Infovore » tag » baking
  • About
  • Archives
  • Projects
  • Talks
  • Code
  • RSS
  • Contact
  • Dubious Quality: A Lesson In Revolutionary Politics From Video Games
    "It was at that moment that I understood, more fully than ever before, why revolutionaries succeed and then fail. It's because they're switching genres. They take over the country in a third-person (or first person) action game, but then they have to play an RTS to govern the country."
    (tags: politics revolution games billharris quotation genre )
  • Suitcase With $134 Billion Puts Dollar on Edge: William Pesek – Bloomberg.com
    "Think about it: These two guys were carrying the gross domestic product of New Zealand or enough for three Beijing Olympics. If economies were for sale, the men could buy Slovakia and Croatia and have plenty left over for Mongolia or Cambodia… These men carrying bonds concealed in the bottom of their luggage also would be the fourth-largest U.S. creditors." Um, wow.
    (tags: economy dollar tallstories money switzerland downturn destablisation )
  • Art Game Star Jason Rohrer Joins Ad Collective | GameCulture
    "After a stint shuttling back and forth from his farm in upstate New York to LA, where he consulted on a project for Steven Spielberg and EA, Rohrer has now joined the roster of multimedia stars at Tool of North America, which produces high-end commercials and interactive campaigns for the top advertising firms in the nation." Hmm.
    (tags: games advertising jasonrohrer notsure )
  • BLDGBLOG: Bloomsday
    "What if Ulysses had been written before the construction of Dublin? That is, what if Dublin did not, in fact, precede and inspire Joyce's novel, but the city had, itself, actually been derived from Joyce's book?" Geoff Manaugh expands on a comment he made at Thrilling Wonder Stories; the stuff about 'quipu' is also awesome.
    (tags: quipu dublin cities bldgblog joyce bloomsday realism description stories design )
  • nullpointer » Drum machine draughts
    "I’ve always been interested in the relationship between gameplay and musical performance. Theres a remarkable structural similarity between certain game systems/mechanics and compositional ones. There is also a risk/reward/challenge aspect that is core to both practices. Anyway, for a short talk I took part in for the Leeds Evolution Festival I wrote a quick augmented chess/draughts app." And the result is a video-processing step-sequencer. Nifty.
    (tags: openframeworks music video imagery augmentedreality chess draughts )
  • Five Minutes a Day for Fresh-Baked Bread
    "It is easy to have fresh bread whenever you want it with only five minutes a day of active effort. Just mix the dough and let it sit for two hours. No kneading needed! Then shape and bake a loaf, and refrigerate the rest to use over the next couple weeks. Yes, weeks! The Master Recipe (below) makes enough dough for many loaves. When you want fresh-baked crusty bread, take some dough, shape it into a loaf, let it rise for about 20 minutes, then bake. Your house will smell like a bakery, and your family and friends will love you for it."
    (tags: baking bread recipes cooking howto recipe )
  • Great London walks – Time Out London
    "Explore London on foot with our suggestions for some great capital walks, including riverside rambles, architectural adventures, even the odd pub crawl." A useful page to bookmark.
    (tags: london uk walking guide cities tours )
  • GameSetWatch – GameSetInterview: Throwing A Zombie Doublesix With Mummery
    "I think in films, zombies are cyclical. They come around, they get reinvigorated. I think in games, they're a constant. In games, zombies just represent this thing around which you can construct a game. There's no morality to them. There's no worries about racism that games are having right now. If it's a zombie and it's a pure zombie, a stupid zombie like the ones we have, they're a game mechanic. They're fodder, they're whatever you want to put in a game, however you want to deal with it."
    (tags: zombies games culture interview )
  • “Project Natal Must Never Be Completed” by John Connor, Leader of the Human Resistance | Hardcasual
    "This is John Connor, leader of the Human Resistance… Microsoft’s Project Natal must never be completed, no matter what the cost. This machine, with its RGB camera, depth sensor, multi-array microphone, and custom processor running proprietary software, as well as its ability to track up to four human users for motion analysis, is clearly the precursor the killing machines of the near-future that haunt my dreams every night."
    (tags: humour games terminator natal microsoft parody )
  • A dessert to remember | Ask Metafilter
    Lots of suggestions for simple but yummy puddings here. Will need to check this list out again.
    (tags: baking cooking mefi metafilter dessert pudding )
  • Fitting curves to data using Ruby and the GNU Scientific Library
    "If you need to perform data analysis, provide graphics for your users in your webapp, or produce high quality plots I encourage you to investigate the combination of ruby, GSL and GNUPlot." Looks good. I should probably give this a poke some time; could come in handy.
    (tags: gsl graphing plotting data analysis statistics ruby visualisation )
  • Fatcat – Nitrome – Play Free Games
    "Feed cake to the cat for a megaburp; use the owl to block bullets." Lovely: you control the fat cat *and* the owl; the owl makes a path for the cat. It's slightly bulletty in places, and juggling two controls is tricky, but still quite laidback. A lovely, lovely flash shmup. The artwork and music helps, too.
    (tags: games shmup flash )
  • russell davies: analogue natives
    "So much joyful digital stuff is only a pleasure because it's hugely convenient; quick, free, indoors, no heavy lifting. That's enabled lovely little thoughts to get out there. But as 'digital natives' get more interested in the real world; embedding in it, augmenting it, connecting it, weaponising it, arduinoing it, printing it out, then those thoughts/things need to get better. And we might all need to acquire some analogue native skills." Yes. I am slighty frustrated by the attitude that you can make anything physical with an Arduino and some other stuff. It's the "other stuff" that's the important bit.
    (tags: analogue digital printing making friction )
  • IDEO Labs » Quick-n-dirty Multi-touch: Flash API + Wiimote
    "Our tireless multi-touch team is pleased to announce another bit of software meant to make your prototyping life a bit easier, via support for using a wiimote with our flash API to quickly turn any TV or projection surface into a multi-touch environment" Nice, simple, hacky.
    (tags: controller interface hacking multitouch design interaction wiimote ideo )
  • The Problem with Games Journalism: Part One | Snappy Gamer
    The comments thread on this is pretty epic, and I'm really not wading into that one. Suffice to say: it's quite a while before somebody mentions the word "criticism", and it's not in the main body of the article at all. That's the important word, to my mind.
    (tags: games writing criticism journalism rant misguided )
  • Julia Roberts | A Better Course
    "Of all the adverts I’ve seen this year, I think this (late entry) surprised me the most. Not because of the concept – the hilarious coincidence that sometimes people who are not famous share names with people who are famous has been used before – or the clumsy copy. It surprised me because I actually know the person in the photograph. And she really is called Julia Roberts." So do I. She really is, you know.
    (tags: advertising marketing branding )
  • 'The best perk in the White House' | Film | The Guardian
    Lovely article about the White House cinema, the first occupant of which was Eisenhower. I came upon this post-"If Gamers Ran The World" if only to find out who the first film-literate (ie: willing to have it inside the White House) president was. The article is a gem.
    (tags: america politics cinema film twentiethcentury )

Archives

  • 2022  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2021  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2020  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2019  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2018  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2017  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2016  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2015  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2014  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2013  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2012  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2011  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2010  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2009  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2008  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2007  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2006  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2005  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2004  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2003  January February March April May June July August September October November December

infovore.org is a weblog by Tom Armitage, 2003-2026.