Author: fledgling otaku

  • can world peace be far behind?

    anyone remember having to use a special mail prefix for sending email to Compuserve or Prodigy users? If not, count your blessings. Though, if the evil forces opposing net neutrality have their way, we might yet see such abominations arise in our URLs…

    Well, instant messaging has been in that particular limbo for many years. Decades, in fact. Until today. A while back, Google announced total compatibility with the Jabber chat protocol; that finally set off enough alarm bells of fear at Miccrosoft and Yahoo to set in motion the grand plan of cross-platform chat once and for all. And today, those plans come to fruition.

    Behold – cross-platform chat, on Yahoo Messenger and MSN.

  • I wish

    Anime on My Mind looks at the future of anime four years from now and finds:

    June 25, 2010

    Ghibli Announces Next Project: “Fresh off Ghibli’s highly successful yet highly controversial Ender’s Game anime movie adaptation last year, Ghibli reveals that their next major project is Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead.”

    oh, please! oh please please please!

  • a happy 4th

    Just got back yesterday from a nice, long vacation in San Diego. 300 emails, a pile of work at work, and a bunch of neglected blogs.. ah, priorities, priorities!

    Hope y’all had a great holiday.

  • with great power…

    …comes great responsibility. That’s always been the maxim of the two superheroes who are arguably the most important, iconic characters in the history of American comic books: Superman and Spider-man. Since Spidey is younger, Uncle Ben had to explicitly spell the principle out for him, whereas Supes just sprt of imbibed it from the example and upbringing of his adoptive parents. But that is the tie that binds these icons and why they resonate so strongly with the American psyche.

    So I find myself extremely pleased indeed at my Superhero Personality Test results… (more…)

  • Mononoke Hime

    Going to watch Princess Mononoke today. Will update this post with immediate post-viewing reactions later this afternoon… if anyone has any non-spoiler suggestions for things to watch for, drop me a comment below!

  • Intel CPU roadmap after Conroe

    DailyTech has a fascinating and accessible summary of Intel’s CPU designs beyond the Conroe processor (the desktop version of the 64-bit Merom, itself the successor to the 32-bit Yonah that launched this January replacing the Pentium M). Lots of interesting details, but this in particular caught my eye:

    Intel tri-gateAccording to Intel’s long term roadmap, Penryn will become the last “Core” (NGMA) microarchitecture, but it will not become the last 45nm generation. A new architecture, based on the Nehalem core, will make an appearance in 2008. This Core successor, dubbed by many as NGMA2, will essentially take all of the 45nm manufacturing principles of Penryn and apply them to the totally new Nehalem architecture. This transition will be very similar to the P6+ transition with Yonah from Dothan to Conroe.

    If P1266 was radically different from the 65nm Core CPU, P1268 takes what is normal on Penryn and throws it out the window. The first P1268 processor is what Intel has publically announced as Nehalem-C. Nehalem-C is still based on the Nehalem (NGMA2) microarchitecture, but is a die shrink from 45nm to 32nm. P1268 employs all of the neat manufacturing techniques found on P1266, but uses a totally different lithography process called EUV, or Extreme Ultraviolet. Although it sounds trivial to swap a traditional DUV lithography setup with an EUV one, there is a fundamental problem with EUV that prevents foundries from doing so; the EUV wavelength is so small at 13.4nm that virtually every material absorbs the wave including the lenses and atoms in the air. EUV must be done in a vacuum with reflective surfaces instead of lenses to focus and redirect the lithography.

    The photo is an SRAM sample under the 45nm process. But it’s just cool – today’s latest chips are at 65nm. And as the article mentions, EUV will take us down past 32nm to 13.4 nm! We are really at the cusp of nanotechnology-scale there. And all within five years. Neat stuff.

    But remember, Intel is dooooomed

  • Fireflies, revisited

    I am probably not going to rent Grave of the Fireflies again, but two comments to my recent post about depressing anime have definitely given some much-needed context to the film. Keep in mind that it’s been about five years since I watched it so I really don’t remember much of the details described below. (more…)

  • Howl


    Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones
    I just finished watching Howl’s Moving Castle. The movie is based on the book by Diana Wynne Jones which I have not read but which I’ve seen enough praise for that I might have to go and order, especially since the movie left me feeling like a potentially great storytelling opportunity was squandered. Or, as Don says, “propaganda is the enemy of art.”

    As Shamus already noted, it hits all of the Miyazaki themes, but as Don notes it is probably more due to Miyazaki taking liberties with the source material than any synchrony between Miyazaki and Wynne Jones. Miyazaki admits to this in a rare interview with Newsweek Magazine:

    GORDON – Were you surprised “Spirited” won an Oscar?

    MIYAZAKI – Actually, your country had just started the war against Iraq, and I had a great deal of rage about that. So I felt some hesitation about the award. In fact, I had just started to make “Howl’s Moving Castle,” so the film is profoundly affected by the war in Iraq.

    As the interview makes clear, Miyazaki is (surprisingly, given his deep insight and reverence for children) a pessimist at heart about human society. I have my own issues with the Iraq war but the portrayal of the military in this film is simply a cartoon, which is I think rather ironic given that it’s anime.

    Still, rather than just gripe about it at the meta level, I will make an attempt at discussion of the film. Read on… (more…)

  • Yikes!

    My wireless Microsoft mouse – which I’ve owned for years – just emitted a gigantic POP that scared the crap out of me. The batteries inside appear to have exploded somehow. I guess I’m lucky it wasn’t worse – I just threw the mouse outside the front door and will let it sit out there for an hour to calm down before I try to open it up and peek inside. Good thing I have a couple of extra wired optical mice lying around.

    And I was all set to make fun of mac users for their woes, too. Well, MacBooks DO cost about two orders of magnitude more…

  • Fry’s sucks

    Let me pile on to Kevin’s mini-rant:

    The worst offender on this score (to my knowledge, anyway) is Fry’s Electronics: their customer service for returns isn’t bad out of laziness or bad management, it’s deliberately bad because they want to discourage people from returning things. So screw ’em. Their prices aren’t all that great anyway. I do all my shopping at Micro Center, and I do it there solely because they’ve always been decent and efficient at processing my rare returns.

    Fry’s maintains the illusion of low prices almost exclusively via rebates. The rebate process is one of the most stealthy scams in existence. And, I have never, ever asked a question of a Fry’s associate to which I received an informed answer. They seem to recruit sales representatives who are almost willfully ignorant of technology fundamentals. And what others say is true – when asked a technical question, Fry’s associates tend to make it up or outright lie rather than admit they don’t know.

    Their advertised specials are the only reason to shop there – I watch the ad copy every week in the local paper. So there will always be a reason to shop there. But if you do need to shop at Fry’s, beware. Daniel Fishman’s rules for shopping at Fry’s is really quite good – and, I am sorry to say, entirely accurate. If you’re going to go to Fry’s for any reason, you need to read it. Fry’s goes out of its way to put obstacles in your path, misdirect you, and bank on your laziness. But by far the best advice is the summary:

    Think of shopping at Fry’s like a competition. There can only be one winner of a Fry’s visit, you or them. Like any sport you need to be in both good physical and mental condition.

    At least the stores are cool. The Clear Lake store has a NASA motif – I’ll try to sneak some pics.