06/19/2010

I just watched an AT&T commercial from 1993. It was part of their “You Will” series, which featured quick glances of futuristic technology that AT&T claimed to be a part of developing. I remember the campaign clearly because I was in college at the time and my friend Jason and I designed some t-shirts around the theme.

Anyway, what I find interesting about these commercials from 17 years ago is they were surprisingly prescient. They predicted things like:

  • Online books (remember, in 1993 the web was new and Mosaic was everyone’s browser)
  • GPS navigation in cars, including automated routing and directions
  • RF sensors that can pay tolls as you drive through the checkpoint
  • Video conferencing
  • Purchasing concert tickets online (in 1993 the web didn’t have any commercial stuff)
  • Choosing a movie on demand from a menu on your TV
  • In hindsight I think it’s easy to say, “Sure, all of that is pretty obvious”. But 17 years ago, it wasn’t obvious at all. When you think about it, the things we take for granted today were barely pipe dreams then. What kind of amazing things can we expect in the next 17 years?

06/18/2010

I’m working on some server configuration stuff for a client. They have an account at Rackspace, which is a well-known (and very good) hosting company. Like many such companies, they have an option on their web site for a live chat session. The idea is you can immediately connect to their support personnel and resolve problems or whatever.

Now, there’s kind of a joke in the industry about so-called “Headset Hotties” which are those areas on corporate sites that encourage you to contact them, and there’s always a picture of an amazingly beautiful woman wearing a headset and smiling broadly because she’s so excited to take your call.

Rackspace apparently doesn’t believe in headset hotties.

Uhh. Is that a woman? Seriously. If so, maybe she should lose the army-green cap and overalls and consider a different hairstyle. I fear that if I click the button to chat with her I’ll suddenly be online with someone named Helga and she’ll want to arm-wrestle.

06/15/2010

“Just speaking generally, not about any specifics, and taking a wild guess, I’d say that’s a good solid maybe, unless my salary depending on raising money by saying yes, in which case I’d say yes.”

— Seen on Slashdot, although pretty much any politician would say it

06/06/2010

Awesome!

Now I’ve really hit the big time… Angelina herself wants to be my friend!

Or– and I know this might be a long shot– this could be a spam message. Hmm.

06/05/2010

Summer vacation update: as we were driving through Holbrook, Arizona on our way to Phoenix, we zipped past a little side street. It was so awesome I pulled a u-turn about a half mile up the road and came back just to have my picture taken with the sign.

Best.
Street.
Ever.

Can you imagine how cool it would be to tell people your address when they ask?

“Yeah, I’m over at 662 Bucket of Blood Street.”

Or something like

“…So you go about a mile on Navajo Blvd. and then take a right on Bucket of Blood.”

05/30/2010

As a follow-up on the computer parts story below, Alex had the idea of making a little fan for himself. He thought he’d set it on his desk so when he’s working at the desk and gets hot, he could turn it on and cool down a bit. (A very little bit, as it turns out, because these fans don’t push that much air.)

So I helped him rip out the appropriate parts from the computer, plug it into a 9-volt battery, and voila! He did almost all of the work, minus some soldering that proved a bit problematic.

Now Zack and Kyra want their own fans, and there was talk of installing one on the outside of the rats’ cage to keep them cool on hot summer afternoons. Heh.

05/29/2010

Computer parts keep piling up in my office, and I’m running out of space for them. All the closet shelves are full, and there are boxes upon boxes on the floor. Out of necessity, it’s time to dive into the piles and figure out what I really need to keep.

I grabbed three old Pentium 66’s (circa 1999) and gave them to Alex and Zack, who were quite excited about unscrewing the lids and ripping out the guts. There’s something really fun (for a boy, anyway) about the innards of an electronic device– particularly something with as many different parts as a computer. So they’re learning about power supplies and RAM chips and CPU’s.

The shame of it is these computers were still functional. Sure, they can’t do much more than run Windows 95, but in a way it’s sad to tear them apart. I guess I’m a packrat– I hate destroying something that works, even if I know I’ll absolutely positively never use it again.

I thought about dropping some network cards in them and building a little cluster, just for the fun of figuring out how to cluster computers, but after spending the time to figure that out, I’d have a system that was still only a fraction as fast as the 2 GHz system I have on my desk.

What’s funny is I have fifteen more computers just like the ones Alex and Zack are gutting now…

05/29/2010

Yesterday La and I managed to farm out all of our kids to various friends’ houses for sleepovers, so we were free to have an evening to ourselves. We started with a company dinner with the gang at Benihana.

Great food, and of course it’s always entertaining to watch the chefs toss eggs into their hats or make a steam engine out of a sliced onion. But that’s not really what this post is about.

After dinner we zipped over to the theater to watch Prince of Persia. It was opening night, so anticipating a big crowd, Laralee had pre-ordered tickets. It turns out we didn’t really need to worry about it– the theater was half-empty.

The movie was entertaining, although not up to the bar of, say, Pirates of the Caribbean. But that’s not really what I’m writing about either.

Of course when the theater says the showtime is 8:10pm, what they really mean is the previews will start at 8:10, and then maybe around 8:30 the actual movie will begin. No matter– previews tend to be fairly entertaining, and with the exception of Guardians of Ga’hoole (oh my word) we’d seen all of them already.

What’s interesting about previews is that back in the day (I’m talking about the 80’s and 90’s) a typical preview would include maybe two or three scenes from the movie, each lasting ten or twenty seconds. Throw in a voiceover and maybe some text, and call it good. But these days, previews mean intense rapid-fire flashes of content– most lasting only a few seconds– interspersed with bright lights, deep bass, or in-your-face taglines. Sometimes it’s hard to recognize characters or even really understand what’s being shown because it’s so fast.

And that brings me to the point of this post.

Blipverts.

Back in the early 80’s there was a TV show called Max Headroom whose main character was a guy who’d suffered a motorcycle accident and hit a concrete tunnel that said “Max Headroom” across the top. He somehow became a digital persona who cracked jokes on a computer screen. I’m not sure if I remember all of it right; after all, it was nigh on thirty years ago. But suffice to say it was one of those shows that lasted one season and yet somehow made an indelible imprint on my memory.

Anyway, one of the things the show featured was compressed advertising called blipverts, which were basically thirty-second TV commercials crunched down to five seconds and shown at high speed. The rationale? People don’t want to sit still for a thirty-second ad any more. They want the content right now, and you’d better make it snappy because their attention span wavers after five seconds.

As it turned out, blipverts had a nasty side effect: they caused some viewers to explode. I vaguely recall a scene from the show where a huge guy is sitting on the couch watching TV, and a blipvert comes on, and before you know there’s a dull thump and it he’s all over the walls. Strange stuff.

So here we are, thirty years later, and I can’t help but feel that ol’ Max Headroom wasn’t all that wrong in predicting the five-second attention span of our modern society. It manifests itself quite clearly in movie previews, but also in things like Twitter and texting and even news stories. If content takes more than five or ten seconds to consume, people aren’t interested.

It’s a shame, because that means no one’s interested in reading a long thoughtful essay. Or hearing a politician talk about a platform in any kind of meaningful detail. Or listening to a song that’s longer than five minutes. Or wandering a museum (or a national park) and just soaking up the beauty and the knowledge. And I think all of these things are an important part of being well-rounded, informed, wise citizens of our society. The rising generation seems to want bullet points, sound bites, and 140-word quips about what someone’s having for dinner. Too bad. There’s a lot more out there than blipverts.

05/27/2010

From an article in Discover magazine, discussing quantum mechanics and relating it (in an awesome way) to puppies:

“Quantum mechanics is the coolest thing ever invented, ever.”