Anagram

By Shamus Posted Monday Jun 19, 2006

Filed under: Nerd Culture 7 comments

Let’s do a few Anagrams:

Shamus Young » MY USA SHOGUN
(Who’s your Shogun? SAY IT! SAY I’M YOUR SHOGUN!)

Beware the %Kawaii » HE A WEE KIWI BRAT

Twenty Sided » SW%EDEN DITTY

Ambient Irony » ANIME BY NITRO
(Ambient Irony also works out to “I AM TINY BONER”, but I didn’t use that one because I like to stay on Pixy’s good side.)

Final Fantasy » A FLAN! FIST? NAY!
(This one is pretty obscure. Final fantasy has these monsters called “flans”, which are usually immune to physical attacks.)

Chizumatic » I CUT CIA MHZ
(So Den Beste has been hacking CIA computer systems? That explains why he hasn’t been posting as much lately!)

 


 

The Manly Man of Anime

By Shamus Posted Monday Jun 19, 2006

Filed under: Anime 57 comments

Don finds this post at Riuva which asks, “who is the manliest man in anime?”

A lot of the choices put forth are characters I don’t know, but I can discard a lot of them because they are not men yet – lots of them are boys. In the comments it’s clear that some people can’t tell “manly” from “brooding, silent, and angst-ridden”. Steven observes (in Don’s comments) that some are metrosexuals. Others even look androgynous.

To clear up the confusion, let’s just start with what a manly character is not:

  • A bad temper does not make one manly.
  • Appreciating attractive women is manly. Being lecherous isn’t.
  • Angst is not manly.
  • Being wispy, thin, boyish, or doe-eyed is not manly, no matter what super powers the character has or how much butt they can kick.
  • This should go without saying, but judging from other people’s choices it can’t: You can’t be manly if you dress like a woman. A feminine hairstyle is also not a good idea for manly hopefulls.
  • Being soft-spoken is okay. Having a high-pitched girly voice or the voice of a boy isn’t.
  • Crying for a fallen comrade is okay, but crying because other people “just don’t get it” and “don’t understand how I feel” is not manly.
  • Being dishonest, cruel, hateful, or rude isn’t being manly – that’s just being a jerk.
  • Being a loner or not understanding others is okay, but does not in and of itself make one manly.
  • You don’t have to be Einstein to be manly, but being a moron is a no-no.

Now, a manly character is Alex Louis Armstrong from Full Metal Alchemist:

Alex Armstrong

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “The Manly Man of Anime”

 


 

Posting frequency

By Shamus Posted Sunday Jun 18, 2006

Filed under: Random 3 comments

I mentioned that I released a new version of Useless Stats a few days ago. The most interesting thing I learned from the program was this:

Posts by Day of Week

This shows how many of the blog’s posts are published on each day of the week. This can be useful to see what days you are most productive, or when you tend to slack off.

Sunday: 33

(8%)

Monday: 53

(13%)

Tuesday: 58

(15%)

Wednesday: 67

(17%)

Thursday: 63

(16%)

Friday: 65

(17%)

Saturday: 42

(11%)

I might have guessed (for reasons I outline below) that the bars started at a high point on Monday and diminished as the week went on. Barring that, I would have expected that the Monday to Friday bars would be more or less even (or at least irregular). I never would have predicted that my posting patterns made such a nice curve.

I wasn’t aware that I did more writing mid-week. I was aware that I didn’t post as much on the weekends as I did during the week, but I didn’t expect my weekend post count to be quite that much lower. I wonder if this curve is very common?

The odd thing is that I do a lot of writing on the weekends. I will take whatever ideas have been bouncing around in my head and turn them into stub posts to be filled in later. Sometimes these posts are just brief reminders, but sometimes they are blocks of text that need to be organized and edited. When a weekday rolls around, I look in my storehouse of ideas and see if there is anything I want to finish, or anything I want to talk about. This is where nearly all of my longer, essay-type posts come from. Not all of my ideas make the cut. Sometimes a post will languish in the idea bin for a while. If I see one that’s been sitting around for weeks but never got published, I usually decide it must not be that interesting and delete it outright.

So as I go into Monday I have lots of stub posts from which to choose. Come Friday they are mostly depleted. I can only assume that my shorter, more spontaneous posts are the onces that form the curve. I wonder why I’m so much more prolific mid-week?

And just now it occurs to me: My short posts are usually done in response to a post someone else has made. As I visit other blogs, I see people talking about stuff and when something catches my eye I weigh in. So, perhaps lots of people post more in mid-week, which gives me more to talk about then. What I’m driving at is that perhaps the curve is the result of everyone else’s habits, and not really my own.

 


 
 

Spamusement

By Shamus Posted Saturday Jun 17, 2006

Filed under: Random 11 comments

I got nothin right now, so let’s dig around in the spam can and see if we can find anything amusing. Some of my recent spam comments really do make me laugh. Of course, it helps that Akismet is catching them and so I can see them without worrying that they are mixed in with legit comments. Here are some funny bits:
Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Spamusement”

 


 

WFS: You can’t get there from here

By Shamus Posted Friday Jun 16, 2006

Filed under: Rants 7 comments

Cinneris is talking about getting files from his old Mac to his Windows machine:

[…] I had initially set up the Mac to allow Windows File Sharing through SMB, and connected to it using the Windows network browsing capabilities, but in the process of attempting to set up Wireless networking I managed to break this and haven't been able to get it working since.

Someone trying to make the jump from Mac to PC might expect that this is an inter-OS problem, but it isn’t. Windows File Sharing has always been a flakey crapshoot.

Back in Win95 days, I had a 3 machine home network on a Hub, and I could never get more than two out of three computers talking. If I had computers A, B, and C, then C wouldn’t show up for the other two. If I got C working, then A would vanish. If I got A working, then the whole thing would go down and none of the computers could access the network. Then they could, but each one could only see itself. Then I’d mess with it, un-install and re-install WFS for everyone and find that the network was back up again! Except C couldn’t use the network.

Windows 98 took a small step forward in reliability. Not much, but when I was messing with C I no longer had to worry about screwing things up for A and B.

With XP, things are better than ever, which is to say: After about a decade Windows File Sharing works sort of well and most of the time will let me get files where I want them. I now have 5 machines and a router, and for the most part all the machines can communicate with each other. Once in a while B and E will suddenly stop talking to one another for no reason, but now I can get around this by using, say, D as a middleman.

Given how screwy WFS is after over ten years of development, I’m amazed that Macs can connect at all. I’m sure that for it to work the moon has to be in the right phase, your horroscope needs to be positive, and Steve Jobs needs to be in just the right mood, but that’s not much worse than the chances other Windows machines have at connecting.

 


 

World of Narue: Disc 3 & 4

By Shamus Posted Friday Jun 16, 2006

Filed under: Anime 3 comments

Steven once said:

Of course, it’s in the rules that any ecchi romantic comedy like this has to have a beach episode (so we can see the girls in swimsuits), a bathhouse episode (so we can see them without the swimsuits) and a summer festival episode (so we can see them in yukatas).

This is not an Ecchi comedy (it would be rated PG if it were a movie) but I think all of this still holds. Let’s see…
Continue reading ⟩⟩ “World of Narue: Disc 3 & 4”