Monthly Archives: March 2005

Podcasting with a Dell Axim x50v

Dell Axim x50vJosh Bancroft recorded his TinyPodcast at a McDonald’s using his Dell Axim x50v and a $20 audio recording application. It sounds pretty darned good, much better than I imagined. I turned around and tried to use mine to do the same, but found that the background noise in my office was audible, in fact, distracting. I suppose if I’m going to podcast with my PDA, I’ll have to find a room with less machine noise.

Check out his podcast though. Very nice.

Update: Josh found this post, and posted a nice comment. Check it out.

It’s not whether you win or lose..

Baseball!It’s whether you end up in Cooperstown.

I was reading yesterday’s entry on my Major League Baseball calendar, and was greeted with this Dubious Achievement:

Hall of Famer Pud Galvin lost 20 or more games in 10 consecutive seasons. No other pitcher had more than five straight 20-loss seasons.

And he wound up in the freakin’ Hall o’ Fame, says I?

Of course, things were different back then. Way back then. Check out The Little Steam Engine’s record. From 1879-1889, he lost 27, 35, 24, 23, 29, 22, 26, 21, 21, and 25 games respectively. Of course in that span he also won 37, 20, 28, 28, 46, 46, 16, 29, 28 and 23 games. His career win loss record? 54%, with 705 games pitched, 364 wins and 310 losses.

Bizarre.

I can’t wait for opening day.

Today’s useless legislation brought to you by…

Connecticut state senator Andrea Stillman thinks that you should pay a $250 fine for using your cell phone at a gas station because she heard their might be a chance that your cell phone could cause a fire.

Of course, there is no evidence that even one fire has been caused by cellphones, and experimental evidence shows that it’s far more likely that simple static electricity is the cause of many more fires. Perhaps we should outlaw those silky undergarments that spark when you slip in and out of your car.

Nah, that would be a tragedy.

“Who cares what others think?” redux

A couple of days ago I commented on the whole podcastalley hullaballo and the role that popularity plays in the actions of blogger/podcasters. You can go back to here if you missed it all, or just wanted to review. My point was really that pursuing popularity (or more specifically, superficial measures of popularity) was kind of silly. You can get upset that you aren’t at the top of somebody’s list, but it’s not going to make you more likely to do things that are of value, but rather only what you need to do to be popular.

But no less a network personage than Wil Wheaton gives me some pause in that overall assessment: he makes me think that perhaps more goes into it than I had presented in my simplified, two toned world.

You see, Wil is saddled with the legacy of having played Wesley Crusher on Star Trek: The Next Generation. As a young actor, he was given some of the most hackneyed, stilted, warped and generally contrived lines ever to grace a science fiction show (and that’s saying something). The idea of having a boy genius on the Enterprise could have been good, with brilliant writing, but without brilliant writing it was a completely hopeless task. There were brief flashes where things worked out, but overall it came off as kind of silly.

That’s not to say that I’m not a fan of Wesley Crusher. There are many characters on STTNG who I found much more consistently annoying, and virtually every character on the many successors to STTNG were more annoying. I think that Wesley gets a bum wrap.

But now I’ve shown my geek colors, what did this have to do with the original intro? I’m getting back to it.

Wil is faced with one of those TV Guide polls where people choose “their most annoying Star Trek character”, and is dismayed by the fact that he (or his character, rather) was leading in the early polls. His comment:

Normally, I’d stuff this ballot box entirely on my own, but if some of you WWdN readers want to legitimately and honestly vote for another character, like The Computer Voice for instance. I mean, come on! How many times did the stupid Ship’s Computer actually save the crew? Yeah! That’s what I thought. She’s got nothing on Wesley Crusher. I would be ever so grateful.

His comments seemed eerily familiar, but for some reason I found myself feeling more empathy for Wil than I did for my fellow podcasters who may have been suffering in similarly unscientific polls. And I wondered why I reacted differently to Wil than to others.

Perhaps it is because Wil has written so eloquently about the pain of being perceived as an unpopular character on a very popular television show. He spelled it out so that while we haven’t experienced it, we do all relate to it, at least in some way. We all want to be perceived as being good at what we do. We crave that validation, even years after we’ve made our own internal peace with ourselves. We still want to be picked first. We want to work with the cool people at the cool job and do the cool thing that everyone talks about.

So perhaps I am being too harsh. If I can empathize with Wil, perhaps I should be able to empathize with others. We don’t need praise because it will bring us fame or money. It’s much more personal than that. And I shouldn’t have pretended like that wasn’t a valid concern.

Addendum: Most annoying character: Lwuxana Troi, definitely. But I bet you Majel had a blast playing her.

Car Physics

Marco Monster has a nice tutorial article on Car Physics (mirrored here) that’s worth reading if you are thinking about writing your own version of Grand Tourismo. There is also a ton of good links at the motorsport sim Wiki.

Addendum: Brian Beckman’s Physics of Racing series can be found here as a set of 30 PDF files. Those of you with the desire to not click 30 times can simply type:

wget -l 1 -A.pdf -nd -np -r
 -erobots=off http://phors.locost7.info/contents.htm

Screw You, America West

Well, it’s one o’clock in the morning on Monday. If everything was right with the world, I probably would be at the Oakland Airport awaiting the arrival of my wife and son on their scheduled America West flight. After all, I checked the flight information before I left for the airport, and all seemed well. But what apparently they didn’t bother to update was the fact that my wife and son were held onboard the plane in Las Vegas for over an hour so that they missed their connecting flight.

For no fucking reason at all, other than their own blatant incompetence in scheduling gates for arrivals.

So, my wife and son get to have about four hours of sleep in a hotel in Las Vegas before boarding another flight (via Southwest) to arrive at 8:30 9:05 in the morning.

Screw you, America West.

Anybody else have problems with America West? Pile them on! Let’s start a new meme for this craptacularly bad service.

Update: Wife and son are safely back home. It was nice to see them both.

Oh, and screw you America West.

Brainwagon Radio: Sans Wife, Robots, Junk and Books

Well, my wife is in San Antonio for her niece’s wedding, so I’m back to my normal nerd talk. I spent yesterday in Sunnyvale/San Jose looking for junk to help with my robotics project, and picked up a couple of books.

Robot Motor Test

Robot MotorsWell, yesterday’s voyage to various Silicon Valley surplus locations didn’t yield many very many good buys, so my robot project is still proceeding rather slowly. I did pick up some alligator clips and scavenged the batteries out of my maglight, and gave them a test. Voila!, and and in reverse. Somewhere I heard that these motors were asymmetric, and ran at a different speed in one direction compared to the other, but as you can see, it’s pretty close. I don’t think I’m going to worry about it.

At 4.5 volts, the motors run somewhere around 40 rpms and pull about 1.5-1.7 amps. They also run pretty quiet, so I don’t think I’ll have many problems with noise.

Constantine

Well, the wife is off to San Antonio this weekend (miss ya honey!) so I decided to go catch a movie. After mulling the choices at my local omniplex, I chose Constantine starring Keanu Reeves.

Reeves plays John Constantine, a man who has literally been to hell and back. Having glimpsed his fate, he now works to try to get rid our plane of demons by acting as an exorcist.

Comparisons between this movie and The Matrix would seem to be inevitable. It has that “something is going on behind the scenes that only those who have taken the right pill can see” aspect of it. But despite that, I think it’s actually pretty well done. It shares certain attitudes with Dogma, but works less hard to be clever. In the end, it’s not a bad movie, nor a particularly great one. Yahoo! Movies says that the critics average a C+ for it, I’d say that’s probably about right.

The movie also showed the trailer for the upcoming Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Lots of people have been raving about how good it looked, but I must admit, I was neither favorably or unfavorably impressed. Could be good, could suck.

If you have a craving for Douglas Adams, consider picking up a copy of Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency as an audiobook, read by the late Douglas Adams himself. His reading is brilliant.