Category: General

  • Charlie Brooker on Facebook

    The Guardian’s funniest columnist has joined Facebook, despite being bad with people and small talk. I think just about every major news outlet now (The Straits Times included, oh my) has covered Facebook in a major feature section.

    Afterwards my friend asked how the party had gone. I complained that the key to small talk had merely opened a door on a world of tedium.

    “Well, duh,” they said. “No one really cares what anyone else is getting up to. Why do you think it’s called small talk? It’s just shit you say to make things less awkward.” What, just a pointless noise you make with your mouth? “Precisely,” they said. “Cows moo. People small-talk.” And I thought: I hate this world. This stinking, unbearable world.

    Link

  • Japanese Schoolgirl Watch: Coin-Op Aerobics

    Any article with “Japanese Schoolgirl Watch” in it, you can be sure I’ll link.

    Wired has a photo and mini-story on the new konbini fitness fad. Which is taking the ubiquitous locations of convenience stores and adding them to the ADD bursts of videogame arcades for a new kind of urban gym. Users pay ¥500 (SGD$6.20) to exercise for 10 minutes on a new kind of balance-challenge workout machine that lets you do aerobic activity without breaking a sweat. Awesome.

    Link

  • Start planning your Geek Vacations

    Wired: The Best Geek Vacations

    Most of these, I can get behind. Tokyo at #1, with the Sega Joypolis and Ghibli Museum. Chernobyl, ehhh…. I’ll pass.

  • Would you?

    Slashdot | When Does Technolust Become An Addiction?

    Would you give up the use of a mobile phone (for life), for £1 million? Apparently 1 in 3 young Britons wouldn’t. Wow. I think I grossly underestimated the technophilia of the English. When I was there, people were happy to live without the internet for weeks on end. Some *gasp* didn’t even have email addresses. This was around the same time that the Koreans declared “email is for old people.”

    Surprisingly, I think I’d take up that offer, depending on what the definition of mobile telephone was. Would an internet tablet count?

  • DS to be in 89% of Jap homes

    Handheld console market maturing

    A report from Screen Digest projects 89% penetration of Nintendo’s DS portable console system by 2011. By comparison. the Game Boy Advance (probably the most popular handheld ever) maxed out at 56%. Japanese people of all ages have stopped seeing the DS as a game machine, removing barriers to adoption. Right now, it’s an electronic cookbook, a web browser, a brain stimulator, a pet, an English teacher, and so on. Come on, Nintendo, make us a phone already.

  • Macs getting GameTap Lite

    Apple GameTap ‘Lite’ launches June 28, Intel Macs only – Joystiq

    Get ready to tap your Mac’s ass, because GameTap’s free ad-supported games are coming June 28th! Premium paid version to follow later this year.

  • Fancy a long meandering post about food?

    Fancy a Chindian?* [guardian.co.uk]

    Imagine a parallel universe where everybody drives Ferraris, Porsches, Lamborghinis. Although this sounds like the set up for a bad Mercedes-Benz ad, what car do they upgrade to when they finally arrive in the world?

    Or a nation of people who use Macintosh computers exclusively. Everyone uses a Mac. Everyone dresses in jeans and loose winter-toned fabrics. Just imagine. Wow, excuse me a minute while I change my underwear.

    Yes, so everyone there uses a Mac. Who should be cast in the ads when Macs are finally surpassed by a new type of computer? What does this hero look like? How much more self-important and pretentious can an actor be?

    The reason for that long preamble was to prepare you for the mindblowing concept that follows.

    Somewhere in this world, there is a country where the people eat a certain kind of inferior food, day-in and day-out. Friends, the majority of us are already living in the equivalents of FerrariTown and MacVille. Consider that for a moment. We are quite blessed, compared to this land of people who consume the culinary cousins of Skodas, Yugos, Hyundais, Dells, and generic beige box computers running Windows ME.

    This country is England. And occasionally its poor inhabitants dine upon foreign foods that have been soaked in the mire of traditional British cooking, removing them far from the original designs.

    I present to you an article from a British newspaper, written from the point of view of someone laughably titled a “Food Critic”. It explores what people in utopian countries such as China and India (seriously though, there’s a joke if ever I heard one) eat when they want something exotic.

    * “Yes, please. Preferably young and attractive,” is not an appropriate answer.

  • Yahoo! Go beta imminent

    Yahoo! Go. The Internet to go.

    I rarely get excited about Yahoo! products, but this Friday will see the release of a new Yahoo! Go beta, including a version localized for Singapore. One has to admit that Yahoo! seems a great deal more committed to localization here than Google. Their movie times service is one example, and I’m not sure, but I think their Maps are far more usable than Google Maps in a local context.

    Hopefully, Friday’s version will be the long awaited Java MIDP2 version, compatible with most modern phones including my Sony Ericsson K800. See the demo at the website linked above. Very promising. Location Awareness means you can get listings of businesses and services in your city, as well as advanced access to Flickr, news, weather services, etc. all in one custom app. I currently use their Mobile site when I need these things, but nothing beats a fast local client.

    Geek out.