we get signal

2006-02-28

The science of leveling up

(tags gaming, programming, work, self-improvement)

Is this a real game? Progress Quest. This definately isn't Xbox Live Arcade material. Even Nethack puts the game to shame, probably. As much fun as playing what-if? spreadsheet games? I mean look at it: The game's logo is two sword-shaped progress bars! Truly iconic.

But the Coding Horror blog connects the dots: Effort doesn't equal skill. Like the time I kept on boasting I spent 100 hours on Final Fantasy X. Does that mean I'm good at it? No, it just meant I like putzing around.

I sure need to "level up" in my programming skills, though.

2006-02-27

Geometry Wars knockoffs hit the PC

(tags gaming, shmup, high-score, Windows, freeware, open-source)

Insert Credit with the win, for telling me about Kenta Cho's newest game, Mu-cade. (More snooty wording here "rather vapid game" (about Geometry Wars, mind you), what is up with these flamers?)

But hey, you gotta keep your eye on multiple targets, because I've been playing another knock off called Grid Wars before Kenta Cho's, which I found through Download Squad's Today's Time Waster last week.

I've been playing Grid Wars with my first choice, the Sega Saturn style controller for USB. Unfortunately, putting WASD-like layout for the right side just doesn't feel intuitive. Gotta break out the Playstation Dual-Shock and the USB converter, hey where is it?

Both of these games are interesting, because they are open-source in programming languages that aren't (yet?) mainstream. Kenta Cho's has been championing the Digital Mars' D programming language for his last bunch of games. D is C-like statically-typed programming with managed memory, object-oriented programming, and other 21st century ease-of-use features that make system programmers (not application programmers) jump for joy. The only problem is that the compiler isn't open-source, which slows adoption.

Grid Wars is made in Blitz BASIC. OMG, "BASIC" reminds me of typing line numbers (10, 20, 30, oh forgot to add a goto, 15) and Applesoft BASIC. Anything in BASIC is probably automatically considered a toy, but actually this game is pretty fun and visually exciting. I'm going to assume this game is made in the commercial product Blitz3d.

Maybe check maid cafes now

(tags かわいい, 美少女, maid, cosplay, advertisement,gaming)

Gotta get this out of my browser tab branch. Yuko Ogura (小倉優子) is totally killer kawaii in the maid dress. She's this year's spokesperson or "image character" for Sega's amusement businesses. This event was at the Sega Joyopolis on February 20th, where 30 lucky raffle winners were served by doe-eyed talento.

Thanks to Kotaku for the link, who still can't seem to keep a straight face on the reporting, with phrases like "How they all managed to keep their lunch in the presence of the nauseatingly cute Ogura is a mystery." So infurating.

Mission accomplished (ER)

(tags TV, ER, DVD Region 2)

Well, I was able to go to 3 Sofmaps in the Osaka area, and I nabbed ER's Season 4 (1 & 2), Season 6 (1 & 2), and Season 7 (1 & 2). So what's missing? Season 5 (1 & 2) and Season 8 and on. Also the "East/West Live". I put the Season 5 and East/West Live in my Amazon basket, but I'm going to checkout later.

Tee hee, more English, stat, and get me suction.

Keeping my eye out for Dreamcasts

(tags gaming, hardware, Dreamcast, used)

Saw only one Dreamcast for sale, at Sofmap Osaka of all places. It was about 6000 yen, for a non-boxed Hello Kitty Blue set. Maybe if it is still there next week... Oh wait, there was a junk Dreamcast and a Karaoke Dreamcast at Sofmap Saurus 2. Still not at the best price but oh well.

Sofmap is cunning. They won't be selling used Dreamcasts and older game systems anymore. I thought the truth of the matter was that the new Japanese law effective April 1st (no joke) only pertains to higher voltage hardware? In any case it doesn't matter, whatever Sofmap decides is what makes it easier for me to buy.

Welcome back Carter!

(tags TV, ER, DVD Region 2)

I have to accelerate my ER (Emergency Room) DVD purchasing.

It seems that the ER half-season DVD bundles are really popular at that price point: 5000 yen for a season (2 packs at 2500 yen). Of course this is the "bargain basement" (廉価版) version, not the first release. Compare that to season 1 of MacGyver which goes for a wicked 13500 yen, or Star Trek (TOS, NG, DS5, Voy) which is a whopping 23000+ yen per season. Just two weeks ago when I went to the shop, there were plenty to be had, but just yesterday there were none! Looks like I'm going to looking for Sofmaps along the way.

According to Wikipedia English and Amazon US, ER has yet to reach past season 4 in the U.S. But all 10 seasons are available now in Japan, and 9 of them are at that 5000 yen price point. Bring it on!

Wonder Fair 2006 Winter (part 1?)

(tags Gaming, Figure, Tokyo, Convention)

Went to Tokyo in the early morning, got frozen on the wait to get inside, stood on my feet all day, and I was totally drained of money. What makes this convention any different?

The reason I wanted to go in the first place was for the 13B/Specter's booth with the Ikaruga model. You know, Ikaruga rocks and I had to get a picture or a model kit of the plane. But ultimately they decided not to sell it this time, just display it. At least the announced it on the website just one day before I didn't have to waste any time on it. Why couldn't they announce it 2 weeks before so I could have cancelled the whole thing?

Since my main goal was dashed, I decided on other figures that caught my fancy: Kaleido Star "Sora & Leyla", Kaleido Star "Rosetta", Street Fighter II's Chun Li "second player color", Rozen Maiden anything, and Ichigo Mashimaro anything. I was busy marking the booth locations in line before the freeze took over. Tokyo in the winter is harsh, and even harsher if you don't have an overcoat. After all the experiences of Winter Comic Markets, though, I decided to forgot the extra armor in favor of +3 agility.

So I finally got in at around 10:30, 30 minutes after it started. Waiting in line starting from 7:00 doesn't get you any head start. The 2000 yen pamphlet reminded me that 30000 people were going to mill around furiously. Oh great, another crowd, more lines. I headed to my first choice: the dreaded 完売 (kanbai == sold out) signs were in sight. I skipped over to Bottle Fairy-related Tokumi Yuiko thater, saw the big boxes and skipped it to see the Rozen Maiden. There was a line, and a rather light one at that. Little did I know it would be an omen.

Ordering Kaleido Star Radio CD volume 4

(tags Anime: Kaleido Star, Internet shopping)

onsen.ag is a commercial Internet streaming "anime radio" site that is the official site for Kaleido Star radio. They have been releasing archival CDs of the broadcasts and although other stores carry them, it's best to get them from this site itself, because you get as an ordering bonus (omake) another CD full of audio. Great if you're an audio fan.

So first you have to become a member. This requires 1800 yen for 90 days of streaming. You have to pay using "WebMoney" a prepaid Internet money service. You can buy WebMoney at any convenience store with a digital kiosk. Every chain's digital kiosk is different. I bought the 2000 yen card and all it is is a piece of paper with a 16 digit password. Then you go to the site and type in your name, address and some other info.

Then you can pre-order the CD on the site's topics page. Actually today was the last day.

As far as the omake is concerned, I missed the first volume's omake, which I'm kicking myself over.

2006-02-26

Final Fantasy, finally

FF12 is coming out. I think I had pretty good fun playing 10. I still have to play 10 girl's edition.

Saw Ibara, Radiruji (sp?), even Clannad memory card for sale this week. I resisted getting that Go (igo) game for the DS. Drill Dozer for the GBA caught my eye, though, just for a second.

2006-02-02

Micro-machine spokesman save me.

In Animal Crossing I have most of the fruit now planted, so every day is harvest day. Which means the tedium of picking fruit and hauling it over to Nook's has taken hold. Ugh this treadmill has gotten boring real fast. It's work, pure and simple. As a wage earner I don't want to be working during my gaming even if it simplistic activities like this. If I was a teenager with no responsibilities I would find this novel, maybe.

I've also gotten quite annoyed at the speed of the message text. I tried turning off the animalese, but it doesn't change the speed. I tap the B button to speed it up, but there's always a possibility of accidentally exiting out of a menu. How can I make it even more faster than it is now? I guess it isn't possible.

Review of the play-yan Micro

I readied the Panasonic 1GB SD card. Before buying that I read the Play-Yan howto guide book at the shop (tachiyomi) and there were some helpful hints interspersed with the commen sense stuff: Using AVIMaker to put your jpegs in there, Nintendo released a "keyfile" to customize, etc.

So I received the Play-Yan Micro and I quickly tested the MP3 player with the Ikaruga soundtrack. The sound was very clear, well about as good as my iPod. Both my GBAMicro and DS handled it without any fault. The mp3 tags showed up correctly in Japanese as well. There was a screen off mode called sleep mode too. I guess the most interesting part about the interface\ (after learning the ins and outs) was the animation control on the little guy. You could make him do hand stands and chorus kicks. Other than that I was disappointed that there wasn't much more control you could have over the playing itself. Of course the basics were covered, but as a power user I always try to see if things are more controllable that they are.
Then I tried the key file and Mario graced my MP3s. It made the Play-Yan Micro feel a lot more intimate and surprisingly satsifying. But that other guy was still present in some of the interface menus. Ugh, go away. Mario only please.

While I was playing around with the mp3 stuff, I installed the Panasonic Media Stage software. I had a couple of anime raws to try, but first off I went with the first episode of Sugar. I did the gimme-now method first: drag the video file onto the application, and hit "convert" with the highest quality settings. And actually the software was sufficient enough to do that. That 24 minute video file took about 24 minutes to encode to ASF, and the file went from 230 MB to 140MB. Moving the encode result to the Play-Yan Micro was as easy as file copying.
However I was disappointed with playing the video. The visual part itself was not too bad. 30 fps on non-action anime like Sugar seemed adequate enough. There were squares that showed up on some scenes, are these called artifacts? But all in all it was clear enough, if not crisp. The audio part was the disappoinment though. First off, ASF format only supports monoaural. Second, the audio sounds muffled. It's not a problem with the hardware because I tried the mp3 player just before and it was good. So it must have been the encoder.

I tried searching the Internet for a better encoder/transcoder. I started with the PSP Video 9 converter but it didn't work and it was generally buggy. I also looked at the 3GP converter but it was shareware so I didn't try using it. Which left me VLC. Unfortunately, it had warnings about expecting only bad quality transcoding and the results I got reflected that. I tried converting the Ikaruga superplays with horrendous results. When the source is mpeg, the transcode went well and the video was ok. When the source was wmv, it was lesser quality. Finally with DiVX ;-) encoded AVIs (ie anime raws) the transcode failed to yield the video part. So if I want to watch anime raws, I need to use the Media Stage junk. Ah disappointing.
Other than that, the video player controls were top notch and a snap to figure out. Press A and hold the left or right to review/fast foward at a higher clip. The player doesn't stutter while doing high speed searches.

Generally speaking, I am not that excited about the Play-Yan Micro. Yeah it shows video but it's hokey. The Media Stage software can't convert many videos at one time and it doesn't encode mp4 (which supports stereo!). As a audio player, yeah it's adequate, but I already have my iPod for that. I suppose I could make a video album with it (showing pictures), but first off it doesn't show still formats of any kind (BMP, TIFF, JPEG, etc), and second, even after converting your still pictures to a video format, when you play it and pause, the screen flashes with an annoying icon right on top of it.

Maybe if I paid money for a good converter I would be more satisified.

So should I buy an encoder? Which one should I try? I don't want to pay more than 50 USD.

2006-02-01

Soon I'll be on fries.

Ah well, let's talk about games. I'm still playing Animal Crossing. It's got a hold on me. I keep thinking I gotta raise more bells so I can get more things so I can upgrade my house. I paid off my second expansion. Now I'm going second story. I planted a lot of stuff, but I don't think I have all the fruit, only apples (native), pears, cherries, coconuts, and the occasional peach. I wonder what the other fruits are?

I was fishing alot to finish buying the rest of the stuff at Nooks. It's like I have the longest Sunday, I finished the payment on the morgage, then I gotta clean out Nooks, then I gotta prepare for Crazy Redd's signature sales.

What I figured out: Always have a lot of bells handy because you never know when you will be able to meet the turnip lady again.

Once I get that second room, I'll have another cabinet and I'll have even more space to expand. And that's when the big bucks start rolling in.