Last-Minute Links

I’m defending my dissertation proposal today at 1:00, and then I leave for Seattle tomorrow for a week. I’m headed to the Penny Arcade Expo, and I won’t be bringing my laptop, so things will probably be pretty quiet here for a bit. Here’s a few last-minute links to check out in the meantime:

Game ratings: Eurogamer (link via Game Politics) reports on how some developers feel that the ESRB is veering a little too close to McCarthyism. The examples offered here—which include seemingly arbitrary guidelines, the complete proscription of sexual content, and quashing even satirical resistance to authority—seem pretty reminiscent of the Comics Code, which arguably stunted that industry for decades.

Geek venues: Jacob sends along a link to UK geek venues. Every country should have a map like this (it would make my job easier).

Women in IT: Slashdot features a link to a Computerworld article about how women in the IT industry cope with the men’s-locker-room atmosphere. I link directly to Slashdot to begin with because it actually refers back to one of its own posts as an example of the men’s club attitude.

Almost casual gaming: Kotaku reports that European Xbox 360s are seeing some price cuts and some renaming; it’s unclear to me whether the US consoles will be similarly renamed. The high-end “Elite” system will keep its name. The “Premium” (which Kotaku recently referred to as “the standard,” as it seems to be the bare minimum for playing games on actual disks) will be renamed the “Pro”; it recently dropped from $400 to $350 over here, and comes with a hard drive, a wireless controller, and a headset for online voice chat (though the online service is an extra $50 a year to actually play games on it). The “Core” system, which will be renamed the “Arcade” version in Europe, recently dropped from $300 to $280, and has always included a wired controller, with other peripherals extra.

The “Arcade” version will be coming with a memory card preloaded with five Xbox Live Arcade games, perhaps including Pac-man. This sounds something like the strategy I suggested in a recent post—that is, making a cheaper Xbox system more explicitly aimed at casual, downloadable games—but it’s still priced way too high for actual casual gaming. Even when Microsoft is trying to go “casual,” it still sort of veers toward “hardcore.” (Can I coin “hardcasual”? “casualcore”? Maybe I should just stop trying.)

That’s all for now. Feel free to drop me an email if you feel like saying hello at PAX!

Best of Craiglist: Nerds Are Jerks

The Morning News directed me to a “best of Craigslist” (Boston) essay about the difference between being “cool” in the US and being “mates” with fellows in Australia. Frankly, the essay confuses me. I think it is saying that living in an “advertising culture” makes American boys who get picked last on the playground grow up in to self-absorbed hipsters and geeks, whereas boys in Australia are all about selflessness and group membership.

Continue reading “Best of Craiglist: Nerds Are Jerks”

Nerds Make Sense of Love Lives Through Research

A study linked to from Slashdot suggests that “smarter teens have less sex.” Highlights from the comments include:

Well, then I must have been ultrasmart… 😦

And:

Now I am conflicted. Half of my inner geek wants to laugh and take the joke, and the other wants to rail on you for creating causation from correlation.

(Thanks to Dan Moren for the link.)

Fantastic Voyage

This blog will probably be pretty quiet for the next few weeks, as I’m headed to Lisbon, Paris, and San Diego (a mix of research trips and a few cheap days in Paris I couldn’t pass up). I’ll be returning on Monday, July 30th, and will have intermittent email access in the meantime.

Here is something to help keep busy while I am gone: thousands of clickable science-fiction magazine covers, arranged chronologically and by hue (link via Design Observer). Happy July!

Looking for Comic Con Roommates/Floorspace

If you or someone you know may be headed to the San Diego Comic Con International and would like to help put a roof over my head, please email me. I basically just need a space to sleep for two nights, as I’ll be busy working during the day and not in town very long anyway. Also, if you help me, I will buy you a sandwich, because buying sandwiches for people is kind of my thing.

Miscellaneous Links for June 20, 2007

While we won’t see the Revenge of the Nerds remake that commanded a giant space at last year’s San Diego Comic Con, that doesn’t mean there’s no market for movies about lovable losers. Case in point, Sydney White and the Seven Dorks hits theaters in 2008. (Link courtesy fellow Annenberger Emily Thorson.)

Slashdot has a comment thread going about a Cool Tech Zone article on the “psychology of fanboys.” Also check out the discussion on whether scientific consensus is a threat to democracy.

And finally, Keith sends me a photo of this weirdly adorably page from the Houston Chronicle. Fortunately, the paper’s website has the whole article on the LOLcats phenomenon online, kicked off with: “Computer geeks have their own niche in pop culture. Sometimes, something crazed from that niche escapes and runs rampant among the masses.”

Two Views on Kids and the Outdoors

The Washington Post has a recent article about parents, governments, and activists being concerned that kids don’t get enough time outdoors anymore. The Daily Mail has a somewhat similar article, addressing the psychological issues of nature deprivation, and the narrow range of space that children tend to roam outdoors.

These articles sound like they are about the same thing, but they read quite differently. The Washington Post article cites some research about kids’ diminished outdoor play time, and offers a lot of anecdotal evidence implicating modern media, especially video games:

[Last Child in the Woods author Richard Louv’s] views have touched a nerve—in an era when people tell stories of backyard play sets that are barely used and children who are so accustomed to playing video games that they use their thumbs to ring doorbells or dial phones.

The Daily Mail article also cites research about kids’ diminished outdoor time and its effects. That research, however, implicates parents, not media, for too much hand-holding and too little freedom:

[Speaking of her son, one mother] said: “He can go out in the crescent but he doesn’t tend to go out because the other children don’t. We put a bike in the car and go off to the country where we can all cycle together.

“It’s not just about time. Traffic is an important consideration, as is the fear of abduction, but I’m not sure whether that’s real or perceived.”

I don’t have any conclusions to offer; just wanted to offer something to think about.

Filling the Gizmodo-Shaped Hole in My Life

After that link Dan sent me today, I went ahead and added Gizmodo to my regular blog feeds, sort of as a trial run. Now I’m wondering how I managed to miss doing this sooner. I guess I figured “gadgets” were kind of beyond the scope of my dissertation, but this is much more broadly about geek culture and technology than I imagined. Just now I came across a post that begins with this priceless sentence:

“Since you’re at Gizmodo, and given our usual demographic, there’s a pretty good chance that at one time or another you wished for super powers.”

I love that. (And not just because it’s illustrative of the stuff I’m writing about regarding overlapping media use groups.)

The next post I looked at in more detail was about McFly 2015, a grassroots campaign to get Nike to manufacture the shoes that Michael J. Fox wore in Back to the Future 2. I’m sure I should have something clever to say here about the blurry boundaries between mainstream science-fiction/cult films/designer clothing, but honestly, my mind has just been blown. I guess I’ll keep this blog awhile.

Update: Wait, they have an entire category for items related to nerd furnishings? I have to step away from this before I go into some sort of ethnographer frenzy.