Nerdnology

Nerds + Technology = Nerdnology

Guitar Hero nearly blinds woman!

clock December 30, 2008 16:30 by author Corby

As a recovering gamer addict, 3 years straight playing Everquest, I am well aware of what it is like to take gaming a bit too far.  I may or may not have been guilty of skipping school to raid Fire Giants, ensuring an empty Gatoraide bottle was close at hand for long spawn camping, and constructing a cone blanket apparatus hovering above my head and vented the tip of the cone out the apartment window with PVC pipe melted and bent with a series of Bic lighters in order to have a cigarette every now and then without having to leave my gaming chair.   Extreme is one thing, physical harm is another.  

Earlier this week, I had a conversation with a co-worker, J, about how her holiday weekend went.  Her excitement about receiving a Wii for Christmas could not be contained.  As she described the glorious moments of bowling and tennis, I swelled with jealousy.  I've been trying to talk my lovely bride into a Wii for our family for several months, to no avail.  J went on to describe how she had purchased for herself and her fiance the acclaimed "Guitar Hero" just after getting their new Wii.  As she mentioned this, I noticed that one of her eyes looked as though she had been assaulted with a fork, perhaps a rock slung from a distance.  To avoid being rude with the "Your eye looks like hell, what did you do?", as I'd prefer to stay on her good side because I thoroughly enjoy her occasional visits to my otherwise droll cubical, I left well enough alone and didn't inquire about her apparent injury.

As our conversation continued, she began to detail an account of a 5-hour Guitar Hero playing spree she and her hubby-to-be went on just days before.  As she described rocking out to the various tunes, mastering the easy and medium levels, discussing thrashing with GNR's Slash, and demonstrating not only her whammy bar action, but also the guitar neck horse reigns motion (my only possible description for how she illustrated wrenching the neck of the guitar in Marty McFly fashion circa the Enchantment Under The Sea finale guitar solo from Back To The Future), she gestured to her eye, bloodshot like it had escaped a drunken sailor and crawled into her socket looking for respite.  

She stated that during their 5-hour rock session, she felt something a bit funny in her eye and began to get a migraine headache.  It was shortly thereafter that her man, B, noticed her eye suffering from what appeared to be some form of inner explosion.  J had rocked so hard, so long, that she had burst a blood vessel in her eyeball.

When I asked how in the hell she managed to cause a blood vessel to explode while playing a video game, her response was simply, "I think I just forgot to blink....for 5 hours." 

Her sight turned out not to be a casualty from the holiday weekend and the Guitar Hero rocking, though the same could not be said for the entire bottle of Visine eye drops she continuously applied one drop at a time to her suffering socket dweller in order to look presentable for work on Monday post Christmas.

This is indeed a true story.  Guitar Hero nearly blinded my friend, J.

-Corby- 



Nerdnology.com video podcast episode 001 Roku unboxed, displayed, connected, and tested out

clock December 22, 2008 19:14 by author Corby

I unbox, display, discuss and connect my new Roku Netflix video streaming player!

YouTube link:  YouTube video!

Direct Download

 Subscribe to the RSS Feed

 



How I Built and Launched my Blog/Podcast Social News Site in one weekend

clock December 15, 2008 19:25 by author Corby

I've had an idea about creating a Digg-style social news network called www.BlogFloat.com devoted to New Media, bloggers, podcasters, video podcasters, social networks, and the like, for a while now and until recently couldn't muster up the man hours it would take to create one from scratch using the tools I am most familiar with (Visual Studio and ASP.NET). After the extensive programming I did on my Twitter-like site, www.bubeasy.com, I was sure this idea would remain in the idea realm and never materialize (like oh so many of my other concepts).

In search of an alternative route, I recently stumbled onto an article on Digg titled How to Build and Launch a Social News Site in 21 Days.

After reading the article and doing the mental calculations on how I could grab 21 days worth of time from my normally hectic schedule, I set out to research a bit more about the Content Management System featured in the article, Social Web CMS. I came to the conclusion that due to the fact I would be using a shared hosting account at GoDaddy and not having to run my own server (which would involve installing PHP, mySQL, and who knows what else), I should be able to get something up and running over a weekend.

Step one was to download and install the files on a free hosting GoDaddy account I had associated with another domain name. I wanted to test out the SWCMS before I plopped out any cash for the adventure and since I already had a Windows hosting credit, I thought why not? Unfortunately, after hours of heartache and visits to the SWCMS forum, with lots of support from a variety of folks over there, I opted to go ahead and buy the domain name I wanted, www.BlogFloat.com, along with some Linux hosting.

From there, I uploaded the files (I had some trouble using Filezilla on a Mac, as it seemed to only be willing to upload one sub-directory....if there were sub-directories within sub-directories, I had to manually upload them), did some slight tweaking, and then set out to Admin the new site. With great pleasure, everything seemed to work quite well.

I set out to try to tweak the graphics of the site by finding some Pligg-based templates on the web. After trying this one and that one, finding that things like the nav menu became broken or that certain pages wouldn't load at all, I re-uploaded the original files and basically started from scratch. Actually, I went through this procedure several times over the weekend as any time I seemed to tweak anything with a non standard template, things went to hell. Not that there is anything wrong with SWCMS, nor the templates, but I have been in the .NET world for a very long time and my PHP skills are foggy.

Administering the site proved simple, too. There is a module store that allows you to easily add existing modules to the new site, pretty much every setting for the site you can imagine is located in the Language menu, and the only notepad editing I had to do for the entire site was to re-write the FAQ page to suit my site's needs.

So over a weekend, purchasing the domain name and hosting on a Friday, tweaking, testing, and reloading from scratch a few times on Saturday, Sunday rolled around and I was pretty happy with the admin settings and layout (the default template “yget” is just pretty, I like it). I spent the day attempting to upload blog post links, editing a bit more in the Admin section, and that was it.

I showed off my new site to a few friends at work and was met with “wow” and “how long?” responses. The next step for the success of the site is to build the user network. My intention is to hit up every podcaster forum I can find, contact podcasters I know personally and ask for their support, and somehow I need to get the word out to the blogosphere, as such users would really, really find a site like this handy.

Imagine as a blogger that you are able to write a post, then post it at www.BlogFloat.com with a nice description and rise in popularity on the page based on the content of your writing. If people like it, you get hits. If not, then you try again with your next blog post.

I'm exicted about the future of www.BlogFloat.com. If anyone is interested in more details on how I made it work, feel free to contact me. Or, heck, just write a blog post, post it over at BlogFloat.com and I'll see it!

-Corby-



Social Web CMS = success

clock December 13, 2008 17:55 by author Corby

After some initial trouble getting things up and running, mostly due to issues with GoDaddy Windows hosting, I just wrapped up another $$ spending session and have purchased a domain name and Linux hosting for a new website that will use the Social Web CMS backbone.  The site will be like Digg but I am going to attempt to target it to bloggers.  Yes, most of what you will find on Digg is from national news sources, with some blog entries being found here and there...I want this new site, to be named shortly, to be specific to the bloggers, podcasters, and video casters of the world...but of course, all submissions will be welcome.

I'm exicted about the new adventure and hope to be able to release the domain name very soon.  Thanks to all the guys over at the Social Web CMS forum, especially Ash, for his answers to my many questions.  Thanks guys!  (By the way, guys, more questions to follow on the forum.  haha)

 -Corby- 



Installing Social Web CMS, PHPDug

clock December 12, 2008 17:24 by author Corby

For the last few days I have been trying to get a Content Management System installed on my GoDaddy Windows hosting account to play around with a Digg-style blog submission website idea I have.  After days of headaches, I had nearly given up completely on Social Web CMS.  I opted to try just one more CMS, one called PHPDug and during the install process I had the same issue.  The only difference was that PHPDug provided a Google-able error message that netted me a working answer!

What was the error message?  

Client does not support authentication protocol requested by server; consider upgrading MySQL client

 After a Google search, I found my answer.

It turns out that there is an issue with the way MYSQL databases handle passwords.  In order to get the PHPDug installer to work, and the Social Web CMS I am assuming (about to try that next), all I had to do was open my database on GoDaddy, go to the SQL statement page, and enter:

SET PASSWORD = OLD_PASSWORD('MyPassword');

...where MyPassword was replaced by my actual database password.  I executed it and POW, I can see my Install screen!

Hopefully this post will help someone else down the road.  I have literally spent days trying over and over, deleting and recreating databases on GoDaddy.  Now, though, it all seems to work! 

-Corby- 



The Guild, a review

clock December 12, 2008 16:09 by author Corby

The Guild, a review of the web tv show located at http://www.watchtheguild.com

Felicia Day, Codex on The Guild

If you are not already in love with Felicia Day, then you're out of the loop! Who is she? Well, she's "Codex" on "The Guild", www.WatchTheGuild.com. She is also the writer and lead on this awesome web tv show. I stumbled onto this gem while chowing down a foot-long Blimpie's Best sammy over lunch about a month ago.

I had fired up the TV for a little G4TV on my cable system while destroying the sandwhich and they were doing an interview with Felicia about "The Guild". Being a former, and ever recovering, MMORPG geek, I was intregued immediately. After having spent nearly 3 years of my life sucked into the world of Everquest, only having given it up after my lovely bride politely told me that if I didn't stop playing the game, I'd be playing with myself for the rest of my life, anything I can live the MMORPG life vicariously through without actually logging the hours is right up my alley.

So that evening I watched the entire season 1 and as there were only two episodes of season 2 released, I added those to the night's viewing enjoyment. Note, each episode is only between 3-8 minutes long so knocking out the entire series up to this point is well worth the less than 2 hour investment. Much more entertaining than the 2-hour movie you've got 6 items down in your Netflix queue (trust me, I know).

Basically "Codex" (Felicia Day) is in a guild with a few other players. Vork (Jeff Lewis), Tinkerballa (Amy Okuda), "Zaboo" (Sandeep Parikh), "Clara" (Robin Thorsen), and "Bladezz" (Vincent Casso). Here's a direct link to the Cast Page.

This band of looters and raiders are all...special...in their own way. Zaboo leaves his mother's home to travel across the contry to pronounce his love for Codex, who is the least bit interested but still allows the creepy little sex pot to live in her house. His mother later comes into the picture as a mega-boss. In an effort to get some help from her guildmates, Codex arranges a real life get-together with these fine folks she's never met in person before. Hilarity ensues, as this group of social misfits, albiet a powerhouse of MMORPG goodness in-game, are a bunch of weirdos in real life. Hm...wonder if that's how things were back when I was rocking the Quellious Server in Everquest as a level 47 magician, "Skoalman".  Anyway, Bladezz holds the guild's loot bank hostage, Tinkerballa offers to babysit Clara's neglected children, Zaboo continues to attempt to make Codex fall in love with him pitifully, and Vork is trying to abide by guild rules not only in-game, but in real life.

One thing that the show is missing is some actual in-game footage. Maybe there's copyright reasons they aren't allowed to clip in some Warcraft video or whatever the flavor of the month MMORPG game is these days. It would sure be nice to see some "South Park"-esc game action here and there as this group struggles between real world problems and in-game guild obligations.

I've got to give this show a 10 of 10 for not only nerd humor, but the writing is great, the cast is outstanding, and the show is just an all around blast to watch if you can relate to the gamer mentality. Give "The Guild" just an episode or two of your time and see for yourself. I can promise you that you'll enjoy it as much as I do...if you're the least geeky or nerdy. And if you're here, you are.

-Corby-

 

http://www.watchtheguild.com



Captcha, can simple random numbers in C# be better than images?

clock December 12, 2008 13:32 by author Corby
I'm curious if a little random number generation would do the trick or if the same robots that can read the Captcha's could figure out this, too.  I guess I don't know enough about how the bad guys are able to defeat image Captchas on websites...but if you've got a .NET site, creating some simpl code tied to your comment or blog post submission button that generates random numbers and checks to see if the end-user can do the simple math would be an easy way of stopping bots from comment spamming.

This has always been my thought...and something I could whip up in 5 minutes with Visual Studio and C#.

int Rand1         //Random #1 (1-20)
int Rand2         //Random #2 (1-20)
int RandSign     //Random math sign (1-2).  If 1, sign is plus, if 2, sign is minus.

Display
Random #1    Random math sign    Random #2
Type Answer here: ______
Submit Button

when the button's clicked:
if (Convert.ToInt32(this.txtRand1.Text) + Convert.ToInt32(this.txtRand2.Text) != Rand1 + Rand2) ||
(Convert.ToInt32(this.txtRand1.Text) - Convert.ToInt32(this.txtRand2.Text) != Rand1 - Rand2)
{
      //Failed to match, probably robot, do not let them in
}
else
{
     //They did good math, probably human, let'em in.
}

Are these Captcha defeating robots able to screen scrape or something and that's why something like this doesn't seem like it's implemented anywhere on the web?  Any thoughts on why this wouldn't work are welcome.

-Corby-


The 2 Blogging and Podcasting expos merge into one!

clock December 10, 2008 16:46 by author Corby

I was sitting at work today when I received an email about the joining of Blogworld's expo and the New Media expo into one event.  I attended the first Podcast Expo (had a great time, met lots of awesome people) and the second which I believe was changed to "New Media Expo" the following year, both in Ontario, CA.  Although I haven't been able to go since, due to family and work, I still follow all of the happenings in the podosphere and in the new media expo world.

The email I received today was titled "BlogWorld Expo & New Media Expo Merge to Create One Huge Event for the Entire New Media industry!" from Rick Calvert, founder of Blogworld and New Media Expo and Tim Bourquin of the Podcast and Portable Media Expo (later named New Media Expo).  The two gave their perspectives on how the joining expos came about one, big mega nerd get-together.  The full contents of the email from Rick's perspective was published over at  Blogworld.com and Tim's perspective at newmediaexpo.com.

Ah, the old days of sipping beers in the Ontario, CA Marriott hotel bar with the likes of Keith and the Girl, Brother Love, Dawn and Drew, the guys from Nobody Likes Onions, Rob from Podcast 411, Nate and Di, Swoopy, Bibb, and countless, countless others....  (my old Flickr photos of the first year's event can be found here)

It's nice to see the two groups getting together and hopefully an official "sticking it to the old media man" expo will come out of this.  As active in the podcasting community as many of us are, either as content creators or fans/listeners/viewers, we new media folks need all the togetherness we can get.  I think that by these two forces joining together, we might be in for some of the best new media expo adventures yet!

-Corby- 

 



iPhone App Review Field Runners

clock December 8, 2008 20:46 by author Corby

 
 
Ah, review time.  I recently purchased Field Runners at $4.99 for my iTouch, one of the few apps I have actually had to pay cash for.  I think aside from this game, I have only ever purchased Monkey Ball (thumbs up, but thumbs sideways for difficulty) and CroMag Rally (thumbs up for a nice racer, but thumbs down for bad controls), though I have about 75 other apps and games that have come from the FREE world.
 
As an avid fan of Desktop Tower Defense, I have been waiting for a "tower defense" style game for the iTouch/iPhone....and man, is this thing the ticket!
 
Although the game seems to initially only come with two maps, one that sends bad guys from left to right while the other sends them left to right and up to down, I believe that if you master the 3 levels of easy, medium, and hard, perhaps you will open the door for more maps.
 
There are only 4 types of towers, where as the web version of DTD has a handful more, the 4 types of towers in this game seem to do the trick in terms of fun.  First is a cannon barrel that when upgraded for $4 (per each upgrade of two, per each piece of equipment) fires double bullets at the bad guys.  Second is a sort of squirter tower that shoots green globs of slow-down-ness at bad guys.  Upgrades for this beast are $5 each, again a 2-time upgrade limit.  Third is a rocket launcher that costs $20 to start and $15 to upgrade each of it's two times.  Lastly is a lightning tower that really seems to blast the bad guys with bolts of blue death.  Each upgrade for this $70 initial tower comes in at $50.
 
The strategy of DTD carries over just fine for Field Runners.  It seems best to create a sort of diagonal zig zag forcing the bad guys to go back and forth between the same towers with each pass.  Heavy upgrades in the center of the screen where the bad guys pass through will help to ensure that the flying helicopters that normally tend to kick my butt get knocked out of the sky before making it to the other side.  Another thing to take into consideration, along with upgrading everything to the utmost, is that many of these things move fast in the small space of the field and even though you may zig zag the enemies through your maze of towers, slowing them down is key!  Squirt towers, fully upgraded, mixed with fully upgraded rocket towers and lightning towers will be your best bet, using the cheapest cannon as blockers to create your zig zag around the edges.
 
On a scale of ten, in terms of value, time consumption, graphics, and fun, I have to give Field Runners from the Apple App Store for the iPhone or iTouch a 10 out of 10.  Please note, though, this game is a BATTERY HOG.  After about 1.5 hours, you'll need to plug in your iPhone or iTouch.
 
Here is the direct link to download the app into iTunes.  Enjoy!  App Store direct download of Field Runners.
 
 


Nerdnology.com's video podcast intro, a work in progress

clock December 8, 2008 20:18 by author Corby

The eventual video podcast is coming, but for now, all I have for you is an intro video.  I think it looks pretty good on the iPod, minus the lower 3rds and any real content....but coming soon!

Intro



3G hits Omaha, AT&T iPhone Gen 2 users rejoice!

clock December 8, 2008 16:18 by author Corby

I had a conversation today with a co-worker/buddy named Brian.  He pointed out that his second generation iPhone's "E" had been replaced with a "3G".  This news should excite all iPhone users in the Omaha Nebraska area as it appears official that AT&T's 3G network has been activated in our town!

Brian was kind enough to share a screenshot of his iPhone's desktop showing the new 3G graphic near the upper left as confirmation.  



Finding the number of leap years between two dates in C#

clock December 5, 2008 09:21 by author Corby

 I recently ran into a situation where I needed to figure out if there were any leap years between two dates.  Although I'm quite sure there is a more elegant way of doing it in C# for purposes of using on an ASP.NET 2.0 page, this is what I came up with and I am quite pleased that it works.  Hopefully somebody will find this useful in the future, as my searching and searching prior to writing this code didn't net me much success.

Why would you want to find out how many leap years are between two dates?  Well, let's say you want to calculate insurance premiums based on a 365 day year.  If you have a leap year, you might have 366 days if the policy started before 2-29 of that year...or if the policy is from 5-1-2000 and goes to 5-1-2004.  The year 2000 does not include the 2-29 date so you are not adjusting the 366 days down to 365...but for the year 2004, you do have to take the extra leap day into consideration when calculating.  This code takes the two dates, starting and ending, figures the total years and days between the dates, and gives a total number of leap year days you must consider between the two.

            DateTime d1 = Convert.ToDateTime(this.txtStartDate.Text);
            DateTime d2 = Convert.ToDateTime(this.txtEndDate.Text);
          
           #region Leap Year Calculations
            //Leap year checker
            int LeapValueToSubtract = 0;
            if (d1.Year == d2.Year)
            {
                //if the same year AND a leap year, we just need to subtract 1 day
                if (DateTime.IsLeapYear(d1.Year) == true && d1.DayOfYear < 60)
                {
                    LeapValueToSubtract++;
                }
            }
            else if (d1.Year != d2.Year)
            {
                if (DateTime.IsLeapYear(d1.Year) == true && d1.DayOfYear < 60)
                {
                    LeapValueToSubtract++;
                }

                int holder = d1.Year;
                holder = holder + (4 - (holder % 4));

                for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
                {
                    if (holder < d2.Year)
                    {
                        LeapValueToSubtract++;
                        holder = holder + 4;
                    }
                }
                if (DateTime.IsLeapYear(d2.Year) == true && d2.DayOfYear > 60)
                {
                    LeapValueToSubtract++;
                }

            }
           
this.lblLeapYearDaysToSubtract.Text = Convert.ToString(LeapValueToSubtract);

#endregion



iPhone App Christmas wish

clock December 2, 2008 20:25 by author Corby

Of the hundreds of iPhone applications I've downloaded to my iTouch, I have found many that I love.  Fieldrunner, Monkey Ball, AOL Radio, just to name a few.  Granted, most of what I download are free but I would absolutely be willing to pay for one particular creation.

What I am looking for is an application that would allow me to stream video from my Macbook to my iTouch using my home's wi-fi network.  Why would I want such a thing?  Well, for one, I have two daughters who enjoy super long baths.  If I were able to set up my Macbook's iSight camera to stream live video to my iTouch while I went around the house and cleaned things up, it would be amazing!  Also, I'd like to be able to do the same thing when the kids are in their play room.  Macbook in the corner, iSight turned on, iPhone app running catching the live video stream so I can see them playing at all times.

Now, I assume that if the iPhone was able to handle Flash, I could accomplish this task with ease by creating a free account at www.ustream.com or some other similar video streaming service and then access the URL through Safari to see the video in real time, but regardless of the rumor mill regarding Adobe Flash on the iPhone, nothing solid, proven, and definitive has been announced, at least for the near future.

So aside from my few examples, there could be hundreds of applications for such a streaming video feature from a Macbook (or PC for that matter) to an iPhone or iTouch, whether via an iPhone App or some sort of web-based service that would jive fine with Safari on Apple's mobile devices.  Have an employee out of the office that should be able to see the big meeting?  Want to stream a live video podcast and allow iPhone users to see it anywhere in the world in real time?  News networks could broadcast repeats of their evening news on their servers and have things accessible via the iPhone on demand.  Anywhere where there is content being created or action going on that someone not there might like to view, this "wishful thinking" iPhone application would be perfect for.

If anyone knows of any suggestions that would help me accomplish this sort of functionality using my iTouch, please let me know.  If you're a developer and you're working on something like this, let me know!  If you know more than I do about the potential of the iPhone/iTouch eventually getting Adobe Flash, let me know!



Digital Converter Box. FAIL.

clock December 2, 2008 17:30 by author Corby

With the digital transition coming soon, I thought it was time to go ahead and pick a digital converter box.  After receiving my coupon while home for lunch today, after work I took my daughters up to the local Target and picked a $49.99 box.  Now under normal circumstances, I would have researched like crazy and picked the best of the best for the price.  This purchase, however, I opted not to bother...figuring all boxes are probably about the same and heck, it's not for my TV, it's for my daughter's room for picking up over the air PBS kids shows.  I should have known better...

After a rather hectic checkout with a lady whose first language was not English, my 1-year-old trying desperately to escape the cart repeatedly, multiple swipes of the coupon card, and my 4-year-old doing her best to attempt to shoplift a princess lipgloss cleverly placed kid-high in the checkout isle, we managed to leave the Target with a GE Digital Converter Box, everyone in tact, no items heisted (to my knowledge).

 Upon getting it home, I plugged the thing into the power strip, put the coax cable into the back of the TV, and tried to turn it on.  Nothing happened.  I tried a different power strip.  Nothing happened.  I took the box to 3 different rooms and tried a total of 5 different outlets.  Nothing happened.  Now I know nothing happened because the menu that was supposed to appear when it was hooked to the TV never came up.  And the two lights on the front of the device never lit up (even after I covered the thing with my hands peering at the LEDs like a kid window shopping for a Red Rider BB gun).  I even tried the remote instead of the power button on the front.  Nothing happened.  I swapped the packaged batteries for brand new ones.  Nothing happened.  I, to be quite honest, got a dud.

So needless to say, this stinker of a device is going back to Target at my earliest convenience.  Too bad, too.  I didn't even get the chance to use it and write a review on the setup, the menu system, and the quality of signal it received.

Word to the wise...avoid this box and do your research!

 

  



iPhone App Store Must-Haves

iCam on iCam
Field Runners on Fieldrunners 
Bejeweled 2 on Bejeweled 2
Tetris on TETRIS®
iDracula on iDracula - Undead Awakening


What I'm loving listening to right now.

 Brother Love: Album of the Year Brother Love - Album of the Year

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