LEGO X-wing & Belafonte

March 21st, 2008

As a delayed present from one of my sisters, I got the LEGO X-wing using the gift voucher she gave me for Christmas. It is a mighty set, doing all the kinds of things I tried to do in my own various interpretations of the craft, both when I was younger and even more recently.

This brings my total number of LEGO bricks to 13,301, with 7,925 in whole sets and 5,376 as loose parts.

Regarding my next big LEGO project, that I alluded to when writing of the Gay Deceiver, it shall be a LEGO-man-scale version of the Belafonte from The Life Aquatic.

I was being a tiny bit secretive as no-one has yet made such a model, the closest so far being the submarine and the crew themselves. So I vaguely wanted to be first, to not let anyone get in there ahead of me…

But that seems a little silly. A few years ago, I had all kinds of plans and sketches and writings detailing the “perfect” ebook reader (electronic ink display, touchscreen interface, clockwork powered, always-on-internet connection) and I was going to make a website out of it, with the intention that, if I would never make it myself, it would put the idea out there for someone else to. Of course, many other people were thinking along similar lines, and the Kindle is pretty close, only without the touchscreen or clockwork (I’ve since learnt that clockwork provides nowhere near enough juice).

So anyway, if someone else makes the Belafonte before me that doesn’t matter too much. If it is exactly what I wanted to build, then I can simply follow their instructions, and if it’s not then I still have my mighty plans…

I’m writing to Eric Anderson to ask if he has any sketches/drawings I may see, and when I’m next in London I’m going to visit the National Maritime Museum in order to get some plans of the Ton class minesweeper, which is the kind of boat the Belafonte was.

So, that’s one of my future LEGO schemes. Right now I’m in Aschaffenburg, have a few assignments to work on over the coming weeks, an interview for an internship with Nintendo too.

Ooh, I am a published writer now, with an article on pages 12 and 13 of the current issue of my university’s student magazine, The Courier. You can download a PDF of the issue (59.4) from the Archive and a more in depth version of my piece is online too. Sure, it’s just the post I wrote last November, but now… published!

Ooh ooh, I also finished Guitar Hero III in Expert mode on Wednesday 12th March! After drinking some booze and playing some multiplayer, I was so very much in the zone that I beat the devil first try. Hoo-hah. Now, to play through it all again on the new Xbox 360 Kitty and I will be buying tomorrow…

No, there are not more people alive today than have ever died.

March 12th, 2008

Today, 12th March 2008, there are approximately 6,793,052,354 people alive right now.

According to ‘How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth?’ by Carl Haub, in mid-2002, there were 6,215,000,000 people alive and the total number of people ever born was 106,456,367,669.

Assuming the total number of people alive doubles every 50 years, as Isaac Asimov supposed in 1991, then in 800 years time there will be as many people alive as there had ever existed up to mid-2002.

Which is to say, if the human population continues growing at the current rate, by the year 2800 there will be over 100 billion people alive.

I tried to work out the method to determine:

1 – How long it would be until the number of people living was exactly half that of those who had ever been born (which is to say, the same number as all those who had died up to that point).

And:

2 – How long it would take for there to be more people alive than had ever lived.

But my brain does not know how, at least not right now.

~

I first read Asimov’s ‘The Power of Progression’ years ago, but it was Ellis’ musings and the bizzare “answers” to this question on Yahoo! that prompted me to write this.

~

The short answer; no, there are not more people alive today than have ever died. We make up about 5.8% of all those ever born.

Time Lapse Carcassonne

March 11th, 2008

This Saturday just gone, I played Carcassonne with some friends and made a time-lapse video of our game, as we had discussed the week before:

( Time Lapse Carcassonne (YouTube, 18 seconds )

If you like, you can also download a much higher quality version:

( Time Lapse Carcassonne (5.44MB QuickTime Movie) )

2 hours and 45 minutes compressed into a little over 18 seconds? Hoo-hah.

LEGO Gay Deceiver

March 4th, 2008

In researching my next big LEGO project, I remembered the Serenity model I saw a while ago and so looked around a bit more on that website. In doing so, I came across a model very much like one I would build myself, a spaceship based on the Gay Deceiver from Robert Heinlein’s books.

Gay Deceiver

If you read through all twelve pages, you will see the attention to detail I shall be striving for myself.

Also, quite a while ago now, I finished inventorying all my LEGO bricks (well, all save three models (1381, 4027 & 4029), the parts for which are mostly still in London as part of a mighty whale). The final numbers were 12,853 bricks in total, of which 7,488 are from models I’ve acquired in the last few years (2,056 from Café Corner and 1,045 from the ginormous Batmobile alone) and 5,365 are from my childhood, reclaimed from my siblings the Christmas before last.

My next model is rather ambitious in scale, and so even all that LEGO shall probably not be enough, but I shall use Bricksmith for a lot of it anyway as I shall likely not have my LEGO with me when I’m in Germany. However, having the database of all my parts on Peeron means I will be able to know which parts I need to buy and which parts I already have, which was the goal of all that cataloguing in the first place.

Finally, No Country for Old Men was interesting and sad, the 2nd and 3rd seasons of My Name Is Earl get much better than the 1st, with an engaging ongoing story, and I’ve finished all but the final devil-battle-song on Expert mode in Guitar Hero 3.

Over the next few weeks, I shall be posting several articles and also the photos from Hong Kong. Hoo-hah.

RE4: 120 Eggs

February 17th, 2008

In a kind of follow-up to my Resident Evil 4: Good Guy post from over a year ago, I show proof that I really do like this game too much:

RE4: 120 Eggs

I am at least playing the Wii version now, my own copy no less, which means I have a shiny new laser gun to play with and aiming is a lot easier…

Anyway, other things soon.

New Year

January 18th, 2008

Exams are over until May and I have a week to catch up before work proper starts again.

The cataloguing of all my old LEGO bricks has picked up steam due to me finding Peeron.com. 1928 pieces have been logged so far, or 392 different colour/type combinations. Still at least double that amount more to go.

For Christmas I was given a lobster, a chess set and a Martian. Ooh, and Kitty and I built the Café Corner we’d been hungering for since summer.

Yesterday, thanks to a tip-off, I bought one huge Batmobile as it was reduced from £50 to £25. It took five hours to build and I listened to the last five episodes of This American Life whilst I did that, so now, in my mind, it is linked with murderous superintendents and Cambodia too.

These last few days I’ve also been watching some films, including The Royal Tenenbaums, The Big Lebowski and The Butterfly Effect. I would also watch No Country for Old Men, Aliens vs Predator 2 and Sweeney Todd, cinemas permitting, and maybe also The Darjeeling Limited again.

Guitar Hero III is nearly finished on Expert, just two songs left; Raining Blood and One. Mike and I also completed the game in co-op career mode, he on Hard and I on Expert, and that made the Metallica song doable. However, it would seem that Through the Fire and Flames doesn’t get unlocked until the game is completed in single player mode, so though I played it over the holidays, I’ve not been able to since getting back to Aber.

There are other things to do, so I would go sleep now.

Things

November 30th, 2007

On account of I work on finishing a Java project and then go to a wedding, I don’t have time to write about certain things in full depth, but would note them here that I might do so later:

1 – ASUS Eee PC and associated accessories
2 – Nintendo DS R4 shenanigans
3 – Photos of Hong Kong
4 – Fake LEGO
5 – And a wedding too

And probably a few more bits and bobs, we shall see. Now, to finish that Java…

Hong Kong

November 21st, 2007

I arrived in Hong Kong around 8pm last night local time, which would be 1pm in the UK, after having been awake for 36 hours, getting a mighty numb bum on the 12 hour flight and watching many films and TV shows on the back of the seat in front of me.

The roads from the airport to where we are staying were eerily familiar, looking far too much like those in the UK, with identical road markings and street signs (English plus Chinese), not to mention road-side architecture. There are British style plug sockets too.

We (myself, Kitty, Kitty’s mum and grandfather, Elton (Kitty’s brother) and Food (Kitty’s tiniest uncle)) went to a ginormous restaurant with Kitty’s “fifth” uncle, her aunt and other uncle, cousins Ada and Kevin, and Kevin’s fiancé Cissy. There was much tasty food, so much that I could not eat more than one pudding, and then hundreds of terrifyingly huge fishies looking glum waiting to be eaten the next day.

Sweet sweet sleep came at last, around 1am, and now I am up again and go play outside. Photos were taken last night and when I get them off folk I shall post some here.

Update:

From left to right, Simon, Ada, Kitty and Elton

From left to right; Simon, Ada, Kitty and Elton.

Clockwise from left, Elton, Kitty's 'fifth' uncle, Kevin, Cissy, Kitty's mum, Kitty's aunt and other uncle, her grandfather, Food, Ada, Simon and Kitty

Clockwise from left; Elton, Kitty’s “fifth” uncle, Kevin, Cissy, Kitty’s mum, Kitty’s aunt and other uncle, her grandfather, Food, Ada, Simon and Kitty.

LEGO Anniversary Present

November 11th, 2007

This October just gone saw the fifth anniversary of Kitty and I getting together. For those who don’t know, we met by way of being flatmates during my second year of Philosophy at King’s College London. It was rather an impromptu situation, as the friends I originally planned to move in with had to cancel at the last minute. We found each other using a London students accommodation website and after only three weeks of living together, we hooked up…

So, to mark our fifth anniversary, I had the idea of recreating the room we did said hooking up in, the living room of that first house. But not just any old recreation, ho no; I would build it out of LEGO!

The first thing to do was to craft a maquette of said living room. In addition to my memory, I had two whole photographs to go on:

The living room of our first house.

The front of our first house.

These being the photos that Kitty sent me in that very first email on 15th September 2002, telling me about a house that she and a couple other people needed, “ONE, just ONE person,” for…

So, after about a month, I had finished the sketch model, complete with firemen stand-ins for Kitty and myself:

Maquette, with firemen stand-ins for Kitty and myself.

The next step was to construct a 3D LDraw model. As I’ve written before, Bricksmith is my weapon of choice for doing this on the Mac, but there is plenty of other software for other platforms.

Read the rest of this entry »

Guitar Hero III Demo; Expert 100%

October 21st, 2007

First off, if you have (or know someone who has) an Xbox 360 and a Guitar Hero controller, you can download a demo of the third game that’s due to come out next month:

http://www.xboxlivetheguide.co.uk/News/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1653

Second, of the five songs on there, four are quite fun to play, one not so much, and two very satisfying; Lay Down by Priestess and The Metal by Tenacious D. On the former, I have even scored 100% on Expert mode:

Guitar Hero III Demo; Expert 100%

Hoo-hah! That’s all, nothing more right now.