Posts Tagged ‘Nerd’

HOWTO: Disable ESPN.com Front Page Video with Adblock

The most terrible thing about ESPN’s already-mediocre web site is the auto-loading, auto-play video on their homepage. You’re just sneaking a peek at the scores with your morning coffee when–boom goes the dynamite–a loud video clip starts playing immediately, alerting everyone around you to the buzzer beater some basketball player shot last night.

Here’s the simple two step process to make sure you never again disturb everyone around you. This assumes you’re running Firefox.

  1. Install Adblock Plus.
  2. Add a filter for this url string:
    http://sports.espn.go.com/broadband/mpf/players/*

Until ESPN changes the code on their site, this will block that video from ever loading. Coffee break saved.




Ten Years Ago

2_2

Oh, what the hell, I’ll use any excuse to find a reason to post…

Ten years ago:

  • I had just turned seventeen and I was getting ready to begin my senior year of high school.
  • I had been back from the NYLC trip to Washington for a few months.
  • My hair, for the first time, was cut with clippers down to a #2 guard. My mom wasn’t exactly happy with the sudden change, but my head has been cool, happy, and ready to wear ever since.
  • The number one song on the Billboard charts was Uninvited, by Alanis Morissette.
  • Heather and I were both relatively heavily involved in the high schol marching band, which took up quite a bit of our time, even over the summer.
  • This was the first year in four or five that I didn’t go to Boy Scout summer camp, because by ten years ago, I had already earned my Eagle badge and didn’t really need any more merit badges.
  • Besides my normal slate of activities, I had also followed Drew’s advice and gotten a great job working the photo lab at CVS. This deserves its own post, so I’ll have to talk more about later.

I found a photo of me rocking three of my 1990s fashion staples here.




Kinda-Funny.com

I’m reading the Foreword to the second collection of Penny Arcade comics, penned by none other than the esteemed J. Allard, and I found this pretty funny:

All love aside, Gabe and Tycho (and their alter egos in the real world) aren’t infallible. It dissapoints me that after all this exposure, success, and profit they’ve amassed from the blatantly capitalistic repackaging of freely available Internet content . . . the fact that they still have a hyphen in their domain name is steeped in a sweaty mass of lameness.

The book showed up in the same box as I Am America (And So Can You!), so the two works will compete for hilarity in my carry-on next weekend when we’re in California.




In Anticipation

Here are a few things I’m excited about this fall…

  • Halo 3 - Duh. After playing the multiplayer beta and following every tiny tidbit of Halo news I could find on X3F, the most anticipated video game of all time is pretty high on my list. I even violated two of my self-imposed rules by A) pre-ordering the game at B) EB Games, but I don’t care. Come September 25th, I’ll be right there in line with the teenagers waiting to unwrap my cat helmet and play all night. Also–I have a Halo 3 party planned with several friends that night. I’m obsessed.
  • Trip to Reno/California - Heather and I are heading to Northern California in October to visit my grandparents out there and do a little sightseeing. We happened to find a great price on a flight through Reno, so we’ll probably spend a day in Lake Tahoe, as well.
  • Futurama - As far as I can tell, Futurama will be back on TV toward the end of this year or early 2008. It can’t come quickly enough for me. Yes, I saw the Simpsons movie, and it was great, but I’m at least equally excited for new Futurama after all of these years of repeats on Adult Swim.




New Obsession - The Settlers of Catan

Catan I’ve been playing a lot of Settlers of Catan lately. My brother was good enough to notice it on my wish list and find it for me as a birthday gift last month. My dad, sister, and Heather and I picked it up pretty quickly over the July 4th holiday and with good reason–it’s pretty easy to learn.

The game comes from Germany, and it looks unbelievably complex when you open up the box, but it turns out that it only takes one round of play to figure out that it’s not all that hard. This is, at its core, a game about resource management. It appeals to that corner of my brain that was obsessed with Warcraft II back in the day, mining gold and hacking away at the lumber in a race to build up my cities. (Note to self: play Warcraft II again soon) It’s also a game that holds your attention a lot better than, say, Monopoly, which can take forever to play. Even more importantly, unlike Monopoly, all players are interacting during each player’s turn. The element of trade and continuous resource generation makes the game A) extremely balanced and B) much more enjoyable when it’s “not your turn” (like I said, it’s never really not your turn).

Enough about the mechanics of the board game. The really exciting thing about Settlers is that Microsoft just made it available to play online via Xbox Live. So rather than pestering Heather to play one of the two-player variants or knocking on my neighbors’ doors, I can find a game within 60 seconds with three other human players, day or night. On the off chance that my internet is down (thanks, Comcast) or I don’t feel like interacting with real people, I can play against bots. This is about a thousand times better than just having the game in your closet and playing it (if you’re lucky) once a week when you can get your friends together. This is the ease of use and tremendous connectivity that Xbox Live gave hardcore gamers years ago, expanded to casual games.

Photo credit: Propagandalf




Long time no see

Think Before You Blog

Yes, I stepped away from the blog for a little bit. Don’t worry, I’ll be back soon! I have some photos from our vacation in Florida, a post about toys, and a post about my experiences with Flickr coming right up. I’m also trying very hard to put a single space after a period, not two spaces, which I recently read was archaic and technically incorrect. And technically correct is, of course, the best kind of correct.




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