April avatar

My photo “Tokyo Tower by night (1 of 3)” recently won the Metallic Lines Challenge meaning that it will be the April avatar for the Just Lines group on RedBubble:

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Yay! 😀

I really like the Abstract Realism and Just Lines groups. I didn’t really know about abstract realism prior to joining RedBubble and checking out all the groups available. I just liked photos that removed their primary subject from overt context, and it turns out that there is a term for that.

For more of my work, check out my RedBubble profile page. I have a lot of stuff still to upload; Hopefully I’ll find the time to pu a few more up tomorrow.

Weekend links

Much like other people, I usually start the day by opening up my feed reader, flicking through headlines and opening up interesting stories in new tabs in my browser. I then peruse the tabs, closing them after I read the stories or if they are too disinteresting.

I leave the interesting tabs open so that I can blog about them. This usually works out pretty well, with just a few tabs to choose something to blog about. However the tabs have been piling up, so I decided to just post a whole bunch of links. Here goes!

I’ll have to post more about Yoshio Ishii in future. Rock, Paper, Shotgun and JayIsGames seem to share a fascination with him. Aside from his games, I’m particularly interested in his motion graphics work which he clearly labels:

This is not a game. In addition, not interactive. This is motion graphics movie. [Yoshio Ishii]

Awesome stuff! (Here are a few examples). I’m sure that there are other people I know who would like this stuff.

Work day

Today was a “work day” with little internet browsing and no gaming; I’ve got a lot to do for the upcoming exhibit, personal projects, and local industry evangelism!

I finished writing the first draft of the Perth Games Industry Report (based on the local industry survey that will run until next Tuesday). Clearly, the report is based on current results, but it should be easy to update when the survey is closed.

Thanks to Paul from Black Lab Games for providing an excellent foreword to the report. It’s a little nostalgic (which is endearing) and shows how far we’ve come in the last few years.

The plan for work next week includes:

  • Final version of the report (online and hardcopies sent to key people in the industry, government, and educational institutes)
  • Forward plan to implement practical measures to grow local industry (based on survey results)
  • Construct all pieces for art exhibition and put together an artist statement and profile

I guess writing it here makes me accountable for it! 😛

Australian Government webpage blacklist leaked

The Australian Government maintains a secret list of ‘banned’ webpages. Australian ISPs that host webpages that contain hyperlinks to banned webpages face charges of AU$11,000 per day.

This post on Slashdot includes a good summary with links to related news articles. Today, the Sydney Morning Herald is reporting that the blacklist has been leaked.

Electronic Frontier Australia (EFA) has a media release on the story. The EFA’s No Clean Feed campaign website includes information on how you can protest internet censorship in Australia.

Note: The EFA website is currently down, so here is a copy of the media release (taken from my RSS reader):

Electronic Frontiers Australia today hailed the leaking of the government’s secret internet blacklist as a “wake-up call for Australians concerned about secret censorship”. The blacklist, which appeared on the whistle-blower site Wikileaks, is compiled by the Australian Communications and Media Authority and distributed to the vendors of approved internet filters, but is otherwise secret.

“The leaking of the list has confirmed some of our worst fears,” said EFA Vice-Chair Colin Jacobs. “This was bound to happen, especially as mandatory filtering would require the list to be distributed to ISPs all around the country. The Government is now in the unenviable business of compiling and distributing a list which includes salacious and illegal material and publicising those very sites to the world.”

The blacklist, which EFA tried unsuccessfully to obtain under Freedom of Information laws, was expected to contain not only some sites publishing illegal material involving minors, but also a majority of sites that were blocked for other reasons. Nevertheless, an examination of the list by EFA has turned up a few very surprising additions. YouTube videos, a MySpace profile, online poker parlours and a site containing poison information were present, as well as many apparently harmless sites such as that of a tour operator and a satirical encyclopedia.

“Now that we have seen the list, it is clearly not the perfect weapon against child-abuse it has been made out to be,” said Jacobs. “Many of the sites clearly contain only run-of-the-mill adult material, poker tips, or nothing controversial at all. Even if some of these sites may have been defaced at the time they were added to the list, how would the operators get their sites removed if the list is secret and no appeal is possible?”

The leaking of the list on Wikileaks is ironic, as ACMA this week confirmed that another Wikileaks page containing a similar blacklist from Denmark is now on their own list. It is therefore presumed that the leaked ACMA blacklist will itself be blacklisted.

“Controlling the spread of information on the internet is not as simple as some in government would like to believe,” said Jacobs. “The leaking of this blacklist is a timely lesson in this, and we hope the Government will take this to heart before imposing a filter on the entire country.”

Update: ABC News story. No comment yet from the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA).

Update: reddit discussion thread.

Update: Statements from the ACMA and Stephen Conroy (Minister for Broadband, Communications, and the Digital Economy) assert that the leaked list is not the government blacklist (although it suggests that the blacklist is a subset of the list hosted on wikileaks).

Post-operative care

This is Bruce (our kitten):

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He was recently neutered inline with RSPCA recommendations.

Aside from a little drowsiness when we picked him up, he’s been just as energetic as always. We didn’t notice any side-effects until yesterday… when I came home to a putrid odour.

This gets a little gross, so I’m putting the rest of the story after the jump.

Continue reading “Post-operative care”

Cybernetic superorganisms

I woke up this morning to the thought that we’re already cyborgs.

At a biological level, we’re all superorganisms mostly comprising bacteria due to the human body’s dependance on human flora.

I think it’s fairly easy to draw parallels to cybernetics at a higher practical level. There is a lot of technology that is very much a part of who we are, and that makes us cyborgs: organisms that have enhanced abilities due to technology.

I don’t want to bother talking about obvious enhancement technology (eg. the bionic ear, hearing aids, glasses) because I think that there is a fair case for all people to be considered cyborgs based on more basic universal technology: clothing and language.

Clothing is fairly universal and serves a number of purposes such as improving: our temperature control, our durability, and our personal appearance. It’s also obviously man-made (technology) due to it’s physicality.

Language is less obvious; I’m not sure that most people would consider it “technology” at first. However, it is a construct that has been developed extensively over the course of human history.

Complex communication and collaboration aren’t possible without language, so it greatly enhances our social abilities. Perhaps more importantly, it greatly enhances our memory (particularly when combined with music and writing).

Fundamentally, language facilitates complex thought: What language do you think in? We need language and it’s as much a part of who we are as our human flora and human body.

We’re cybernetic superorganisms (and that sounds pretty cool to me!).

TAB trading on Good Friday

I just read this ABC News article on “outrage” over the TAB trading on Good Friday. I’m flabberghasted that anyone could even attempt to dignify this outrage.

In a modern multi-cultural society, no reasonable person can assert that the entire country must observe a certain religious practice. (In this case, no gambling or drinking on Good Friday.)

There is absolutely nothing stopping devout Christians from not going to the TAB on Friday. Why should everyone else be forbade from spending their time however they see fit? The entire notion is preposterous and discriminatory. Bah!

Update: A number of years ago I was at a Pot Black when the police arrived to shut the place down. It turns out that they had a liquor license and (although they were not serving liquor) they could not operate on Good Friday. The police waited until everyone left. That’s nuts.

Cheap games (Devil May Cry 4, Prince of Persia)

I picked up Devil May Cry 4 (Xbox360) and Prince of Persia (PS3) on sale at BigW. Pretty good prices (~$30, ~$60); there’s a list of current sales at PALGN).

I’m not sure when I’m going to play them though. It seems that I only really finish casual or download games recently. Prior to PSN and XBLA, I never realised that putting a disc into a console was a barrier to getting around to playing a game… but apparantly it is.

I still haven’t played Valkyria Chronicles or Uncharted. I might talk to Dan to see if he wants to feature any on Teh Learning Curve.

Anyone else having trouble getting into “full” games recently?