Monday, June 30, 2008

Dancing On The Ceiling

Welcome back friends and netizens!

House of Oddio Fun Fact: If you ever catch anyone using the phrase "netizens" in any context not involving irony, it's legal (and in some states required) to kill them. True story.
Well, to be honest, you all should be saying welcome back to me; both as protagonist of this charade and returnee from the Swiss-Italian border where I just spent a lovely weekend. Good for me.

Back to the daily grind. Today I present, for your insatiable approval, this man's website.

No, not Lionel Richie, despite how awesome that would be. The less-smooth man standing next to Lionel is Josh Handel, proprietor of "The #1 Song On This Date In History" website, a title so unwieldy I was forced to title this post the much catchier "Dancing On The Ceiling", a 1986 Richie classic. Quite simply, you click the month in which you were born, then the date, and a list is shown for every song, along with a helpful link to the iTunes store. The Billboard hits date back to the 1890s (which is damn impressive, I didn't even know humans were around back then), but the clickable links only go back to the 1930s. The number one song in the US when I was born was a pathetic little ditty; Roxette's "It Must Have Been Love". Ugh. Bonus points for whoever finds out when I was born!

Friday, June 27, 2008

Bioluminescent Algae

Among the animals who emit bioluminescence, you'll find fireflies, glowworms and even some kinds of mushrooms. But one of the most interesting kinds is the pyrocystis fusiformis, an algae that is responsible for the Red Tide effect and glows only when disturbed. Sometimes they'll flash when they're being eaten by fish and krill and such (I don't know what eats them) to draw larger fish to eat their attackers. SCIENCE! Unfortunately, the concentrations are usually so low that's it's almost just a faint blue flash in the water. Sometimes though, you'll get lucky.

That was taped off a bay in Australia when some sharp fellows decided to start throwing water... in the water. Good job guys. Also, the greatest thing you could do would be to drive a motorboat through there in the dark. It would leave like a tail or something.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

It Is Pitch Dark

I swear to you all, if I had known of a music video that brough together Interactive Fiction and Nerdcore rap, I'd have mentioned it earlier. You have my word on that.

That was MC Frontalot with "It Is Pitch Dark". Look out for his next few hits "You Are In A Maze Of Twisty Passages, All Alike" and the minimalist "Xyzzy".

Monocycle

So there I was, trolling YouTube, killing time, when I stumbled upon this slice of heaven.

"A monocycle?" I cried aloud, much to the annoyance of my boss, who was talking to me at the time. "What could this be? Could such a thing exist?" I instantly dropped everything I was doing and began to search for a purveyor of such a device online; all the while vaguely aware that people were still talking to me. These people, however, were not monocycles, so I considered them significantly less important. And find one I did. I fully intend to scrounge up the requisite thirteen thousand dollars so I can scoot about town, worrying that the wheel would get caught and I'd just spin around and around and around inside the wheel, all the while screaming "THIS WAS A BAD IDEA."

Kinda reminds me of the monowheel thing in Steamboy. Ever seen that? Why not? It's steampunk anime. If it's good enough for me, then it's good enough for you. Gotta go. Boss is saying something about a "pink slip".

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Time-Lapse Starfish

You ever go to the beach and wonder how the starfish move around?
Answer: Disgustingly.


Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Googlewhack

I first heard of this little trend on some news show. It must have been a slow day, because they had a man in the studio who claimed to have invented a grand new pastime; that of the Googlewhack. Quite simply, it's a game where you type two words into the Google search bar with the hope of getting only one result. As surprisingly hard as that might sound at first, it gets a good deal worse. The rules stipulate that a) the words must both be actual words as defined by Google's dictionary, and b) it CANNOT BE A WORDLIST. This rule is shockingly hard to accommodate. You'll think "Yes! Finally! After hours and hours I got one!" only to see that the page is just an alphabetical listing of words. Who does that? Why would you ever just list hundreds upon hundreds of words? Anyway, In the hours and hours I put into this project, I only managed to get one. It's slightly slack because Google recognizes "pan-dimensional" but not "pandimensional". I ask you, is it so hard to just be happy for me, Google? Can you make an effort? Anyway, the beauty of me putting it up here ("Pyroclastic Pandimensional") is that it now has two hits on Google, rendering it unusable for anyone but me. Ha.

Anyway, should you happen to find one, you can submit it here. That list is effectively a graveyard for these little Internet wonders; for in a twist of Hemingwayesque tragedy, their discovery is their death.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Sleeveface

I've said it before and I'll say it again: the internet is 100%, straight-up hardcore. For proof I present to you the following:

They just blow my mental gasket, man. See the rest or upload your own at Sleeveface.com

Friday, June 20, 2008

Awesomest Thing

And yes, "awesomest" is a word. Hold on... I'm just now getting word from my spell-checker that says otherwise. Well screw you, spell-checker.

I think the best thing is the expression on the guards face. "I don't know what you think you're doing, but I'll let you... Oh, I see what you did there. NICE." I like to think that every cop in my life will be this understanding. So far, I've been disappointed in this respect.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

COLD FUSION! (But Not Really)

This May, the US government in Iraq deployed "trash-fed generators" that turn plastics and cardboard into pellets that are then super-heated to release a synthetic gas. This gas is then used to power 60-watt generators. As low-grade awesome this might seem, prophets such as myself can see that this innovation brings us one step closer to the average citizen powering their cars with a Mr. Fusion.

The FUTURE!

Games Of Philosophy

I like to think that philosophy is best described as "the study of everything else." You can learn biology or physics; or go to med school and "make a difference," but in what other field can you just sit around thinking all day? That's my dream job (that or MythBusters). After trolling some pretty dry philosophy sites to gain some perspective, I stumbled upon Philosopher's Net, the blog of The Philosopher's Magazine. Even more interesting, they have a section for interactive quizzes and the like. Be warned, however, this stuff is pretty heavy. A good place to start is the "So You Think You're Logical?" quiz, which measures your ability to pick out logical fallacies. For the more advanced player, I'd recommend the "Taboo" quiz, which begins to delve into the heart of the matter: morality. It asks you to render moral decisions on certain scenarios, and you'd be surprised at the amount of thought you put into the questions. Among the other tests you'll find are the "Battleground God" and the "Do-It-Yourself Deity", the the first of which attempts to poke holes in as many belief systems as possible while the second tries to empirically disprove the idea of a Judeo-Christian God. Yikes. Rounding out the links is "Shakespeare vs. Britney Spears", an analysis of what defines art; "Morality Play", which is the most in-depth quiz of them all (culminating in an essay comparing you to other philosophers, complete with graphs and percentages); and "Staying Alive", a deeply intriguing study on personal identity (are you your body, brain, or something else altogether?). The rest are okay I guess, except for Strange New World. I didn't get to do that one, because I'm at work and it has sounds or something. Apparently it has something to do with The Matrix, so I'd check it out. Have fun!

P.S.: Apparently, I'm cold and amoral. I've always considered myself Nietzschean, so that fits. It just doesn't help when I find out that I'd be no more inclined to save a human being's life than a puppy's.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

City Lights

I believe the band is Sleeping Beauty, and while I'm not a fan of the song in particular, I find it my duty to equally distribute both indie bands and innovative new music videos. I can only imagine the patience required for this.


Eyescapes

We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams.
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams.
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams.
Yet we are the movers and shakers,
Of the world forever, it seems.

Yeah. For some reason, that always reminds me of eyes. HUMAN EYEBALLS. Probably that "pale moon gleams" line. Anyway, check this out!

Wicked. You can see the rest here. Oh, and props to Piers for the link. I think it was Piers.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Wordlustitude

Ladies and gentlemen, it is with great ado that I unveil an entirely new category for House of Oddio! Noting the trend of me liking new words and writing about them, I have decided to add Words as a label for posts like Unwords and my personal favorite: Cab Calloway's Hep Dictionary.

Okay, so the reason I bring this up is due to the fantastic new blog Wordlustitude. Instead of acting as a wiki-like compendium of some word you just thought up, Wordlustitude collects words actually used at some place online, usually words like Vikingologist or human-esque-ish-like. These are words you should fill your head with.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Chess

Yeah, you though I was joking yesterday, didn't you? Yeah you did.

After looking up the ridiculously fake-sounding names for opening chess moves, I delved a little further and started reading about the history of chess. Fascinating stuff. Were you aware that players new to the games of chess were called "rookies"? Yeah, because the rook is traditionally the last piece to be moved into play, just like the newest player. Eventually, the phrase migrated into other sports and games. Also, did you know that after the first move, there are 400 piece-position possibilities, but after the second, there are over 72 thousand? The math on that doesn't seem right, but it is. After three moves, there are over 9 million possibilities, and after four there are 288 billion. The number of electrons in the universe is theorized to be about 10^79, while the number of possible games on a chessboard is about 10^120, or in layman's terms, a whole lot.

Okay, these are pretty cool. Everybody knows about the six standard pieces, but there are in fact a good number of "fairy pieces" that didn't make it into the final cut. As gay as they sound, there are some pretty kick-ass moves you didn't even know existed. For instance, the zebra is a [3,2] jumper. That means it works like a knight (a [2,1] jumper) who can move two spaces then one space perpendicular. Except it can move three spaces, then two. Awesome. Equally excellent is the concept of knighted pieces, standard pieces with the additional power to move like a knight. A knighted queen can essentially win the game single-handedly (a knighted queen is also called a superqueen or an Amazon). Also wicked cool is the Grasshopper, a piece that can move like a queen but jumps over its victims to capture, à la checkers.

Chess variants are games played with standard pieces but different rules or board setups. A perennial favorite is Transcendental Chess, where the first rank of each player is randomized to ensure something-or-other. Also, Pawn's Game, where Black has standard setup, White has no queen, but eight extra pawns. Ummm, let's see... Lord Loss Chess, where there are five boards and a player can choose to remain on one board or move to another (You can probably attack from across boards, which would be awesome), Andernach Chess, where a capture results in a color change rather than a death (presumably a player could have two queens, four knights and four bishops while the other side has all the pawns), and Progressive Chess, where White makes one move, Black makes two, White makes three and so on. Another good one is Upside-Down Chess, where you're playing the other side of the board. As such, the pawns only have one space to move to, but once they do, you can promote them to queens. You'd have nine queens, if I understand the rules correctly. It would be a massacre of epic proportions. But it would be nothing compared to Kung-Fu Chess. This is a variant in which there are no turns; players can move their pieces whenever they want. Games must be over in mere minutes (as opposed to the longest game ever played, a whopping 269-move monster played in 1989. It lasted for 20 hours. For comparison, a fifty-move rule has been in effect for most major tournaments since the early Nineties and most games don't even get that far). To combine fairy pieces with one of these variants would probably mean the end of time and space as we know it; and besides, require the fortitude of a demigod.

To end with, I'll tell you of a sport my high-school art teacher first brought to my attention; a little sport called chess boxing. The game begins with a four-minute round of speed chess (the one with the timers) followed by two minutes of boxing. There are eleven rounds total and games can be won by checkmate or knockout. I get exhausted just thinking about it.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Crazy

Here, enjoy some Gnarls Barkley. I hate the song, but the video is spectacular.

Also, enjoy this right here if you speak Japanese. If not, just bask in the glory that is a Darth Vader-based samurai helmet.

Also, this.

Well, that's all the randomness I have time for today. Come back tomorrow when I discuss the relative values of the Latvian Gambit over the Stonewall Attack!

Monday, June 9, 2008

Cracked.com

For the most part, I tend to stay away from top ten comedy lists (on the INTERNET?! Surely you jest), finding them elitist and slanted in their leanings. I also like to stay away from comedy articles online. That being said, I had never read Cracked.com before. I actually like it. Much like The Onion, it has comedy articles, mostly lists. I love lists. Here are some of the best.

The Nine Manliest Names In The World

Five Recent Scientific Advances (And How They'll Destroy Us All)

Near Misses: The Six Worst Movies Hollywood Almost Made

Eight Laws All Comic Book Movies Follow

If Juno was Ten Times Shorter And 100 Times More Honest

Five Scientific Reasons A Zombie Apocalypse Could Actually Happen

The Five Most Badass Presidents Of All Time

The Six Most Badass Stunts Ever Pulled In The Name Of Science

Six Insane Cults (That Would Probably Be A Lot Of Fun)

But really, they're all good.

EDIT: Jesus Christ. Read this. Not you, Olivia. Seriously. NOT YOU.

THE UNHEARD OF DOUBLE EDIT!: Okay, I'm done.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Bentō

More awesome things from Japan! Today, I'm going to show you all the wonderful world of bentō, an art form with the delightful medium of food. And yes, for all you anal-retentives out there, "bentō" is just the little box it comes in, but it's much cooler when you think it all looks this beautiful.

And for the nerdier among you:

Special thanks to Flickr, whose photo protection disclaimer I am now violating, and Secondose. If you want some more, try here.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Ernten Was Wir Saën

Thank God for foreign MTV.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Six Word Stories

According to legend, Ernest Hemingway once wrote a six-word story to settle a bar bet and he claimed that the result was his best work: "For sale: baby shoes. Never worn."

Way back in 2006, the magazine Wired got hold of some other famous writers and asked them to do the same. My favorites are William Shatner's

"Failed SAT. Lost scholarship. Invented rocket."
Joss Whedon's
"Gown removed carelessly. Head, less so."
Orson Scott Card's
"The baby's blood type? Human, mostly."
Robert Jordan's
"Heaven falls. Details at eleven."
David Brin's
"Dinosaurs return. Want their oil back."
Margaret Atwood's
"Corpse parts missing. Doctor buys yacht."
And once again, David Brin's
"Mind of its own. Damn lawnmower."

Apparently, it's become something of an internet phenom, because I found several other websites all linking to the Wired article and asking their readers to get in on the fun. A healthy selection:

Reluctantly, I welcomed our robot overlords.

Lived to be ninety. No regrets.

Still waiting for her to call.

Cruel and unusual? It's only pie.

Once upon a time, the end.

Ran for president. Lost. Grew beard.

To my surprise, she chose me.

Lucky, yes. But my twin wasn't.

She loved again. I never did.

She watched the world end. Again.

It wasn't her fault. Not entirely.

Debates have rules. This was war.

The secret to eternal happiness is

They fell in love. Problems ensued.

Oh God! My body's over there!

See that shadow? (It's not yours.)

The Earth? We ate it yesterday.

Womb. Bloom. Groom. Gloom. Rheum. Tomb.

Essay due tomorrow. Wrote this instead.

Our baby lived for thirty minutes.

Snow? In July?! Oh, wait... it's crack.

Horses: punched right in the face.

Also, apparently a couple years back someone won a nation-wide essay contest on "good government" by submitting "Good government. Good government. Sit. Stay." And now, I'm forced to ask you to come up with some. Sorry, my hands are tied by the blogger's code. Have fun.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Nomic

I first heard of this game in Douglas Hofstadter's previously mentioned masterpiece Metamagical Themas (some people are all like, "Eternal Golden Braid is better," but I'm all like "As if"). Designed in the early 80s by Peter Suber, Nomic is a game in which "changing the rules is a move. In that respect it differs from almost every other game. The primary activity of Nomic is proposing changes in the rules, debating the wisdom of changing them in that way, voting on the changes, deciding what can and cannot be done afterwards, and doing it. Even this core of the game, of course, can be changed." Yes, you can find that on Wikipedia, but I did do some more research; and besides, it's a very fitting description.

Because of this extremely interesting dynamic between rules and choice in game theory, games often take on the properties of the players involved. From attempting to forget everything you know about the rules to eventually getting into the fun of intentionally writing loopholes to exploit later, Nomic often blurs the already shakily defined line between game and simulation. While games can be played with pencil and paper with some friends, the most common medium the game takes on is that of the mailing list, with dozens of games and players submitting rules for voting simultaneously.

My first foray into online play ended in bitter tears, as I attempted to join AgoraNomic, the world's longest running Nomic (Est. 1993). The only reason it has been able to survive so long online is that many players are lawyers or some kind of savant maybe. They take the game very seriously, seeing it more as an exercise in philosophy and law than a game. Needless to say, I was too intimidated to even start. It would be hard anyway, as the game has inflated from the original 29 rules to the current ruleset of over two thousand, pertaining to everything from direction of play to special titles and awards for the players. Agora has seen a fair bit of history and is unlikely to shut down anytime soon. For example, it has survived multiple scams, loopholes, even a couple of wars. That's right. As the model for a successful Nomic is similar to a well-run, impossibly democratic country, many parallels, including conflict, begin to surface.

Perhaps the best example was the great Risho-Agoran war of '97. Rishonomic (since defunct) passed a rule stating its superiority over all other Nomics, additionally declaring AgoraNomic "generally boring". Militias quickly began to form on both sides, and the Agoran Commander-in-Chief hatched a plan that involved slowly introducing Agoran spies into Rishonomic under false identities. Once they had a majority, they could vote Rishonomic into an Agoran colony (via the "Overlord Rule" as it came to be known), with all Rishon votes going through an Agoran veto system. Unfortunately, there was dissent in the ranks, and a double agent of some kind ratted them out. The plan went through anyway and Rishonomic was completely under Agoran control. The plan fizzled out when Rishonomic passed a rule to redefine a word in the English language. Specifically, they passed a rule stating

"Repealed" means "painted white". "Aced" means "deleted from the ruleset". The Overlord Rule is hereby aced. This rule is hereby aced.
Soon afterward, Rishonomic crumbled when a rule was passed that replaced all numbers in the ruleset with the phrase "A Suffusion Of Yellow" (Heh. Douglas Adams). Since numbers are used to determine the priority and order in which rules were enforced, the entire game fell apart, handing victory to the Agorans.

This is the reason I love this game.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Oh God No

This is going to be terrible.

Note: I'm a huge fan of the graphic novel, so if you're totally lost, read the book. Seriously. If you've already read it, read it again with this annotation. It's pretty in-depth. Come to think of it, a book as grand as this deserves a longer post than this, but I'm seriously tired for some reason. Seriously. Read the book. It completely changes your view of the comic medium, the superhero genre and how literature can be interpreted. It also proved inspiration for many other awesome things, most notably Heroes. I was actually kinda mad when I MILD SPOILER!! saw the last couple episodes of the first season. I won't say any more for fear of ruining not one but two excellent plots (even if one is almost a word for word ripoff of the other). Okay, one more thing. Dr. Manhattan and Sylar are both second-generation watchmakers? Please. NERD RANT... OUT!