Updates

House

We’ve officially decided to stay in the same house next year. There are some drawbacks (mostly temperature related), but we generally like the place and none of us really wants to deal with moving again. It’s also nice to be in a house as opposed to an apartment. I think we are going to try and plant a vegetable garden in the spring.

Summer

I’m definitely going to be in Ithaca for the summer, continuing to work on the games project. There were a couple of weeks there when I was trying to deal with applying for internships, but I think it will work out better to be at Cornell. It will be nice to have some good quality research time, and I’m looking forward to the chance to explore Ithaca and its environs in more hospitable weather.

Courses

Logic is pretty tough, but I suppose I should have expected as much from a grad level math course. I think I’ll make it through the course just fine, but I’m going to have to revisit my decision to minor in math. I like learning math, and I can certainly find other math courses I would like to take, but I’ll have to balance that with the extra work and stress that they tend to create.

Databases is also tough at the moment, though the work isn’t as intense. We’re starting with some very theoretical material, which is interesting but dense. Still, I’m enjoying the opportunity to work through some of the foundational material in my research area.

MIxed Media

Most of my gifts over the holidays were books or gift certificates, so I have been on a media binge every since. Here are some of the more interesting consumables.

I'm just here for the food

I’m Just Here for the Food, Alton Brown

I wouldn’t say that I’m much of a cookbook reader, but then this isn’t exactly a cookbook. Alton likes to discuss the science behind food, and he spends a lot of time debunking common misconceptions or coming up with creative ways of doing things. He covers searing, grilling, roasting, frying, boiling, braising, brining, and microwaving, as well as some details on sauces and eggs. Most of the techniques and recipes in the book are fairly complicated, but I like the fact that he provides a rational for every step. I probably won’t build a fire pit in the back yard — but at least I know why such a thing would be desirable. If you are interested in food, this is a fun read.

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Bioshock

I finally broke down over break and installed Windows on my laptop using Apple’s Boot Camp. Ostensibly it’s to facilitate the C# development I need to do for my research, but I’d be lying if I said I hadn’t considered the gaming possibilities afforded by a dual-boot system. I’m not much of a gamer anymore, but I enjoy it from time to time, and Mac gaming situation has gotten progressively worse since the Intel transition.

I picked up Bioshock on sale for $25 on the strength of its reviews (and Wired’s piece), and I can heartily recommend it to fans of dystopian science fiction.

The game is set in the 1960s in an alternate reality where genetic modification has become commonplace. As the result of a plane crash, your character finds himself in the undersea city of Rapture, a sort

of Objectivist haven that allows people to pursue their interests without legal or ethical interference. Of course, things haven’t gone quite as planned, and you find the city in ruin and populated by twisted monsters addicted to genetic material.

Though the gameplay is fairly standard first person shooter fare, the setting and story are very well done. The voice acting is superb, and lends a great deal to the luscious art deco decor (think Batman’s Gotham City). The story seems to lag a bit midway through the game, but I’m hoping that it will pick back up.

All and all, it’s nice to see a game (an FPS, no less) with a sophisticated story that raises interesting ethical questions and is still fun to play.

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Futurama, Season One

Like the Simpsons, Futurama was a formative show for many of my peers (it also shares writers with the Simpsons, and both were created by Matt Groening)

I was even more intrigued when I read a Wired article calling Futurama “The Geekiest Show on TV” and revealing that the writing staff contains a number of self-professed math geeks, many with PhDs in the sciences. As a self-respecting math geek myself, I had to check it out.

I got the first season, and I must admit that my reaction is mixed. Despite Wired’s proclamation, I’ve been somewhat disappointed with the “geekiness” of the show. I think my expectations were just too high. I was expecting xkcd, and got, well, the Simpsons. There are certainly some clever jokes, but there are also a lot of physical gags and thinly veiled scatological references.

I was pretty much ready to write the show off after watching the first half of the season, but I’m glad I didn’t. Once I stopped looking for references I started to appreciate the whimsy of the show. In some sense I had forgotten how to watch cartoons, and it took half a season to remember.

Futurama isn’t exactly a children’s show, but it does remind me of watching cartoons as a kid. Cartoon shows have a certain kind of creative freedom that other shows don’t, and it’s just kind of neat to see what the writers and illustrators come up with. A lot of the science fiction I’ve read/seen/played recently has either been dystopic or set in the near future, and it’s good fun to see a vision of the far future with flying cars and transport tubes and all the other stuff that the Jetsons promised us.

I’m not sure I’m going to rush out and buy the second season, but I wouldn’t be surprised if I pick it up somewhere along the way.

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Blankets, Craig Thompson

I’ve long been intrigued by graphic novels, but I’ve read very few. I did read Alan Moore’s Watchmen, which tops pretty much every top 10 list I’ve seen, but I found it too preoccupied with the Cold War paranoia of the 1980s to really draw me in.

I decided it was time for me to try again, and this time I chose Blankets, another critical favorite. It’s a semi-autobiographical work about growing up in a religious family in rural Wisconsin that manages to touch on many of the coming-of-age themes. I sense it may be very generational in its appeal, but it’s beautifully written and illustrated, and it does a good job of portraying many of the trials (both real and imagined) of growing up.

Claes Oldenburg In DC 
I just got back from visiting Divya in D.C. for the weekend. I had an excellent time: good company, good food, and good art. We visited the National Gallery and sculpture garden (with ice skating), went to a free chamber music concert at the Kennedy Center, and partook of restaurant week at Marrakesh Palace. 

(The sculpture above is by Claes Oldenburg — the same artist who did Spoonbridge and Cherry in Minneapolis. It’s the sculpture garden at the National Gallery.) 

Classes start tomorrow. This semester I’m planning on taking

  • Logic
  • Database Systems

 Hope it goes well.

Macworld Roundup

For those of you who didn’t watch it live, a roundup of today’s Macworld announcements.

Time Capsule

Apple’s the only company in existence that can draw rock concert like crowds for a hard drive. Seriously, though, it’s a pretty cool hard drive, and it serves as an Airport base station. The idea of having a dedicated network backup server appeals to my organizational fixation, and Time Machine is definitely the slickest backup software I’ve ever used.

Apple TV

This looks like a great update to an originally lackluster product. I have no use for it as I watch all of my television and movies on the computer, but the ability to use it without a computer is a big deal, and it fits very nicely with the rental announcement.

iTunes Rentals

Now here is something I might actually use. I the big win here is that Apple got all of the major studios onboard. Even if I were willing to pay the $9.99 to buy a DRM-encumbered movie, there existing selection was so small that there wasn’t much I wanted to see. I agree that 24 hours is too short, but I might live with it if it saves me a trip to the video store.

MacBook Air

Like Gruber I would rather have seen something like the oft-mourned 12 inch PowerBooks, but I think that this is an important product for its engineering. The multitouch trackpad is a big deal, and I’m really excited to see where the technology goes. I also wonder whether we won’t see the new smaller Intel chips in a new product before too long (a new Newton anyone?) Who knows whether the MacBook air will meet with much success, but it will certainly keep Apple’s competitors on their toes, and that’s what Steve does best.

(Not Quite) Back in Ithaca

I think I’ve discovered a new inverse-square law: The probability of a hassle free trip is proportional to one over the square of the number of planes involved. Since my trip involved three separate aircraft, it was doomed from the start. I got out of Omaha in time, though it was on a plane that was supposed to leave two-and-a-half hours earlier, but Chicago was a different story. They had some bad weather, and my flight to Philadelphia was delayed by two-and-a-half hours. This of course caused me to miss my last-of-the-day connection to Ithaca, and I spent the night in the Philadelphia airport listening to International CNN endlessly looping through the New Hampshire results and British soccer scores. It’s now 6:00am, and I’ve got another four hours before I finally get out of here. I even paid for the ridiculously expensive wireless because I finished my book and the only way to survive airports is to spend money freely on junk food (I hit up Dunkin’ Donuts at 5:00) and entertainment.

Ah well, at least I should accumulate a disproportionally large number of travel stories over the next five years.