Continuing on…..
Seattle Waterfront Arcade
Because of this particular arcade’s proximity to a lot of Seattle’s tourist attractions on the waterfront, I suspect that local arcade game enthusiasts may not know about this one or want to deal with parking down in the increasingly popular area (according to a new report Seattle now ranks ninth in the nation for cruise ship embarkations). It’s small, and doesn’t have very many games, but if you’re in the area for, say, a burger or to look at fish it’s not a bad place to hop in a play a few ticket games or a game of Tekken 5.

Tags: games · blog · Seattle
August 16th, 2007 · 1 Comment
Admittedly, I’m a chart geek. I have copies of all the relevant Tufte books. I feel that I know a deceptive or misleading chart when I see one.
Let’s look at this one at cnn.com, about obesity rates in the US.

At first glance, I noted, damn, look at the red, the south sure is fat. And what’s up with Michigan? How is Indiana, Ohio and Illinois this strip of thinness in the bulging belly of the midwest? What’s going on in those states? Then I looked more closely.

What’s going on here? The color (specifically the intensities of the red and blue shades) aren’t scaling evenly at all. A state could be 24 percent obese (according to their standard, of course) and in the land of the gray-blueish healthy people, but be 25 percent obese and be in a horrible, red, fat fat fat land. This sensationalistic and fundamentally unsound color shading methodology is horribly oversimplifying and misrepresenting the issues and data. The progression of colors, bluntly, is not granular or linear enough.
This is very deceptive and unhelpful to anyone who doesn’t look at the information presented carefully.
Stupid and bad chart, cnn.com.
Tags: information design · blog · digital life
It was heralded over postcards, a voice mail on my home phone, my cable box messages…. the new Program Guide and DVR interface is now on my Motorola cable box here in Seattle!
Let’s get this out of the way. I hate, hate, hate this box. It’s incredibly flaky to the point that I can’t trust it to record a program properly without dropouts or crashes. The interface is clunky. There’s no intelligent managing of recorded content and the to-do list like my still-hooked-up Series 2 tiVo. But it doesn’t cost me much more per month to have the DVR, because I’m already paying for high definition programming and needed the HD box, and my tiVo doesn’t do high-def.
I had recently reformatted and resetted my DVR, so it had no recordings and no subscriptions on it. Weeds Season 3 (drool) finally started up again last night, and there was a new Big Love on as well. So I figured I’d give the new DVR a spin and set up some recordings for the girlfriend and I to watch later on this week.
Fine. Yes, the Interface is now totally different. I can’t exactly say that it’s better or worse than the previous interface yet. It doesn’t feel faster or slower. But when I went to search for Big Love, I noticed something somewhat different in the text input interface. Instead of the expected on screen array of letters to scroll through to enter “B…I…G……” I saw something that looked like this:

Wait, what? I have a Masters degree in Interactive Technology. WTF is that?!?!?!
I then realized what was going on. You remember how you entered your name when you won a high school at an arcade game? These games had no keyboard, usually just a joystick and a few buttons, so you had to scroll the numbers, letters and punctuation for each of the three letters you were usually alloted for your initials or some dirty word.

This interface works the same way as those arcade games, except it was five letters.
I’m not saying that this is a horrible interface. It isn’t. In some cases, it might actually be faster than an onscreen keyboard, and it definitely takes up less space on the screen. I can see how it may require explanation to some folks though - it’s not as immediately obvious as an onscreen keyboard. Some arrows indicating that the boxes are indeed scroll boxes wouldn’t hurt, as a start.
What bothers me though is, why not adaptive / predictive text technologies in DVRs? They work great on cell phones, after all. All of the possible words are already neatly indexed on the DVR as the TV program listings. Let’s say I enter a “B” in the first box…. there’s no reason why I should have to scroll through letters or numbers in the second box that would lead to words or partial words that don’t exist in the listings. There’s no show that could possibly start with the string “B2,” for example, so why should I have to scroll through the number “2″ to get to a possible letter?
edit: I just also realized something as well - why not use the numeric pad of the remote controller like a cell phone number pad, with each number key corresponding to 2-3 letters? That would obviously work just fine with predictive text technologies, and is a familiar interface to anyone with a cell phone.
This is just example of how clumsy these boxes are. These are devices that are designed for the mass market, not just geeks. Pull it together guys!
Tags: technology · blog · Seattle
Continuing on my thoughts about places to play arcade games here in Seattle…. some thoughts about a place near Eastlake…..
Jillians’s Billiards

This establishment seems to be primarily known as a place to play pool, but they have a decent selection of arcade games. They have a wider variety of games than the others listed - including a selection of driving games (including a multiuser Daytona USA set up), a 360 degree VR game that involves gunning down soldiers on the beach, and a Sega Marine Fishing machine (enjoy your fishing!).
Beer and food is also availible, which is a plus. And for you retro gamers, I remember that there’s a few cabinets with older games too. Not a bad joint, but not a mindblowing or particularly novel experience.
Tags: games · technology · blog · Seattle
awwwww!

From National Geographic’s website.
Tags: red pandas! · blog
The recent launch of CrankysArcade’s Blog about arcade games at IGN.com had me thinking about the last few times I’ve been out to a video arcade! Growing up there were places out in suburban Seattle that I went to several times a year; one was called “Zones” I think, the other was the “Fun Plex.” The late, lamented Wizards of the Coast center here in the U District (which I’ll rant about later) also had a great arcade, featuring a very rare game in particular.
Sadly, these places are gone. They disappeared at a time where home consoles were just beginning to replicate the experience of playing an arcade game in the comfort of your own home. I’d estimate that this occurred somewhere around the Super NES / Genesis time to the early days of the Playstation and Sega Saturn. Certainly, the first amazingly great port of Street Fighter II certainly couldn’t have helped the plight of struggling arcade owners.
The big draw for me, even in the post 16 bit world, was to play games that couldn’t be replicated at home due to peripheral requirements, such as Galaxy Force II, which featured a spinning cockpit, or those great multiplayer beat ‘em ups with friends, in particular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Mercs (which I still fire up on my XBox once in awhile).
But I digress. Since moving back to the Seattle area in 2004, I’ve visited several arcades. Let’s go over two of them in this post:
The Fun Forest in Seattle Center
Oof. The ambiance is not the best, but it is the Fun Forest and it is Seattle Center - you know, basically a somewhat strange and aging amusement park in a chronically underachieving wasteland of potential. Of interest to gamers, there’s at least one working Dance Dance Revolution machine, and an aging but functional six person X-Men: the Arcade Game cabinet. Admittedly, I was bored and early before an opera once and went inside for a few games of X-Men. That was a great, great game.

Funtasia
I recently visited this place for my girlfriend’s friend’s bachelorette party. Just to get this off my chest, the mini golf course is awful, both in design and upkeep. The par set for each hole was nonsensical, there were loose bricks from the course just laying around, and the many of the holes themselves aren’t even marked clearly. However, the go karts and batting cakes looked fun. The Lazer Tag also looked fun (I didn’t partake), but the scoring system seemed to be needlessly complex and I ran into a half naked man in the bathroom attempting to mop off the sweat he accumulated during a heated session of the game with paper towels. The snack bar was disgustingly delicious; I ordered a hot dog from the rotating sausage machine and the girl basically said “you don’t want that,” so I settled for an order of nachos. there’s something about fake cheese product being squeezed out of a heated foil bag by tongs that gets my mouth watering.
Oops, I’m digressing.
The arcade itself was surprisingly decent, mainly because it was charmingly out of date. There were at least two Dance Dance Revolution machines. There was a working Silent Scope, which in the process of enthusiastically dumping a few quarters into and playing I managed to alienate at least one member of our party (was it the happy gunning down of snipers in the crotch?). The real finds at this arcade are a working Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cabinet and a working Simpsons arcade game cabinet. Fantastic. After seeing the movie and enjoying some of the 7-11 merch that my girlfriend brought me one day, it was great to be able to replay another game that will probably never see a console release due to licensing issues… ever.

(if you have to ask, I played Marge)
Tags: games · technology · blog · Seattle
Hey, Sanju made Cute Overload a few weeks ago!
Check it out here.
Cute Overload is a nice beacon of cute fuzzy-wuzziness in what can be a cruel, cruel Internet sometimes….
Tags: red pandas! · blog
This is a repost (slightly cleaned up and with a few links added) from an oft-linked-to blog post I wrote in 2004…. enjoy!
Technological Transparency.
Interactive digital art installations have an immediate hurdle to face when presenting to the general public. The problem is that no one wants to look like an idiot and mess up in front of other people. More specifically, when someone is facing an interactive installation that he or she has never seen or experienced before, he or she does not want to do something wrong and possibly (a) mess up the project or (b) look ineffectual and unknowledgable.
This is why children have more fun with interactive art than adults do! They tend to be less self conscious about going up to something and pounding on it. They’re also more likely to understand the vocabulary of interactivity with kid oriented science museums and video games out there.
Adults are more likely to associate computers with work and productivity. If you’re presenting work on a computer, you have to break past that in presentation or you lose perception and immersion points immediately. You don’t want your stuff to be perceived as a “pretty screen saver” unless, of course, your work actually is supposed to be a pretty screen saver.
Some quick tips that I’ve picked up so far:
- Hide the CPU. If it is at all possible, the CPU should be hidden behind a wall or barrier of some sorts. Having a CPU exposed can look sloppy and god forbid, cause your project to be accidentally turned off or rebooted. Most CPUs look ugly anyway (if it’s one of those sexy new G5 IMacs that’s a totally different case….).
- On the same vein, flat screen monitors are nice and sexy, but make sure they work for the colors that you’re presenting in your project. I like flat screen monitors because their front panels tend to be nicer looking and they’re easy to hang on a wall. They’re also easier to enclose or build a frame around, which, if appropriate, adds a nice touch.
- If your project absolutely requires a mouse, consider a wireless mouse on a pedestal attached to a tether or a trackball. With one show I did a while back the wireless mouse was a godsend, as less cables are always better. Trackballs are good because they don’t require flat space to roll across to use, and people are generally familiar with their operation.
- Signs or placards. People do just about every approach when it comes to signage. Some people like to put up a poster carefully explaining technical, conceptual, and technical details about their projects as well as instructions. Some only put up the name of the piece and the title.
I think the first approach (an extensive poster) is awful, and I had to endure it while I was at ITP during their school shows. It’s horribly redundant to put a picture of the project on the poster next to the project, so don’t do it. It really depends on the environment, but many times the specific details about the technology are not important or relevant, so use your judgment there. Don’t give away elements of the user experience. Otherwise, you’re ruining the surprise, or at the very least, the users’ curiosity and spirit of discovery.
A traditional art example is this. How many times have you looked at a painting in a gallery and pondered it and wondered what it was (okay, so this is probably abstract art we’re talking about here), and then you read the title and was disappointed and suddenly disinterested and walked away?
The same thing can happen when you blow the fun on the informational poster. Don’t.
However, I don’t necessarily think it’s a bad thing to at least start the user on the right track. I felt that Eyebeam and Ars Prix Electronica blew it with the Prix Selection show they did this summer in this regard. When I visited I watched as people went into the gallery, looked at various works, got confused before they interacted with them, and simply left, especially with Interactive Plantgrowing.
Every person who walks out because they don’t even know where to start is another potential patron of the art lost.
Tags: blog · development · art
As a nice gift, my girlfriend Laura adopted a Red Panda for me from the kind folks at the Red Panda Project. Her name is Sanju.
I personally prefer the Red Panda over the “classic” Giant Panda. There are two at the Woodland Park Zoo that we visited on a sunny day last weekend. They’re in a quiet corner of the zoo in the Conservation Yards, usually hanging out, curled up like the Firefox logo in the branches of the trees in the exhibit. Check ‘em out!
We had a loud and spirited discussion at work about which panda was better. See for yourself here and here…..

Tags: red pandas! · blog · Seattle
Yesterday I was determined to go hiking, despite the fact that I had gone canoeing on Lake Washington on the previous day. Unfortunately, I had a truncated day, as I had to pick up vegetables for work from a local farmer at the West Seattle green market. So, I thumbed through the guidebook and found Lake Twenty-Two, a 5.4 mile hike right near Mt. Pilchuck. After dropping off the vegetables at home and packing my backpack, I set off.
What is immediately fantastic about this hike is that there isn’t a long drive to the trailhead on a gravel road; the trailhead is just two miles away from the Verlot Service Center inside the Mt. Baker - Snoqualmie Forest, about 13 miles away from Granite Falls. It’s basically an uphill climb for 2.7 miles through some lovely forest and then some rocks until you hit the lake. I was huffing and puffing for the first 2 miles but then it got easy just in time for the trail to pleasantly level off.
What’s interesting about this area is that it’s a research area, and it’s kept in immaculate condition; no camping or fires are allowed and there are really strange looking plants about that I hadn’t seen before. It’s a fairly popular trail, although I didn’t run into very many fellow hikers and was able to find plenty of time alone on the Sunday afternoon (or maybe Saturday is the prime day for hiking?). Apprently, the area has been set aside by scientists to study how actively unmanaged land can maintain itself. I would say nature’s doing a pretty good job.
At the end of the trail, the lake moreoreless suddenly appears, and it’s a majestic sight. It’s surrounded on three sides by forested cliffs and the north face of Mt. Pilchuck. The lake has a boardwalk running around a portion of it, and there is a trail that loops around the rest of the way around the lake. Apparently these are recent developments….! I walked around the lake, had lunch at the base of Mt. Pilchuck, and happily galloped back down. I then drove back home, picking up Thai food on the way in, ate, showered, and fell asleep on my bed. This was a good Sunday…..
Tags: blog · outdoors