Entries from April 2004
Japan’s Location-based Cell Phone Item Collection Game
April 14, 2004 · Leave a Comment
From Wired:
It sends players out and about in Tokyo searching for virtual treasure by using the GPS technology built into their phones.
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Items like flowers, fruits or creatures are “hidden” around Tokyo, and are visible on a city map on players’ mobile phones. Players form teams, comb the city and try to find each item in various “collections.” They also try to find players from other teams working on different collections with whom to trade.
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“What’s astonishing about Mogi is that it provides a system for people to coordinate and team up and inhabit cities in ways they never have before,” Hall suggests. “It’s dispatching. It’s recreational dispatching, like a cab company, or police or the fire department. It’s fabulously fascinating, this idea that, hey, I’m sitting on my computer at home looking at the Mogi map, and that thing our group wants is over on the west side of town. You’re the closest, so (you go get it) because it’s important for the group.”
From thefeature:
For now, Mogi runs on Japanese carrier KDDI’s phones with built-in GPS capacity.
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Mogi is a collecting game – “item hunt”. The game provides a data-layer over the city of Tokyo. As you move through the city, if you check a map on your mobile phone screen, you’ll see nearby items you can pick up and nearby players you can meet or trade with.
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“some items only appear at certain places, at certain times.” For example, Castelli cites the creatures in the game: “We used the map to give creatures some interesting behavior. Some creatures only hunt at night. Some hang around close to parks.” If a player wants to find that creature, they’ll have to travel near a park[IN THE REAL WORLD] in the evening hours.
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Desktop internet players have access to a larger map. Newt Games’s idea is to have the desktop players guiding the mobile internet players, a goal of collaborative play, team work.
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Players can run around the landscape collecting things, or they can remain in one place and trade with other players.
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Kigen [THE EVENTUAL PRODUCT THAT MOGI IS THE FIRST INSTALLMENT OF] resembles Mogi, with additional layers of complexity added: combat, technological evolution, conquering neighborhoods.
Damaged Goods
April 14, 2004 · Leave a Comment
Reviews and summaries of Russell’s Doctor Who novel. drwhoguide, amazon, pagefillers, Howe’s Who.

‘Wherever this cocaine has travelled, it hasn’t gone alone. Death has been its attendant. Death in a remarkably violent and inelegant form.’
The Doctor, Chris and Roz arrive at the Quadrant, a troubled council block in Thatcher’s Britain. There’s a new drug on the streets, a drug that’s killing to a plan. Somehow, the very ordinary people of the Quadrant are involved. And so, amidst the growing chaos, a bizarre trio moves into number 43.
The year is 1987: a dead drug dealer has risen from the grave, and an ancient weapon is concealed beneath human tragedy. But the Doctor soon discovers that the things people do for their children can be every bit as deadly as any alien menace — as he uncovers the link between a special child, an obsessive woman, and a desperate bargain made one dark Christmas Eve.
Categories: Books · Doctor Who
BBC Interview with the new Dr Who
April 13, 2004 · Leave a Comment

The BBC has an interview with Christopher Eccleston, the new Dr Who. The show will start airing again next year. Sounds like they’ll be taking a lot of risks…. In the interview, he jokes that the Dr and his companion will be more than friends. In an article, Russell T Davies, the writer, says he wants the show to be a “real, full-blooded drama”. Am I the only person who thinks Ozzy Osbourne would make an excellent Dr Who?
I miss Dr Who. Give me Daleks and Cybermen over The Borg(Star Trek) and Stormtroopers(Star Wars) any day. [Edit: It's harder to dismiss, of course, Cylons and Decepticons.]
Article, Interview, Dr Who Home, New Series News, Info about Russell T Davies.
Categories: Doctor Who
Palm-Related: Enfora Wifi Portfolio Mod
April 13, 2004 · Leave a Comment
This guy modified an Enfora Wifi Portfolio, turning it into a (much smaller) sled!
Categories: Palm
CloneWars index page down.
April 13, 2004 · Leave a Comment
The index page for Cartoon Network’s Clone Wars has been removed from their site. This page at StarWars.com indicates that you have to pay for the Hyperspace service to get the files. That sucks. The links I posted the other day still work, but I don’t know for how long.
Categories: TV
Gmail Review – Forbes
April 12, 2004 · Leave a Comment
A First Look At Google’s Gmail at Forbes, via Slashdot.
I’ve been using it for several days(thanks John!!) and I agree with those comments. I’ve sent some specific bug reports and constructive feedback to Google, but the service is definitely usable, even in its beta stage. Fast searching of email is HUGE for me – I’m an email packrat. I hope they make a GMail appliance so I can index and seach my work email archives.
Categories: Google
Penny-Arcade Presents Comic Strips
April 12, 2004 · Leave a Comment
[Ideally, no children are browsing my blog, but just in case: These links are not kid-safe.]
These are great. I made a quickie HTML document that loads all images for the comics in one page for easier viewing.

Categories: Comics
Pattern-Matching CamPhone Images of City Buildings to Determine Location
April 12, 2004 · Leave a Comment
Holy cow.
“Two researchers at the University of Cambridge, UK are currently working on a brand new technology that will allow the owners of cameraphones to easily make their way through an unknown city.
Roberto Cipolla and Duncan Robertson have developed a program that can match a photograph of a building, taken by a low-res camera integrated into many modern cell phones, to a database of images on a remote server. Containing a three-dimensional model of the street, the database can work out precisely where you are and send back directions to help you get to your destination.
Unlike GPS receivers and positioning using cell phone base stations, the new technology cannot be shielded, has a precision of one metre, and can also tell which direction you are facing.
When a new photograph arrives, the system starts identifying vertical and horizontal edges. Next, the image is distorted so that it looks as though the photo was taken face-on. The software then locates key points, such as the corners of buildings, windows and doors, and looks through the database for matching data, using the positioning info from the nearest cell phone base station as a guide.
At the moment the researchers are building a prototype to cover all the buildings in Cambridge city center. However, it is not known yet whether the system will be commercially available in the end.”
Categories: Gadgets