Archive for July, 2009

How to Cut an Orange

This summer I’ve been trying to eat more fruit’s and veggies. I’ve been pretty good eating an apple and a banana a day, but I wanted to add oranges to that list.

The problem of course is that oranges are much tougher to open. Unlike apples which you can start eating right away or bananas which have a natural peeling device built-in, oranges require a tool to open (unless you have incredibly long nails). Usually people use a knife, but for a orange eating beginner I found myself butchering the poor fruit and leaving a juicy mess behind.

True more time and experience could solve this problem, but all the barriers to eating this fruit made it less likely I would pick one up. I know this sounds crazy but consider what eating an orange required.

  1. Dealing with a knife (which I am not good at and cut myself with)
  2. Dealing with a juicy mess (which I hate even more because I have so many gadgets)
  3. Taking the time to learn how to peel an orange properly

On top of all that I wasn’t even guaranteed I’d get to eat the fruit!

As always I turned to the internet for a solution and narrowed my finds to four different types of orange peelers.

All the peelers work the same, they have a small sharp nub used to easily cut the orange without fear of cutting too deep. But I really wanted the EziSit-Rus Peeler.

As the video shows it is by far the easiest and fastest way to cut and peel and orange without a mess. It even comes in four different colors! Sadly this iPod of the orange peelers was only available in South Africa, and I could not find any to buy online.

I ultimately went with the tupperware one because it was the cheapest at a buck a piece (or at least it was when I bought it a month ago). You can see my first attempt to use it in the first video. I can’t imagine it’s as nice as the EziSit-Rus peeler, but it has accomplished what I wanted from it.

Who knew there was such variety in orange peelers? Also if you really want to up your orange peeling apparatus, get yourself one of these bad boys.


The future of RTS

Interesting post by Sebastian de With of the Cocoia Blog about the past, present, and future of Real Time Strategy game UI.

Of course, only time can tell where we will be taken in the future when it comes to interface design. However, it’s interesting to note that we’re gradually making the experience more tactile. While giving users a controller that resembles a gun to play a shooter game doesn’t work very well and feels rather gimmicky, making a realistic landscape that the user can reach out to and touch seems like the natural evolution for strategy games. It shares some of the best characteristics from the origin of strategy games: the board game.

Also check out this sweet trailer for Ubisoft’s upcoming strategy game RUSE, do yourself a service and watch it in HD. As a side note though, I don’t think I’ve ever seen such hansom and trim gamers. In fact the guy with the black hair reminded me of actor Gael García Bernal of The Science of Sleep and Y tu mamá también fame.

Cocoia Blog » The future of RTS.

Why StarCraft 2 LAN Play Matters

Blizzard Starcraft 2 Wallpaper

Ars Technica article on Blizzard’s decision to remove LAN play from StarCraft 2

Blizzard was so loved because it was a gamer-friendly company that gave us more than we asked for, and surprised us with things like a free online service and the spawned installs. Now, if you want to hook up a few computers in your basement without an Internet connection, you may not be able to play against each other at all. The LAN party is a dying thing in the world of built-in voice chat and high-speed Internet connections, but it’s not dead yet… especially among those who grew up playing StarCraft.

I doubt many PC Bangs in South Korea are too happy by this.

But it is a shame to see  LAN play go the way of the Dodo, since I imagine it is such an easy technology to implement. I have many found memories of me and my friends scrabbling to get all our computers setup to play StarCraft over LAN – I remember lots of cat5 cable and a lot of shouting about not having the latest update.

It’s funny that even today me and my friends will still have the same problems when we want to play. Wireless routers have made the process less messy, but it should also be a testament to how easy Blizzard made LAN play that last semester a few students were still able to get the game up and running on all the Macs in the Hampshire College computer lab.

Still, LAN play was one of the reasons StarCraft became such a huge hit, and it’s demise will be felt by this old gamer.

The pillars of PC gaming: why StarCraft 2 LAN play matters – Ars Technica.