Robosapian v2 for $100

Hit Amazon.com and check out your gold box. You should see the WowWee Robosapian Version 2 at a 50% off $99.99 price. If only I could get the wife to get me one. I believe the sale is over after today. My direct link is probably screwed up because of the posting software I’m using, in which case just use the Amazon search feature or check your gold box.

Buy one to further spread the robots’ influence around the world, thereby easing the work needed in their upcoming uprising and taking over the world.

[tags]WowWee Robosapian v2 for $100[/tags]

Testing in-game ads via eye tracking

This has to be one of the neatest uses of eye tracking I’ve seen. With the recent increase in real-world advertising in online games, and the talk of advertisers and game distributors working on bringing in more, it seems at least one company has decided to check on the effectiveness of this move. And the results don’t look promising for advertisers or distributors banking on this.

Continue reading “Testing in-game ads via eye tracking”

Snow Crystals

I snowflake-AmSciCover.jpgfinally received my first issue of my American Scientist magazine subscription yesterday, and consumed a chunk of it in my spare time last night. The cover has this awesome snowflake image, from a microphotography snap of a complex snowflake. Here’s a cropped shot of it, taken from the web site by the author of the snowflakes article in the magazine(apologies for that horrid grammar). I hope I won’t get in trouble from the author from snagging this photo.

In the article, Kenneth G Libbrecht discusses the creation of snowflakes, the different kinds of snowflakes, some history of snowflake studies and snowflake photography, “designer” snowflakes, and much more. Reading this is akin to reading a Scientific American article, although I find American Scientist articles to be much more readable. The article is available online, but you have to subscribe to the magazine or be a member of Sigma Xi to access it. I recommend just buying the magazine at the newstand.


It is in fact true that no two snowflakes are alike. These single crystals of ice are so affected by subtle changes in temperature, water saturation, mineral content and wind speed that it’s nigh impossible that two would experience the exact same conditions during their growth. Indeed, just a few degrees’ temperature shift can alter a snowflake from the flowery form that we typically think of into a needle or a cluster of bullet-shaped columns. Libbrecht details many of these forms and how they arise, but also how much remains unknown about the elusive shapes. One of his newest theories relates to the fact that the very thin edge of a snowflake becomes highly unstable, leading to unexpected growth. Libbrecht’s work can be applied to the growth of crystals used for semiconductors, as well as other nanoscale processes of material formation.

All that said, I really just want to direct folks to the author’s web site. There are some amazing images there, and a lot of information on snowflakes. It’s a much more interesting topic that I would have guessed.

[tags]Snowflakes, The formation and study of snowflakes, Photographing snowflakes[/tags]

Top games 2006 – multiple sources

End of the year review time, hot shot. Here are a number of sites giving out their top XX games of 2006 virtual awards and a sampling of their awards. Check some out and see with which you agree.

Next Generation:

  • 49. Galactic Civilizations II: Dread Lords (PC)
  • 34. Microsoft Flight Simulator X (PC)
  • 23. LocoRoco (PSP)
  • 4. Guitar Hero II (PS2)

Maxim Magazine:

  • 2. Sci-Fi Blockheads!
    LEGO STAR WARS II
    PS2, Xb, GC, PC, PSP, DS
  • 5. Spandex Gaming!
    GUITAR HERO
    PS2
  • 10. Mammoth RPGing!
    THE ELDER SCROLLS IV: OBLIVION
    X360, PC

Some random guy on Amazon.com:

1. Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Collector’s Edition (DVD-ROM) by 2K Games

10. Black by Electronic Arts (Whaaaaa? Note: Does not match up with the view of most of the rest of the gaming community)

16. Guitar Hero 1 Bundle (with Guitar) by REDOCTANE

CBS News on top portable games:

  • “Power Stone Collection” is a collection of two older Sega Dreamcast games merged into one. It’s a solid and slick fighter that is every bit as fast and fun as it originally was. Retail price $30. (PSP)
  • If puzzle games are your thing, or you enjoy music/rhythm based games, “Lumines 2” will easily fit the bill with more music options and a great price. Retail price $30. (PSP)
  • Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin” will utilize WiFi capability to play cooperative in certain modes, so you don’t have to go demon slaying alone. Retail price $35. (DS)
  • “Elite Beat Agents” is a quirky “touch the screen to the music” game that had me laughing within minutes of playing it! Music and rhythm game fans will LOVE it. Retail price $35. (DS – I just got this game, and it’s addictive)

There are plenty more such lists out there if you take the time to look.  It’s interesting to see how much overlap there is and how many unique entries there are per list.  You’ll see Oblivion and the various Guitar Hero incarnations on most lists, I think, but otherwise it is all up in the air.

[tags]Top games of 2006[/tags]

Gaming industry’s biggest blunders – 2006 edition

I love pointing out the failures of others.  So when I see a site like Next Generation cover the gaming industry’s top 10 blunders of 2006, I have to pass that on.

5. Gizmondo Crashes, Exec Follows Suit

In January the underdog handheld company Gizmondo imploded and threw itself at the mercy of its creditors. At the time no one suspected that the most fascinating part of the Gizmondo story was still to come. In February Stefan Eriksson, former executive at Gizmondo, taught his Ferrari Enzo how to fly on a stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway, slicing the million-dollar car neatly in half, and creating the world’s first performance art re-enactment of the rise and fall of a videogame company.

Of course, it wasn’t really Eriksson’s fault. As he told it, a mysterious German named Dietrich was driving the doomed sportscar when it crashed. Eriksson was just innocently sitting in the passenger seat of a flying Ferrari when it collided with a pole and blood flew off his lip and onto the driver-side airbag. Happens all the time, really.

That’s my favorite.  In fact, the others aren’t even that interesting.  But hey, faults is faults, and I’m all about them’s getting the faultification highlightingism they deservify.

[tags]Gaming Industry’s biggest blunders 2006[/tags]