Sci-fi, comics, humor, photos…it's all fair game.

Archive for July, 2009

Spamming Tech Support

Friday, July 31st, 2009 Posted in Annoyances, Spam | 1 Comment »

A real “white hat SEO” wouldn’t spam their sales pitch to a tech support contact form. #

Microsoft Stores, Sherpa, and Political BS

Thursday, July 30th, 2009 Posted in Computers/Internet, Politics | No Comments »

  • Huh. Still not sure what the point of a Microsoft retail store is going to be, but they’re opening in Mission Viejo. #
  • Why do some people feel the need to make $#!7 up to enhance political messages? Don’t they know it undermines their position when exposed? #

Sherpa for Android

  • Trying out Sherpa. It thinks I’m still in San Diego. And local search turns up several places that have been closed for years. #
  • Sherpa also has lots of miscategorized stuff. It’s a Grind as groceries instead of coffee? #
  • Wow…Sherpa lists the “Irvine Meadows Amphitheater.” Where are they getting their data? #

Twitter Homepage Redesign

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009 Posted in Web Design | No Comments »

New Twitter home page: good move emphasizing conversation & search over “What are you doing?” & soup. #

The Other 10 Essentials of Comic-Con

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009 Posted in Comic Con 2009, Travel | No Comments »

You know what to pack on vacation. You know to bring your camera, spare batteries, and a bottle of water. But here are ten things you might not think of that will come in handy at a comic-con.

  1. Medical tape – preventing blisters from costume shoes. (Also, repairs in a pinch)
  2. Extra lanyard for your camera
  3. Umbrella for outdoor lines
  4. Costume-appropriate bag
  5. Insoles – you’ll be walking a LOT
  6. Burt’s Bees Res-Q Ointment for sunburn in case your sunscreen wears off or otherwise fails
  7. Safety pins
  8. Reliable writing surface (in case you have paper but not a notebook)
  9. Napkins or paper towels (especially if you’re bringing your own food)
  10. Extra shirt to go over tank tops to prevent sunburn or backpack friction

Read more Tips for Comic-Con.

Comic-Con 2009 Round-Up

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009 Posted in Comic Con 2009 | No Comments »

We’re back from Comic-Con International in San Diego. As always, it was fun but exhausting. Photos are up at Flickr (most of them — there’s still a few from Saturday and Sunday panels that we need to go through).

Costumes

For the first time in six years, we both wore costumes during the con. Back in 2003 we went as Riff and Gwynn from Sluggy Freelance. Since then, Katie’s picked one or two days to go in costume (pirate, Sylar victim, and Yomiko Readman from Read or Die), but I’ve stuck with shorts and a t-shirt every day.

So this year, on Friday, Katie repeated her Yomiko costume from last year (only without the trench coat), and I went as the Golden-Age (1940s) version of the Flash (a.k.a. Jay Garrick). On Saturday, Katie went for subtle, and dressed as Kate Austen from Lost.

Liveblogging

I did a lot of posting through Twitter and my other blog, Speed Force, where you can find write-ups of three panels:

There’s more running commentary on the posts tagged CCI 2009 at Speed Force.

Coming Soon

Over the next few days we’ll both be posting about the trip, about some of the panels we attended, and about interesting things that happened while we were there.

Comic-Con Hotel Review: Holiday Inn on the Bay

Monday, July 27th, 2009 Posted in Comic Con 2009, Travel | 1 Comment »

During Comic-Con we stayed at the Holiday Inn on the Bay. It’s sort of in walking distance of the San Diego Convention Center (we did it one morning…and I did it again one evening after an incident with the shuttle that deserves its own write-up), but at more than a mile it’s not a distance you’d want to walk with a heavy backpack, or in a costume, or carrying bags, or on a hot afternoon, or after a long day of trudging around the convention center.

It’s located on the bay (of course), near the San Diego Maritime Museum where they have several classic ships permanently anchored and available for tours. If you happen to have an upper-floor room, the views are quite nice. (We were on the second floor, so our view was of the roof of the hotel’s conference center. It’s funny how quickly we got used to the sound of the air conditioner.)

It’s an easy walk to Little Italy (we went out to one of our favorite San Diego restaurants, Indigo Grill, on Wednesday) or the trolley, and on the convention shuttle route.

Holiday Inn RoomThe rooms were nice, clean and spacious (absolutely huge, compared to the last few places we’ve stayed in San Diego). The bed was comfortable, and they had pillows with two different levels of firmness, so neither of us had any trouble getting to sleep. The hotel restaurant/pub, the Elephant and Castle, is quite good. There’s also a Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse in one tower, and a deli next door. And for those looking to save money on breakfast, the in-room coffee service is a single-cup disposable-basket setup, so that if you want plain hot water for tea or oatmeal, it won’t taste like coffee! Wireless internet access is complimentary, and easy to set up. Our room had locked doors to adjoining rooms on both sides, so a large group could presumably link together at least three rooms into a suite.

The only annoyances were:

Internet access during the convention was absolutely swamped. Sometimes pages just wouldn’t load, and the Flickr uploader actually gave up several times. This would have been less of a problem if I hadn’t been so determined to post photos and blog during the con, though at least with photos it turned out I could (usually) start them before going to bed and let them run overnight. The one night that it just gave up, I tried when we got up at 6 AM and they posted extremely quickly.

The bathroom had a sliding door that didn’t seal. Like the room at the Omni, it blocked light but not sound or airflow. On the plus side, it was actually big enough that we could brush our teeth at the same time.

Overall, though, we really liked it, and agreed that it would be near the top of our list when it came to hotels on the shuttle route. Though if possible I’d really prefer something close enough that we wouldn’t have to rely on the shuttle or other transportation.

Mad Science: The Science Behind Science-Fiction – Fringe, Eureka! and Caprica

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009 Posted in Comic Con 2009, Sci-Fi/Fantasy | 3 Comments »

This was a fun panel with representatives from Eureka!, Caprica/Battlestar Galactica, and Fringe, moderated by Phil Plait of Bad Astronomy.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kelsonv/3752347890/in/set-72157621663313887

Some interesting moments:

After they talked about the ethics of interrogating a corpse, one of the guys from Fringe (I think Rob Chiappette) remarked that he wanted to see a Law & Order: Fringe show. I think I’d watch that!

One of the reps from Eureka revealed that they’d planned an episode that would take the Attack of the Killer Tomatoes concept and play it seriously, but it didn’t make it. Jamie Paglia said “It’s so good we didn’t do that episode.” Either Glenn Whitmann or Rob Chiappetta remarked immediately, “You’ll see it on Fringe!”

Phil Plait asked why there wasn’t more astronomy on Fringe, and Glenn Whitmann explained it was because it was a horror show, and it’s easier to creep people out with biology & neurology than astrophysics.

A fan asked the panelists whether they had ever done something dangerous on their show that made them worry about people trying the experiments at home (”Don’t try this at home, kids!”) For the most part they figured the level of technology, gadgetry and genius that their characters had made things impractical to imitate, though Rob Chiappetta added, “If you see Walter [Bishop] do something on screen, don’t do it!”

Another audience member mentioned that he worked in robotics, and was concerned about the way robots were portrayed as good or evil. If too many robots were portrayed evil, he might lose funding… Jane Espenson explained that “Killer robots are a lot more fun to watch.”

And of course Phil Plait plugged his book, Death from the Skies! “I love having a microphone!”

Photos will be on my Flickr account later tonight, once they trickle through the incredibly-slow hotel wifi. Update: They’re up! The trick was apparently waiting until 6am when no one else was using the wifi.

New Five for Fighting

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009 Posted in Music | No Comments »

Hmm, new Five for Fighting. After being burned on the last glurgeriffic album, though, do I care? #

Gandledorf

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009 Posted in Harry Potter, LOTR | No Comments »

Poster: Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Go ahead. Tell me Dumbledore doesn’t look like Gandalf in this poster.

G1, Costco, and SLIMEIT!

Monday, July 20th, 2009 Posted in Annoyances, Computers/Internet, Spam | No Comments »

  • Impressed w/G1: restarted for system update & audio player remembered not only the podcast I'd been listening to, but where I'd left off. #
  • Argh! Why is it that every time I plan a Costco trip I forget my membership card? #
  • Why is so much spam sent to postmaster accounts? Seems counterproductive to target abuse contact–it's a topic, not an invitation. #
  • Misread spam w/"SLIMFIT"-something-or-other in all-caps as "SLIME IT." I blame having watched Ghostbusters 2 this weekend #

WiFi & Tori

Friday, July 17th, 2009 Posted in Comic Con 2009, Music | No Comments »

Missed the opening act, but here in plenty of time for @there... on TwitpicYay! Comic-Con announces free WiFi in the convention center. iGoogle should be a less annoying sponsor than Eagle Eye. #

Missed the opening act, but here in plenty of time for @TheRealToriAmos #

Greek Theater, turned out to be a great concert!

Apollo+40, Comp Bits

Thursday, July 16th, 2009 Posted in Computers/Internet, Space | No Comments »

  • Cool! RT @BadAstronomer Are you following @ApolloPlus40 ? It’s tweeting the Apollo 11 mission “live” as it happened 40 years ago. #
  • Huh. I don’t think I’ve ever encountered a power-only USB cable before. Would be nice if it was LABELED as such. #
  • Ugh. “Refurb Madness.” Bad pun. Stay in the corner. #

Daily Halo Pics!

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009 Posted in General | No Comments »

Just discovered there’s an Atmospheric Optics Picture of the Day! #

Looking for a Good Android Twitter App

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009 Posted in Computers/Internet | 3 Comments »

I’ve been having trouble trying to find a good Twitter app for my Android phone.

Actually, that’s not entirely true. I’m extremely happy with Twidroid, which I’ve been using since I got the phone. The problem is that I need a good second app, because I have two accounts I want to use.

I ♥ Twidroid

I keep going back to Twidroid for two main reasons:

  • It lets me do everything I want to do with Twitter on my phone.
  • It makes the most common tasks as streamlined as possible.

That second item is really the key. Most other Twitter apps I’ve tried tend to get in the way. Want to post something new? Hit the menu button, then choose an item from a pop-up toolbar. Want to open a link? Press and hold, then select from a big long menu.

With Twidroid, buttons for posting a new tweet, showing replies, posting/viewing direct messages, and refreshing the view are right there at the bottom of the screen. One tap and you’re posting. One tap and you’re pulling in new messages. One tap and you’re looking at replies. And you open links by tapping a message, not pressing and holding.

It’s like the “easy button” from the Staples commercials.

Twidroid also ties in to the Android OS, making it easy to share a link directly from the browser, or share a photo directly from the image gallery.

Another nice feature is that it can break down background notifications by category. If I want it to check for replies and direct messages and sound an alert, but not worry about general posts until I look, I can tell it to do so.

I Tweet

I Tweet ($2.99) is very close, and I’ve been using it as my secondary app for several months. It ties into the OS, does photo uploads and URL shortening, lets me customize notifications, etc… but it has a tendency to get in the way. The user interface is pretty, but cluttered. The things I want to do most often require multiple taps (or worse, press-and-hold, like opening a link).

The worst part is that if I don’t let it check periodically for new messages, I can’t tell it to pull in new ones when I launch it… and it won’t always retrieve older posts. If I post something before hitting refresh (which is hidden behind the menu button), it won’t pull in anything further back than the post I just made.

Trial and Error

At this point, I’ve got my personal account @KelsonV set up on Twidroid. That’s the one I have linked to this blog and to Facebook. I’ve got @SpeedForceOrg running on I Tweet. I’ve been using it a lot lately with the lead-up to Comic-Con International, and those few problems have started really bothering me.

So I tried a bunch of others this weekend.

  • Twitli – I used this one for a while a few months ago, but it was kind of buggy. The last straw came when I was trying to upload a photo during WonderCon, and I switched the account to Twidroid for the duration of the con. I only gave it a glance this time around.
  • Loquacious – nice w/ multiple accounts & photo integration, but incomplete. No notifications, can’t share a link from browser — heck, no settings at all other than login+password and filters. Either that or the demo is crippleware in addition to being time-limited. Also, suffers from press-n-hold syndrome like I Tweet.
  • Twitta – too basic.
  • Twit2go – Photo uploads worked decently, and it was able to do notifications the way I wanted, but it didn’t hook into the OS as well as Twidroid or I Tweet. And it was yet another case of press-and-hold to open a menu that includes opening links. I decided to stick with it for a few days, though, and was pleasantly surprised to see that it did pull new messages automatically when opened, so I wouldn’t have to worry about missing anything. Gave up on it when I tried to retweet a post that ended up being too long, and rather than let me edit it down to size it just cut off the end…which happened to be the link.

So I’m back to Twidroid and I Tweet for now. I’ll probably end up swapping the accounts again and putting SpeedForceOrg on Twidroid, since that’s the one I’m likely to be using most during the con. *sigh* Why do I have to make things more complicated for myself than they have to be?

Update: A few months after I wrote this, Twidroid released Twidroid Pro, which adds several features on top of the free version…including multiple accounts!

The Evil Carpet of Evil

Monday, July 13th, 2009 Posted in Annoyances | No Comments »

New carpet seems designed to keep hallways clear by maximizing eyestrain. I fear a photo won't do it justice. HP Lovecraft might. #

Awful carpet: photo doesn't do justice. Yellower & sea of pinstripes makes it shimmer to the eyes #