Unrefined Awesome

January 15, 2009

Review: Circus Latino

Filed under: event/act review, personal — Tags: , , — Jason @ 2:31 am

Update 23/5/09: I’ve been informed that a number of the performers we saw are no longer with Circus Latino.  It is therefore likely that the following review may not reflect any future performances of the circus.

For our weekly tradition of not-so-random-Wednesday the girls and I visited “Circus Latino”, a circus we’d spotted setting up last week next to the fire station in Frankston.  While a night at the circus was a nice change and gave us something different to do for the week I could not recommend this particular circus to others at present; Silver’s Circus is apparently also in the area and — in spite of not having seen them for several years — given the good experiences I’ve had with their shows in the past would guess they may be worth a look instead.  (EDIT: For an alternative point of view you can also find a more positive review of an older Circus Latino performance linked by one of my commenters here.  Note that the current performance sounds significantly different to that described in the linked review.) So, why wasn’t I impressed with Circus Latino’s current act?

  1. Entry was a bit costly for my liking at $25 for a general-admission adult ticket.  I havn’t visited a circus in several years and so have no idea of the average pricing but had been expecting cheaper.  Although unexpectedly high I might have considered the fee worth it if the show itself had been better.  Family and concession (with a fairly limited definition of concession) discounts were available but not relevant to us.
  2. The performance was a little clown-heavy for my liking.  This particular circus had only a single clown — I don’t personally particularly enjoy clowns other than in smaller doses, your opinion may differ — but still had almost every second act on stage some sort of caper involving him.  I also use the word “act” in the case of the clown particularly loosely; he twice came out  with nothing but a large ball which he repeatedly threw into the crowd and made people bounce it back — a trick which doesn’t work particularly well when most of the seats are empty (but admittedly may have been better with a fuller crowd) — once was fine, but twice simply seemed uneccesary.  These acts may have been more popular with children, although my friend Heather tells me the girls she looks after for work would have been terrified of the act with the ball.
  3. The audio was terrible.  The Ringmaster’s (note there is a stage rather than a traditional ring at Circus Latino) microphone failed to work numerous times, and the music distorted and/or suffered from random interference sounds throughout the show.  This is unfortunate given an excellent choice of music to support the performance and the fact that this was probably beyond the control of the circus; if however this is a regular occurance and not a one-off something should be done about it.
  4. Only one of the three people who attempted juggling as part of their act actually succeeded.  He still dropped a couple of things, but I personally think that’s fine as long as it happens less than the actual succesful juggling, and his act was otherwise quite well performed and entertaining.  The other two performers who attempted to juggle however didn’t succeed at all and ended up simply giving up on it.
  5. At one point a performer came out with bubble mix and various rings and pieces of equipment for making bubbles.  They failed to make any however, and after several failed attempts and much apologetic shrugging the performer simply gave up and left.  This may have been less of a problem if the performer had given up sooner when it became obvious the trick wasn’t working, but rather than doing so they proceeded to attempt the entire act, including calling a little girl from the audience on stage to help with yet another failed trick.  This potentially cool act was unfortunately one of the biggest negatives of the performance.
  6. Some of the costumes were incredibly inappropriate for the body-types of the performers wearing them.

All that being said, there were some impressive acts and if you happen to particularly like clowns you might enjoy the show more.  Definitely don’t let this review stop you from giving this circus a chance if you happen to stumble upon it at a later date, they definitely had the potential to put on a much better act with some more work.

January 3, 2009

2008 Link Clearance

Filed under: links — Jason @ 2:38 am

I tend to spend a fair amount of time online and therefore collect a whole load of links to useful, interesting or just plain strange things from around the web. The following is a brief and randomly chosen collection of unsorted links which seem to have accumulated in my browser’s bookmarks over the last year or so.  I have however omitted Flash games I enjoyed and will be listing some of those in a following update.

Regular Expression Matching Can Be Simple And Fast
(but is slow in Java, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, …)

Programming article explaining a faster-than-the-usually-used approach to matching regular expressions; any programmer implementing them should be aware of this, although it does of course come with associated costs and may not be suited to all uses.

Finite Simple Group (of Order Two)
YouTube video of a clever song. Most of it may go over your head unless you’ve studied math to a reasonably advanced level, but it can still be appreciated purely for musical value and should have at least some meaning to the more modestly educated.

Multicolr Search Lab
Clever little page which allows you to search a huge selection of images posted to Flickr based on the colours in them; thoughts on potential practical uses for this are left as an exercise for the reader.

LifeHacker
Tips on improving productivity, choices of software packages, etc.

Robot Donkey
Youtube of creepy/cool robo-donkey - it turns out the model shown is the Boston Dynamics “Bigdog”; they’re a company who produce robots based on observation of living creatures.  The one shown is intended for carrying packages (as a packmule or donkey would) in difficult terrain.

NES Controller Coffee Table
This guy built a working giant NES Controller which doubles as a coffee table.  Gotta get me one o’ these!

Face-stealing/copying robot
Why yes, I am apparently slightly preoccupied with robots, what of it?  YouTube of a robot that can copy face types.

Last.fm
Website/service that tracks the music you listen to, generates a bunch of stats and recommends similar stuff. Pretty cool.

On The Original Of Circuits
Damn Interesting article about a cool experiment using FPGAs to “evolve” novel solutions to problems.

Lordi - Hard Rock Hallelujah
I was trying to resist posting music or music videos, but this one is just too awesome.  On the day of rockening, it’s who dares wins…

XBox 360 Portable
This guy managed to turn an XBox 360 into a laptop, pretty cool. He’s done the same with a Wii as well.

Mnemosyne
A cool piece of freely available software designed to help you remember things. I’ve used it to remember a whole bunch of birthdays, but I’m sure there are many other uses (new languages?!?) it could be put to as well.

Giveaway Of The Day
Free downloads of licenced software, one new application every day available to install for free only within that 24 hours.  Most of it is crap, but occasionally you see some good software in there.

I’ve collected a whole bunch more, but rather than ramble on forever I’ll just leave it at those.  Feel free to comment with any favourite online discoveries from the past year!

December 26, 2008

Help Wanted Picks updated (cross post)

Filed under: Games, Programming, cross-post — Tags: , — Jason @ 12:11 am

(Note: cross posted from J of K)

I took on board some of the feedback from last time when posting the new Help Wanted Picks to the front page. This time we’ve got screenshots, and the list of services offered at the bottom of the post is sorted into categories with a couple that I personally recommend for anyone interested specially marked.

Check it out and let me know if you’ve got any more feedback.

I also got the suggestion last time of highlighting one bad post as an example of how not to do it. While this would be both educational and potentially amusing I don’t feel it’s really in the spirit of encouraging beginners (even if they’re really bad now they might get better with some prompting), and doesn’t seem overly professional. As an alternative however, would people be interested in seeing short snippets giving tips on succesfully recruiting from some of our current and/or previous users?

December 18, 2008

Why you shouldn’t use Dev-C++

Filed under: Programming — Tags: , , , — Jason @ 4:42 am

I still see a lot of people using the out-of-date and unmaintained Bloodshed Dev-C++ IDE, and I’d like to briefly explain why this is a bad idea as well as pointing any interested readers toward a couple of good alternatives.

  1. Dev-C++ has not been updated since 2005 and is not currently maintained.  Given the availability of newer software packages the majority of the programming community has moved on from Dev-C++, making it hard (sometimes impossible) to find help with any issues you may have.  Bugs which are currently present in the software are unlikely to ever be fixed; according to the SourceForge listing, at the time of writing there are 340 known bugs.
  2. Dev-C++ lacks many of the features of newer IDEs such as good intellisense, code-completion support or a fully featured debugger.  These things can greatly improve workflow for a more experienced programmer and are a minimal hassle for a confused beginner to simply ignore until ready.  Given the obscure bugs that often arise and are hard to find support for it isn’t worth it for a beginner to choose Dev-C++ as a simpler environment; if a simpler environment is really the goal then something like Programmer’s Notepad would be a far more suitable choice.
  3. Following on from point #2, the debugging facilities provided by Dev-C++ are far inferior to those available in other free options and can be very confusing to use.  A good debugger is nearly essential to skilled programmers, and debugging is a skill that should be learned by all beginners at a reasonably early stage.
  4. Error messages and the steps required to solve them are not well documented when compared to other free solutions, and as mentioned above it can be difficult to find other users who are still familiar enough with the software to help.
  5. The compiler that ships with the Dev-C++ IDE is outdated.  This is easily fixed, but it is not obvious to a beginner that this should be done or how they could go about doing it.
  6. The “devpack” system provided for working with 3rd party libraries is no longer maintained or supported by many libraries, leading to Devpacks either being unavailable or out of date in many cases.  When not working with one of these packages it can be difficult and non-obvious how to otherwise get 3rd party code working in the Dev-C++ environment.

Given the availability of free alternatives it’s amazing anyone still clings to this outdated beast, and frankly quite ridiculous that it ever ends up in the hands of anyone who is just now starting out.  To finish up, what are those free alternatives?

  1. Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition is by far the best option when it comes to Windows-based IDEs; it costs nothing, allows commercial distribution of products, and is a fully featured solution including excellent debugging facilities.
  2. Code::Blocks fills the void once occupied by Dev-C++ as an alternative solution, and can also be used on other platforms.  An excellent alternative to the higher-quality MS solution.
  3. For those who really want a simpler environment, your compiler of choice in combination with Programmer’s Notepad or a similar solution is a far better choice than the outdated and unsupported Dev-C++.
  4. For those who just can’t let Dev-C++ go, the wxDev-C++ project is an updated version with less bugs and a few additional features.  I’ve not personally used this and see no real reason why given the excellent options from MS or Code::Blocks, but from what I’m told it works acceptably.

December 12, 2008

Shazzie travels time?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — Jason @ 3:12 pm

WTF? [Image hosted by ImageShack - http://imageshack.us]

December 8, 2008

Help Wanted Picks (cross-post)

Filed under: Games, Programming, cross-post — Tags: , , , , — Jason @ 11:15 pm

(NOTE: Cross-posted from J of K)

Just a quick post to point anyone who doesn’t regularly visit the front page of the site in the direction of the second edition of what will hopefully continue to be a regular fortnightly news-item here at GDNet: Help Wanted Picks.

The basic idea is to handpick a few projects every couple of weeks which stand out amongst the others and give them a bit of front-page exposure on the site - hopefully it’ll get more skilled developers connecting, thereby attracting more promising projects which traditionally sometimes shy away from our beginner-friendly (and therefore sometimes unfortunately swamped with low quality projects) HW forum.

While I’m less confident about the success of my first and third choices for featured projects than I was the first time I think the chosen threads do clearly stand out amongst the rest, and still have the very-likely-to-succeed EDI project in there.

So, anything that could/should be added/removed/done differently? As a reader who might be looking for help, would it be worth it to you if I’d spent the time to sort and/or summarise the list of services offered at the bottom? Do you agree with my choice of projects, and with what I said about them? Have you recently visited Help Wanted and think I missed a brilliant project that should have been included?

December 5, 2008

:-(

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jason @ 3:27 am

Man, this emo shit was supposed to be for people who didn't have hats.

November 6, 2008

You know that I could use somebody

Filed under: Uncategorized, music, personal — Jason @ 4:14 pm

Alrighty, Bluenote’s end of year concert will be on the 13th and 14th (that’s a Saturday and Sunday; the second weekend) of December.  Unless things are for some reason changed up drastically (which is extremely unlikely) there will be a Saturday afternoon show which tends to have most of the younger kids, solo acts, etc.; a Saturday evening show which tends to have most of the big band acts; and a Sunday arvo concert which has all the leftover stuff.

Come along for a look if you wanna see William, Shazzie and I performing, tickets are cheap and we’d appreciate the support.

Managing a pizza store - not for me.  I wouldn’t mind the longer hours if they were timed better rather than taking up all my evenings and pretty much killing the weekend, but rostering like that doesn’t really seem achievable so I’ve decided I shan’t be signing the contract.

Nothing else of interest to report right now.

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