Halo Infinite Seems Promising

Martin · 3 years

Xbox held a short online event today for its 20th anniversary. During the show, they released the first part of Halo Infinite, the multiplayer bit. The campaign for the game launches in December.

After work, I spent some time playing around with it - and it's a lot of fun. It reminds me of playing Unreal Tournament 2003 with my roommates, back in college. I think it has a lot of potential to be fun.

I'm more of a campaign guy myself, but I like having a casual game to have fun with my friends with in the evenings. We'll see if this turns into that, but in my opinion, so far, so good.

And I am here for it.

It's funny how each iteration of Forza Horizon is only an incremental change over the last, but it's always so fun to just drive around and explore the new map and complete challenges as you go.

These games are great. And coupled with Flight Simulator, which released last year for PC and this year for Xbox, provides some amazing escapism and pseudo-travel for those of us who don't yet feel comfortable resuming our old ways of being.

Duplicate Files

Martin · 3 years

A week ago, my phone's data storage maxed out, and I needed to unload my photos and videos to clear up space.

Actually, scratch that - my photos and videos were already backed up via OneDrive, but somewhere along the line, the app lost the ability to automatically delete media that's already been uploaded. I wanted to make sure I had everything backed up before deleting it all from my phone, so I had to find a solution to compare the phone's storage to my OneDrive copy. I have a Samsung Galaxy S10e, and it lets you plug a USB cable in and browse the files just like an external hard drive.

After some research, I settled on software called Beyond Compare. The interface was easy enough to figure out, and it quickly churned through all of my media. It also let me use all the features in the demo, without buying. After an hour or two of working through my pictures I was done! Beyond Compare aligns duplicate (or similar) files by name, so it was simple to find the discrepancies. I was able to clear up over 30GB of data!

I purchased a copy of Beyond Compare after I finished, since I felt like the tool may be handy in the future and I appreciated what it'd done for me.

Yesterday, my wife had a similar issue, but with slightly different circumstances. She needed to upgrade her phone, which was also about out of space, and wanted to make sure everything was backed up before swapping over to the new device. I've got her on OneDrive as well, so the backup has been happening, but she has an iPhone and weirdly, the files on the phone were not named the same as the files backed up in the cloud.

I loaded up Beyond Compare, thinking I might solve the problem as easily as my own, but I forgot that without the file names being the same there was no practical way for the software to show duplicates side-by-side.

I spent the next hour creating a PowerShell script that would go through all the images from the phone and rename them to match the files on OneDrive, which appeared to be just the date the photo was taken in this format: "YearMonthDay_HourMinuteSecond_iOS.jpg". Once I got the script working however, I realized two things: first, the hours were off by 8 - an easy fix - and second, that the "date taken" property in Windows Explorer did not include seconds, so I couldn't recreate the file names exactly as they were on OneDrive. So Beyond Compare would, sadly, be useless here.

After spending a bit more time looking at other duplicate file checkers, I tried out dupeGuru. It took a long time to analyze all the photos from the phone and the OneDrive backup - about an hour to get through 18,000 photos. Once that was done, however, it was pretty easy to sort out which files we wanted to keep and which were duplicates.

In addition to the 3,000 duplicates it found between the phone and the OneDrive storage, it also found 2,000 duplicates within OneDrive - a happy surprise! It took me a few hours to go through everything, but it wasn't too difficult - just a little tedious (and with a few random hiccups, probably because OneDrive didn't like the software trying to delete hundreds of items at once).

We still have to get all the media she has in her iMessages out somehow, but that shouldn't be too hard.

In the meantime, I'm wondering why Windows (or OneDrive) doesn't have built-in tools for this sort of thing. We're almost all digital hoarders in some capacity, with the inevitable duplicate file here and there, and Windows has tools for comparing and hashing files included in the Command Prompt/PowerShell. It seems like an easy, obvious thing to have.

Digital Art & NFT’s

Martin · 3 years

A few months ago I heard about NFT's, and for a week or so, I thought the idea was quite exciting. As an artist, being able to sell my work digitally, to a worldwide audience, and also get a residual cut of subsequent sales sounded great. It still does. But since then, I've learned a lot more about NFT's, and now I just have concerns.

I've seen way too many other artists have their art stolen, minted as NFT's, and sold without their knowledge or consent. There's no authority to watch over who mints what, and minting outfits don't seem interested in policing users eager to help them make a quick buck. Naturally, there's no authority over the underlying cryptocurrency used to buy these illicit NFT's as well, so fraud runs rampant and there doesn't seem to be much anyone can (or will) do about it.

There's also the matter of the ever increasing amounts of energy being wasted to crunch cryptocurrency mining and transactions. Aside from the blatant theft of other people's work, it's one of the worst aspects of all this.

It's a shame because NFT's could be a big deal for digital art in the future. But the problems currently outweighs the benefits, in my opinion - so much so that I'm starting to worry a tiny bit about posting my art online, as I'm afraid it will end up being ripped off and sold without my knowledge.

I've already seen images that I've created and posted appear in random places online, and I can't imagine that situation will improve when there's a buck to be made.

It seems like every other week there's a hot new set of NFT avatars generated by some programmer artist's algorithm, made to have common configurations and rare ones, selling for thousands or millions of dollars.

My question is, if you want to have a rare, unique avatar created by an actual artist, why not just do the old-fashioned thing and commission it?Y

You'll probably pay a lot less - and you won't be participating in the dumpster fire that is the current NFT market.

Here We Go Again

Martin · 3 years

The remastered Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas was added to Game Pass today, so I downloaded it to see how things have held up.

I originally played this game on PC (I still have the discs, somewhere) and had a pretty good time with it - until I hit a few missions where the terrible controls were too much to overcome, and I quit. I also gave the Xbox 360 version a try, but that was a port of the mobile version, so it was even worse.

I thought the new remastered versions were built from the ground up, or at least ported to a new game engine - Unreal? - but so much of the original jankiness remains, I have doubts. Mercifully, the controls do feel better though.

I'm not a huge fan of the remastering that Rockstar has done here, however. I feel like this could've been done better with less high-resolution texturing and more work on the underlying 3D assets.

The interior of CJ's house looks like something a modder would've created in the earlier days of game mods, where a high resolution texture pack was about the most anyone could do.

The models of the characters are also weird looking. The original models had to be styled a certain way to make up for their lack of fidelity, and so had a reason for looking more like caricatures. This remastered version adds a level or two of smooth subdivisions on top of stupidly high-resolution textures, and the result is extremely off-putting. It felt almost offensive to me on first viewing.

The lighting is also kind of bad. It feels like nobody tested these games.

I know there's more to it than that, and I don't mean to shit on the work of the people who created these games, but I'm glad I didn't impulse buy the trilogy right when they announced it. I'm hoping some work might be done to iron out the worse parts so that by the time I get around to playing these games again, they might actually be worth it.

Healthcare Survey

Martin · 3 years

I was cleaning out my email tonight and I saw that I had a survey from my healthcare provider. I'm one for filling out surveys, so I jumped in and started answering questions. And they were interesting.

All of them asked you to rate whether you:

  • Agree completely
  • Agree somewhat
  • Neither agree nor disagree
  • Disagree somewhat
  • Disagree completely

Pretty standard. But here are some of the questions they asked:

  • Prescription medications are the only remedies that I trust.
  • I always follow the advice of healthcare professionals; they are the experts.
  • I prefer home or natural remedies (acupuncture, eastern medicine, etc.) over pharmaceuticals.
  • I avoid vaccines for me and my family.
  • I would rather seek medical advice from my own personal research than from the doctor.

There were others that were a little more general, such as one asking whether you use CBD or THC to medicate, if going to the doctor gives you anxiety, etc. But I definitely feel like my provider is trying to feel out whether or not the respondents among its subscribers are turning away from modern medicine and embracing woo.

Man, am I sick of the anti-intellectual crowd. I answered a lot of questions with "Disagree completely".

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Having A Disco Ball

Martin · 3 years

I've been spending most of my game time the last week working on Disco Elysium - which has opened up and turned into a much bigger game than I expected it to be.

On top of all the crazy, interesting, and funny stuff this game has to offer, it's also quite beautiful. Each area is painted with a smattering of colors, in a rough stroke that fits nicely with the grittiness of the game's world.

There's a fair amount of washed out browns and grays in the main areas, but they are accented by dashes of color here and there that help make the more important points of interest stand out.

I've been admiring these massive paintings as I play. It's just really nice.

The Intricate Web

Martin · 3 years

I've been developing my own websites for over 20 years, and doing the odd website work for a few clients lately, and so I keep up with that scene as best as I can.

The amount of stuff you need to know to be a solo web developer in 2021 is kind of mind boggling though, and I concentrate mostly on the design side, along with rudimentary things like HTML, PHP, CSS, and some Javascript.

I aspire to be able to be better at Javascript, and I'd like to learn Ajax properly someday. And get good at making things with three.js.

I like that we can have websites that do all this stuff - it's crazy compared to the rinky-dink sites I learned how to make back in the Geocities days. But I also sort of lament how complicated everything is, too.

I don't want to compile a website before deploying it. I don't want to have to worry about SEO, and compromise (or worse, homogenize) my designs because Google wants things to be a certain way. I don't want to add special code to my websites so Facebook understands the content flow better.

I hate that this stuff is common. It makes the web feel less like a tool for free expression. But if you don't learn it, and don't do it, others will - and then you won't get work.

Mass Effect Will Continue

Martin · 3 years

So the official Mass Effect account on Twitter posted this today:

Is it wrong to get hyped for a new Mass Effect game, probably long before it'll ever be released, after the spectacularly (but, in my opinion, undeservedly) bad launch of Andromeda?

Maybe. Maybe. But I don't care. I love this franchise and I want this to be awesome.

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Disco Elysium Is Weird

Martin · 3 years

I mentioned this the other day: I've been playing through Disco Elysium on Xbox, and really enjoying it. With the added narration of The Final Cut edition, it's almost like listening to an audiobook. A really strange audiobook.

That's the thing about this game, though... it's so weird! It reminds me of books like Neuromancer or other William Gibson novels. It draws you in with its foreignness. The world is there, and it definitely exists - whether or not you understand it.

Oftentimes in games like this, I get turned off by too much world-building. I want to see the game through, and not live in its world for a moment.

Disco Elysium is not that, though. It's just all very interesting and connected, and so far, I love it.