7/27/2009

Popcap is still working on Android versions of Peggle and Bejeweled

In march game producer Popcap announced that they are going to release a version of their popular game Peggle for Android in April. Well, there is still no Android Peggle until this day, so I wrote an email to Garth Chouteau from Popcap. Looks like Peggle is still on its way:

We are still working on Peggle for Android. Peggle and Bejeweled Twist shouldn't be too far away. It's a new OS for us to develop on and it has taken a little longer than expected to 'get it right.'
Nice. Now we need them to also announce their better games for Android, like Plantz vs. Zombies and Bookworm Adventures (a game with the word Bookworm in its title cannot fail!).

6/07/2009

Wave notes

From Drop Box
Slowly digging into the Wave Protocol Specs. I wonder how backups are best implemented. I guess we can always have robots creating snapshots once a wave reaches a given state (eg. crossing a timeframe without updating). But I guess we will use extension data in the process (e.g. the history of the Chess game you played in the wave).

2/12/2009

I could get my hands on a G1...

There is a marketing campaign by T-Mobile for the G1, the first phone (officially) running the Android operating system. They give the device to bloggers and form a planet, where they aggregate all the praise and criticism for the device. So far they seem to do it right - bloggers are free to slam the device and this makes the campaign very authentic.

Barbara just told me that she mentioned my name to someone as a tester for the second round, which is interesting for several reasons:

  • It would be the second time I blog for a mobile provider.
  • I had the G1 in my amazon shopping basket today. I did not place the order, since 400 euro is a lot of money, and there will probably a few other Android devices announced next week in Barcelona.
  • I did not blog much lately, since most of my social online life moved to twitter.

Still, I hope I get my hands on the device. I will probably be unhappy with some issues, but I still have high hopes for open culture that Android could bring into the proprietary mobile scene. I'm not so much interested in smart-phones. What I want is phones to become the mobile version of a PC, an open and customizable software platform where competition and standards drive opportunities and innovation forward. And I think Android is a huge step in this direction.

I'm playing with the Android SDK since it has been released and I took a look at the source code as well. It feels a little stupid to hack stuff and then only use it on an emulator ;) .

12/09/2008

Install gridwars on a 1024x600 netbook running ubuntu.

  • install deb from http://www.getdeb.net/app/GridWars+2 .
  • if you try to run gridwars, it will crash with an error "appstub.linux signal handler 11".
  • wtf? a look into ~/.gridwars/errors.txt shows more details: "Can not set graphics mode: Fullscreen - 1024X768" . ok, that makes sense, we only have a resolution of 1024x768.
  • change resolution in ~/.gridwars/Config.txt ("Screen Heigt" to 600).
save, play, have fun

12/08/2008

German for advanced beginners: Various names for the heel of a loaf of bread

Aheuer, Anschnitt, Bugl, Bödeli, Gnetzla, Gupf, Kipf, Knerzel, Knießchen, Knippchen, Knorzen, Knurrn, Knust, Knust, Knäppchen, Knäuschen, Knäusperle, Knörzchen, Knörzla, Knüppchen, Knüstchen, Krüstchen, Mürgel, Ortstückel, Ranfl, Ranft, Reiftchen, Reiftle, Riebel, Ränftl, Scherzerl, Stützle, Timpken

11/30/2008

Now reading

Quiz: Who is this?

  1. Knowledge of Literature.—Nil.
  2. Philosophy.—Nil.
  3. Astronomy.—Nil.
  4. Politics.—Feeble.
  5. Botany.—Variable. Well up in belladonna, opium, and poisons generally. Knows nothing of practical gardening.
  6. Geology.—Practical, but limited. Tells at a glance different soils from each other. After walks has shown me splashes upon his trousers, and told me by their colour and consistence in what part of London he had received them.
  7. Chemistry.—Profound.
  8. Anatomy.—Accurate, but unsystematic.
  9. Sensational Literature.—Immense. He appears to know every detail of every horror perpetrated in the century.
  10. Plays the violin well.
  11. Is an expert singlestick player, boxer, and swordsman.
  12. Has a good practical knowledge of British law.

Answer

11/23/2008

32


Four o'clock in the afternoon
and I didn't feel like very much.
I said to myself, "Where are you golden boy,
where is your famous golden touch?"
I thought you knew where
all of the elephants lie down,
I thought you were the crown prince
of all the wheels in Ivory Town.
Just take a look at your body now,
there's nothing much to save
and a bitter voice in the mirror cries,
"Hey, Prince, you need a shave."
Now if you can manage to get
your trembling fingers to behave,
why don't you try unwrapping
a stainless steel razor blade?
That's right, it's come to this,
yes it's come to this,
and wasn't it a long way down,
wasn't it a strange way down?

There's no hot water
and the cold is running thin.
Well, what do you expect from
the kind of places you've been living in?
Don't drink from that cup,
it's all caked and cracked along the rim.
That's not the electric light, my friend,
that is your vision growing dim.
Cover up your face with soap, there,
now you're Santa Claus.
And you've got a gift for anyone
who will give you his applause.
I thought you were a racing man,
ah, but you couldn't take the pace.
That's a funeral in the mirror
and it's stopping at your face.
That's right, it's come to this,
yes it's come to this,
and wasn't it a long way down,
ah wasn't it a strange way down?

Once there was a path
and a girl with chestnut hair,
and you passed the summers
picking all of the berries that grew there;
there were times she was a woman,
oh, there were times she was just a child,
and you held her in the shadows
where the raspberries grow wild.
And you climbed the twilight mountains
and you sang about the view,
and everywhere that you wandered
love seemed to go along with you.
That's a hard one to remember,
yes it makes you clench your fist.
And then the veins stand out like highways,
all along your wrist.
And yes it's come to this,
it's come to this,
and wasn't it a long way down,
wasn't it a strange way down?

You can still find a job,
go out and talk to a friend.
On the back of every magazine
there are those coupons you can send.
Why don't you join the Rosicrucians,
they can give you back your hope,
you can find your love with diagrams
on a plain brown envelope.
But you've used up all your coupons
except the one that seems
to be written on your wrist
along with several thousand dreams.
Now Santa Claus comes forward,
that's a razor in his mit;
and he puts on his dark glasses
and he shows you where to hit;
and then the cameras pan,
the stand in stunt man,
dress rehearsal rag,
it's just the dress rehearsal rag,
you know this dress rehearsal rag,
it's just a dress rehearsal rag.

-- Leonard Cohen, "Dress Rehearsal Rag"

11/07/2008

My new dell mini 9

Because Barbara requested it, here are some pictures of my new Dell Mini 9.

So far I'm pretty happy with it. Ever since I bought a good desktop machine in the end of 2006, I hardly used my expensive notebook (Macbook) for anything else but reading and editing text, video & audio. The mini can do that too, and it has the huge advantage that it is small/light/cheap enough to carry it with me even if I'm not sure I'm going to need it. With the Macbook I always had to ask myself "Am I really going to go to the library after lecture, and will I really need the notebook then to justify carring it around the whole day?". The mini perfectly fits into my small bag, together with book, my moleskine and all my other stuff.

As for the Macbook: I'm giving it to my little sister Cosima. She turns 16 today, which I remember is an important birthday, and I guess she will have a lot more use for it than I have. This ends my 2 1/2 years affair with Apple Computers. The Mini is running GNU/Linux (Ubuntu), as are all the other machines I currently use on PCs.

All in all OS X was a interesting and positive experience. Some really annoying things, like iTunes only downloading album art if you enter your credit card. Or software updates without package management. But there are quite some annoying things in Ubuntu as well, so that's not making the difference in the end.

What does make a difference however is that Ubuntu is free software, and OS X is not: If all the systems do the job (and Windows XP does the job too), of course I'm going with the one that costs nothing, is based on open standards, and has a transparent development process.