Musical Discovery

Found some great new bands this summer.

Spread Your Wings – Queen

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Vicious Delicious – Infected Mushroom

Trippy, calming, many things all at once.

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Hey Jude – Beatles

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Going Home – Kenny G

After many years, I finally found the name of this song I heard many times in restaurants, hotels and such. His music doesn’t seem to have much variety though, and it gets old fast, but it’s always calming.

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The Atheistic Fallacy

I’ve heard it said several times that atheists are driven to achieve more in their lifetimes because they know their time is limited. One day consciousness will simply end, and knowing this, they will give it their all to create and do great things. But why would this be said at all? It seems that it is in fact for the purpose of achieving what atheism cannot allow, which is an immortality of sorts. Through achievement, they can immortalize their name, their creations or ideas a while longer than they can exist before they kick the bucket.

“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.” – Steve Jobs

Achieving immortality, or extended life at the least, through achievement must be the unconscious, underlying reason. I cannot see any other purpose for being driven to achieve so much, except for the hope that what they create and establish in this life will last longer than themselves. This is something I wish to do, although I am indifferent as to whether my name is immortalized. I want to create something that people love, or at least like and use, whether it’s a product or service or something, because this is a source of personal pride, as it proves to myself that I conceived something of value. It proves to me that my thoughts are not wholly meaningless. The individual is simply a source of ideas, and ideas are what matter most, because even though they flit about our minds, somehow they seem eternal because their existence is not physical. Ideas and thoughts are the person, and if the ones that you conceive are not valued, it would point to the scary possibility that others are indifferent to your ideas, and thus your existence is meaningless. (True, the person represents the thoughts, but it seems to place too much emphasis on the individual, which is usually not known for just thoughts, but a variety of other things, which deadens the achievement.)

But the apparent fallacy in all of this, which I’ve come to time and time again when thinking about this, is that in the grand scheme of things, nothing will exist at all. So ultimately what is the use of all this achievement when what you accomplish and achieve lasts only a few tics longer than anything else. But I suppose nothing is meant to be looked at in such a grand sweeping overview covering the universe and all. I’m looking too far out. When viewed in such a perspective, I suppose everything looks meaningless. And thus it is necessary to keep the mind on the now and a few distances past that.

Laptop Hunters Commercials

Microsoft has been running a “Laptop Hunter” commercial campaign in response to Apple’s “I’m A Mac”. The Laptop Hunter campaign is probably even worse than the commercials with Seinfeld.

The “I’m A Mac” commercials attack PCs as being boring, unhip, generic, unstable, and geeky, while portraying Macs as just cool and reliable. These Laptop Hunters commercials essentially respond with, “But PCs are cheaper and they have bigger screens, which is why you should buy them.”

The comments that the laptop hunters make are also unbelievably inane. You would think that the ad team would play up the geeky tech smarts of the PCs, by having the hunters list technical aspects of the PCs, but instead they decide to play the lower price game, which is a stupid move, especially when most consumers have the bad taste of Vista in mind. Most of the time consumers would rather have a more expensive, but higher quality product, as shown by Apple’s skyrocketing profits.

So what do the inevitable PCs want? “Speed, a big hard drive, and good gaming computer.”

Speed

That’s pretty subjective. But it’s no secret the Windows OS falls terribly short on every aspect of this. The times I have used a Mac, they were incredibly smooth, with very little lag. With Windows, everything is a tic slower, there are temporary freezes, and general instability. And they would hardly get the speed they want, especially with Microsoft Office getting slower and slower with each new version.

A Big Hard Drive

Even the lowliest Dell Inspiron packs 160GB of storage, so I don’t even see how this is a concern.

A Good Gaming Computer

So Windows is better in this respect. Also, who uses Blu-Ray on a laptop? Blu-Ray is for high resolution movies, and you’d hardly see any difference on a laptop screen.

Maybe these were good commercials, but I just saw a terribly planned response that fell flat.

Windows Live Movie Maker Beta Is A Joke

I made the bright decision to download the fancy newfangled Windows Live Movie Maker. It has an extra word; it must be good. So the first time I run this, it asks me to update the program. Why wasn’t this update included in the installer? I had to download the update, install that, and then run Windows Live Movie Maker. Who are the twits that code this garbage? And worst of all… it didn’t even have a storyboard. Sure, it’s beta software, but how are you supposed to make videos without a storyboard. This isn’t beta. Maybe alpha.

Even worse, everything that can be done in Windows Live Movie Maker can be done with Microsoft Office PowerPoint. In fact, it was worse than PowerPoint. It had fewer transitions, timing features, and everything. It’s embarrassing that they even released this. I’m having doubts about Windows 7 now too.

It seems that the Windows Live Movie Maker team’s idea of new is changing the color scheme and adding a dynamic resizing scrollbar at the bottom.

A Logic Puzzle

I gave up too quickly.

You paddle up to an island where you know there are two types of people: Liars and Truth Tellers. Liars ALWAYS lie, and Truth-Tellers ALWAYS tell the truth. You see 3 people on the beach. Liars and Truth Tellers often hang out together, so these 3 natives could be any combination of liars and truth tellers.

You ask, “Are you liars or truth-tellers?” and the first guy answers your question, but a big wave crashes on the beach just then. The natives hear the answer, but you do not.

So you repeat the question, and this time the second guy responds. He says, “The first guy told you that he is a truth-teller”. The second guy then continues, “The first guy actually is a truth-teller”. Finally, the second guy states, referring now to himself, “I am a truth-teller”.

At this point the 3rd guy decides to respond. He says, “No, the second guy is lying. I am a truth-teller.”

Who’s a liar and who’s a truth teller?

Here are the only possible accusations, where x=impossible and o=possible. It is assumed each person knows the status of the others.

[x] L<–(T)–L
[x] T<–(T)–L
[x] T<–(L)–T
[x] L<–(L)–T
[x] L<–(L)–L
[o] T<–(L)–L
[o] T<–(T)–T
[x] L<–(T)–T

T<–(T)–_<–(L)–_
1           2          3

China Restricts Virtual Economies

So buying virtual stuff through internet communities is profitable. It’s so profitable that I should totally create an addictive internet community that sells virtual crap. It makes tons of money for the website owners, as such items cost literally nothing to produce when ignoring labor costs for creating and maintaining the websites. Facebook’s virtual gifts net a cool $15 million a year if I remember correctly. That’s basically no different than people sending you $15 million, because what they’re getting in return is pretty much nothing because it’s virtual.

“Some have called the process inhumane, and news reports describe sweat-shop-like conditions for the people who work to earn the virtual cash,” says CNN. But then, compared to the wide range of other jobs, say, construction labor, what’s more “humane”? At least the gold farmer is sitting in a room, in no real physical danger, and earning more than the construction worker.

While I can see where they are going with this, they’re blocking the exchange of money the wrong way. Instead of preventing people from blowing their hard earned cash on virtual garbage, they’ve instead prevented people from turning virtual cash into real money. All this does is continue allowing people to waste money, while preventing people who are able to make a nice chunk of change gaming the internet from making a living.