tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:/posts collusioni.st 2011-04-15T19:46:06Z Enki Michael Buffington michael.buffington@gmail.com tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:Post/884 2011-04-15T19:46:06Z 2011-04-15T19:46:06Z Fluid CSS Grid System <p>New Gold Leaf&#8217;s <a href="http://fluid.newgoldleaf.com/">Fluid <span class="caps">CSS</span> Grid System</a> looks pretty useful.</p> tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:Post/883 2011-04-15T18:26:00Z 2011-04-15T18:26:40Z Human or Robot? <p>It was my what, tenth time? Logging into TurboTax and doing some taxes was practically an automatic habit by now. This time though &#8211; this time I got past the step where everything is going to be OK and I&#8217;ve happily given TurboTax their preparation services dollars.</p> <p>Then they ask me if I am a human.</p> <p>It&#8217;s a question that&#8217;d normally trigger a rapid lung emptying sound meant to convey a mixture of incredulity and mocking.</p> <p>Not this time. This time I was worried. After slogging away through countless menus and double checking countless and ridiculous answers to ridiculous questions, this question wasn&#8217;t so ridiculous any more. Was I still human?</p> <p><img src="http://dl.dropbox.com/u/100876/blog/craptcha.jpg" width="300" height="100" /></p> <p>They wanted to know if the oil splotches and polka dots on my screen were letters and/or numbers. What a peculiar test. If I cannot recognize them and don&#8217;t mind, am I a robot? If I cannot recognize them and panic, and I a human?</p> <p>What if I cannot recognize them, don&#8217;t mind, take a wild stab and succeed?</p> <p>Would a robot feel as proud as I do for passing the test?</p> tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:Post/882 2007-04-02T15:21:00Z 2011-03-18T22:12:27Z Doing what I love <p>A few weeks ago at <span class="caps"><span class="caps">SXSW</span></span> I got to see one of my heros give what was unarguably the best talk I&#8217;ve ever seen. I feasted on Will Wright&#8217;s every word, and if you watch the video (<a href="http://2007.sxsw.com/video/movie_window.2007.php?dir=2007_trailers&amp;id=1099">1</a> <a href="http://2007.sxsw.com/video/movie_window.2007.php?dir=2007_trailers&amp;id=1100">2</a> <a href="http://2007.sxsw.com/video/movie_window.2007.php?dir=2007_trailers&amp;id=1101">3</a>) of his talk, I think you might be able to understand why I rank it so high. Of course, I&#8217;ve always ranked Will&#8217;s work highly.</p> <p>I can thank Will Wright for sparking my interest in computers more so than any other individual. We had some sort of <a href="http://www.apple2clones.com/?q=node/view/107">Apple II clone</a> in my house as a kid, and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zork">Zork</a> and the like were fun, but I really didn&#8217;t get into computers until the original <a href="http://simcity.ea.com/play/simcity_classic.php">Sim City</a> came out.</p> <p>I spent a month during the summer between junior high and high school working for my dad so I could earn the money to buy the game, and spent the rest of the summer begging my mom for some computing time. My mom was writing a book at the time, so play time was sparse.</p> <p>The next summer I worked hard manual labor for the entire summer break so that I could earn enough money to buy my own computer. My dedication was impressive, and I kept myself going by reading reviews about the RPGs <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultima_6">Ultima 6</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultima_7">Ultima 7</a>. Ultima 7 had me especially drooling because it had simulated weather patterns. I was thrilled with the idea that at any moment while exploring this land that it could start snowing. At the end of the summer I had $2400 saved up (amazing what $5 an hour will get you as a teen).</p> <p>My dad and I went to a computer show underneath the Anaheim stadium, bought a 386-33 with 2MB of <span class="caps"><span class="caps">RAM</span></span> and a 85MB hard drive. I&#8217;m pretty sure he had to match my dollars, because at the time this was a top of the line machine.</p> <p>I savored Ultima 6 and 7 for a few months until I discovered the modem. Within a year of buying my first computer, I had set up a <span class="caps"><span class="caps">BBS</span></span> in my bedroom, and had hooked into <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fidonet">Fidonet</a>, effectively putting me on the Internet in 1991. I had several hundred local <span class="caps"><span class="caps">BBS</span></span> members. We traded files, swapped stories, and played games like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tradewars_2002">TradeWars 2002</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barren_Realms_Elite"><span class="caps"><span class="caps">BRE</span></span></a> along with a multitude of other <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBS_door"><span class="caps"><span class="caps">BBS</span></span> door games</a>. It was a sublime period in my life, and when I look back on it, it&#8217;s nearly shocking to think that some of the player to player interaction and community building aspects were stronger then, even with the limitations, than a lot of multiplayer games have now.</p> <p>Within those first few years of owning a computer I knew, without question, that I wanted to do two things as a career and two things only: build communities, and build games. I&#8217;ve spent time doing both of those things in the past 12 years, but rarely both at the same time &#8211; I was most recently the community manager for Values of N, and before that built and ran <a href="http://llor.nu">llor.nu</a>.</p> <p>And now that <a href="http://valuesofn.com">Values of N</a> has announced <a href="http://iwantsandy.com/">its second product</a>, I intend to reorient myself with the original path I set out for so long ago. I&#8217;ve left Values of N &#8211; no bridges were burned and I wish Rael and crew the best the of luck. I learned an incredible amount about true entrepreneurism and how everything you do matters in a small startup and will use the lessons liberally moving forward.</p> <p>I need to do some housekeeping first, but within a few months I&#8217;ll be putting my focus back on building clever games on the web and building real communities around them. Will&#8217;s talk didn&#8217;t make the decision for me, but the seed he planted certainly helped remind me of what I enjoy doing: uniting and enabling people to have fun.</p> tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:Post/881 2007-02-02T16:13:00Z 2011-03-18T22:12:27Z Stikkit Nominated for SXSW Award <p>I just <a href="http://www.valuesofn.com/blog/2007/02/were-sxsw-awards-finalists.html">posted about how Stikkit has been nominated for a <span class="caps"><span class="caps">SXSW</span></span> Award</a> in the Technical Achievement category. This is obviously great news, and I spent most of yesterday grinning about it. We&#8217;ve been so busy and deep into some really technical stuff &#8211; it&#8217;s great having that announcement hit around the same time as two other big announcments:</p> <p>We launched our <a href="http://api.stikkit.com">Stikkit <span class="caps"><span class="caps">API</span></span></a> yesterday (you should read <a href="http://www.valuesofn.com/blog/2007/02/stikkit-awaits-your-api-calls_01.html">Rael&#8217;s announcement post</a> &#8211; very good insight into our philosphies).</p> <p><a href="http://www.merlinmann.com/">Merlin Mann</a> <a href="http://www.43folders.com/2007/02/01/merlin-stikkit-board/">announced</a> that he&#8217;s <a href="http://www.valuesofn.com/blog/2007/01/merlin-mann-advises.html">joined the Values of n advisory board</a>.</p> <p>Regarding the <span class="caps"><span class="caps">SXSW</span></span> Awards, the <a href="https://secure.sxsw.com/peoples_choice/">People&#8217;s Choice</a> voting application went live today, so you&#8217;re able to go in and <a href="https://secure.sxsw.com/peoples_choice/">cast your votes</a> for who you think should be the winner. <a href="https://secure.sxsw.com/peoples_choice/">Start voting!</a> For <a href="http://www.stikkit.com">Stikkit</a>!</p> <ol> <li>Update<br /> [We won!](http://www.valuesofn.com/blog/2007/03/stikkit-won-sxsw-award.html)</li> </ol> tag:www.collusioni.st,2008:Post/880 2007-01-30T09:46:00Z 2011-03-18T22:12:27Z The Valentine One <p>I own the <a href="http://www.valentine1.com/">Valentine One</a> radar detector, and this morning saw it pay for itself fully. Right as I pulled onto the freeway it went nuts, as a traffic cop on a motorcycle approached with radar in full force.</p> <p>He pulled in right behind me and waited a few minutes until someone inched up over 50mph by a few more miles per hour. He pulled that car over.</p> <p>Minutes later the detector was going bonkers again, showing the signal approaching from behind. He locked onto me again and waited. A few minutes later he pulled someone else over.</p> <p>And he did the same thing again, zooming right up to me, waiting, then pulled someone else over a few minutes later.</p> <p>This is just one reason I spent $400 on a device that tells me if there is radar present. In Oregon, the maximum speed limit on a major metro freeway is around 55. 65 if you&#8217;re out in the country, but no greater than 55 on my commute. And for most of the way, it&#8217;s 50.</p> <p>Now, people scoff at my idea of paying $400 for a radar detector. They say &#8220;well, you shouldn&#8217;t speed&#8221;. These people have no leg to stand on given they also speed, even if just by a few miles an hour. A speed limit of 50mph was easy for my 1972 Datsun 510 to break. My Subaru <span class="caps"><span class="caps">WRX</span></span> <span class="caps"><span class="caps">STI</span></span> can break it in first gear. In California, if you drive 50mph on the freeway people will crash into from being at 30-40mph (given you usually do 80-90 there if traffic is moving).</p> <p>And if the behavior of that police officer is any indication of things, in my car, I need a radar detector even if I&#8217;m going the speed limit so that I can be reminded of when I should drop down to 40mph when a cop is approaching.</p> <p>At $150 per speeding ticket (not to mention moving violations on your record and insurance hikes), $400 pays for itself in no time, and I&#8217;m extremely pleased I did it.</p>