The Adventures of Joshua Judson Rosen
(action man)

[ sections: VisualIDs | art | movies | everything ]

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Sat, 10 May 2008
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16:30: The Dangers of Cheerleading?

History Channel is running a 'THC investigate: cheerleading' special on the dangers of cheerleading & of cheerleaders falling on their heads. A multitude of similar stories & testimonies about cheerleaders breaking their necks.

There was one minor mention about how cheerleading 'not being a sport' keeps it from being monitored & regulated.

But...:

The cheerleaders say that it never occurred to them that they could fall on their heads. That last bit sounds like the most relevant part of the entire thing.

Some speakers mentioned that there are safety-precautions that could be taken. At the end of the segment, they championed the introduction of safety-equipment. And then they were done.

But the 'I never considered' comments from the cheerleaders, along with the comments from parents to the effect of 'But what are you going to do? Keep them in a plastic bubble?' make me thing that, if one wants to learn to do flips & other gymnastic feats associated with cheerleading, the place to do it is actually in a martial-arts course, not cheerleading.

I remember martial-arts training including 'how to fall without getting hurt', while the 'solution' taken by cheerleading is "don't fall".

I wonder how commonly the phrase "contingency plan" is part of the modern athletic vocabulary.

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Mon, 05 May 2008
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14:39: A Mere Matter of Programming

I'm working my way through the more technical parts of the VisualIDs essay, and learning the Cairo API. The essay's really kinda clumsy, when it gets down into the technical bits, but I think I get what it's saying :\

I've got some of the basic VisualID-generation framework in place, now, so the current focus is on learning Cairo.

[2008-05-05_00: meta-source]

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Wed, 23 Apr 2008
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22:04: VisualIDs in Nautilus

I started hacking on Nautilus a couple of days ago with the intent of adding support for VisualIDs, and I've already been successful in implementing the Nautilus-side requirements. At this point, I'm using a store of pregenerated VisualID icons, and a not-very-good hashing-algorithm that maps files to VisualIDs. Now I just need to: - develop a VisualID-generation library using the algorithms outlined in the essay - make Nautilus use the library instead of my static icon-store - add some GConf toggles so that Nautilus VisualID subsystem can be enabled/disabled during runtime

Here's a screenshot of a directory-view in Nautilus using VisualIDs: files are all uniquely identified by VisualIDs; the file's type is indicated by an auxiliary `emblem' attached to periphery of the main icon, because file-type is still valuable information--it's just not quite /as/ valuable as a quick/easy/obvious `wether this is the file that you want' indicator (i.e.: the VisualID). If a file is actually a symbolic link, that's also indicated by an `elsewhere-pointing arrow' emblem. You'll notice a few different file-types and 1 symbolic link, here:

screenshot

Now, here's another screenshot: this one mixes in a few more more file-types, including some that /don't/ use VisualIDs because they're thumbnailable: I have it setup so that, by default, `graphical' files (image-files and video-files, for example) use a thumbnail version of their action content for their icons, and any files that can't be thumbnailed (including types like directories, text-files, audio-files, etc.) use VisualIDs. You'll notice that there are several image-files and 1 video-file (all of which use thumbnail-views for their icons), a few audio-files, a couple of HTML-files, and a shell script, with all of the files which would traditionally all have the exact same icon now having unique VisualIDs:

[screenshot]

This screenshot may be a little confusing, because I'm also using some auxiliary `visual tagging' facilities that Nautilus provides:

[screenshot]

While either VisualIDs or thumbnails are used as /default/ icons, and a file-type emblem is also added by default, individual files can also have custom emblems added by the user, and they can also have custom icons set by the user, and setting a custom icon does away with the default (type-indicating) eblem; this is why `collections' and `contacts' don't have any emblems (as the user who set the custom icons, I know that they're directories and don't need any auxiliary `what is it' info--I just need to be able to find them quickly); `photovideo', `graphics', and `html' are also directories with custom icons, but I (as a user) have also added custom emblems to them. I've also added custom emblems to `contracting', `finances', `cvs', `dp2', and a few other directories, but not set custom icons--this is especially useful in combination with Nautilus' `sort by emblems' feature, which allows me to (for example) group all of the money-related objects together.

[2008-04-23_00: meta-source]

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Fri, 18 Apr 2008
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17:25: #(2008 4 18 17 24 edt)

I just watched Ina Garten unapologetically use cowboy roux. WTF?

[2008-04-18_00: meta-source]

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Tue, 01 Apr 2008
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01:43: The benefits of unemployment

Well, on the up-side of being without full-time employment: unpaid vacation without concern of employers' projects floundering.

I have a lot of free time to pick up the personal projects that have been floundering for... years.

Almost a decade after starting, I finally have a couple of canvases that are almost completely filled with paint. Here's one:

[image]

It's been reworked some in GIMP: The wings are very different than I initially imagined and (started) rendering in the on-canvas oil, the face is different, features like hair, irides, and eyebrows have been added, and the lips and nose have been reworked.

The GIMP XCF file is available if you want to see how I work.

This one has only had a little barrel-distortion reversed:

[image]

[2008-04-01_00: meta-source]

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