It is so incredible how warm it has been the last couple days. If you don't believe in global warming then there is nothing to worry about.
This entire winter has been so warm. Here is the Anchor bar on a nice warm January afternoon in Buffalo. Someone told me it will be in the high 50s on Friday.
It was even sunny on my lunch break.
[size=m]It's Official[/size]
The other night I met with Jamie Moses at Artvoice. The server is officially moving there on Monday. I am also going to make Artvoice a mobile calendar site.
I ate chicken Ambrosia at Ambrosia. If you have never tried this and you are a meat eater, you have to try it. It is reminiscent of Chicken Soulvlaki but it has a mustard sauce instead of the vinigar oil dressing you typically get with a souvlaki.
On the way home I foudn this sign on a linwood lawn of the house I want to own but which is not for sale. I want it so bad. They apparently said no to the Casino which angered some people.
Then other people tacked up this boycott delta sonic sign on the say no to the casino sign. It's like a whole protest on their lawn - my lawn that should be.
Paul's Journal
My Podcast Link
01/11/2006 19:54 #32450
Around the WarmthCategory: buffalo
01/10/2006 23:33 #32449
The Commodore 64Category: computer
According to (e:shawnr), a commodore 64 cost $100 when it came out. This is GEOS the graphical based operating system I used first. I rememebr being blown away with how much it could do.
This site has so much info about the commodore 64
Here are about as many game and applicatrion roms as you could ever desire
There are emualtors for every system including your phone. Here is one for the PC Just try google if you need another flavor.
When The Pawn came out in 1986, it was so amazing. I got so lost in this text based adventure you can't even imagine. Did anyone else play it?
You should try it in an emulator.
This site has so much info about the commodore 64
Here are about as many game and applicatrion roms as you could ever desire
There are emualtors for every system including your phone. Here is one for the PC Just try google if you need another flavor.
When The Pawn came out in 1986, it was so amazing. I got so lost in this text based adventure you can't even imagine. Did anyone else play it?
You should try it in an emulator.
robin - 01/11/06 01:57
you guys are the biggest computer geeks ever.
uh...
i remember playing space quest and kings cauldron
you guys are the biggest computer geeks ever.
uh...
i remember playing space quest and kings cauldron
01/09/2006 18:37 #32447
When Print makers Become Web designersCategory: design
I know I will get a bunch of slack for this but print makers are notoriously bad web designers in my opinion. There have been a few exceptional cases that I have met, but generally, when a print design company tries to go web design, it usually looks like wrong. They almost always have a really beautiful giant splash graphic and thats where the magic ends. It's no longer just a picture that you put on the web, it's a living interactive interface.
Right now I am working on Ride for Roswell at work. You can look at last year's website to get an idea of where it is going It is designed by Flynn and Friend's, a company in buffalo . I decided to look up their firm on the net after seeing the CD I am supposed to work with had their name on it. The paradigm is so old, i received some photoshop pictures and it is supposed to become a web site.
If you look at the non-web media design portfolio on their website, it looks pretty nice. But the web deisgn stuff looks really mediocre, borderline lame. I guess the was interersting.
I think it is the result of print based web designers relying too heavily on photoshop. It's all still a throwback to when the web was all slice up tables based layout. My question is how much do they get paid for the web site design, when I am doing the coding here at Roswell and someone else enters in the data.
Right now I am working on Ride for Roswell at work. You can look at last year's website to get an idea of where it is going It is designed by Flynn and Friend's, a company in buffalo . I decided to look up their firm on the net after seeing the CD I am supposed to work with had their name on it. The paradigm is so old, i received some photoshop pictures and it is supposed to become a web site.
If you look at the non-web media design portfolio on their website, it looks pretty nice. But the web deisgn stuff looks really mediocre, borderline lame. I guess the was interersting.
I think it is the result of print based web designers relying too heavily on photoshop. It's all still a throwback to when the web was all slice up tables based layout. My question is how much do they get paid for the web site design, when I am doing the coding here at Roswell and someone else enters in the data.
01/10/2006 00:20 #32448
My first computerCategory: computers
When did you guys get your first home computers? I got my first computer a vic20 back in the early 80s probably around '81 maybe before. I would play on it for hours, poking memory bits and moving sprite.
I rememeber my first program Basic went something like this
1 print "I love my vic20"
2 goto 1
and I was instantly addicted and saved it all to tape. Tapes were kind of fun. I can't tell you how much music got sacrificed to "save data".
The vic 20 had some really excellent text based RPGs. I loved them all. But it definately was not a gaming machine. In fact I don't think it had any graphics outside of text.
Then I saw Jason Fahmer's commodore 64 .
He was always the kid that had eveything first. Luckily, he was also my best friend at the time. I got one right after that. My mom said just about after they came out, which was 1982, so lets say 1983 when (e:mike) was born.
Many of my other friends had a tandy or an Apple II. I remember wanting an apple II GS, whatever the gs stood for.
I never got a modem because my dad was an insurance salesman and he couldn't have the business line tied up with me using the computer. I wonder what would have happend to me during the dot.com boom if I had had a modem before that. Luckily, the mail man [inlink]paul,2626[/inlink] would bring around programs and I quickly got my hands on GEOS, the first graphics operating system I had ever seen. The commodore 64 was truly a viable home computer for the time.
At school we played Oregon Trail ont eha Apple IIs (WIKIPEDIA - The_Oregon_Trail_%28computer_game%29)
I remember using logo (WIKIPEDIA - logo programming language) by third grade. PENDOWN FD 90 RT
We played some otehr game about mixing chemical on other planets to make compounds. Taht was fun too.
Nearly everyone I knew had a home computer. A lot of my good friends at the time. Jason Fahmer, Angela Vacanti, Kelly LeVan, Heather Killian , Chris Watson, Chris Parada. Seems like most of the people I hung out with in the early to mid 80s.
Then the macs came out in 1984. Those macs were pretty advanced machines that could do a lot of home computing tasks. Heather got one and so did Chris Watson. I remember distinctly that Heather always had some really cool computers.
I am sure everyone remembers the first computer based encyclopedia they saw. Mine was at Heather's house. Or maybe not because I lived in such an isoloted weird place like Kenmore.
I remember the crazy advertsiement with tthe woman running and smashing the computers or something . I wanted one so bad, but we didn't get one or an amiga.
(WIKIPEDIA - home computer)
I lifted this list from wikipedia.
* Apple II (June 1977, North America) (color graphics, eight expansion slots)
* Tandy Radio Shack TRS-80 (August 1977, N. Am.) (first home computer for less than US$600)
* Commodore PET (December 1977, N. Am.) (first all-in-one computer: keyboard/screen/tape storage)
* Atari 400/800 (1979, N. Am.) (first computer with custom chip set)
* Commodore VIC-20 (1980, N. Am.) (under US$300; first computer in the world to pass the one million sold mark)
* TRS-80 Color Computer (1980, N. Am.) (Motorola 6809, OS-9 multi-user multi-tasking)
* Texas Instruments TI-99/4A (June 1981, N. Am.) (16-bit CPU)
* Sinclair ZX81 (1981, Europe) (£49.95 in kit form; £69.95 pre-built)
* BBC Micro (1981, Europe) (premier educational computer in the UK for a decade; advanced BASIC)
* ZX Spectrum (April 1982, Europe) (best-selling British home computer; "made" the UK software industry)
* Commodore 64 (August 1982, N. Am.) (best-selling computer model of all time: > 20 million sold)
* MSX (late 1983, Japan) (a computer 'reference design' by ASCII and Microsoft, manufactured by several companies)
* Apple Macintosh (1984, N. Am.) (first fully GUI-based home/personal computer; first 16/32-bit)
* Amstrad/Schneider CPC & PCW ranges (198?, Europe) (British std. prior to IBM PC; German sales next to C64)
* Atari ST (1985, N. Am.) (first with built-in MIDI interface; also 1MB RAM for less than US$1000)
* Commodore Amiga (July 1985, N. Am.) (custom chip set for graphics and sound; multitasking OS)
I think then there was a huge lapse before we got another computer when I was in my late high shcool years. That actaully worked out good for me because I was not at all into computers in high school. Liek I would use it sometimes to type a paper, but it was deifnately not my passtime. I was much more into doing outdoors stuff and exploring sex and drugs.
I rememeber my first program Basic went something like this
1 print "I love my vic20"
2 goto 1
and I was instantly addicted and saved it all to tape. Tapes were kind of fun. I can't tell you how much music got sacrificed to "save data".
The vic 20 had some really excellent text based RPGs. I loved them all. But it definately was not a gaming machine. In fact I don't think it had any graphics outside of text.
Then I saw Jason Fahmer's commodore 64 .
He was always the kid that had eveything first. Luckily, he was also my best friend at the time. I got one right after that. My mom said just about after they came out, which was 1982, so lets say 1983 when (e:mike) was born.
Many of my other friends had a tandy or an Apple II. I remember wanting an apple II GS, whatever the gs stood for.
I never got a modem because my dad was an insurance salesman and he couldn't have the business line tied up with me using the computer. I wonder what would have happend to me during the dot.com boom if I had had a modem before that. Luckily, the mail man [inlink]paul,2626[/inlink] would bring around programs and I quickly got my hands on GEOS, the first graphics operating system I had ever seen. The commodore 64 was truly a viable home computer for the time.
At school we played Oregon Trail ont eha Apple IIs (WIKIPEDIA - The_Oregon_Trail_%28computer_game%29)
I remember using logo (WIKIPEDIA - logo programming language) by third grade. PENDOWN FD 90 RT
We played some otehr game about mixing chemical on other planets to make compounds. Taht was fun too.
Nearly everyone I knew had a home computer. A lot of my good friends at the time. Jason Fahmer, Angela Vacanti, Kelly LeVan, Heather Killian , Chris Watson, Chris Parada. Seems like most of the people I hung out with in the early to mid 80s.
Then the macs came out in 1984. Those macs were pretty advanced machines that could do a lot of home computing tasks. Heather got one and so did Chris Watson. I remember distinctly that Heather always had some really cool computers.
I am sure everyone remembers the first computer based encyclopedia they saw. Mine was at Heather's house. Or maybe not because I lived in such an isoloted weird place like Kenmore.
I remember the crazy advertsiement with tthe woman running and smashing the computers or something . I wanted one so bad, but we didn't get one or an amiga.
(WIKIPEDIA - home computer)
I lifted this list from wikipedia.
* Apple II (June 1977, North America) (color graphics, eight expansion slots)
* Tandy Radio Shack TRS-80 (August 1977, N. Am.) (first home computer for less than US$600)
* Commodore PET (December 1977, N. Am.) (first all-in-one computer: keyboard/screen/tape storage)
* Atari 400/800 (1979, N. Am.) (first computer with custom chip set)
* Commodore VIC-20 (1980, N. Am.) (under US$300; first computer in the world to pass the one million sold mark)
* TRS-80 Color Computer (1980, N. Am.) (Motorola 6809, OS-9 multi-user multi-tasking)
* Texas Instruments TI-99/4A (June 1981, N. Am.) (16-bit CPU)
* Sinclair ZX81 (1981, Europe) (£49.95 in kit form; £69.95 pre-built)
* BBC Micro (1981, Europe) (premier educational computer in the UK for a decade; advanced BASIC)
* ZX Spectrum (April 1982, Europe) (best-selling British home computer; "made" the UK software industry)
* Commodore 64 (August 1982, N. Am.) (best-selling computer model of all time: > 20 million sold)
* MSX (late 1983, Japan) (a computer 'reference design' by ASCII and Microsoft, manufactured by several companies)
* Apple Macintosh (1984, N. Am.) (first fully GUI-based home/personal computer; first 16/32-bit)
* Amstrad/Schneider CPC & PCW ranges (198?, Europe) (British std. prior to IBM PC; German sales next to C64)
* Atari ST (1985, N. Am.) (first with built-in MIDI interface; also 1MB RAM for less than US$1000)
* Commodore Amiga (July 1985, N. Am.) (custom chip set for graphics and sound; multitasking OS)
I think then there was a huge lapse before we got another computer when I was in my late high shcool years. That actaully worked out good for me because I was not at all into computers in high school. Liek I would use it sometimes to type a paper, but it was deifnately not my passtime. I was much more into doing outdoors stuff and exploring sex and drugs.
joshua - 01/10/06 03:50
Yep, the VIC20 - the very first computer I ever had. Damn, that just brought back some memories I forgot about.
Yep, the VIC20 - the very first computer I ever had. Damn, that just brought back some memories I forgot about.
jenks - 01/10/06 00:37
Hmm interesting. Must admit I've never heard of the vic20. (sorry!) We had an apple IIGS (the GS stood for "graphics and sound" I believe.) I think that was our first computer, though I have vague memories of others. But we thought we were pretty fancy because it was COLOR. At school we had a bunch of (i think) commodore 64's? We played oregon trail a lot (I loved that game), and worm. then in high school a lot of the kids had macs. They didn't have hard drives, and the whole system software ran off a floppy (though they were the 3.5" floppies that a lot of people thought were "hard disks".) I was so jealous of their computers, and I would always go over to their rooms (i was in boarding school) to play Crystal Quest. my first computer of my own was a powerbook... I forget the number. I think it was the second model they made. I did have a modem, and discovered this dinky little local BBS... And I am happy to say I have never owned a windows box. I stayed apple ever since the IIGS, but my dad and everyone else went to windows.
Haha, and I try to pretend I'm not a geek. I guess I'm not fooling anyone.
Hmm interesting. Must admit I've never heard of the vic20. (sorry!) We had an apple IIGS (the GS stood for "graphics and sound" I believe.) I think that was our first computer, though I have vague memories of others. But we thought we were pretty fancy because it was COLOR. At school we had a bunch of (i think) commodore 64's? We played oregon trail a lot (I loved that game), and worm. then in high school a lot of the kids had macs. They didn't have hard drives, and the whole system software ran off a floppy (though they were the 3.5" floppies that a lot of people thought were "hard disks".) I was so jealous of their computers, and I would always go over to their rooms (i was in boarding school) to play Crystal Quest. my first computer of my own was a powerbook... I forget the number. I think it was the second model they made. I did have a modem, and discovered this dinky little local BBS... And I am happy to say I have never owned a windows box. I stayed apple ever since the IIGS, but my dad and everyone else went to windows.
Haha, and I try to pretend I'm not a geek. I guess I'm not fooling anyone.
01/09/2006 15:22 #32446
wingdings for lunchCategory: food
Today's special atw work was those yummy wingdings. I knew this because I saw it on th mobile app I made for work where it reports today's specials. I guess it worked for me. Yum!
imk2 - 01/09/06 16:30
Ohh! are those the breaded kind? those are my favorite, the only place i know where you can get them are at fuddruckers.
Ohh! are those the breaded kind? those are my favorite, the only place i know where you can get them are at fuddruckers.
Its a smaller large cottage looking white one near Bryant and Linwood.
What house on Linwood do you want to own so bad? There are some devestatingly beautiful houses on Linwood. I used to gaze at some of them out the window of our 7th floor apartment...
Rain in January is strange. When I went out to lunch today is was so warm (for jan) that it was weird.
Dude I know I keep saying that!! Its even warmer here. You should come visit before the sun just crisps us...