Showing posts with label Interesting and Fun Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interesting and Fun Stuff. Show all posts

September 8, 2016

Star Trek 50th Anniversary - A Beginning


So it's been a few years since I posted anything here, but I figured today would be as good a day as any to return. Ya see, today is Star Trek's 50th Anniversary and I want to start watching it. Once upon a time I wanted to do a Wheel of Time Re-Read/Review on this site, but that never really panned out. I have these grand plans of things I want to do that will carve out a little fan base on the internet for myself, but then life happens and I never do it. This may be another one of those times I start something grand and then never really follow up on it.... but I'm going to attempt this.

I'm going to watch all of Star Trek.
All of it.
In Order.
And I want your help.

August 10, 2013

My Favorite Music Easter Eggs in the Media




So I discovered today that the Emperor's theme in Star Wars is the exact same theme as the super happy ending celebration theme in Episode I which is all kinds of awesome. The big celebration at the end of Episode I is rightly deserved for the heroes, but it is also the initial first step allowing the Emperor to stage a full on coup later and taking over the entire universe basically. This is his moment. This is his theme. Behold the Genius of John Williams.

This got me thinking of a few other of my favorite music easter eggs.


September 7, 2012

One of the Most Amazing Photos Ever

Prepare to be amazed...





This image is just mind-blowing.  It was originally captured in 1927 at the Solvay Conference, attended by some of the most brilliant scientists in history. Notable attendees included Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Marie Curie, Erwin Schrödinger, Werner Heisenberg, Wolfgang Pauli, Paul Dirac and Louis de Broglie. More than half of the attendees went onto win the Nobel Prize in either Physics or Chemistry. Marie Curie actually won the prize in both fields. She remains the only scientist in history to have done so.


The original picture is black & white but a Swedish female artist successfully colorized it and posted it on reddit where it became an instant classic. Not only that, she's made it available on the internet for free. The colorization is amazing and is the first time I've ever felt like I'm seeing these people for the first time.

This one definitely deserves to be shared further for the world to print and put up as a poster. A more epic gathering cannot be imagined.

February 1, 2012

This guy is cooler than me in every single way.


Ok, so this dude is pretty much cooler than me in everyway imaginable. I mean seriously. First off, Yale. So there's that. Second, the dude's got style.... I wear the same shirts I've had since 9th grade. On top of that... Check out these cello skills.... while BEATBOXING!


"Oh, but Krit...," you may say, "But you speak Chinese! At least that makes you special!"
.
.
.
.
BEHOLD!



January 13, 2012

iPhone roit...



Hundreds of angry Chinese people.... one slightly amused white guy.

(Apple store annouced they wouldn't be opening as planned to sell the new iPhone as planned)

March 1, 2011

World's Biggest Water Balloon Fight



I thought this was kind of fun. It was filmed at the world record breaking of the largest water balloon fight at BYU in 2010.

January 6, 2011

Family History

This may interest many in my family, and others as well... but this is a picture of everyone in my Family History spanning back 11 generations (not including myself). There are more people that have been researched, I plan on continuing to expand this tree... but it takes forever and the web browser responds super slowly.

January 5, 2011

Neat Photo

A week or two ago, the Provo tabernacle (one of the oldest buildings around these parts) burned down. Here is an interesting photo from the cleanup.

June 5, 2010

RSA Animate - The Secret Powers of Time

Here's an interesting video.

While I mainly agree with what is being said, there are a few things that I think that aren't quite 100% accurate. I think many people have the ability to see the world in many time perspectives rather than just one. While the world is indeed becoming more and more present based, I'd argue that it depends on what we are doing. We work hard for a better future. We take time for our families. We remember the words of our fathers. And we take time to enjoy ourselves. These are not conflicting ideas. They need to be added together into one great whole.




April 18, 2010

Bobby McFerrin hacks your Brain

Music has such a profound influence on our lives. It is built in. Don't believe it? Watch this...

February 22, 2010

Games as a means of storytelling

Video games have gone through a strange evolution. From the early days of two simple paddles bouncing a ball back and forth in Pong, to the modern day of . . . well, hitting an invisible ball back and forth with two Wii remotes in Wii PingPong. However, a video game has pretty much always been just that, a game. Sure, you may say that there are good story lines in games, but the game is still just a game with a story. You play 45 minutes of game and you are rewarded with a 5-10 minute cut scene that tells more of the story, then you simply rinse and repeat until the epic conclusion. Some modern games are trying to change that dynamic. How can you make a good story that just happens to be a game as well? What if the story was played out the entire time you played the game and not just after a battle? Not a moment is wasted. The games of the future will have this dynamic. One already does. Heavy Rain is a unique game that you cannot fail. There is no moment in this game that does not tell the story. If your character dies, the story moves on without him and the ending changes. Your choices can give the characters a happy ending or end the story in tragedy. You will get emotionally attached to the people in this game in the same way you might with those in a good novel. In this way, games have joined the ranks of books and movies as being a legitimate method of storytelling.

February 18, 2010

Trust

Privacy on the internet has become an increasingly hard to control problem. We consistently hear about Facebook, Google Buzz, Twitter, and other social networking sites and the problems they have regarding privacy matters. I believe, however, that privacy on a computer is fictional. If you don't want people seeing certain information, then it shouldn't be put online. In today's society nearly every computer is connected to every other computer in the world. The only thing separating your work and information from someone else out there is a flimsy password. In fact, with cloud computing becoming more and more popular, your information can be stolen straight out from underneath you even if you haven't been online for weeks.

Recently Google was hacked by what they assume to be government hackers from China. They are probably right, but I bet that the United States has just as many hackers on it's own payroll trying to obtain secrets from China. Hacking is the cheapest and fastest way of espionage that we have in the current world. Since all of our information is connected somehow, it is just a matter of time before people find different ways to access it. The internet can seem like a scary place in our day. Is everyone out to get us? Nope.

While we need to understand that anything we put online is easy fodder for hackers and people who want to steal our identities, there is also a whole army working to protect us. Most these people don't even get paid to fix our problems. Jonathan Zittrain gave a speech on TED.com about how the internet restored his faith in humanity. Despite the trust issues, the web is home to the world's greatest acts of kindness. When a virus infects systems, hundreds of people band together to fix it and kill it as soon as possible. Wikipedia is another example of people doing good on the web, just for the sake of doing good. Google's motto is "Don't be Evil!" for crying out loud (although people will argue whether Google is actually evil or not).

We need to think of the internet as an online version of those big bulletin boards you see at Universities. Anything you put on it can be taken down and used for who knows what reason. If you put up a message with your phone number and address then say you need to carpool to California next week, some bad guy can use that information to break into your house and steal your stuff. Most people understand this, so they only put up a phone number or an e-mail address. When people use the board smartly, good things happen. Good people help out other good people, just because they can.

February 13, 2010

Memories

So my Mom came and visited a couple of months ago when we had Lucas. It was really great and fun to have her around for a while. When she came though, she brought with her a couple of VHS tapes that had a glimpse of my past. They sat on our shelves like that until last week when I went and transferred them to DVD.... and oh my goodness... that was a blast from the past. I'm probably 14-15 years old in the videos and things are CRAAAZY... we had so much fun though. Among those guest starring in the video are such illustrious names as Steve Cann, Daniel Jacobs, Ryan Rigby, David Horrocks, Nanny and Gramps, Hunter Petty, a cameo by Dustin Brown, Tiffanie Payne, Danielle Kikuchi, Cory Dahl, and many many more!

It's weird though because we are all so young and well, frankly, somewhat immature. Funny how our memories make those events better than watching them on film. I knew we were having fun at the time. Watching back I can't help but thinking... man, we were weird. But you know... I wouldn't have it any other way. I thought about posting some of the video... but then I just thought that would be inappropriate without everyone's permission. Cause, well, 8th-10th grade isn't everyone's best years. But here's a bonus screenshot...