Now That’s Targeted

I just got my first spam message where the subject line was structured like a bug report. Not the same bug reporting system we use in our office, and the name wasn’t familiar, but I still had to open it anyway just in case it was from some auxiliary office or channel partner or sales liaison or whatever, some of whom have their own systems. Sigh.

It was the same old ‘hot stock tip!’ body though, and I’m surprised the filters aren’t doing a better job of catching those, since a lot of the phraseology and keywords are often similar.

I’d Go See That

I was going to play more of Halo 2 tonight, but before I could do so I got distracted by a coding challenge link someone posted and wound up working on that all evening instead.

I’m relatively weak on theory, so I went for the fairly simple brute-force depth-first tree search solution. It’s fun to see some of the titles it generates, though, like “3 NINJAS KICK BACK STAGE BEAUTY AND THE BEAST FROM 20000 FATHOMS”! I’m just not sure it’ll finish before the heat death of the universe occurs…

The longest chain it’s found so far is 231 movie titles long, and looks more like the junk text you see in spam messages nowadays.

Dear Diary…

As time marches on, a lot of my gaming memories blur together a bit. I’ve started more closely tracking what I play on a day-to-day basis and my thoughts on it, for my own archives if nothing else. It probably won’t be too interesting to most people though, and I don’t want it to crowd out other entries and become the main focus of this site, so instead I’ll be writing it over here.

Enjoy! Or not.

TANSTAAFL

Well, the free ride has ended: as of the start of this month, Zap2It no longer provides free TV listings data for programs like MythTV. It’s disappointing, but it’s also hard to complain about something that you didn’t have to pay for in the first place.

Zap2It doesn’t seem to want to have to deal with individuals, so Schedules Direct has been set up as an alternative provider to resell the data instead. There’s a recurring fee now, but I’ve found it too useful to go without, and it’s been set up as a non-profit company so they can try to bring the cost down as much as possible. Switching over wasn’t too painful; I just had to get a newer version of MythTV from the ‘proposed’ repository, add a new listings source, and rerun ‘mythfilldatabase’ to get the new listings.

And, now that I’m paying for it, I can now legitimately complain about all the minor little annoyances! ;)

Torn

With the announcement that the stock of 60GB PS3s will be running out soon, I’ve been waffling back and forth on whether to get one or not.

On the one hand, this will be my last chance to get a model with the hardware-level PS2 compatibility, and I’ve still got a lot of unfinished PS2 games that would benefit from the upscaling and faster loading (the 80GB models use a software emulator that’s not nearly as compatible). And, being the gaming whore that I am, I’d probably wind up eventually getting one anyway. And it can run Linux and things like the MythTV frontend, which always tickles my inner geek.

But on the other hand, the thing is freaking expensive. It’s better now, at only $50 more than I paid for my 360, but that’s still a lot for something that’ll largely be used as a glorified PS2 in the short term. Which leads to the next problem, the lack of games. There are a couple that look interesting, like Resistance and Warhawk, but they’re not really compelling by themselves, since they’re not really my preferred genres. A bunch of others are turning out to be disappointments (i.e., Lair), and most of the rest are also available for the 360 anyway, where I’d prefer to get them for things like the Achievements and better online integration. And it won’t even work with my LCD monitor (damn HDCP), so I’d be stuck using it on S-video until I get a proper HDTV. And I don’t really need the backwards compatibility since I already have a PS2; it would just be a convenience.

The PS2 library did have a lot of games I liked, and hopefully the PS3’s library will eventually turn out the same way, but is that hope that it’ll live up to that potential enough to balance out the immediate hit to the wallet…