Kip

RSS

Written by Kip on Wednesday, December 7, 2005 at 1:45 pm (EST)
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Quick note to say that I’ve got RSS feeds for our blogs now.  If you don’t know what that means, you probably don’t care.  And if you do know, there’s a good chance you still don’t care.

Kip’s RSS feed
Steph’s RSS feed
Both blogs’ RSS feed

There will be links at the bottom of the page later, but for now you can use those.

Update
Upon learning of Firefox’s automatic live bookmark (very cool feature by the way), I retooled the RSS feed so that now there’s a feed for both blogs (as well as the original two).

Kip

PicTML

Written by Kip on Saturday, December 17, 2005 at 12:51 am (EST)
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Some of you are probably aware of PicTML, a Visual Basic program I wrote with back in high school.  Well, now it exists on the web.  Go here to see some examples of what PicTML can do, and feel free to make your own pages and publish them for everyone to see.  There are a number of improvements, namely different optimization options (I find it easier to tweak settings in “small HTML” mode, and then convert to “accurate image” mode before publishing).

I try to make my site accessible to non-geeks, and PicTML could use some help in this area.  The background color field currently accepts the following colors:  red, orange, yellow, green, cyan, blue, violet, purple, magenta, white, grey, black, and pink.  And of course you can use any hex color you want, but if you know how to do that then this paragraph isn’t really directed at you now is it.

I was actually a little disappointed with how easy PHP made it to do a program like this.  I had the working prototype done in a single evening.  I had set out to make this a two-week project, to take me right up until Christmas break.  I mean, when I was learning to code on the TI-83, we had to program uphill, in the snow, barefoot.

Geeky sidenote- once I had finished I realized that I had used an MVC design pattern without even intending to.  The image itself, the $_SESSION vars, and the script to validate the $_POST vars are the model.  Then the control frame is the controller and the preview frame is the view.

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Kip

Narnia Kong

Written by Kip on Tuesday, December 20, 2005 at 9:17 am (EST)
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I thought I’d post my opinions on a few movies I’ve seen recently.  It’s kind of rare that I go to the theater three weekends in a row.  When you consider that for almost the same price that it costs for two people to go to the movies, I can watch about 8-10 movies in a month with NetFlix.  Sure, a theater is a better experience than my living room, but not 8-10 times better.  But back to what I was saying.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
I was expecting something like the Harry Potter movies- kinda boring if you haven’t read the books.  But it turned out that I really liked this movie!  It was a great movie with very likeable characters and a very good story and good acting.  I thought the little girl’s acting was especially good.  I wasn’t expecting the big LotR-esque battle scene at all, but didn’t have any problems with it.  Like I said, I’ve never read the books, but they’re definitely on my list of books to read in the future.  I can’t really think of anything bad to say about this movie.

I give it 5/5 stars

King Kong
I had sort of mixed feelings about this movie.  I think my biggest problem was that I had very high expectations, while at the same time knowing that it would be pretty much impossible for Peter Jackson to live up to The Lord Of The Rings.  The special effects for Kong himself were really good, and the crazy fight between Kong and a hojillion T-Rexes rocked the casbah.  And yeah, you’re supposed to feel really sad and drained at the end when Kong dies, and I did.  But the movie really didn’t need to be that long.  I mean, it is an hour and a half into the the movie before Kong ever appears.  There are many movies that are done in that length of time.  Did we really need that subplot about the suspicious younger guy and the black guy that was all overprotective of him?  I didn’t get anything from it.  And the dinosaurs didn’t really look much better than the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park... twelve years ago.  But I really mention that as a statement of how good the effects in Jurassic Park were, especially for their time, because the dinosaurs in Kong didn’t look bad or anything.  So to sum it up, I found the movie better than average, but not that much better.

I give it 3.5/5 stars

Just Friends
Umm... it was a holiday/romantic comedy.  Within the constraints of the genre it was a very good film.  If it weren’t for Ryan Reynolds (a.k.a. Van Wilder), I don’t think I would have liked it very much.  But I think he is incapable of being not-funny.  Like all good romantic comedies that lean more towards the comedy side than the romantic side, the first half of the film is hilarious, and the second half is slower because they figure they need to give the characters some depth so that you feel something when the protagonist almost gets the girl but then somehow blows it and has to win her back all over again.  You know, the standard plot that probably predates Shakespeare.  Now when you see that I give this movie a higher rating than King Kong, keep in mind that it is relative to the genre.  I don’t think this movie will have anyone crying or anything.

I give it 4/5 stars

Kip

Nintendo WFC - doesn’t quite work for me

Written by Kip on Friday, December 30, 2005 at 9:06 am (EST)
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So Stephanie and I each got a Nintendo DS for Christmas, and we had lots of fun playing Mario Kart at her parents’ house.  So we get back to the apartment where I’m expecting to be able to play on my wireless router.  Turns out, Nintendo isn’t all that good at implementing 802.11b for some reason.  It finds my router, lets me enter my WEP key, and tests my connection successfully. Then I start Mario Kart and try to connect and after about ten seconds my game freezes—the music gets stuck on one note and the screen stops animating and it doesn’t respond to any kind of input.  I went to NintendoWiFi.com, and see that for some Linksys routers you have to set “Basic Rate” to “1-2Mbps” for it to work.  I tried that, and the very first time I connected after that, I could actually connect, but then I couldn’t do anything else.  But it refuses to work a second time.  Some other Linksys routers require that WEP be disabled.  I haven’t tried that, but I’m not about to run my router without WEP.  I’ve also tried disabling port forwarding (the only “special” feature I’ve messed with on the router) without success.

It is very annoying to me that Nintendo actually has to have a list of routers that do and do not work with their device.  This page should not need to exist.  Seriously.  I mean, 802.11b is not some obscure, new, or undefined technology.  It’s been common for something like four years now.  I have a computer with a Linksys card in it, a computer with a D-Link card in it, and a Dell Axim, and they all connect to the router just fine.  Why does the Nintendo DS have a problem?

Update: I’ve checked the troubleshooting guide, which is clearly written for people who don’t know what an SSID is.  It tells me to call an 800 number for my specific problem.  I may try that, although I have low expectations.  I also found some information about specific ports, and found that some routers only work if the DS is assigned a static IP address.  I’ll try those things and see what I can come up with.

And I know about the USB thing, but the point is I shouldn’t need to use it if I’ve already got a wireless router in the house.

Kip

Nintendo WFC - update

Written by Kip on Friday, December 30, 2005 at 11:25 pm (EST)
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Now I’ve got Nintendo WFC working, after a lot of headaches with my router.  I wrote up a description of what I did on the Nintendo forums, which you can see here, so that hopefully someone else won’t have the same headache.  I seriously hope they make some major improvements to WFC by the time the Revolution comes out.

Without further ado, here are my complaints:

  1. “Friend codes” are retarded.  This seems like the same mistake ICQ made when instant messaging was a new concept.  Let everyone pick whatever screen name they want, but everyone gets an annoyingly long ID number.  And if I only had one friend code I’d be willing to let that slide.  But I don’t.  I have one for every single WiFi game!  Which, at the moment, is two (see below).  But if they are serious about this (especially third party support), they should make a system where your handle is something the DS keeps track of, not each individual game.

  2. I can’t see which friends are online.  There should be a way to quickly get a menu of my friends that are online, and a way of sending a “hey, wanna play Mario Kart?” message to them.  And, as I said before, this should be done on the OS level, not on a per-game basis.  Currently you have to kind of arrange a play date if you want to play.

  3. I can’t communicate with people I’m playing with.  Well, in Animal Crossing I can.  But I still think this should be a system-level feature, not something every game developer must implement.

  4. Friend code is specific to game/system combination.  In other words, if I put my Mario Kart in Stephanie’s DS and go online, I’ll have to say goodbye to my friend code when I put it back in my system, and give all my friends a new friend code.  As I said before, if the friend code was handled just by the OS, this wouldn’t be an issue.

Our friend codes!
Mario Kart DS
Kip: 481098-624409
Stephanie: 150386-138145

Animal Crossing Wide World
Kip:  2319-9061-8694 (“Agent 86” from “Ninjäna”)
Stephanie:  2792-3525-8250 (“Darcy” from “Daisyton”)

RSS feeds: Kip's - Stephanie's - Both
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