Posts for Bisqwit


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Yesterday, I visited Brooklyn again, but for most of the day, I didn't do anything noteworthy. Today, I went to the ICWE conference again. Miscellaneous notes: -- I haven't been mugged or stolen anything from (and I try to be very protective of my possessions). The biggest hazard so far was yesterday, when I went to middle Brooklyn. In the distance of two blocks, I was stopped by three different people asking for various things. One of them was someone who has (allegedly) AIDS (and he looked very sick), and he wanted me to buy milk for his child. For the first time, I didn't feel myself safe, so I returned to places where I've been before. And no, I didn't give anything. "Not my problem" may sound like a harsh explanation, but in USA you have USA to take care of you, not tourists. -- Somehow, the taxi fares between Croton-Harmon and the IBM research center had risen by a few bucks between Monday and Wednesday. I wonder why. ---- Speaking of the taxi: all cabs I've passenged in so far have been equipped with automatic transmission. Well, the same goes for Finnish cabs, but where do they have the handbrake (and the autotransmission controlling mechanism)? The section between the front seats is completely devoid of any levers. That boggles me. -- Almost without exception, when someone comes to talk to me in English, I will ask them to repeat it a couple of times, because I think they are speaking too quietly. Native English speakers can hear them well, because they can _guess_ what they are saying even if they cannot really hear them. Me, not so much on the guessing side. I was in a camera store today and I was looking at the SD card selection. Didn't find what I wanted, so I asked the clerk where could I find Kingston cards. After a couple of repeats, I settled on having heard "Circus City". I got the address right. The actual shop name is Circuit City. The difference between those two pronounciations is obvious when you hear them clearly, but when half of the phonemes are obscured, as it seems to be in almost every conversation that takes place with a clerk of any kind, you can only make a best guess.
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Heh, everyone comment in this submission in the alphabetic order of their nicknames? :P Many surprising submissions happen while I'm away.
Post subject: Re: video pls
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..or it didn't happen?
Post subject: Re: Converting TAS videos to PSP-readable movie files.
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Well, what kind of multimedia file formats does PSP support?
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upthorn wrote:
The only reason I can think of for this is that your Finnish accent might make them giddy.
Maybe. The hotel owner actually commented that in his opinion, I seem to have a strong British accent. He wondered if I have stayed in Britain at some point (which I have not). But I do agree on the fact that I try to consciously steer my pronounciation towards RP rather than American. I don't like American pronounciation. To me, it sounds like your mouth is always in a position ready to pronounce that awful "r" sound. The vowels in British are much more pure. :) (For the record, the English of the Swedish speakers seems to be often biased towards pronouncing the "s" and "j" (the /j/ in yellow) phonemes in my opinion.)
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More miscellaneous notes: -- In New York, it seems like the emergency crew have always something to do. When I stroll the city, I can't walk three blocks without hearing (and usually seeing) an emergency vehicle with sirens on. The police, the ambulance, the firefighters. This applies anywhere in the city. -- There's no tram system in New York! Surprising. -- Last Sunday, it was my name day in Finland. Apparently, the concept does not even exist in USA. Various European countries have it, but with different conventions. -- When people wish me "have a nice day", I usually reply with "thanks. You too". This often seems to result in chuckles. It may be a Finnishism (in Finnish we wish the same back), but I still wonder why it is reacted to that way. Today, I went to Yorktown Heights for the first day of the ICWE conference. -- It's in the middle of nowhere. You take a look around the building and everywhere there's just woods, forest and trees. -- Taxi service was rather nice. I've been here for a week and it was the first time I tipped for something. I have been explicitly avoiding places where I would have to tip. ---- I went to the nearest MTA station by a train first.
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Yeah, also in Finland, soda prices go from 0.8€/l to 2.5€/l (for 1.5l bottles; smaller bottles have even higher price per liter).
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Thanks for watching the movie! Regarding rerecord counts: -- Manipulating L3 hits/misses was rather easy. It was usually just a matter of looping a "try, if fail, undo and advance 1 frame" mantra. For enemies that are not very animated, that mantra won't work very well because randomness is stale. In those cases, I just need to try out different strategies in terms of which character hits next. -- Manipulating enemies' actions varied. Some enemies are manipulatable, some aren't. For the dragon guardians, the most important thing was to manipulate the number of turns you get at start before they hit. It was accomplished by delaying the dialog acknowledgings. -- Manipulating enemy drops was very difficult (also, stolen items (rare/common)). No randomness manipulation seemed to help for those. It was just a matter of trying a number of different battle strategies; which turn you attempt stealing at, which field colors are in effect at that moment and the such. -- And sometimes, strategies needed to be rethinked many times. That was the case with Vita Unus/Dos/Tres, and most of the other bosses fought in part 2. I needed to find a strategy that allows me to beat the enemy before it casts its nastiest elements, and which allows my characters to survive the battle in good health. I'll add that .torrent to priority seeding list temporary. EDIT: Nope, I won't. I shut down the seeding computer before I left from Finland...
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Today I visited a Baptist Church at Convent Avenue. It was nice. I also explored the Chinatown a bit more, and went seeing the Statue of Liberty. However, I had trouble figuring out where to buy ferry tickets, and I satisfied with just photographing the statue from the Manhattan island. On my way back to the South Ferry subway station, I found a ticket vendor but I didn't care anymore. Miscellaneous notes: -- Somehow, every single white American boy of certain age looks like the boy from Home Alone to me. Younger ones than that look like Dennis [the menace]. -- For my next travel here (if ever), I think I'll need a compass. When I exit a subway station I haven't explored before, I am still getting lost, without exception. I just can't figure out which direction corresponds to which direction on the map, without walking at least a block to see which way the street/avenue numbers grow. And if they aren't numbered, I won't find out even that. Luckily, there are subway stations everywhere, so I can just go walking in a random direction without worrying about my bearings, and see whatever interesting comes across. When I want to return, I just continue walking and see whenever I can spot a subway station. ---- Speaking of subway stations, I found it funny that at Times Square, which is full of blinking banners and lights and video screens, even the "subway" sign is animated with flashing lights. Everywhere else, they are just painted signs on black metal.
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Apo123 wrote:
-- In was in Bronx today. It's the first time I noticed signs of anything recycling related in the NYC. And I noticed plenty of it.
We're big on recycling and eco-friendliness. It's a new trend over here, trying to reduce global warming.
"We're" as in The Bronx is? Because that's the only place where I have seen any signs of recycling.
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Today miscellaneous comments: -- Why are all children playgrounds here, including schoolyards, surrounded by high metal grid fences? -- I wonder if those "ice cold water!" street entrepeuners pay any taxes. There's suspiciously many of them. People lugging some makeshift cold storage wherefrom they sell ~0.4l water bottles for $1 each. Some of them sell Gatorade instead. -- Speaking of which, Gatorade and other drinks normally expensive in Finland in general seem very cheap around here. ---- The bottle sizes are big too. I bought a 2.5l bottle of ginger ale for $1.13 yesterday. -- "No trespassing" signs abound. Weird. -- In was in Bronx today. It's the first time I noticed signs of anything recycling related in the NYC. And I noticed plenty of it. -- I was also in Chinatown today. What's so China about it? The architecture is exactly as bland as in everywhere in the NYC. Only the people seem to be Chinese! One would expect to see pagodas, but there were none to be found.
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mr_roberts_z wrote:
I hate to say this, but you may have accidentally chosen a particularly bad store.
Ok. Bad luck. But it is good to know that not all salesmen in NYC are like that. Any other purchases I have made so far have been entirely good in all aspects (the MicroSD wasn't, but they let me refund it so it was good; the currency exchange at Chase was not good). Today I was about to buy four LR6 batteries in Radioshack for a total price of $3.99. However, the clerk suggested a better deal: sixteen batteries for $10. That's what I like. (Plus tax.) (Then again, it is a little suspicious that the Ah rating is not given for these batteries.) (For the record, the average price for four LR6 batteries in Finland would be around 5 €, incl. tax.)
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upthorn wrote:
Though, if it was selling goods that appeared to be new, then it sounds like something pretty suspicious was going on...
The stuff indeed seems brand new for what I can tell. For the record, those who want to avoid that place, the address is 1632 Broadway, called Digital Depot. Even more suspiciously, the receipt says "all sales final - no refunds - no refund on layaway deposits - exchanges within 7 days"
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In Finnish cities, every building has a designated garbage area; more often than not it is a separate shed where large garbage containers are placed; those garbage containers are of standard type that contain wheels so they can be moved around by the garbage truck staff, and they can be lifted and folded by the mechanism in the back of the garbage truck, even though they are heavy and contain dozens of trash bags. They are usually emptied every few days, maybe even once a week, and they contain the garbage produced by the households of the entire building. The garbage containers also shield the environment from the smells of the garbage within them. Nowadays, the shed is usually locked (so as to avoid small children from entering there getting accidentally rat-poisoned, and to prevent other buildings' people using it). The garbage truck services are usually ordered by the housing company, I suppose. They also provide the staff with the keys and instructions for getting to the containers in the shed.
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Today, I slacked off and mostly just sat in the Central Park reading a book in a shadowy place. It was actually a not overly hot day (a perfect Finnish summer day), but the sun is still shining from almost the zenith, and it can burn pretty quickly if you stay in the same spot for a long time. I also found out that in the Central Park there's a free WLAN where outstandingly SSH is allowed. Most "free WLANs" I have ever come across outright block any traffic that is not HTTP, and even the HTTP traffic is redirected to some registration page until you register. So a pleasant surprise overall. -- Yesterday when I visited Brooklyn, I went by the A and 2 trains. Today, I went there again, and I came back with the Q train. Surprisingly, that train surfaced in the daylight, crossing the Brooklyn river through a bridge instead of tunneling below it. -- I went to the Times Square Church. I actually messed up a bit: I only remembered that it is on the Times Square, so I came from the subway to the 42nd street. After 15 minutes of wandering, I finally found it at the 49th street (where I had already been a couple of times earlier the past few days). It was really crowded at the Times Square at 7pm. ---- I was a bit disappointed. I was expecting a good old church service for adults, but instead, there was some youth session with lots of praise songs and some multimedia. Another case of "misunderstanding" I guess. The schedule on the wall outside the church doesn't exactly make clear which ones of the 7pm events for Friday are happening on which Fridays; are they all, or what. Miscellaneous notes: -- I have yet to see a single "goth" style dressed person or an "manga" style dressed person. You see plenty of those in Helsinki. -- I noticed that for the little thinking I do here, I do it almost all in English here. More often than not though, I don't think in any particular language, but I may suddenly stop to think of the pronounciation of some particular word which wakes me up to notice the language aspect. Smell. I have been thinking for a long time to write something of the smell. -- The first few days I were here, I recognized some weird scent; it seemed to me as if every single person in New York uses the same deodorant brand, because it was smelling everywhere. Later, I came to realize that it's my own deodorant, which is completely defeated by my excess sweating, and flows everywhere and delivers its smell to the air. -- However, today it was a day where I didn't sweat almost at all, so I came to notice more smells I had previously ignored. Indeed, there seems to be some kind of pervasive smell about New York. I am yet to find out what to compare it to. It may be a mixture of a myriad of various things; such as decomposing trash. ---- It was actually a surprise to me seeing people take their trash out to streets! Indeed, in New York, it looks like people put their trash in a plastic bag, and just place it on the street right in front of their house. The garbage trucks will collect them from the streets. Yuck.
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alden wrote:
Oh, and also, it should include an export to MIDI feature :)
Hahaha. That'll make the movie publication all the more complicated; if we want to show what kind of "music" the player creates while playing... :)
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Xkeeper wrote:
Of course, taxes do kick in (usually 8% here, so $100 becomes $108) but it's just something normal.
In Finland, taxes are always included in the price, unless you represent a company or you are purchasing from a dealer that primarily deals with companies and entrepeneurers. In fact, most people don't even need to know what the value added tax (i.e. sales tax) percentage is. The amount of tax you paid is mentioned in the receipt, but you don't need to care, unless you bought something that can be reduced from your own income tax.
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Today diary... -- Smartened from yesterday, I went to the NBC rainbow room entrance at 8.30 am waiting for a ticket to Conan O'Brien's Late Night Show filming; they would start giving those tickets out at 9.00 am. However, at 8.30 am there was already a line with 90 people before me, and they would only give 75 tickets. Another no-win situation. ---- I also overheard that of those 75, probably only the 30 or 40 first have actual chance of getting in at 4.00 pm. The first ones arrived at 5.30 am. If I want to still pursue this, I should probably go queuing at 7.00 am tomorrow... Maybe I'll just give up. Yes, Finns have been showing up noticeably often at Conan's audience, but not all Finns visiting NYC are that desperate to get there. If they don't want us, then that'll they get. -- Then I strolled through the Central Park from south to north (last time, I stropped the same distance from north to south, but most of it on the Fifth Avenue instead of in the park). In the process, I got minor sunburns in my shoulders and arms. -- Later at the evening, I checked out the WTC construction site. It looks pretty much like any construction site; the only sign of that it was not planned to be like that is the great effort by which traffic, including pedestrian traffic, is redirected around the block, and the number of securitymen around the perimeter. -- I bought a camera. Recalling reading someone's writing that one should buy those stuff from little stores instead of the big ones, because the big ones have twice the prices of their Internet prices but the little ones have reasonable prices, I went to a little store. However, I was somewhat unprepared for the way they deal business. I'll describe it like this. ---- They don't have any prices listed. Instead, you tell what you want to buy, and they tell the price. ---- After you agree to have made a purchase decision, the price suddenly inflates by a factor of ~200% because they invent various taxes and stuff. At that point, you are supposed to start bargaining to get the price down. However, I was somewhat unprepared for this process so I didn't get the price much down (only $20 from their initial offer) and didn't get the gear in my brain running that would have made me calculate exactly what kind of "tax" they were applying. Nevertheless, the price is not considerably less than or greater than that which it would have been in Finland, so I'm not complete unhappy. Just mostly. ---- They also tried to make me buy a 1 GB memory card for the camera. Their memory card box contained a whopping $119.90 price tag. Their initial offer was $59. After I refused numerous times, the price had dropped to $39, but it was still way too high for even be in the realm of possible purchases. And they drove me through the guilt trip for not purchasing it even though they cut open that box and all. -- I also checked out Brooklyn, just so that my entire perception of New York is not made only about Manhattan. ---- I only checked a few blocks, so it's hardly a balanced opinion, but the impression I got that it's more busy than Manhattan, and more youthful. Curiously, on one of those streets, literally every second shop offered sneakers. As in, they explicitly advertised doing that in particular. More observations about NYC in general: -- Women have big tits. This may sound weird coming from me, but really, compared to Europeans, women in NYC have bigger tits. Though in all fairness, they have larger asses too. Nevertheless, even though I'm not a person to stare at women's breasts (in fact, I'm less interested of that particular section in woman anatomy than an average male is), I can't help but be unsettled when I notice a young (black) woman whose chest around the breasts is literally twice as big as it's 15 cm down from that section. I wonder how she manages her life. She must be stared at a lot. -- [EDIT 2008-07-20]: {placeholder for more observations I had in mind but can't remember right now} I remember now. Emergency vehicles here sound really weird. They don't produce a continuous biibaa/biiubiiubiiu signal, but instead, they sound like this: "biuuu. bauuu! baupoubiuuuuu. biuuu! biubauuuuu." and so on. With occassional uses of a nasty sounding horn.
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moozooh wrote:
Bisqwit wrote:
At Best Buy, I bought a 1 GB MiniSD card […] ($27) It's actually a MicroSD card with an adaptor.
Doesn't sound like a "best buy" to me, lol. Out of curiosity, how much does the same kind of card cost in Finland? Cause I know I can (and did) get 4 GB for the same price here in Moscow quite easily.
I don't know about MiniSDs or MicroSDs. Regular SDs are quite cheap, around 7-10 euros for 1 GB. Actually now that I searched, I found a Finnish webstore where one can get a 1 GB MiniSD for 10 euros ($15).
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Tub wrote:
Might be out of habit, because over here shops are required by law to list prices. A shop trying to hide their prices would seem suspicious to me.
Yeah, I think the law is the same in Finland in that regard. Today diary so far: -- I woke up early and planned to go get a ticket for that Conan O'Brien thing, but I arrived 10 minutes late at 9:08 am and there were no available tickets anymore. Better luck tomorrow! -- Then I went to Best Buy and returned that memory card I last mentioned buying yesterday; I said it's defective, and they took it back, no questions asked, VISA refunded. At least that part was good about them. -- Finally I had remembered to take the passport with me so I went to a bank to exchange some EUR for USD. I tried Citibank and Chase. Both had crappy rates, 1.49 USD per EUR (it should be around 1.57) (and they took a $5 of handling fee), but seems I had no choices, so I took that. So much for the theory that it's cheaper to purchase local money with foreign money than to purchase foreign money with local money. Never again will I deal with either bank. (It was a challenge by itself to find a bank that even does foreign exchanges; most banks outright said they don't do that.) -- Asteron had kindly invited me to Google for lunch! I met him at Google and had lunch with him. He also showed the Google office around for me, playing rooms and all. It was very nice meeting him, though I was less than verbose a companion to talk with. Damned us Finns :) The only bad thing (besides spilling a glass full of ginger ale) was that I had planned to take some Finnish chocolate for him as souvenir, but I forgot to bring it with me from the hotel. Too bad. Well, the next Tasvideos person to meet me will have it :) (I also have salmiak candies for the adventurous!)
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mmbossman wrote:
Bisqwit wrote:
MET... Met... What's that?
http://www.metmuseum.org/ Be forewarned, they'll search your bag there too.
Oh, that. I walked by yesterday. Though it was closed at that time, I guess. Hmm, $20 for admission. Backpacks not allowed (at least when carried in the back) inside. An art museum? Hmm...
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mr_roberts_z wrote:
How much longer are you staying? You might want to try and seek out the MET; it's, uh, really nice. It may be a touristy thing to do, but it's also one of those once-in-a-lifetime things that you should try not to miss.
MET... Met... What's that? I'll be staying still oh-too-long. Although, the weather beats what Finland is having any time. (Though tomorrow it will be raining.)
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DeHackEd wrote:
People in north america will honk at you if you take more than 1.5 seconds to move once the traffic light turns green.
That may explain some situations, but I've seen them honking even when the lights are red.
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Today my mood seems to be mostly of the "screw it" type. Partially due to a number of mishaps, and partially due to becoming self-conscious about how badly I fit the stereotype of a tourist. A few more little observations. -- People honk their cars a lot here. I am yet to discover why. Sure, it's obvious when you're pedestrianing across the road at red lights, but at other times it just seems to be without reason. It's as if they just do that to point out that "I'm here". Like some birds or animals in a flock. They honk at each others just to establish their power and spatial relations. -- At downtown Manhattan, the ratio of whites to non-whites became larger than what I previously had observed. -- UPS trucks look exactly the same here as they do in Finland. Hardly surprising, though. Travel diary: -- Today, I continued exploring the Fifth Avenue downtown from the point where I left yesterday. Namely, streets 59 downto 14. -- The distance I walked was shorter than yesterday because my feet were still aching, and it didn't get much better. -- Except for a few high buildings, I noticed nothing particularly interesting. ---- One of those buildings being the Empire State Building, I presume. However, getting inside would have meant queuing for god-knows-how-long, and the tickets aren't exactly free either, so I passed on the opportunity. I took a panoramic picture of it from the ground level -- though it probably doesn't turn out as good as that in Google Maps' street view. -- I intended to exchange some currency today, but I forgot the passport to the hotel. Yes, again. Also, I think the passport will be required to prove one's identity if making bigger VISA purchases, so I couldn't buy a new digicamera today either. -- At Best Buy, I bought a 1 GB MiniSD card for my phone so I can save more photos. Turns out, that MiniSD card doesn't work. I don't know if it's broken, or what. The phone doesn't seem to acknowledge the presence of the card at all. Hopefully they refund me. It wasn't exactly cheap. ($27) It's actually a MicroSD card with an adaptor. There were no genuine MiniSD cards there. -- At morning, the hotel owner suggested me a few restaurants nearby. Later today, I checked out those streets I remembered him mentioning, and though there were restaurants here and there, I didn't find any of them particularly attracting. It's hard to tell from the street which ones are good (as you can hardly see inside), and as most of them had only Spanish-speaking staff, I just didn't feel like having enough courage to try. I have somewhat a phobia for doing a faux pás, and I have a high likelihood to do exactly that, often failing to understand people the first five times around. (Even when they speak my native language.) ---- I prefer places where the prices and the products are clearly listed (before making the purchase decision), so as to minimize the need to ask questions, and to request clarification to the answer four times, and where nobody stares at you if you accidentally drop something, and you can pay the price listed and go after eating. ---- Yesterday, I ate at Subway. It was good for everything else but for the fact, that I misunderstood the price. They advertised that "footlong" breads are $5. Mine cost $6.50. I still don't know why. I did not have a drink. -- I checked out the New York Public Library. It had lots of catalogues for whatever. I wonder what purpose those were for. Big building and had a museum-like feeling to it. Not so library'ish. I didn't spend much time there. Oh, and they checked the contents of my backpack. Three times. -- I don't know how to be a tourist. I walk at the streets and wonder, but I rarely go inside any store or building. I'd rather be by myself. Such as sitting at a park bench. ---- If I go to a store and they don't have prices listed, it's for certain that I don't buy anything. Turns out many groceries labelled "Deli" do that. ---- I feel that as a tourist, I should be doing all sorts of things, visiting all kinds of places, but I don't like any of that. Yet, if I don't do that, something inside me is nagging to me that I'm wasting an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Tomorrow, I'm planning to see if I can get a ticket to filming of Conan O'Brien's Late Night show. And if I can attend with that ticket. -- One of the few things I would actually like to do.
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Xkeeper wrote:
I have this on both of my computers and I have never understood why people are so frustrated with Windows Update. If you don't want it to nag you, don't tell it to install the updates until you're ready to reboot. Problem fucking solved.
Not really. I have had at least two incidents where Windows ignored that setting and had rebooted anyway, and innocently proclaimed that it had rebooted the computer due to some patch or other. (I have set Windows to download, but _not_ install without explicit permission.)