Archive for February, 2006

On Video Games and Education

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Saturday night we had a LAN party at my friend Shaan’s house. We played Warcraft III, which is a real-time strategy game. The particular maps we played on were a game called ‘tower defense.’ There were several variations on this game type, but I’ll elaborate on the one that held my attention the best.

The point of ‘tower defense’ is simple. You have a little base to defend, and some distance from this based is a portal, out from which large monsters will periodically emerge. They try to make their way to your base, and you try build up your towers to kill them before they get there. Every time you kill a monster, you get a little bit of money, which you can use to build more towers, or upgrade your existing towers. Every time a monster gets through to your base, he disappears and you use one life; once you lose your allotted number (usually around 50), the game is over for you. As the game progresses, the monsters that come through the portal get tougher and tougher.

After playing and losing a couple of times, I realized that in order to succeed you have to set your towers up into a maze, increasing the distance the monsters have to travel to get to your base, and therefore the amount of time your towers have to shoot at the monsters before they are killed. Every time I played the game, I’d do a little better than I had before, and I kept tweaking what I thought the ‘ideal strategy’ would be.

I never tired of it though – long after everyone else was sick of having played the same map over and over, I wanted to keep going. I figure this is because I still had ideas that I wanted to try out. I find myself to be this way with pretty much any type of game – I feel the need to keep playing it untill I understand the dynamics of the system, at which point I get bored with it. Once you know how the thing works, it’s no longer entertaining. Could it be that I find video games so entertaning because they’re just another form of learning?

Oops

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

I read a couple of blogs and web-comics. When I’m at my computer, I occaisionally look at them to see if they have new content for me. Just now I opened markpneyer.com to see if there was anything new…

On Thought

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

I find great pleasure in the consideration of a particularly curious idea. Chasing and pursuing an odd thought in order to wrestle it into submission and force it to reveal its true nature to me is fulfilling and satisfying in a way few other things in life are.

Musical Offering

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

I made another song.

In Defense of Detractors

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

The people in the physics department post all manner of oddities on their bulliten boards. Today I saw something about radio and marconi. Maybe it was some ‘this day in history’ thing. It was about how Marconi was able to transmit radio signals 2000 miles over the ocean, even though ‘detractors’ said he’d be limited to 200 miles.

The thing is, neither Marconi nor his detractors knew about the ionosphere, an ionized layer of the atmosphere that reflects radio waves. The ionosphere allows radio waves to follow the curvature of the earth, bouncing back and forth, enabling radio waves (particularly those of lower wavelengths) to travel further. When Marconi’s ‘detractors’ said that he wouldn’t be able to send radio signals around they earth, they didn’t realize that there was a giant reflecting surface in the sky above them. Marconi didn’t either – he was just stubborn and tried to accomplish a task thought impossible by most scientists of his day. He got lucky in that the scientists at the time didn’t know about the ionosphere.

The thing is, if there wasn’t any ionosphere, then the ‘detractors’ would have been right and Marconi would have looked like an idiot trying to recieve radio signals that would have to somehow pass through the earth if they were going to reach him. The article made it seem as if Marconi knew better than his detractors. In reality, he just stubbornly ignored a perfectly logical explanation for why his plans would fail, and happened to get lucky.

It’d be akin to some guy spending $250 on lottery tickets, winning, and then saying all those folks who told him he was just throwing money away were dumb.

Stressed out

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

I don’t handle certain things very well. One of them is when I plan to do something, and then those plans are interrupted. I become really frustrated with that sort of situation easily. Tonight I had planned on going to a C.S. Club event. It starts at 6:30, and I normally leave work around 6, meaning I’d be able to get there just in time. My boss called and wanted me to some some servers over to our data center, and because this would take everyone offline, I’d have to start at 6. As he was telling me this, I could feel my level of frustration rising.

I realized it’d probably take at least a half hour if everything went perfectly, which it never does, meaning I’d get out of here at like 7 :30 and miss the event entirely. I felt my mind clouding over with negative pessimistic thoughts. I didn’t like my job and wished that I wasn’t even working at all in the first place; I recalled how much of my college life I had missed because I was thinking about other things instead of doing what I wanted to be doing, which was just being a college student and enjoying what life had to offer. Something dragged my attention back to the task at hand (moving someone’s internet explorer settings to a different computer for them) and then I realized I could probably just call my boss and ask if I could take care of the thing tommorrow. He said that was fine.

If I hadn’t gotten so frustrated and my mind hadn’t been so clouded over, I would have thought to ask him that while he was on the phone with me, instead of waiting till I was off the phone with him, and having it cause me unecessary frustration and negativity.

On Music and Embarassment

Monday, February 20th, 2006

I found some new music lately, that I’ve really gotten into. One of the bands is Megadeth. I always liked metallica, particularly the older stuff. The lead guitarist/frontman for megadeth is Dave Mustaine, who was in Metallica when they started, utill they kicked him out for being too awesome.

Megadeth has that great melodic metal sound that made the old metallica stuff really good. Unfortunately, Megadeth doesn’t have Cliff Burton writing H.P. Lovecraft inspired lyrics for his songs, and so a lot of them just sound kind of dumb. I love the music, and I like the style of the vocals, but the subject leaves a little something to do be desired. If anyone asks what I’m listening to, I’m embarassed to say it’s ‘Megadeth.’ I feel like I ought to be fourteen with a skeleton drawn on my algebra notebook.

Today at work, I was in the process of making copies of some directions at the copier. One of the ladies up front asked me what I was listening to. I felt a little embarrassed to say ‘Tool’ but at least she probably didn’t know what that was. Sometimes at work I listen to the Bach Cello suites – why couldn’t she have asked me when I was listening to them? Oh well.

100% compatible

Monday, February 20th, 2006

MarkPNeyer.com is now being hosted on a different webserver. This means that everyone from XU can now see it and use it etc. Hooray!

lol, south africa!

Saturday, February 18th, 2006

I was looking at some south african news site (having followed a link from my brother john’s profile) and I found a banner ad that said “US Green Card: Your Country is eligible!” It’s funny to think that’s what they advertise in other countries. Suckers.

If only real life were this easy

Friday, February 17th, 2006

There are some days when I wish I could gather data on everything I did every day – what time I got up, what I ate, how I felt, and when I went to bed – so that I could do a little analysis of the data and then make improvements to my life accordingly. Kind of like doing a bunch of profiling on a processor-intensive application and tweaking the parts of the code that take such a long time. I bet if I had that data I could make all kinds of improvements. But I don’t, and to be honest I’d probably stop gathering the data after getting bored with the undertaking. All the same, it’s a nice concept to think about.