking tools (Ugh.), my treo and the PS2.
There is a lot to pack into life. If I could not sleep and still feel good I wouldn't get a wink. I imagine a world of every day learning something and taking naps between. All at your own pace, all in your own interest. Some people travel, some work – I learn new tools and languages with my husband.
2.) Video games are efficient. They are a direct line to stress relief for me. I work hard and my brain breaks every day. Rather than get all jiggy, I hit electronic rabid rabbits with plungers.
3.) I like playing games.
How about those printed solar panels?
This was really interesting read and one which I would find at the beginning of every year. New technologies and the level at which they might impact us in the coming year. A couple stand out:
1. Printed Solar Panels : LOW IMPACT Next step is an energy-generating pair of jeans or solar roofing tiles. Nothing but good can come from this.
2. Plasma Arc Gasifiction: LOW IMPACT (2009) Superheated trash with helpful by-products. Bring it. Build on the craters left by the landfills and do it right.
3. Data Clouds: HIGH IMPACT On it. I can see this one being huge for us in the next year. Ubiquitous data is everything. And it has arrived.
What's your most exciting tech for 2007, whether on or off this list?
Kelvin Kelley's Cool Tools

This is a plug for a site I frequently visit, Cool Tools. It has a rundown of mostly helpful, well-made and super value products and services. In my quest to dsign my life as a simple, effective and cheap machine, I've been scouring and gleaning from Cool Tools for several years. A couple of successful conversions:
Surefire G2 (Buy the battery 12-pack, too.)
Gorillapod (UPDATE: It broke. The plastic just sheared off with little pressure on it. Not really recommended.)
Gorilla Ladder
and not something I bought, but encouraged me to get the catalog: Duluth Trading Company Presentation Twill Jacket
Please comment on anything you find there which you think would be of use. It is a great – and from what I can tell, uninfluenced by sponsorship – site to visit regularly.
Me portfolio website.
I thought this was long gone, but my father kept it hidden and safe for me. My portfolio is once again online. I might even update it now that I know and have made more.
Portfolio
Some highlights? Everything. (hehe) The drawings are my personal favorite part. I would never put up something I hated, so I like everything here at least a little bit. Or it was demostrative of a skill. Or I should shut up.
Go. Wander. Live the dream.
Google-bound
Let me back up a bit. Two years ago I got an invite to beta test Gmail. It was one of those invitations people were BUYING and had the buzz power of a Wii. I was elite. I was the shit. Updated contacts, sent out notices, burned bridges to other providers. Easy. I was in.
There was nothing insidious or cloying about how Google worked itself in further. Gmail & co. works. It does all of the necessary tasks and lets you integrate mostly seamlessly. Privacy and fear experts (Not the same thing, btw. I don't want to argue about it.) will tell you that I am setting myself up to be electronically violated or left in the dirt when Google changes its profit machine or gets bought. I don't care and I don't care. Any system which allows me to FEED NEWS THROUGH MY EMAIL AND TRACK MY SEARCHES(AWESOME!) is my new best friend. So someone finds out I was searching for Brazillian Wax videos or information on pot farms in Manhattan. It proves nothing exept that I am curious. Curious AND satisfied.
More things I can do:
- From Google Analytics I learned that someone from Bulgaria has repeatedly visited my blog. Whoever you are, I love you. Same to the person from New Dehli and Wisconson. We are an inclusive, internationally-minded blog. Welcome. Also, No Agenda is driving 13.33% of my traffic. That is 2 people. Thanks. Every bit counts toward inflating my ego.

-If I look something up in Google Maps I can text it to my phone, then hit the road. Seriously. When did we not need that? I've saved a freaking tree by not printing directions over the last six months.
That is enough fawning over Google, the provider of this blog. There is much more, but I think we have had our fill for now. Please feel free to comment.
Booby-trap your house for $14.99

- TEACH GRAMMA TO SWEAR LIKE A SAILOR: Attach it to the reading lite by her bed. Program the word as "F*ckwad". Extra points if she loves the idea.
- THE CAT IS IN CONTROL: Hook all the lights in the kitchen to the dimmer. Record the cat's hunger meow. The cat will get fed first. Guaranteed.
INTELA Voice-activated Dimmer -$14.99
Tag of the month: Cooking Obsession

About cooking obsession: My boyfriend has a cooking obsession. I get a great payoff because he makes me food. Delicious food. I eat it and ay things like "Mmmm." or "Delicious. Just the right amount of __________." I am going to buy the Wii game "Cooking Mama" the day it comes out to make him happy. I like him happy Jim because that means I am full.
And I did not realize there was going to be a ticking sound...
Please, please watch this a couple of times. The nuances of her performance make it worth your while.
Back from a break in.....Dallas!
Jim and I just returned from a week in Dallas. A nice city whose strength is in it's people. I always miss New York on trips, mostly because the angel Lizzie is here. We were visiting friends for Thanksgiving and had a terrific time with them. Points to reflect upon:
- We got a Wii. I love it. Love it, love it, love it. Now they just need to get more games to make my life complete. So with the wii I've started a new exercise routine. 20 minutes of training in Wii sports per day. I'll start there and see how it goes.
I bought it at Walmart. I know. We had searched everywhere for a Wii. All out. Guillerrmo's sister happened to be at Walmart and she asked if they had one. They did, returned earlier. She held it for us there, God bless her, and Gui drove us there as fast as he could. Awesome. So I jumped from the car and sprinted into the Walmart. I had never, mind you, been to a Walmart, so knew not what to expect. Running through Walmart at top speed you don't see much. I got the Wii and was very thankful to his sister. Fun.
Then I started looking around. They had everything the universe had ever created in that store (except, of course, an extra Wiimote) but my shopping impulse turned right off. Weird, huh? Got back to Target and I again wanted to buy. I'm loyal to good design. I looked really google-eyed in the Walmart, though, because Ronnie noticed and we laughed about it the rest of the trip.
- To get to the train, we needed cash. We walked to a little store up the road. The lady told us the ATM was broken, but there was a Carnival store three blocks up the road. I asked if they had an ATM. She responded that she hadn't been up that way in 20 years. 20 YEARS. THREE BLOCKS. WTF? What has she been doing that would keep her from going up a local main road at least once a decade? Heroin? Birthing? Barking dogs?
- We walked from Mockingbird Station to Northpark mall. 2.37 miles. Roughly the distance from our apartment to Central Park. People mocked us openly (and hilariously) about that walk. There were no sidewalks. We just meandered through the strip malls of Dallas. Everyone was great except the jerk manager at Gamestop (you know who you are) who was too distracted to assist us properly. Look at my flickr account for the pictures:
My Flickr Account
I'm going to break your gayest of hearts.

Looks like Carol Channing joins the short list of homophobic gay icons. In an interview with Gay People's Chronicle she makes some not-so-vague statements about how she feels abut gay rights.
KK: You seem to have a very large gay following. Have you ever thought about why?
CC: I don’t think about them. I’m grateful that they seem to like me. They’re terribly loyal to me. But I’m knee-deep in the Bible and you know what it says about that.
KK: Alright.
CC: Oh, dear. Is this for a gay publication? Have I offended you?
KK: Yes. For the Gay People’s Chronicle. Right now, it’s really not my job to be offended or not be offended. I am just asking questions and reporting answers. I read that you have fought for gay rights. Do you think that the things gay people are fighting for are important?
CC: I don’t think about it. If they can’t take care of their own problems, why should I bother. It’s not my problem.
Hmm. That really sucks. We have the same birthday and I always had a little spot in my heart for her. No longer. She can go screw herself.
Learning Movable Type

While on the subject of geek, look here:
Online Generators
It has image and code generators galore. like the Concert Ticket Generator and the Avatar Maker is useful, too.
A tool for HSX
Actually, I made one. {geek} It is an Automator action which downloads your portfolio page when you run it. What you do is open it in Automator, add your name and password to the URL in the first action, then tell it where you want it saved in the second action.
Here: HSXRecord
I have been playing for years (though very lightly the past few years) and I wanted to get a record of my progress. HSX records apparently only go so far back. So I've taken matters into my own hands and am recording it myself from here on out.
For those of you who have no idea what I'm talking about: I'm learning Apple's Tiger scripting tool to increase my productivity at work and automate repetitive tasks.
The Dance Remix is the best.
Link: From WBEZ in Chicago... This American Life
Pie charts can produce heightened enthusiasm.
An Upload
The '08 race is beginning.
Mr. Richardson said that if he ran for president, as he is considering, he had no intention of conforming to the norms of his antiseptic peers.“I just won’t use the sanitizer,” he said. “I’ve been offered it, but I’ve turned it down.”
This positions Mr. Richardson as the early hygienic maverick of 2008.
“I’m not afraid to get my hands dirty,” he said.
Hmm. Obama/Richardson, anyone?
The Essential Guide to Springfield
Tighten up you crazy cords.
Cord Control from Lifehacker
Get to it.
So I went and changed the title.
Carry on my wayward son. There'll be peace when you are done.
Little Tip fer ya #1

Go ahead and download a Podcast and feel the magic happen.
Marmaduke for the humorless
Roll Call!
Great idea #3: Use your blog as a storage device.
One: Tons of information work. I really liked the cover initially (done VERY quickly), but am thinking of redoing it for myself. Probably not.
Two: Eatontown. The cover is an overlay of some buildings on a model of the city. I'm a geek. Yes. I am.
Three: Another Property Tax report. Lots of data inside. I learned more about how to arrange tables from this report than I ever have.
Four: Moynihan Station Report. Not a lot to say. I love the Farley building and would love to spend time in it as a commuter.
I'd better find something to do while this downloads...
New Idea #3: Just start drawing.

Actually, I did some work on an illustrator tutorial, which helped me create the nut on this page.
Drawing Nuts and Bolts
I really like this kind of drawing. Reducing detail and geometric shapes adding to others. It feels honest. Or simple. Or like a little puzzle. Or whatever you want to call it. If I were to get stuck in a rut, this would be it and I'd totally deal fine with it. Actually sounds kinda awesome.
How to clear the line at the Louvre.
Smiling, inviting clichés
While we are on the subject, I'd like to make images not have to work so hard. They don't solve anything and sometimes dilute a perfectly good argument. If I see one more smiling person on a bank ad or an insurance brochure....
Link
Commanding Heights: The Battle for the Economy
This three-part series has substantially redeveloped my knowledge of planned versus free market economies in the first disc. Beginning in the 1900s and moving through current (2001) and future economies, the series lets anyone willing to sit through six hours of information REALLY know what the history of modern economics looks like. One note: It is a bit more enthusiastic about Reaganomics and Thatcher's policies than I'd like, but I'm open to the other side.
Recommended for anyone, of any age and social strata. This is the knowledege we all should have remembered in the first place. In order to do so, you may have to watch some of the sections more than once. Do yourself that favor and get on it right away.
5 things I know about life.
2. Cats like grass. They eat it.
3. Everyone poops, no matter who they are.
4. People like to control content that isn't theirs.
5. There is a way around anything unless it involves a lot of beauracracy.
There's more but my friend who moved to Miami said that it should only be five.
Happy Gay Pride
Whether in New York, San Francisco, Toronto or Atlanta, keep it safe and stay out late. Maybe we'll see you out.
Blazing Hot Sun
Waldorf=Astoria Starlight Roof map

A couple of things: I think the angle is a bit high now. It could have been lower, though I don't know how much could've been seen, especially in the Rotunda area.
Also, It was originally done on a yellow background, so had more fig-ground relationship.
Catching up on the posting
Two: My arm is getting better, so I can start doing some work again. It has been too long that I've really sat down with my computer and /or paints.
New Idea #2: Isometric Landscapes
A pinch in the arm.
I can't post for a few days because of a comprimised arm. No typing
allowed. More later.
Astor Place
Coming Into Being
For such a large physical space, Astor Place has a surprisingly low profile in Manhattan. It is mostly known for the Kmart, Cooper Union and, of course, Tony Rosenthal's Alamo sculpture, better known as “The Cube,” around which the intersection seems to revolve.
In other cities, a square where two subway lines meet and three major streets overlap would probably be a vibrant downtown core, with a gravitation felt for blocks around. In Manhattan however, it is an in-between space. It is devoured historically by the Bowery to the south, Greenwich Village to the west, Union Square on the north and the recently-renovated East Village to the east. It has a foot in each of these places, and has not quite managed to emerge on its own feet, as its own place.
It should be said that Astor Place is different things to different people. For some, it is essentially just a subway stop, a small traffic island within some busy streets. But for me, and I believe for many others, Astor Place is the relatively large trapezoidal-shaped area that runs from Broadway over to 3rd Avenue, and 4th Street to 9th Street.
I walk twice daily through Astor Place, on my way to Union Square and back, usually through a sea of Ipodded fellow travelers. I notice that Astor Place is changing, and quickly. As buildings rise and fall, and streets and sidewalks are re-carved, Astor Place may continue to exist as a non-space defined by the places around it, or it may coalesce into a place whose boundaries define other places, rather than being defined by them.
On my daily trips, I notice changes in and around the square the way I might notice flowers budding or leaves falling from trees. Recently the luxury condominium tower, designed by architect Charles Gwathmey, was built with a lot of hand-wringing. Its form of wrap-around mirrored glass was a mystery to locals until the water tower had been completed and covered. Back in March 2005 the Cube was removed temporarily, prompting Internet accusations of a fate similar to the Tompkins Square band shell, which was “removed for cleaning” in 1992 and never returned. In response to the cube’s absence, residents quickly, and hilariously, replaced the empty space with a PVC pipe version of the sculpture. The Cube was reinstalled late last year, prompting a sigh of relief. But just last week the statue of Peter Cooper was removed without explanation. In typical New York fashion, people take these changes in stride with a dash of resignation and humor. “Maybe he’s in the bathroom,” a friend said about Peter Cooper’s disappearance.
Around this changing square, titans of American consumerism are growing up like deep-rooted oak trees. We live among the essentials here. We have Starbucks (two! one east, one west), Barnes & Noble, Kmart, The Gap, McDonald’s and Chase all circling the Cube. We also have Cooper Union and McSorley's, Collonade Row and Grace Church and all the undeniable history that comes with them being piled on top of one another. And we also have the stretch of 8th Street known as St. Mark's Place. What we don't have is a neighborhood.
The districts that surround Astor Place are coming into their own, and this in turn can help Astor Place form its identity. Nearby St. Mark’s Place is one example of this. It is changing rapidly, even while it retains its intimate and parochial flavor in the best sense of the word. Cars travel slowly down its length, limited by the street’s narrow width and overflowing sidewalk traffic. Pedestrians cross in the middle of the street. The stores articulate themselves into the sidewalk with abandon. The old Astor of crime and punk rock has shifted itself into history. Now, new Japanese restaurants and markets open up every month. Chain stores, though, wither and die, crowded out by the local commercial foliage. Quizno’s failed because the little market right next door makes tastier sandwiches. It all adds up to a better experience.
Helped along by its vibrant neighbors like St. Mark’s, I feel a guarded optimism that Astor may actually live up to its name, and become “a place.” But it’s contingent on the city making the right public improvements to guide private investments in the area. More defined edges, more pedestrian scale, more sidewalks, more places for humans as opposed to cars, is the way to go. Helped along when it is needed, Astor Place can emerge as an invigorating hub around which equally vibrant parts of the city swirl.
Reserch Item #1: Predictive Markets
A couple of words of warning: The markets can become very addictive. Try to schedule time to pay attention to them, rather than doing it haphazardly. Don't expect yourself to be a pro overnight. It takes time to get the hang.
Having been a member of HSX's movie prediction market for 6+ years, I wanted to see how the competition had evolved. Or if there was any. It turns out that it really hasn't moved far at all, which surprises me. The main examples are weak, underpopulated and poorly designed right now, but evolving quickly.
The Markets:
HSX: My first trade was Deep Impact in 1998 and I've (slowly) built to 550 million HSX dollars. Reliably stable and thorough, HSX offers an easy to understand model of prediction markets and is based upon the actual box office reciepts. The competition is stiff and already way ahead of you here. Competent newbies (of which there many) can really take off in the rankings. As good as it is, they seem to be slowing the impovements considerably. Having said this, when they upgrade the site next week and it's great, I won't be surprised.
Inkling: Looks to be a popularity market, allowing bets on everything from American Idol winners to Apple Rumors to the price of oil. Smart looking site and easy betting tools are appreciated, but there needs to be more to bet on. Perhaps with time and more members there will be something really solid here. The staff is very responsive to requests and seems excited about the concept in the various blogs and news items detailing the process of starting the market. Trading is really easy and plainly evident. It actually asks you a question to help you get to a buying decision faster, which helps. The amount to trade leaves wide gaps for the future. I want so badly to create a market of two, and I believe this is on the horizon for them.
Yahoo Buzz: This market has the most content potential of the new crop, but I doubt it will ever be organized into something better. It is SCREAMING for an AJAX interface and an information designer to grab it by the neck and shake it. It is plainly designed, but the content is terrific and easy to bet on, much like HSX. The focus is (kinda) on tech and tech products.
CrowdIQ: I really tried to like this one. In the end, however, it was a bit intricate for my idea of fun. It is built as a series of smaller, user-created markets, all functioning on their own. In the looks department it gets a 9, however, and it has little moments of brilliance like giving confidence percentages as newsworthy items.
These markets can all be a lot of fun and really bring current events into a new place for you. It makes reading the news much, much more interesting because there is a sort of investment in it. No matter how evil that may sound, it keeps me reading.
I'll possibly add more as I encounter them and update this list every so often.