Friday, June 30, 2006

What Is [eon8]?

The site: http://www.eon8.com/

The investigation: http://eon8theinvestigation.ytmnd.com/

My guess is it's a publicity stunt, probably for a new game coming out (remember ilovebees?) Hopefully we'll find out soon, as the countdown ends tonight at 11 PM.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Arm Yourself with Knowledge

Operation Clambake

Anti-Scientology site that is currently one of the top results in a Google search for "Scientology," second only to the CoS's official site.

Just doing my part to help make it first.

Friday, June 23, 2006

Math is Power

My new almost favorite webcomic.

As you can see from its inclusion in the links section, this is my favorite.

(I promise the next one won't be a webcomic!)

Sunday, June 18, 2006

If You Loved Me, You'd Buy Me These T-Shirts

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

MoCCA

Last weekend was one of the best weekends ever.

There was an art & comic con at MoCCA in NYC. A bunch of people on Truth and Beauty Bombs are webcomic artists, so they all had tables at it. So they and a slew of forum members all met in New York City for assorted hijinx! It was quite awesome. It started Friday night, when I met the entire webcomic community in a hot dog joint: Ryan North (Dinosaur Comics), David Malki ! (Wondermark), Jeph Jacques (Questionable Content), Andy Runton (Owly), Steve Carey (Poppycock Theater), Chris Yates (Reprographics), and more! Seriously, if someone had bombed the restaurant, there'd be nobody left to make webcomics. I was quite intimidated. Any of them that I didn't get a chance to introduce myself to then I did at MoCCA the next day. So I bought stuff from all of the above, plus Dale Beran and David Hellman (A Lesson Is Learned), Joey Comeau (A Softer World), and Kent Earle and Scott I-don't-know-his-last-name (White Ninja Comics). The rest of the weekend was spent with the coolest group of webcomic fans ever, wandering about the city--pics here and here. We went to a couple museums, bought books at Strands (18 miles of books, they boast), and shopped for punk/goth clothes in St. Mark's. In all it was an amazing weekend, even if it did leave me nearly broke. I wait in eager anticipation of next year.

Friday, June 09, 2006

YTMND Weekend!

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Our Only Thought is to Entertain You

The last two years before I came here to Stevens Tech, the DeBaun Theatre (located on campus) has put on both Godspell and You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown--both shows that I did in high school. Now they're continuting that tradition with Into The Woods next spring. It's basically a hodgepodge of fairy tales in which all hell essentially breaks loose. Naturally, I'm stoked--it's one of my favorite shows, and it's being directed by my favorite director to work with, Aaron Bogad, who also directed me in The Rocky Horror Show and Batboy. In high school, I played Jack, of Beanstalk fame. I'm probably going to try for that role again, if not for one of the princes--Cinderella's or Rapunzel's, which are both very fun roles too--Cinderella's Prince especially, though I'd probably have a much better chance as Rapunzel's. Eh, I'm probably going for Jack again in any case.

Anywho, allow me to discuss the link in the sidebar there.

Dinosaur Comics is a comic about dinosaurs. How surprising. The interesting thing is that the pictures never change. Every comic is the same clipart picture of T-Rex, Dromiciomimus (God I hope I spelled that right) and Utahraptor, discussing topics ranging from philosophy to personal regrets to kissing two ladies at once. Ryan North (its author) is my hero. He's also responsible for such projects as Oh No Robot, a webcomic search engine. and RSSPect, which can turn any website into an RSS feed. Ryan is also the administrator of Truth and Beauty Bombs, the sexiest message board you'll ever come across. All the members are truly wonderful people; it's amazing they were all able to find this one place to convene, with little interruption from the usual message board folderol. It's also the official home of the "Garfield is funnier if you take away his thought bubbles" meme. If you look closely in the background, you can see me making one or two keen observations (I'm MvCRage)! There are now a couple projects out there that have run with the idea, taking a close look at how pathetic Jon really is when you strip away the witty quips of his anthropomorphic housepet. Could it be that my remark is what spurred the entire "Arbuckle is a sad creature" perspective? Eh, probably not. But it'd be cool if it was.

Woo, tangent.

Back to what I was originally talking about, Dinosaur Comics is one of my favorite webcomics, which is why I've decided to put it in the sidebar. I suggest you read a few, and don't forget to read the hidden punchlines-- One from hovering your mouse over the comic, one inside the "comment" subject, and one from the title of the comic in the archive. That's four punchlines per comic (including the unhidden one)! I'm probably gonna add another 2 or 3 links in the sidebar, and introduce them later (this post ran a little long). I'll promise they won't all be webcomics! Maybe!

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Grow, damn you, GROW!

I'd like to introduce you to one of my favorite time-wasting websites, eyezmaze. It's a collection of Flash games made by this Japanese guy, which of course means it's going to be bizarre. He tries to make each game easy to understand without any written instruction, which is a good thing, since it's obvious English is not his first language. The best games are the Grow games. You just drag various objects onto the ball in the center, and watch as they grow and interact. That's all there is to it--though it takes a while to find the best order to put them in in order to get a perfect score. There's four different Grow games, so they'll keep you busy for a while.

A less cerebral game is Tontie, which is essentially just whack-a-mole to the EXTREME. On the other side of the intellectual spectrum is chronon, which just got released, and I'm still nowhere near beating it. It sort of reminds me of Majora's Mask, in the sense that what you do at one time of day affects things at later times. Like, put the clock on the wall, and the time will change. Get the hands to point the right way and woohoo, you got the key! That's all I'm gonna tell you, because, hey, figuring it out is all the fun.