Playing elaborate games

“Strange to think…most games were played without more apparatus than a ball or two and a few sticks and perhaps a piece of netting. Imagine the folly of allowing people to play elaborate games which do nothing whatever to increase consumption” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World.

Axure 5.6 outputs to google docs

‘O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!’ No need to buy/install Microsoft Office to export specification docs – from Axure. Just generate them, then upload them to Google Docs and you have them ready to share. This works fine with version 5.6 of Axure on a Macintosh, so please let me know if this is the same for PC.

Shed video installation

Come with me, into the garden, I’ll open the shed door. Now take a seat. I just need to tuck you in with this crocheted rug. There’s cushions behind your head and the screen is above you. When you’ve finished just push the shed door open.
[slideshow]

You are sitting in the dark inside a garden shed looking up as some titles slide across the screen. The video begins, what’s going on, why are you sitting is a shed at the Southern edges of Tooting? You came to the Wandsworth Artists Open House (London, UK) and have seen some great paintings, jewelery, pictures, sculpture and crafts.

When invited to see a video in my shed “be gentle with me I’m quite old”, “There’s witnesses incase I don’t come back”, “This is a bit scary”.

After being seated in an old Loyd Loom chair in a darkened shed. I lean in and cover them with a crocheted blanket and say “Here’s something to keep you comfy – there’s a cushion behind your head so just lean back”. People said “Are you going to lock me in?”, You’re not going to take a picture of me and make me look stupid?”.

The video lasted 10 minutes. I stopped telling people this as they kept thinking it was to long. So I said it took roughly 5 minutes and I got a lot more takers. I had three people waiting their turn last Sunday and today. Only one person left the shed before the video was finished. I was usually in the kitchen when they came through the back door. Most people said they thought it was good, interesting, a very clever ideas, a genius idea. “I’ve seen a totally new perspective on walking down the street”, “I couldn’t stand the lack of control”, “don’t lamp posts look amazing”, “I wanted to know where I was”. “it took me a while, but a finally worked out what I was looking at”. One women suggested I post in on YouTube, I said it’d be hard to get people to look at it from below, she said she was a health visitor and thought it would be useful to show parents a babies perspective so they didn’t leave them for hours under a plain ceiling. I had a few good conversations with people who seemed quite inspired by the experience. A toddlers perspective of a dog was suggested as another project…

With a a couple of exceptions if someone saw the video they encouraged their friends to take a look too. Successsss 🙂 The video of the shed experience is now ready to see on Vimeo.

Bell or knocker

TACK, TACK, TACK. The sound came hacking through my breakfast. Someone was tapping very hard on the glass of our front door. On opening the door was a Royal Mail driver holding out a parcel. I asked him if he could knock on the wood not the glass. “It’s always something with you people. Get a bell or a knocker” I replied that we were thinking of this, but until then could he knock on the wood of the door. “Get a bell or a knocker”. Less of a conversation more two monologues. I pressed my point and asked if he was going to stop tapping on the glass as it was damaging it. While walking away I was told once more to invest in specific door enhancements. I closed the door, annoyed. I grabbed a pen nipped back out into the street and took a note of the reg of the Royal Mail van.

The next day I had call from my wife who was at home with the baby. She was upset. A supervisor had called round and was telling her to get a bell or knocker and that the driver had reported that I had be aggressive. The supervisor kept repeating that we needed to get a bell.

On returning home I intended to now put in a complaint about Royal Mail supervisors intimidating my wife, but was swept away from the task by baby amongst other things.

A few days later – I was working from home – a knock at the door. A different man is holding a parcel for us. I take the parcel say thanks and am about to close the door when he introduces himself by name and says he called round and spoke to my wife about getting a bell. I told him how she had felt about the previous exchange. He apologies, it seemed genuine. He then asked if I was going to get a bell or knocker. I pointed out that it was not the place of the Royal Mail to tell me what to put on my front door, that we had been living here for years and had many parcels delivered and everyone else either rattled the letter box or knocked on the wood. I added that we were thinking of getting a knocker when we found one that suited the door and the house. In midst conversation the driver avoiding eye contact with me walked up to the supervisor and asked loudly “Are they getting a bell?” and walked away.

I was then told that the driver had put in a complaint against me for being aggressive. I suggested that he had merely anticipated that I was going to complain and got in first. I told the Super that I was impressed that so much effort was being put in with all these visits, when normally if you complain to Royal Mail it seems to be totally ignored. He said the issue is mostly with people complaining about drivers not knocking and leaving cards. I assured him that I had no issue or complaint with the driver. And asked how he’d take it if someone came to his home and tried to tell him what to have on his front door. He gave me a couple of phone numbers if I had a problems and his name.

I returned to my morning feeling several degrees hotter than I had before.

The sausage is a cunning bird- childrens rhyme

“The sausage is a cunning bird
With feathers long and wavy;
It swims about the frying pan
And makes its nest in gravy”

Found this gem while reading a very good book ‘The lore and language of schoolchildren’ by Iona and Peter Opie. A study of the songs and rhymes children sing and how they spread and change. Fascinating how old rhymes stay mostly in tact over decades, but children often believe that they (or someone they know) invited it.

Playing games can save the planet

Inspiring ideas from TED: Games like World of Warcraft give players the means to save worlds, and incentive to learn the habits of heroes. What if we could harness this gamer power to solve real-world problems? Jane McGonigal says we can, and explains how.
[ted id=799]
Great to see this as it chimes nicely with a project we’re developing, that, in it’s own modest way aims to use game and competition elements mechanisms to change behavior and hopefully get people to re-discover the joys of local things, for local people.

Power lunch

A quick update as a let my Haddock and chips digest, I had 6 eyes watching my every move while I ate it. All of the eyes were attached to cats.

Had a very productive power lunch today with Matt at the Lyric. We were joined by a 3 month old baby who wasted some of meeting by smiling and distracting us. The idea for mobile app to encourage local shopping hung by a thread, saved by some early morning inspiration, more news on that as soon as it’s fit to print. Matt’s work on the video building blocks project is taking shape nicely and has a nice political ‘of the moment’ angle to it. It was the first time I have literally had to wipe poo from someones’ arse after a meeting.

Next step is a half day of locking ourselves in a room to thrash out more detail. Oh and we need to find time to give some love to a new multiplatform game format.

Business plan 1a

Planning projects with my main man Matt Burton McFaul. The three main contenders are:

1) mobile app to encourage local shopping – in keeping with the Plugging the leaks approach of the NEF and part of the Transition Towns movement.
2) multi-platform game format, very social and plays on group dynamics.
3) digital story built from blocks we gather. We’re developing this as part of workshop that we’ll take on the road.

Oh and here’s some nice words I wrote down about our overall plan;

Enjoyable
rewarding
useful
social shared
socially useful
healing edge (beyond the cutting edge is the bleeding edge, beyond that the healing edge)
work with good people
co-operative model?
USP that’s USB compatible

Macbook 5,2 video out to TV

I have a Macbook 5,2 (model A1181) with Intel core 2 Duo, Nvidia Geforce 9400M. I purchased an Apple mini-DVI (D-Shape) to video adapter. It does not work. And hey what do you know this is a know issue with this model of Crapintosh laptop! I returned the cable and got a refund.

Not to be defeated I came up with a cunning work around. If you must connect your laptop to a TV (composite) or old skool video projector (composite) -by composite I mean devices that have either S-Video or 3 phono (yellow – video, white and red – stereo audio). OK so if you’re still with me here we go.

Connections used to get TV signal out of Macbook

Connections used to get TV signal out of Macbook

1. Go to an apple store and buy the mini-DVI to VGA cable (£16).
This, on it’s own, will allow you to connect to other monitors and some projectors.

2. Go to Maplin (UK version of Radio Shack) and buy PCTOTV (made by kworld code KW-SA325) £39. This has all the cables you need to plug into the VGA end of the apple cable.

3. Plug it all in. Your Macbook ‘senses’ the Apple cable and switches resolution. You may have to go into the Displays preferences panel and tick the ‘mirror’ displays box, if you want to play out a DVD on a projector. With my TV this was not necessary.

4. Curse Apple for selling you a laptop with a graphics set-up that requires additional hardware.

5. Smile, as this cunning solution works.

I hope this is useful. Please let me know if you have any questions or other work arounds for this problem.