Phasing in a new look

As you may have noticed by the reorganized sidebar, Beckism.com is phasing in a new look! As I slowly expand Beckism.com’s offerings (see, for example, the new By Design section), I’m looking to make the site easier to navigate. I’ll be looking into creating a better archiving system in the near future, and am also developing a reasonably cool feature for the main page (fixing the forums so they work correctly is on the list as well).

I’ve also cleared up a lot of the issues that the site had in Internet Explorer (thanks to the marvelous Parallels Desktop). Hope you enjoy the changes, but feel free to let me know if you don’t.

Censoring dictionaries?

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) posts a way to “Expurgate your dictionary.”

What is the use of censoring an electronic dictionary? If someone is searching for a profane term then they obviously know the word; wouldn’t you prefer that they be able to find out exactly what it means than give them that tantalizing doubt that makes swearing so fun?

It’s not like a print dictionary; people aren’t going to go browsing through it. Sometimes I have to wonder.

Blurburger rocks

I don’t think that I’ve mentioned it recently on Beckism.com, but can I just say that Blurburger rocks? This is why, and this, and this, and this, and this, and of course this.

You haven’t lived until you’ve had a Blurburger picture for your desktop for an extended length of time, although ever since discovering Blurburger if I fall asleep while my computer is on I have strange dreams about carrots. It’s a small price to pay, though.

It’s done!

Currently playing: Meant to Be from the album “Woods of Chaos” by Rob Costlow

That’s right! After what seems like far more work than it should have been, I have finished my senior thesis and turned it in!

What is it? It’s a fantasy novel that I started writing in September, finished mid-March, and have finally finalized (although without anywhere near as much revision as I wanted to give it; it’s pretty first-draft stuff). Because the library is an asshat, the printed copy for them was a whopping 400 sheets of paper (plus the second copy, of course, for an even 800). Probably about 390 of that was solid type (the rest being table of contents, references, titles, etc.). Yowza! How the hell did I write this much?

When I delivered it, the librarian said that she thinks it’s the largest she’s seen yet in her career. I don’t doubt it. I beat out the last thesis-cum-novel by at least 100 pages, if memory serves. Good luck binding it, suckas.

Entitled Tantalus Chine, the novel takes place in the fantasy land of Lakuna where humans are rebelling against their slavemasters, the elves. This is not standard fantasy. The elves are neither nice, nor do they live forever. They do, however, have pointy ears, so thank goodness for that. If anyone is interested in reading the novel, you are welcome to, but I warn you that it isn’t worth it. It’s first draft quality, and not a particularly good first draft at that. Should I try to publish it (as if any publishing house would want it; it wouldn’t sell well given how many molds it intentionally sets out to break), I would first want to do some pretty serious revisions.

In any case, I am really, really happy to finally be done with it. I still have to do the oral defense, but I’m not too worried. I think it might actually end up being fun; I have a great thesis committee, and as long as I get enough sleep before-hand and do a little reviewing of my past three years of Soc, I should be able to show off my ability to pull crap out of my ass quite nicely.

Now on to other projects! I can’t decide what to do first. I’m definitely going to start trying to get some web work with One Crayon, but beyond that I’m not sure. I’ve been wanting to try and get into Cocoa programming for a while (the native Mac OS X stuff), and I’ve got an idea for a program that would be 1) relatively simple and 2) something that I would find useful that nothing else can do, so maybe I’ll try that. Then again, getting a little more into Flash is always good, and I’ve got a couple ideas for browser-based games that could be really sweet. And there’s always the novel that might actually have a chance of getting published that I need to write, now that I know that I can write a novel.

It is still kind of crazy to think that my big project is over. All I have left now is Creative Writing and a paper for my independent study (which will hopefully be low stress). And dance and percussion ensemble, of course, but whatever. I’m still reveling in the sense of freedom before reality asserts itself and I realize that I’m way too good at keeping myself busy.

And in my final exciting news, I have decided to order Adobe CS3, web edition (Photoshop, Flash, Illustrator, and some other stuff). I have the credit available, and I discovered something amazing: student versions of Adobe software can be used for commercial work during and after school, and can be upgraded as if they were the full price commercial version! That means that I can buy a suite of software that will be central to web work at $1100 less than the standard price, but I have to do it within the next month and a half. Legitimate version of Photoshop, here I come! I’m really excited; I hope that it ships before I head to France.

And now, I should probably go to bed. It doesn’t look like I’m going to get through the story for Creative Writing that I need read by tomorrow, so perhaps I should plan on waking up during the morning sometime.

Shapeshifter : Good, not great

The Ease Down’s first effort is an interesting blend of jazz, rock, and pop. On the plus side, the sound quality is excellent, the artists obviously talented, the songs high-energy, and the tunes catchy.

However, the downside is that for an album called “Shapeshifter”, the songs are remarkably similar. The driving piano beats rarely change, the songs often follow a predictable formula, and particularly on a first listen it is difficult to tell which song is which (when I first heard it, I didn’t notice when the first track switched to the second because they sounded so similar).

That said, this is well worth a listen. If you absolutely love this band’s sound, then you will undoubtedly like the whole album. Additionally, Shapeshifter would make a nice addition to a rock/pop mix to jazz things up a bit. Listening to it straight through gets somewhat repetitive, but if The Ease Down is able to introduce more variety into their sound their next effort will definitely be worth looking into.

The first track (Heavy Hopes) is an excellent example of the band’s general sound, and the second half of the album contains some more varied takes on the general theme.

Tentative beginnings

I’ve always wanted Beckism.com to be something more than “that site I never update.” As I’m nearing the end of my largest college commitment, I think I might actually be nearing the stage where I’ll be more interested in updating this site. With that in mind, I’ve added a couple posts to the Commentary, and will hopefully get a new Dirt Man up soon (although I’m not making any promises, of course).

Also, it looks like one of the newer versions of WordPress might have broken the forum; I’ll be looking into that soon-ish.

I also may do some minor site redesign work; let me know if there’s anything about Beckism.com that could work better, or if you have any ideas for improvements.

Jamendo: rock on

I had never heard of this site until I went to download the newest subatomicglue album, but as of tonight I have been introduced to Jamendo, and it’s an amazing site.

Take a bunch of music, allow people to download it for free (Creative Commons rocks my world), and make it super easy to donate for the albums you end up keeping.

Beyond that, artists can opt into a program that gives them 50% of the advertising revenue generated by their page views (for free), and of the money donated to the artist, only about half a Euro goes to Jamendo.

This is an amazingly cool experiment in free music. Go check it out now. In only about an hour I’ve already found five or six albums that were good enough to download and may end up being good enough to donate for. And don’t be surprised if a couple music reviews show up here; Jamendo allows automatic integration with blogs. How cool is that?