All posts by Steve

New Portal Addict

This weekend, I purchased, downloaded and started playing Portal, the increasingly popular first-person puzzle/strategy game from Valve. Finally, an involved, challenging, first-person game that not only doesn’t involve killing anyone, you don’t even have a weapon!

References have been popping up, along with Valve’s own viral marketing (oh, and I’m assembling the papercraft project as well!), so I knew it would be good, but had little idea how much I’d enjoy it. I finished Half Life 2 Episode 2 last week, and was a little underwhelmed (it was good, don’t get me wrong, but somehow upon reaching the end I still went “wait, that’s it?”. Oh, and Valve? Please, please don’t wait as long to release Episode 3, ok? That cliff-hanger was a little much!), but this was the game worth waiting for. It’s hard to tell, but I think I got most of the way through it this weekend, but there’s the promise of bonus maps and alternate levels, and that should ensure gameplay for a while.

If you like third-person shooters and puzzles, you should really check this out. This game has everything I want in a third-person-style game: mind-bending puzzles, the chance to explore large areas, and a good sense of humour. Well-done, Valve!

Adding My $0.02 to the Leopard Installfest Reporting

Well, I’m not entirely sure why there were all these lineups at Apple stores, waiting for 6pm. I had ordered a copy of Leopard the day before (around mid-day, even), and was a little surprised to see that it said “arrives by October 26”. Sure enough, the FedEx guy arrived the next *morning*, carrying the box. By early afternoon, Eastern time, I had upgraded my MacBook Pro. My impressions? Find the review (which is more than one, really) that says “nothing earth-shattering/not going to change your life/evolutionary, not revolutionary” and “a whole bunch of little things that make things tighter and faster”, and you’ll be where I am.

Things I Like:

  • Spotlight’s overall improvments
  • Finder’s new sidebar (especially with the shared section, and the fact that it takes less space)
  • Cleanup of the Preferences panel and options – especially the new networking panel.
  • The new interface for FrontRow (well, new to me anyway – I don’t have an AppleTV box). I especially love it for navigating shared content – an amazing improvement!
  • Most non-Apple applications “just worked” after the reboot

Non-Apple Things that “Just Worked”:

  • VMWare (upgraded to the latest beta, which was for Leopard)
  • Firefox, Thunderbird (although I’m giving Safari and Mail another go)
  • Skype, Adium, Colloquy (I would have been surprised if these didn’t work)
  • Audacity
  • Growl
  • DropCopy

Things that Didn’t Work:

  • synergy, the daemon for sharing a keyboard and mouse from one system across many (I use this at work across 4 machines), crashes (the client – I run the server elsewhere) when run.
  • My favorite screensaver, Fenetres Volantes, doesn’t run (although the new “Word of the Day” is nice!)
  • Very Little!

Things I Miss:

  • The ability to name desktops in “Spaces”, and optional transitions (just eye-candy, no big deal).
  • The hack of dragging your “Home” folder to the dock, and, when clicking on it, getting the menu-like way of navigating your directory structure.

Overall, it’s a nice update, and one I feel will make non-power users and new users feel more at home. I’ve read that as more apps go 64 bit, along with some of the tweaks in the behind-the-scenes code found here, things should be generally faster. While I’d like to say I’ve seen that, I don’t think I’ve used the system enough yet to say if that’s true.

Update: found a couple more things that need fixing: VLC no longer recognizes the Apple remote, and SMC fan control doesn’t seem to be working(even after trying to re-pair it).

Update #2: Updated SMCfancontrol to v 2.1.2, and that fixed the issue.

New Service: Blogging (and Other Things) From IMified

I’m writing this post (after another lengthy hiatus, I realize) from a new service that a colleague told me about. Called IMified, this service allows access to a number of services and tools conveniently through your IM client. This first post will serve as a test to see how well it works, but this seems very useful, especially for quick posts. In addition to the blogging module, I also have access to my Backpack account , as well as other note, reminder and network tools. They also have widgets for calendars, other blogging tools, and various social networks. Looks very cool, and I’m interested to see how useful this becomes to me!

More is coming – there’s been a lot going on lately, in our lives, and, of course, the geeky stuff too.

Great reverential Gig to Start the Fall

Last night, Dan and I kicked off our fall gigging season with a great concert at the Edgely Christian Church in Bristol, PA. We got to play outside to a great crowd. We played for about an hour to a warm (that is to say, appreciative – the temperature started dropping once the sun went down!) reception. Despite having to overcome a slight lack of momentum (the summer was pretty quiet for us), and a couple of technical glitches during sound check, the gig went near-flawlessly, and we both had a great time.

Me and Internet Messaging

Or, A Geek Discovers that it Can Be Fun to Communicate After All

Well, as usual, it’s been a while since my last blog post. Hopefully you’ve been checking out the tumblelog (hint: it’s got an rss feed too!). But it’s no substitute for actually writing…

If you had told me a year or two ago that I would be as immersed in Internet communication as I seem to find my self now, I would have laughed and just shook my head. Email excepted (oh, and a bit of unix-based talk/ytalk in the early 90s), I didn’t see much point.

Then came a colleague at work setting up a Jabber server in order to have a chat room for the group here, and I was dragged kicking and screaming (ok, not much of that, but I might have stubbed a toe) into IM. It wasn’t long after that, and Google introduced GTalk, and integrating that into GMail meant that now a few other people I knew (most notably family) were able to easily chat.

The next nail in the coffin was my annual attendance of the O’Reilly Open Source Conference. Thanks to a colleague (there are those colleagues again!) who went with me, I became aware of the back-channel conference: in IRC. Admittedly, this was not only an amusing aside (some brilliant comments and observations are posted here, not to mention the sharp wit), but an interesting insight into some bits of info that wouldn’t normally be available (the conference chairs were active participants on the relevant channels). This year when I went, in addition to the new-found public server, I set up a simple IRC server on my home network for the benefit of myself and two friends: a private chat room where we could chat.

That slippery slope had me careening into the sett-up of a full-blown server, complete with bot (and I’m even writing TCL code, a language I never did learn, to extend it!), for a group of mostly-sysadmins that I’m in, which meets every Friday for breakfast.

The clincher happened in the last week. One of my sisters transferred to the University of Calgary, and in her “I’ve arrived” email, she listed her Skype address. That was the second time in as many weeks that I’d been given a Skype address. I’d looked in to Skype when it was announced, of course, but wasn’t interested (we already have VoIP for our main phone, which gives us cheap calling). So I signed up for a Skype account, and in the short week that I’ve had it, I’ve had an audio and a video call (my sister in Calgary has a Mac, too!), and 3 chat sessions. I’m in.

Add to that my Grand Central account, and I’m pretty communicative, which I have to say, as someone who has always hated the phone, feels pretty weird. But it’s also cool, this new-fangled internet thingy that let’s me chat with and talk (and see) people all over the world.

So all of you who haven’t talked to me in a bit, there’s really no excuse now – I’m connected.

(I’ve even added a couple of icons on the sidebar to get you started!)