Stefan Hayden

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Archive for June, 2008

GoodReads experience is only as good as the number of friends in your network.” I agree. So much of thier interface is based around the idea that you have friends that it’s lot less useful with out any.

If Ender’s game was about helicopters this is how Ender would fly his.

I am so excited for Joss Whedon’s Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog staring Neil Patrick Harris, Felicia Day and Nathan Fillion!


Teaser from Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog on Vimeo.

I just posted this over at YPulse and wanted to post it here as well to get some more thoughts. Currently it rings true to me but on the other hand I could be way off base.

I would almost say it seems to feed on it self. Pregnancy among disadvantaged teens has always been high. And I would almost call a lot of these young celebrities disadvantaged as well, even if it is in a completely different way.

With so much pressure and control from the outside world I could imagine a person retreating to a place they can’t be controlled, their bodies. Having a baby was something they could make their own choice and in the end also give them something to do that isn’t part of their career.

With these celebrities taking control it only encourages others to take control as well.

The reason I shy away from blaming movies like Juno and Knocked Up (besides the fact that I loved both movies) is that these movies are about dealing with irresponsibility and mistakes. But when you come to the real world it does seem to be that teens are clearly actively choosing to get pregnant.

Am I wrong? A lot of this is right from the gut where Colbert has taught me to think from.

While this probably kills my hopes and dread of made for TV movies and awesome reality shows it seems the “baby pact” has been called in to question. In a story that makes more sense in 2007 there were 4 pregnant teens and in 2008 there are 16ish. To explain this the principal has basically manufactured a wild story to explain is and probaly to enact some kind of draconian rules.

I went to high school during the Oklahoma Bombing incident and know too many stories of principals thinking up wild stories to get dumb litmus tests put in place. No trench coats, no red bandannas, no blue bandannas, no males with makeup, and on and on. I’ll bet it was the principal who blamed the day care center at the school as well and he’s been inching to shut it down.

This is definitely now my favorite Sound of Young America episode about the book “American Nerd: The Story of My People”. It sounds like an amazing book. I’ve always been especially interested in the word’s etymology.

Sadly he did not broach my favorite topic of how the boundaries of Nerd come up against the boundaries of Geek. I’ve always considered myself more of a geek. Benjamin Nugent takes a broader scope of what a nerd is but defines it in such an eloquent way that I am certainly not going to argue. He defines nerdyness as “People who are really good with and like systems, rules and rational systematizing way of thinking which remind people of machines.”

I love Daft Hands so how did I miss Kanye Hands? I’m even subscribed to Barats And Bereta!

Mark Evens has been complaining about the release of FireFox 3 calling it rushed and poorly planed. I saw it differently and posted this comment:

Firefox was definitely not rushed. I would characterize the Address bar complaints as light and really I think they will dissipate as time goes on. <a href=”http://lifehacker.com/396312/power-users-guide-to-firefox-3″>Though there is a way to turn it off</a>.

As far as addons go I see your problem but I don’t know what you think the solutions should be. The code for Firefox 3 has been finalized for a month or so. As soon as it went from Beta to Release Candidate the code was in a state that add on developers could update their addons.

Which addons should they make sure work? Every one uses different ones and when the list grows to the thousands it become very impractical. Also these are not just 3rd parties but often times these addons are just made by normal people who don’t have time to update these extensions.

Some addons have larger communities behind them and have more pressure to get out the door like the developer’s tool bar and firebug. Others come from companies which depending on their dedication to the addon can also come out with quick updates like del.icio.us or compete.

While certainly Mozilla could have done more I think it’s kind of absurd for them to not release their product while they wait for a developer they don’t know to respond to an email and put out an update. Would you want to run your company that way?

I totally want this piggy bank with a built in game. Too bad it seems to be all in japanese.

Great defense of Yahoo. I always root for the underdog.

Guitar Hero: World Tour First Look. This is a lot of new features. I can’t wait to see how rock band tries and tops it.

This Cooking With the Dungeons & Dragons is hilarious. A lot of this seems to support the criticism toward D&D that it’s focus is too rules based. I’ve always heard GURPS was better as it required more imagination and didn’t fall back on rules systems as much.

I know I should be more cynical when it come to technology but I always like to keep the stance of never say never.

Of my top 25 bands (23 if you combine all the Mike Viola / Candy Butchers) on Last.fm I have seen 15 in concert. That seems like a pretty good effort on my part. And 8 of those are from the top ten!

  1. The Eames Era
  2. Bishop Allen
  3. Ted Leo and The Pharmacists
  4. Rilo Kiley
  5. Fountains of Wayne
  6. Weezer
  7. Jonathan Coulton
  8. The Lascivious Biddies
  9. Mike Viola
  10. The Elected
  11. The Decemberists
  12. Candy Butchers
  13. Stars
  14. Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin
  15. The Candy Butchers
  16. Death Cab for Cutie
  17. Cake
  18. The Golden Republic
  19. Guided by Voices
  20. Jill Sobule
  21. The Submarines
  22. Spoon
  23. Lily Allen
  24. Architecture in Helsinki
  25. Fooled by April