Productivity Cycle

I’ve recently come to a significant discovery about my productivity cycle.

Wednesday is my strong day.

During a “normal” 5 day work week, you can find my productivity cycle is lowest on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday have this huge kick — I get the most done on these two days. Friday will see me tapering off, but still more productive than Monday or Tuesday (possibly combined).

During a “long” 7 (actually 12 day) work week, my productivity cycle is completely whacked. I’ll push my top productivity juices from Wednesday of week 1 to as long as I can (usually somewhere on Sunday or Monday of week 2). Monday afternoon will experience the crash. Absolute 0 productivity. Tuesday will see a ramp up similar to a normal Monday. Wednesday will be either Monday #2 and/or Tuesday. Thursday might be Tuesday #2, but more probably is a Wednesday. Friday will be Thursday. And the glorious weekend of sleep will then finally commence.

Most Saturdays are sleep days. Sleep in as long as possible. If we just survived a long week, this might be sleeping from dark to dark, Friday night until Saturday night. That’s around 20 hours. A normal Saturday is more like 12 to 14 hours.

Sundays are often similar to Saturdays, except that I’ll attempt to leave my Cave, at least for a little while. Not always.

My Life as an Excel Spreadsheet

No, I’ve not recently become made up of two dimensional array boxes…although I am indeed made up of cells, technically speaking. I’ve decided to begin (again?) tracking my life through excel. First, I have a Weight & Calorie tracker that I’ve been coding up. It’s fairly handy, and automated, mostly. Secondly, I’ll be tracking my work hours more closely using another spreadsheet. I used to do this, but slacked off. Once I’m satisfied enough with an initial version, I’ll post again, and attach them.

Twitter

Just a quick note. Started using Twitter and added a live update at the top of the side bar. In the links section, there is also a direct link to my Twitter page. I can now send quick short update notes using it, either by IM, twitter.com, or text message. And all y’all can recieve them those three ways, or read them here.

Character: Malcolm (Lshoan Harah)

On most Sunday nights, I can currently be found portraying a vampire named Malcolm at the Vampire: The Masquerade troupe game Lshoan Harah. Malcolm is a Nosferatu, whose face was smashed into a fence and had his right ear mangled by his Sire. This is my first attempt at his makeup.

Adventures in Hair Dye Land

A really close closeup of the purple.So, the blue faded into a mottled mess. It was interesting looking though, various shades of blue and gold (due to the original bleaching process). So, a new bleaching was done, to attempt to get an even color to start with. Of course, this wasn’t exactly the best idea. I actually ended up with platinum roots, with green ends. No pictures of that part though. Applied the purple dye, which came out very well, but since there was no red left in my hair to begin with, under most lighting (which tends to be florescent) my hair appeared blue. It looked brilliantly purple in my bathroom (which has very warm tungsten lighting).

The back of my head faded much faster than the rest of my hair. I figure that it must have rubbed off on my pillowcase (since it was purple instead of its original gray). I had some purple and blue dye left, so I mixed it together, and used that. It turned out fairly well, but looked more blue than purple.

After this faded, since I was going to be visiting my parents, I attempted to dye my hair black. But instead it looked navy blue. When I went to get my hair cut, I asked the girls there what they thought. They told me that since my hair had no red pigment in it, not only would it look blue, the dyes would tend to fade a lot faster. So, I dyed my hair red. The faded parts looked really great as red, and the navy blue parts were then close to black. Then on top of this, I used the black dye, and thus my hair was indistinguishable from my natural color.

And that’s the update on my adventures in hair dye land. I’m sure many more adventures are to come!

Pictures after the jump. Read more

Hands On: The Wii Zapper

On Sunday I acquired a Wii Zapper™ that came bundled with Link’s Crossbow Training. The Zapper is essentially just a piece of plastic that you insert the Wii Remote™ (or Wiimote) and the Wii Nunchuk™ into. The Zapper is held with your dominant hand (the one with the trigger finger) in the front with your other hand on the back (where the Nunchuk is located). At first this position feels odd and backwards, but after some time, you get used to it. This will tend to be the configuration most games will probably use now that the Zapper has been released. The manual also condones an alternate configuration where you do not attach the Nunchuk to the Zapper chasis. Many games released prior to the Zapper will likely use this configuration. The Zapper sports a larger B button trigger, that makes pressing it much easier.

As far as Link’s Crossbow Training is concerned, it’s fairly fun and surprisingly well done for the price of the bundle (US$24.99). There are nine levels with three stages each, and various modes and objects that you have to shoot. Shootables include targets, boxes, pots, signs, dummies, and various monsters from the Zelda series. A number of familiar locations are present, as well as a number of familiar friendly creatures.

Of course I had to try the Zapper with Alien Syndrome. Playing my favorite class, The Seal, was great with the Zapper. I felt like I had a bit more fine grained control of my targeting reticle, and being able to use both hands to steady my weapon was really great. The “Nunchuk Attached Configuration” isn’t completely compatible though — two of three minigames require separate movement of the Nunchuk from the Remote. This isn’t a problem for me because I don’t really like to play those two minigames. “Nunchuk Separate Configuration” is completely compatible, and feels just fine. I feel like my shooting is a little less stable this way, but it feels much better than just holding the Remote alone–the constant pressing of the B button and aiming with the Remote alone starts to hurt my wrist after a while. The Zapper alleviates this problem. Note: Alien Syndrome isn’t the only shooter that makes me suffer from wrist ache–Metroid Prime 3: Corruption also causes this problem for me.

Should you get it? Sure! A nice budget game and a well made, sturdy peripheral that makes pumping the trigger and aiming much easier. This piece of plastic isn’t like those useless sports attachments.

Playing with ustream.tv

Colin and I were playing with the recording feature of ustream.tv. This is what resulted:

Alien Syndrome sells over 200K units

Alien Syndrome PSP Cover FrontI was very excited to hear that Alien Syndrome has currently sold more than 200,000 copies in North America and Europe. Hopefully that number will continue to rise, especially during the upcoming holiday season! :-D

‘Cause You Gotta Have Blue Hair

Another angle.I finally dyed my hair. I’ve been wanting to do the blue hair thing for a while now, and one of my friends helped me do it this past weekend. Seems to be a big hit so far.

Process:

  1. Apply bleach
  2. Let sit 60 minutes
  3. Rinse
  4. Apply bleach
  5. Let sit 60 minutes
  6. Rinse
  7. Apply Blue
  8. Let sit 30 minutes
  9. Rinse
  10. Apply Blue
  11. Let sit 30 minutes
  12. Rinse, shampoo, rinse, condition, rinse
  13. Observe the awesome

Pictures after jump! Read more

Alien Syndrome, Wii & PSP (USA) Released

Alien Syndrome PSP Cover FrontFinally, Alien Syndrome was released today. The game is an Action RPG, in which you play the role of Aileen Harding on her attempt to once again save the human race from the parasitic Alien Syndrome.

Alien Syndrome Trailer (psp footage)

Official Website:

http://www.sega.com/gamesite/aliensyndrome/fullsite/index.html

Update: December 17th, 2007 – Added trailer

← Previous PageNext Page →