Sometimes I hear a song on the radio and think “man, that’s a good classic.” I really need to start writing down these songs because I want to someday have a massive playlist of crazy awesome fun songs. The only thing is that this is difficult to do well… if I bought each song from iTunes, then I’m locked into the whole iTunes + iPod thing unless I am willing to sacrifice some audio quality to remove the DRM on the songs. The whole iTunes + iPod lock in isn’t so bad currently as I do use iTunes and own and iPod, it just makes me uneasy that in the future, should I want to use something else, I may not be able to. Darn that DRM!
Buying the CD’s containing each song I want to own would be incredibly more expensive and… yeah, I don’t think I’ll go that route.
Back to songs, I think what makes me enjoy a lot of the stuff I hear now is a nostalgic or epic feeling. Kathy and Van believe my taste in music is stuck in the 80′s, and perhaps so, because I find it fun to bounce along to songs I heard in my younger years, I suppose. =) I maintain that this does not mean I will have an 80′s themed wedding, that would be attrocious.
On to another topic, the no-girlfriend-monkey-demon is poking at me again. While I am generally not overly effected by this, his jabs can be annoying at times. I don’t think I feel like I need a girlfriend, nor do I feel like all my attempts would end in failure making me a cynical old man, it’s just that I feel like there are no prospects at all and the hanging around in limbo can be frustrating at times. I suppose it would be similar to many other major events in one’s life, such as finding a college to go to, finding a job, etc. etc. Sitting in uncertainty can be troublesome. I was, thankfully, blessed with not much strife in those two particular examples, so I suppose I don’t have it too bad anyhow. =)
Oh well, next time that monkey comes around, I’m shoving a banana in his butt and feeding him to some kangaroos. =p

Been a while since we’ve hung out at Mark’s… good memories there, and we added more tonight. Of note were the Trivial Pursuit champions, Andrew, Mark, Van and myself (and my Kevin Mitnick answer… yay animated GIFs!). Also, masked in an attempt to play the above pictured game with her, I very triumphantly slapped Kathy in the face much to my satisfaction. =) Sorry, little one, it’s just so much fun. =p

Photos are now on flickr. Enjoy!
Played some Rosetta Warcraft 3 on the MBP today. Seems like the issues were primarily due to the custom map we were trying to play (not sure if it’s a problem specifically with the map or with the Rosetta/Mac/IntelMac and the map together). We played a short regular game and a game of DoTA and it seems to play okay. The mouse acceleration is still a bit weird to me… I hear there’s a Microsoft utility I can use to make it Windows-like… I was using a Logitech mouse though so not sure if that’ll work… I might try it out sometime.
In other news, with casual use (web surfing, iTunes) the MBP doesn’t get scorching hot like when it’s importing 11000+ photos. Parts of it, especially towards the rear can still get pretty warm though.

Went to volunteer for the Freescale Marathon earlier today with other Freescalers… man, it was COLD! My hands still feel kinda weird, heh.
We were unprepared for the swarm when it came and like locusts in a field, they sucked up our water reserves like no other. I spent the next hour or so fervently filling up cups as fast as I could. My hands lost feeling so fast, it was crazy. I went into Home Depot and ran my hands under cool water and it felt like boiling water… =)
Anyways, even though it was uber cold, it was still a good experience with the coworkers.
So I finally looked at my server logs and it seems like I’ve got a decent number of people hotlinking my images. Apparently I show up quite high on some Google image searches. I’ve decided to put an end to that and modified my htaccess file to block requests for images other than those from oliverweb.com. *shrug*
Here’s a graph of how many requests I got for an image of Pikachu:

I thought about instead of forbidding access to the picture to replace it with… hmmm… wait, that’s actually a good idea… I’ll get back to you on that. =)
Edit: OMG, this is hilarious!! Go here and scroll down a bit… you’ll know when you see it. =) (You may need to refresh/reload the page once)… some more. Oh… if your firewall is configured to block the HTTP_REFERRER in your browser, it prob won’t work and you’ll just see sad Pikachu… gotta figure out a way around that…
While I’m waiting for some stuff to finish buildling here, I figured I’d blog a bit.
In the past few weeks/months, I started to visit digg on a regular basis. It generally picks up things faster than /. and has a ton more articles per day, but that’s not always a good thing. Along with all the cool stuff, there’s a lot of stupid articles that seem to populate up to the frontpage due to fanboys hopping excitingly at the mere mention of their idol and hitting the “digg it” button without any thought whatsoever.
Most often, this kind of thing happens to Apple-related articles where it seems like anyone who blogs virtually anything about Apple will get “dugg.” When the Intel Macs came out, there were about five or ten articles switching back and forth between “yes XP will boot” and “no, XP won’t boot!” and most of the articles were just guesses and/or repeats of previous ones. More recently, the annoying articles have been the “I know how to boot XP!” where it’s pretty much just some random guy who can’t figure out the name of the company is Apple, not Mac, and his idea of how he *thinks* he can boot XP. Many of the steps might as well like this:
1. Make world peace
2. Cure the common cold
3. Wallah!! XP on iMac!
… because they’re just as plausible as many of the proposed steps. It’s pretty much like if I said something like this: I know how to cure AIDS!
1. Inspect AIDS virus.
2. Find a chemical that destroys the virus.
3. Create a pill with that chemical.
4. Feed to AIDS infected person.
5. If all goes well, cured!!!
I don’t understand how articles with no backing/substance whatsoever get so popular. I guess it just goes to show how stupid masses of people can get… hehe…
I have determined that my decision to purchase an Intel PowerBook comes down to the following Pro/Con chart:
Cons:
- A bit pricey (but I can shave $300 off with student developer…).
- Apple Rev.A’s have an uncanny ability to get screwed compared to the Rev.B’s, where Apple fixes most issues with the Rev.A.
- Merom comes out in half a year (but will the 15″ be updated then?).
- Other Apple Intel offerings are coming (but how soon, and how comparable to the 15″ in size/power?).
- No reviews yet (does it get hot? what’s its battery life? any unusual common defects?).
- Ability to install Windows XP uncertain.
Pros:
Edit: Hehe, ok, really, another major pro is: OS X on Core Duo. Really, my main beef with the last PowerBook I had was that it got insanely hot and was not very impressive performance wise. OS X is no lean machine and it requires a pretty hefty system to achieve that “snappy response”… the PowerBook I had just didn’t cut it, despite the many other things I liked about it.
I do like Apple software, generally, I like the way I can switch between “noob GUI mode” and “l337 h4x0r pwn3d y0! CLI mode” rather seamlessly. That plus is also in recent Linux distros, however, OS X is a bit better when it comes to plug-and-play hardware issues (though, Linux def has its merits and it better in many other situations… which is why its on my mac mini right now). Apple also has the support of software companies such as Microsoft and Adobe, where Linux has to fall back on WINE (man, I’d like to see a Linux-native build of Photoshop… that’d be HOT).
Anyways, I think the Core Duo will likely solve most of these issues… of course, I should probably wait for reviews regardless. Heh…

At around 5 or 6AM or so, I stole Van’s monster of a tripod and took some pics. Now, I think I need some sleep… don’t expect to hear from me for a while, haha…