November 3rd, 2005

FIFA 06 Review

You’ll find it here, if you’re looking for it.

It’s been a long time since I played a videogame for fun. I don’t really count World of Warcraft, since it’s more of a lifestyle choice. I think a lot of it is because I haven’t seen a game I had an overwhelming urge to buy and play. And I heard just recently that they’ve pushed the next Tomb Raider game back until next year. Grrrrrrrrrrrr. I was looking forward to that.

You probably need to know this about me: I’ve played every Tomb Raider game there’s been, and I’ve finished all but two of them. In fact, I only bought the original PlayStation because Tomb Raider II didn’t get released on the Sega Saturn. I also hate it when they add new abilities in the game and take away ones I’m used to. Frankly, when I like a game, I want the sequel to just be like playing more of the game. I seem to be alone in that regard, and sales of the Tomb Raider games haven’t been all that great the last few times out. The next one looks all revamped and stuff, but I’m still psyched about it. Now I have to wait :(

Also, I won’t be getting an Xbox 360 at launch. As much as I want one (the fancy version, not the lame cheaper one!), I just can’t afford it. I’ve got more bills than I know what to do with and Christmas is coming, so I need to save for gifts. Plus, I really need a bed and a new couch.

Oh, well, right?

So, there’s your review of FIFA 06 in case you were planning to buy it.

November 1st, 2005

The Final Numbers

The grand experiment is over. My well-worn Barnes & Noble discount card has expired, and my days of getting a discount on hot chocolate are over… until I renew my card, that is.

So here are the numbers:

  • Amount spent on discount card: $25.00
  • Amount of discount per hot chocolate: $0.31
  • Number of hot chocolates I needed to buy to save enough to make the discount card purchase worthwhile: 81
  • Number of hot chocolates I actually bought: 145
  • Amount saved: $44.95
  • Amount spent on hot chocolates: $392.95
  • Number of days I was able to use the discount card: 384
  • Average number of hot chocolates purchased per day: 0.3776
  • Average time between hot chocolate purchases: 2.65 days

These numbers don’t quite match up with projections, but I really didn’t expect them to. These numbers also do not take into consideration the discounts I received on books purchased, which would make the discount card purchase even more worthwhile. I wanted to stick with just the hot chocolate numbers for this experiment.

Some time earlier this month I learned that I could use my discount card until the end of the month I purchased it in a year earlier. That’s why there are 384 days listed above instead of 365 like you might expect. (It’s also why I’m waiting until tomorrow to renew my card.)

Working under that assumption, I went in for my final hot chocolate purchase earlier today. I wanted it to be all dramatic, full of slo-mo and scored by James Horner. Instead, I was told that my card had expired.

WHAT?!?

It’s the last day of the month! The last day it’s good! This makes no sense! I was actually a little ticked off about it, but it was a pointless rage, as there was nothing I could do about it. Corporations will do whatever arbitrary thing they want to do. Want to fight them over 31 cents? Go ahead, they don’t care.

The nice girl behind the counter (Mindy) went ahead and did some sort of register magic and gave me the discount anyway (saying, “You’re here all the time”) but it wasn’t the same. I was fairly dejected.

I am reminded of “The Hollow Men” by T. S. Eliot:

This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.

Ah, well. It was a good run.

So… what should I count now?

October 27th, 2005

In My Opinion

Every so often, something beautiful happens and you can only hope you’re in the exact right position to witness it. I’m not talking “plastic bag floating on the wind” beautiful, either, I’m talking straight-up, old-fashioned, wonderful neatness.

Last week my friend Kat alerted me to a situation where I might get paid for giving my opinion. Imagine! Not only did people want to hear what I had to say, they would PAY me for the privilege! I wholeheartedly endorse this trend. If only I could start a business based on this model. People would come in and say, “Should I eat at Olive Garden or McDonald’s?” and I would give them my opinion (Olive Garden today, McD’s tomorrow) and they would pay me and then they would go away.

Eventually I would expand onto the web. People could pay me via PayPal and I would do live “Opinion Support” using fancy Java chat applets.

Soon there would be chains. I’d have pre-set opinions and people could buy packages to have some around for when they needed them.

Let’s face it: we’ve all got opinions on just about everything. We happily offer them, even if nobody wants them. I’ll modify a well-known phrase and make it more family-friendly for inclusion here: Opinions are like skunks – everyone has one and they usually stink.

This whole blog is about me having opinions on stuff and wanting a place to put them. We have a hard time keeping our opinions to ourselves, and the more we know a person, the more likely it is we’ll give them our opinions. Random strangers we run into are fairly safe from our opinion-spewing, or, at least, safe from hearing it. We’ll still think it, but we might never say outloud, “Blue hair doesn’t really work on you,” “That bumper sticker reveals your ignorance,” or “You’re very attractive.”

So imagine getting the chance to vocalize your opinions and get paid for it! Awesome!

This particular instance was for the local paper. They’re getting a new fancy printing press in the near future, and it will require a layout change, so they decided to get opinions from people on some ideas they have. There were about 15 men in my group, and I was the youngest in what was apparently the “33 to 812” age group. There was a group of women in the group before us, and I know there are more (and younger) groups tomorrow night.

It was interesting to me to gather with these fellows I’d never seen before and likely won’t see again. There were some factory workers, a priest, a realtor, a principal (from my same school corporation, even, but not from a school where I work), some Purdue employees, and some retirees. I found it interesting and sometimes humorous what aspects of the layout they focused on – sports came up a lot, the comics were mentioned, and the TV schedule was dissected at length by one fellow (the priest).

At the end of the hour and a half, we were mostly in consensus about which version of the three we liked best. We were in total agreement about which one we did not like, so I guess that’s something. About half of us said we like the heading on one but the layout of the other.

I had this happen to me once before, in the mall in Denver, Colorado. I was on tour for the summer, and another fellow in the group and I got stopped by a lady who asked if we wanted to participate in a survey. We did. We watched a gum commercial and then answered questions about it. I think we got paid $5 or so.

Tonight, though, I felt I was in the big leagues. Not only did we get cookies, soda, water, fruit, and coffee, we got paid $45. $30 an hour? Not too shabby, my friends.

It was a beautiful thing.