• Precarious situation 🧑‍🚀🚀

    Starliner’s flight to the space station was far wilder than most of us thought – DAMN! Astronauts are the absolute coolest, smartest, bravest human beings. I also love the respect they have for the folks in Mission Control:

    “Thankfully, these folks are heroes. And please print this. What do heroes look like? Well, heroes put their tank on and they run into a fiery building and pull people out of it. That’s a hero. Heroes also sit in their cubicle for decades studying their systems, and knowing their systems front and back. And when there is no time to assess a situation and go and talk to people and ask, ‘What do you think?’ they know their system so well they come up with a plan on the fly. That is a hero. And there are several of them in Mission Control.”

    Link courtesy of Metafilter


  • Highlights from the w-g archives

    On this day


  • An email from a ZX Spectrum game developer!

    Remember my post where I shared some of Rodd’s old ZX Spectrum games? Yesterday I received an email from Professor Paul X. McCarthy who was one of the original developers of the “Famous People Play Poker” game. He shared some more details and kindly agreed to let me post them on the site for posterity.

    I stumbled upon your blog tonight and wanted to thank you for making the post about old ZX Spectrum cassettes. My close friend Kieran Sharp and I were responsible for creating the Famous People Play Poker game you featured while we were at school together and over the years have lost all copies since. That was our first company Jolly Good Software.

    We were offered a distribution contract to Spain and other European countries by Ozisoft but turned it down as we thought the contract was too restrictive (ridiculous i know!) So this is one of the few copies that were sold probably through David Reid Electronics in Sydney where I worked as a part time computer sales assistant while at school.

    It brings back very fond memories of working long hours for almost a year on this game and being immersed in the then very nascent development and publishing scene – mostly of course in the UK.

    And to answer your question, who were the famous people you got to play poker against? From memory there was a progression based on how well you did through these characters each with its own 8 bit soundtrack and pixel art we painstakingly created by hand.

    1. The Statue of Liberty
    2. Mona Lisa
    3. Mad Hatter
    4. Beethoven
    5. Clive Sinclair

    Thanks for sending them on to ACMI. That’s brilliant! I’ve some friends there too, so delighted to hear they and the others are in good hands.

    I replied to Prof. McCarthy thanking him for getting in touch, and apologising for slamming their cover art (I called it “crappy” 😬) in the original post. He said:

    No worries! It was retro chic before its time 😊 and not printed using conventional processes.

    Artwork typography done by hand printed on a ZX Printer on heat sensitive silver paper (no laser printers readily available then) and printed with yellow background on Sydney’s first generation colour photocopiers that Canon researchers in Sydney later built the global postscript rendering engine for at CSIR[O] in Ryde.

    Very cool! That means I’ve now spoken to developers of TWO of the different games featured (including Veronika Megler from The Hobbit). I’m hoping some more might come out of the woodwork…


  • Dinner tonight

    A plate with a Lebanese bread, a big pile of salad, and chicken with yogurt sauce

    Lebanese Lemon Garlic Chicken and Fattoush Salad from RecipeTinEats. The salad was a lot of chopping, and I had to specially seek out sumac for the dressing. (We already had pomegranate molasses since we’re annoying foodies.) Worth it though! 😋


  • Aussie architecture 🏠

    Do you know your Art Deco from mid-century modern? Your guide to five popular design eras – Fun little visual guide to some of the common architectural styles you see in Australia. There’s a quiz at the bottom too! I immediately fell in love with the Star Theatre in Launceston. *sigh*

    Relatedly, I was interested to read that someone in Ohio has built a “new” Frank Lloyd Wright house from blueprints he drew but never built. Hilariously, the FLW Foundation refuses to classify it as authentically his work… because they built it to modern building codes. 😂 I’m not surprised. When we visited Taliesin in 2010, I was shocked by how poor some of the workmanship was. The walls were thin, and there were literally gaps around some of the windows. “How in the world did the family live here in Wisconsin in the winter?” I asked the tour guide. “They didn’t. They had another home in Arizona.” Of course! While some of his ideas were brilliant, his designs don’t always seem especially suited to the realities of how people live.


  • Links that have been occupying me lately

    • AO3 is entering a new era – some fascinating number-crunching here on the stats around what’s happening in the world of fan fiction. I’ll confess I’ve read a ton on AO3, and I was motivated enough to look up the full report. I also didn’t realise the impact that AI-scraping is having on the fanfic community, but it makes sense.
    • Coming Soon: From ‘The Sims’ to ‘World of Warcraft’, You’ll Be Able to Play Your Way Through ACMI’s ‘Game Worlds’ Exhibition – Oh, fun. We’ll have to plan a trip to Melbourne.
    • Why are we still using 88×31 buttons – Nostalgia! The bit about IAB ad sizes reminded me of my “Responsive Ads: This is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things… Yet” talk. It also reminded me of Amazon’s “Phone Tool Icons,” these little badges employees can earn that get displayed on your page on the internal company directory. Some people were obsessed with those. I remember back in 2020 I tried to get a new one approved to award to people who managed to record their Summit talks with a perfectly white backdrop. (Everyone had to scramble and record at home during Covid lockdown, and for some reason Amazon PR were super fastidious about your backdrop not having any visible shadows or texture on it. Like, we’re all paranoid about the global pandemic and finding toilet paper and homeschooling kids, but you’re totally right, a perfectly smooth white background is the #1 priority. 🙄) But it got rejected, because whoever approves the Phone Tool Icons hates fun. Anyway, I pinged a friend there yesterday to see what size they are, and turns out they’re 120×30, so they’re not actually Micro Buttons anyway.
    • Do One Thing – Everything is awful, and when I’ve run out of stupid Internet things to distract myself with (like fan fiction and video games and micro buttons), I find myself seeking out these posts with suggestions of how to cope.

  • Caffeination

    Caffeination

    I’ve caught a cold so I had to pull out of a planned trip to visit the in-laws. While I will be without my in-house barista for 3 days, Mr. Snook has ensured that I will not lack for caffeine. (Toby’s gives you a voucher every time you buy a bag of beans.)


  • Happy anniversary, part 2

    Happy anniversary, part 2

    Since we had to get dressed up for an event in the city tonight, we took the opportunity to finally check out Fabbrica for dinner afterwards. We shared the wagyu tonnato, deep-fried zucchini flowers, trottole puttanesca, and hazelnut tiramisu. Everything was very, very good.

    Wagyu Tonnato

    Deep-fred zucchini flowers

    Trottole puttanesca

    Hazelnut tiramisu


  • Happy anniversary!

    We went out for breakfast to celebrate the fact that 24 years ago today, two silly, shy, impossibly young web developers got drunk enough on vodka-Redbulls at the Leopard Lounge in Fulham to confess their mutual crushes and have a pash on the dancefloor. ❤️

    A collage of two middle-aged people having breakfast


  • A tale of two dresses 👗👗

    Earlier in the week, I popped into Made590 to pick up a couple shirts… and whoops, a new Liberty dress was right there. It was Tana Lawn and it felt like silk, and I looked great in it. 😍

    Saski dress in Liberty Tana Lawn

    I sent the photo to a couple friends, and one of them went by a few days later to pick one up for herself. That night she said, “You know it’s AI-generated, right?”

    Wait, what? Liberty of London? The famed 150-year-old “purveyor of craftsmanship,” that prides itself on its “dedicated in-house design studio” who are responsible for “hand painting and creating our beautiful prints”? THAT Liberty of London?

    Yep, them. Check the “Editor’s Notes”:

    For Avalon Scenes, the design studio approached Tom Furse, an artist and musician who specialises in creating artwork with AI in controlled environments. Harnessing the cutting-edge potential of AI technology, this design conjures a display of surreal landscapes morphing into psychedelic flower forms…

    Well, that sucks. I had a good long think about it. It really is a lovely dress. I am not against algorithmic art entirely, and I can see cases where I’d be fine with this – like if the model was trained only on Liberty’s pattern archive. But I could find zero mention of the technology used, not on Liberty’s site or the artist’s website or Instagram. (The artist is actually a musician that seems to dabble in AI, so I doubt he’s training his own models for this.) I contacted Liberty through both their website and Facebook page to ask for details, explaining that I was concerned about whether the model used for their AI-generated fabric was trained on any stolen artwork, and how the environmental impacts of the project lived up to Liberty’s stated corporate social responsibility goals. I got a reply back asking “Which AI-generated fabric specifically are you asking about?”

    Not good.

    I decided to return the dress today for one featuring Australian plants photographed straight from the shop owner’s garden. Made590 were lovely about it, and I can’t fault them – most people wouldn’t feel as strongly about this as I do. But right now I’m in the “no ethical use of AI” camp, and I’d rather pay artists for their art. I’m so disappointed in Liberty – ACTUAL LIBERTY OF LONDON – jumping on the AI trend bandwagon. Ugh. I’ll update if they ever send me the details, but for now I feel a lot better about my pretty new dress.

    Saski dress in Botanist print



ABOUT

My name is Kris. I’ve been blogging since the 90’s. I live in Sydney, Australia, and I spent most of my career in the tech industry.

No AI used in writing this blog, ever. 100% human-generated.


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