The Twilight Report

Your Home For Snappy Repartee

On being useful

The other day, someone at work asked me (not entirely out of the blue), if I “had anyone useful” in my family.

Without missing a beat I answered: “No, they are all scientists.”

Because it’s true, at least in the context of the conversation, which made the question more like do you have anyone with skills that are useful to ordinary people in your family. I mean, they contribute to the sum of human knowledge, and arguably do important things, but hardly useful skills, such as being able to cut hair (like Nina’s husband) or even fixing a Windows XP machine full of viruses that you stupidly downloaded (like me. er, the fixing part, not the downloading of viruses part).

“But wait,” I added, “it gets worse, because I grew up in a company town, where the ‘company’ was a federal laboratory, and everyone who lived in the town were also scientists.”

Later, when I was explaining this conversation to my mum (who didn’t seem to find it as inherently funny as I did), she pointed out to me that there are also engineers in Los Alamos.

“Well, they can be useful.” I said.

“Not those engineers.”

Mum seems to hold engineers in the same esteem as people who live in Melbourne (“seriously,” I can imagine her saying, “if you are in Australia, why wouldn’t you live in Sydney?”).

I know this attitude sort of filtered down to me, unfortunately, because early on when I met my friends in New York who also worked at The Company, I said with some disdain that I wasn’t an engineer, when one of them described us as a group of engineers. I have always preferred the term “programmer” or “coder” (which is actually different from what my friends do), although I do have to admit my job title was “software engineer” for those six years in New York.

They are pretty cool engineers though. They do things like make the processors that go into all of the next generation video game consoles. (When the dust settles from this round of the Console Wars, I don’t know if Sony or Nintendo will be left standing, but either way The Company stands to make a tidy profit either way). More importantly, they are cool people, who know how to have a good time and be good friends.

I told my photography teacher what my friends did once, and she thought those GPUs The Company was making were a waste of resources that could have been more appropriately allocated. Seriously though, who is she kidding, she is a professional photographer. What is she contributing to the world that is so awesome that she can go around judging other people? There is nothing wrong with being a photographer, but there is everything wrong with being judgemental and condescending.

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Found Objects

Some recent found objects...

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Hand sofas/chairs which remind me of Arrested Development


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Old Nintendo Famicom Console.

That last one if for Tyler. It was the Japanese version of the Nintendo 8-bit NES that rescued the video game industry back from the jaws of death. I saw it in a store window, though it is only for decoration, and not for sale.

I’ve been reading about the PS3 and the Nintendo Wii on both Slashdot and in The Economist, and it is interesting the different ways in which they cover the video game industry. They quoted a Nintendo exec as recognizing that the video game market, in Japan at least, is shrinking and that Japan, unlike Sony, is trying to engage non hard core gamers, rather that trying to fight to regain supremacy from Sony or Micro$oft of a shrinking market. Why I think this is historically interesting, is because Nintendo flourished in a market considered dead in the early 1980s, largely due to the way the marketed the NES. That and the fact that the hard core gamers have turned on Sony recently means that Nintendo has an opportunity.

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