People often ask me, “You’re so grumpy all the time! Why are you so grumpy? Smile! No, that’s… no… you’re doing it wrong… oh, close enough. Can you fix my Outlook?”

The answer is, of course, that a good night’s rest will do wonders for anybody’s outlook. That, and not using the trash as long-term storage. However, I find that I most often encounter the following ten obstacles to a good night’s rest.

10. Neighbors’ Screaming Kids
I remember that there was a time (and it was not so long ago) when just as soon as the first rays of dawn fell across my face, I would leap out of bed and scream “Hooray!” I would frolic through the house, whooping with joy. A new day, full of possibilities! It was all so exciting! Until, of course, a grumpy parent would emerge, and with grimace or glare, and instruct me to “be quiet or play outside.”
9. Unattended Alarm Clocks
So, Neighbor, I see from the absence of your slogan-bearing SUV that you’ve left town for a few days. Have you remembered everything? Sunscreen? Change the oil? Take out the trash? Have you turned off your alarm clock? I didn’t think so. Apparently, you don’t realize that it’s going to squawk and screech continuously until you return? Or perhaps you just don’t care.
8. Boom Cars
Unless you’re driving an ice cream truck, your music should stay inside your vehicle. And if you are driving an ice cream truck, then why the heck are you visiting in the middle of the night?
7. Mystery Bells
I didn’t even know there were any large bells in my neighborhood until a few days ago, when one clanged and bonged with vigor and zeal. The only meaning that my befogged brain could attach to the outburst was that De Plane had finally arrived at Fantasy Island. “Smiles, everyone! Smiles!
6. Garbage Day
Huge truck! Robotic claw! Tons of rubbish flying through the air! Need I explain further? It would be a breathtaking spectacle of modern living if only it would happen an hour or so later in the day. But, the fact that there exists someone whose job it is to take my trash to the dump so that I don’t have to do it myself makes this one bearable.
5. “Urgent” Text Messages
From time to time, on a relatively peaceful morning, I’ll be instantly awakened by the dreaded cheerful fanfare of a text message. As my trembling fingers reach for the phone that is buzzing like a giant hornet, visions of smoke-belching servers fill my mind. Is this the Big One?
HAY CAN U FIX MY OUTLOOK?
Wow, thanks a lot, early-rising co-worker. That adrenaline surge is way better than a cup of coffee... which I'm going to pour over your head when I get to work.
4. The Trash Bum
In these depressing economic times, more and more families are choosing to defend the environment and supplement their income by recycling. Good for them, right? The problem is that they're recycling my recyclables. Ordinarily, I wouldn't raise much of a fuss about this, since I don't really care whether Edco or somebody else empties the little blue bin, just as long as it gets emptied (and not just into the big brown garbage bin, thank you very much.) In this case, however, I will raise a fuss, mainly since the Trash Bum comes in the dead of night with his rattling bags of cans and bottles, to dig through the blue bin (also full of rattling cans and bottles) for cans and bottles to add to his clinking, clanking, clattering collection.
3. Birds
My neighborhood is apparently a waypoint on the migratory path of a flock of green parrots. While in town, they roost in a big weird tree across the street. Perhaps roost is the wrong word. I think party might be more accurate. Perhaps even frat party. These birds have two calls, "Brah!" and something that sounds suspiciously like bird laughter. The bird party starts just after dawn and lasts until just before I walk out the door, at which point the birds flock en masse to (I can only assume) the nearest Denny's.
2. Mr. Gentleman
This spot is reserved for the notorious Mr. Gentleman, my former upstairs neighbor. Mr. Gentleman would arrive home promptly at 11:00 PM, at which point he would turn up his television to maximum volume, perhaps so that he could listen to it from the big weird tree across the street. He would then ignore the television (as well as the front door) until about three or four in the morning, at which point he'd call it a night.
1. Gravity
Because even if I were to take a nap in a soundproof, lightproof, climate controlled Cold War bunker on the edge of nowhere, gravity will still accelerate me at 9.8 meters per second per second into my sleeping surface.

GI Joe: I went expecting nothing more than a two-hour-long episode of a cartoon show and as a result was satisified. Or I was until James and Rex became Destro and Cobra Commander. Destro’s head looked hokey and fake, and Cobra Commander’s mask could have been better designed. Their Duke made up for it, though.

District 9: Very, very good. It’s well written in that you might actually find that you care about what happens to the characters. I’d like to see more movies like this, but of course Hollywood will take that to mean, “More movies about aliens filmed in a pseudo-documentary style.” Oh, Hollywood.

A “vacation” where you stay in town and still have to go to work isn’t much of a vacation, no matter how nice the hotel is. Even if the bit about the beach being “steps from your door” turns out to be true. Even if the definition of “beach” isn’t even stretched… much.

It does, however, get you to think about what’s missing from your life and what isn’t. Even if you don’t come up with any answers.

Perhaps tomorrow, I’ll write a real post. Until then, please enjoy this hand-picked collection of randomly stumbled links of mild interest.


20 Technothriller Tropes We Hope Never To See Again
It’s like the Evil Overlord list, but for thrillers.
Stories We’ve Seen Too Often
And I wonder why I can’t come up with any good ideas of my own. I can think of too many bad ones!
Neoclassical Roleplaying Games
A provocative comparison of the iterations of D&D (and others) to artistic movements. If true, then we’ve got some interesting stuff ahead of us.
Brand New Antique Humanoids
A warehouse of forgotten Atomic Age robots has been discovered in Japan.
Efficient LEGO Storage
Most useful, as I have recently been diagnosed with acute LEGOmania.
Things I Won’t Work With
In summary, don’t work with anything that contains too much nitrogen, and/or anything that smells like Hell’s Dumpster.
FORA.tv – MythBuster Adam Savage’s Colossal Failures
If you don’t fail, you don’t learn. And sometimes, all you can do is apologize.

A friend recently sent me the list, "9 Things I Hate That people love to do." Now, I’m usually all for a good "X things I hate about Y" list, since I usually find most or all of those X things (or Y itself) to be somewhat irritating to myself as well. This one was a bit different, and either the writer didn’t think his points through, or he did and I’m just playing along into his little trap.

1. People who point at their wrist while asking for the time…. I know where my watch is pal, where the hell is yours? Do I point at my crotch when I ask where the toilet is?

We do that because everybody knows what it means. What other gesture would you suggest to convey the question? Perhaps making an hourglass figure in the air with the hands? No, that already means something else.

And no, you probably don’t point at your crotch when you need the toilet. You probably clutch at it and sort of dance around. We all know what that means, too.

2. People who are willing to get off their ass to search the entire room for the T.V. remote because they refuse to walk to the T.V. and change the channel manually.

I don’t know about you, but my TiVO doesn’t even have any buttons. So yeah, I could just walk over to the TV and change it… to a dead channel. Poop!

3. When people say ‘Oh you just want to have your cake and eat it too’. Damn right! What good is cake if you can’t eat it?

Okay, I’ve never really liked that saying, either. My reasoning is that "have" and "eat" are synonymous when applied to cake, as in "We are going to have cake after dinner." To say that one can’t also "eat" has always seemed to draw a pointless and irritating distinction between the two. If I were enjoying a slice of cake and someone were to ask me whether I were having it or eating it, I could only answer "mu."

4. When people say ‘it’s always the last place you look’. Of course it is. Why the hell would you keep looking after you’ve found it? Do people do this? Who and where are they? Gonna Kick their asses!

What would you have us say instead? "For the thousandth time, I have not seen the damn remote! Now either go change the channel at the set or shut up and watch ‘Secrets of the Sham-Wow’."

5. When people say while watching a film ‘did you see that?’. No Loser, I paid $12 to come to the cinema and stare at the damn floor.

Actually, I also paid $12 to watch this movie, and this little "discussion" you two are having isn’t making it any easier.

6. People who ask ‘Can I ask you a question?’…. Didn’t really give me a choice there, did ya sunshine?

"Can I ask you a question?"

"’May I ask’, dear."

"May I ask you a question?"

"No, you may not."

7. When something is ‘new and improved!’. Which is it? If it’s new, then there has never been anything before it. If it’s an improvement, then there must have been something before it, couldn’t be new.

"Say, Bob, this new freeway sure is an improvement over going through town, isn’t it?"

8. When people say ‘life is short’. What the hell?? Life is the longest damn thing anyone ever does!! What can you do that’s longer?

You’ll be dead for at least a few billion years, unless something weird happens.

9. When you are waiting for the bus and someone asks ‘Has the bus come yet?’. If the bus came would I be standing here, dumbass?

Not if you also missed it, dumbass.

With just over 24 hours left in 2008, I thought it would be an appropriate time to look back and reflect on the year. Suddenly, a fantastic idea spontaneously occurred to me from the blue with no outside input whatsoever. What better way to to reflect on the past year, I thought, than by highlighting my most memorable or interesting posts of said year? Brilliant! Actually, that’s a just a wee bit of a fib. In fact, I stole the idea in its entirety from Dead Robot. You know what they say, "Good artists borrow, but great artists steal." Nevertheless, let the highlighting commence!

January

January’s winner is Faulty Analogies, in which I compare Windows and Linux to rooms in a house. I didn’t mention MacOS, but this was only because I’m not all that familiar with it. Would it be the home theater room, perhaps?

February

After careful consideration, I chose February’s winner based on coolness (read: robot factor.) Man From Mars  was about a photo of an Iron Giant promotional action figure that I took for a Photogamer challenge.

March

March’s clear winner is Breaking the Blogatorium, in which a poor, unsuspecting chain questionnaire is subjected to some well-deserved mockery.

April

April was the month of Letters, and as such provided many fine candidates. After careful consideration, I find I have no choice but to name An Open Letter To Noisy Eaters as April’s big winner. Noisy eaters drive me completely bonkers, as the letter clearly shows.

Honorable Mention: On the Evolution of Robotkind on its overwhelming robot factor.

May

May’s award goes to Weee? in which I shared my first impressions of the Wii and its various games.

Honorable Mention: Don’t Mosh Without It! Heavy Metal plus dangerous toys? What could possibly go wrong?

June

Friday the Memeteenth showed that I believe that one should be prepared for anything, or at least I like to talk about being prepared for anything.

July

July’s award goes to Crispy® Bacon on Lumpy Sandwiches, a contemplation of the sins of sandwichcraft.

August

August’s winning post is the one in which I discovered a Blog Excuse Generator. 

September

September’s award goes to OMG HAXORS! in which I ponder the way in which words change their meanings, and then go on to make a pun or two.

October

In October, I wrote An Open Letter to the Voters of California in which I attempted to reason with the voters of California to vote No on Propositon 8.

Honorable Mention: My Evil Plan to destroy the Earth by sabotaging the moon.

November

When October’s open letter failed to achieve the desired effect, I wrote a post In Which A Thanksgiving Season Rumination Goes Horribly Wrong 

Honorable Mention: Stupid Friday, in which another chain questionnaire is found wanting.

December

Project Weather Dominator attempted to identify the ideal winter holiday weather.

Honorable Mention: Wah Wah Wah for "most original sneering while suffering a cold."

TroyBoy at Pheasantly Fascinating asks,

Which is your current all time-favorite blog entry? And no, you can’t select one of your own! Post about it and let me know in my comments.

I don’t think I can select just one! My true blogroll is a just a wee bit longer than the one displayed in the sidebar. I’ve read a lot of blog entries, and many of them are amusing and memorable, and each of the bloggers behind them is brilliant in unique ways. It’s not really fair or possible to create one set of criteria with which each of them should be judged. (There’s also the the fact that everyone who wasn’t picked will be least a tiny bit offended. Honestly, you will be, just admit it.) So instead, I’ll do a top five type of thing.

5. Surrogate Samurai at Radioactive Jam.
Why do managers get the best equipment? All I got was a SplinteredSharpened Stick.
4. HowTo Piss Me Off With Your Blog at dyers.org
I mentioned this one a while back. Even though the rise of OpenId mayhave made one or two of the annoyances less common, the rest are noless true. (And I’m sure I’m guilty of at least one of those, myself.)
3. Execution In The Kingdom Of Nouns at Steve Yegge’s Blog Rants
An allegory (in the style of the Thing King ) about the shortcomings of the Java programming language,it’s written in an entertaining but informative style that makes a drysubject interesting and easy to digest.
2. MyWeekend at Nice To See Stevie B
A seemingly mundane "moving day" story takes a macabre twist. If Iwere in that situation, I probably would have jumped to the sameconclusion about the crock pot.
1. Personality Disorders at Digital Heath
It’s a pet peeve of mine that people occasionally make remarks about OCDthat show that they don’t understand it. For example, someone may blogthat they deep-cleaned their home in anticipation of the in-laws’visit, and remark that OCD compelled them to clean the oven, polishall the brass, iron the curtains, and zshoosh all the magazines.
Sorry,but unless you’re convinced that your mother in law will killyou for having a tchotchkie out of place, and you’ve cleaned the ovenseveral times consecutively— just in case it’s gotten cooties in thefew minutes since you last cleaned it— then in my humble opinon,you’re just a perfectionist.
The author of the above post knows thedifference, too, and delivers (also in my humble opinion) a fairlyaccurate description of OCD. (He doesn’t mention numerologicalobsessions, but that would be a whole blog post blogin itself.)

How about you, dear reader? What are some of your all-time favorite posts?

The cybernetic arm I linked to a while back could become irrelevant as a prosthetic if Star Trek-style regeneration becomes a reality. A substance called an extracellular matrix can signal the body’s own cells to begin regrowing tissue. It has apparently worked for one man who lost a fingertip in a freak model airplane accident. Has the matrix given him super powers and the desire to take over the world? No— at least, not yet.

Now, burn victims can recieve an experimental version of the treatment in which they are basically spray painted with their own skin cells. The cells continue growing and can eventually repair the damage.

However, there’s one thing that an extracellular matrix can’t knit together, and that’s a lampshade. Sleeping Beauty, a robotic lamp shown at the Design Academy Exhibit, knits a stocking-like shade for itself whenever its bulb is lit.

Perhaps knitting isn’t entertaining enough for you? Check out the Yellow Drum Machine. This little drummer robot drives around a room looking for objects with interesting accoustic properties. When a sufficiently interesting object is located, the robot bangs out an improvised solo.

Welcome to this week’s Link-O-Rama!

The first item for consideration is a robot which pantomimes the dreams of the human interfaced with it. It has been trained to recognize patterns of brainwaves which represent "flying," "scared," "moonwalking," etc.

Next, some Dutch scientists think they’ve figured a way to use roads as solar panels. The energy-absorbing properties of asphalt can be used to generate power for cooling buildings in the summer, and the network of tubing can be used to de-ice roads in winter. The only catch is that a source of cold water is required in summer and a source of hot water is required in winter.

Finally, we have something which some of you have probably seen before. However, it so delights my sense of the absurd that I’m posting it anyway. A woman ordered a wedding cake made in her likeness. Somehow, I don’t think the bride thought this completely through, as I’m sure the bizarre symbolism present in the serving of the life-sized pâtisserie proved unsettling to all present.

Let’s start this week’s Link-O-Rama with a video of “The Luke,” an amazing new prosthetic arm. The Luke’s “test pilot” reported that, with the device, he can now do many things he hadn’t been able to do for twenty-six years. It’s designed to be controlled by whatever method is most applicable, whether that’s by foot switch or nervous interface.

Cobra Commander is on the move, according to Thai authorities. He seems only to be in the bank robbery phase of his insane scheme for now, but taking over the world can’t be too far off.

A New York museum is featuring a Wall of Condoms as part of a new exhibit. “No one really has time to look at condoms as design objects, so we placed them on internally lighted, um, ‘members’ to show off their ‘inner beauty,’” explains James Biber, designer of the exhibit.

There is now a robot designed to help lost shoppers. If Robovie determines that you are in a "wandering" state, it will approach and offer to give you directions. If you don’t want directions, it will then suggest you visit various nearby businesses.

Interesting idea, but I imagine it won’t be long until someone decides to create a robot barker by programming a similiar robot to demographically categorize shoppers and then automatically advertise the appropriate businesses.

If you want to be reminded of when the Borg were scary, then check out these Unusual Venitian Masks:


Originally Uploaded by kaibara87

Finally, Science!