Provence, day 4

Today we checked out from our hotel in Aix, and took a pleasant Sunday drive into Avignon, our next home base. Avignon is a curios place, both a provincial shopping city, serving the local area; an important French cultural stage; and a monument to a certain notorios phase in the history of catholic church. The 59th Avignon theatre festival takes now place before the papal palace.

View the file information

Provence, day 3

This day, we went for a morning walk among the old town markets – there seems to be everything, from new shoes to old books on sale in these narrow streets and squares. Then, perhaps half an hours drive to Marseille. A city oddly familiar from Dumas’ novels, this my first visit to here took us quickly via the old harbour up to the hill-top church (Notre Dame de la Garde), then back. (I still hate the traffic, but I am improving, I am told.)

View the file information

Provence, day 2

Another warm and sunny day in the southern France. We have explored Aix-en-Provence by foot, seeing much of the Old Town, and getting rather thirsty and hungry in the process. Luckily, there are plenty of charming little restaurants to choose from. Still learning to understand the strange opening hours, though.

View the file information

Provence, day 1

A bit exhaustive day, filled with a long drive from Nice up to the mountains, via the serpentine roads in the Gorges du Verdon, late at night to Aix en Provence. Finally! We really need some sleep now.

View the file information

Provence, day 0

(Trying to moblog some of these holidays.) Staying in Helsinki overnight before the very early morning flight. Did shop some classic jazz for listening during those road trips. Espresso in the Srindberg’s, then dinner with Aki in “Villa Thai” in Bulevardi (meal was nice – and hot!) Now couple of hours’ sleep before France…

View the file information

to the horizon

After an intense week of working on my own research (finally! winter goes in all kinds of business), we have a sunset on a terrace. Next week, Provence!

View the file information

tv's going digital

Digitalization of television became a major national project in Finland some years ago, when a decision was made to abandon all analogue tv transmissions, and provide only digital broadcast content. There were reasons of ‘cost efficiency’ (=money) behind the decision, but also the general techno-utopian spirit of our country is behind the whole Lets Be the Top Information Society in the World thing, or at least that is what I suspect.

Even as a self-admitted technophile, I have postponed the transfer into digi-tv to this point because of the ridiculous quality (or lack of it) digital set-top boxes provided. When television, the supreme and ubiquitous media terminal gets stuck every half-an-hour, when even switching channel can take 15 seconds, all subtitling is missing or erronous, it was very hard to believe in the future of this whole thing.

The latest generation of boxes finally seems to have crossed the boundary where they are “usable enough”, “stable enough” and the genuine benefits of digitalization become apparent (primarily the better quality of image and sound, combined with an accessible electonic programme guide and hard-disk recording). I got mine yesterday – Topfield TF5100PVRc model – and currently I am mostly satisfied. But the basic situation remains, complex broadcast-networked & computer-like systems are released in ‘beta’, the various national “standards”, networks and programs create a mess, which is resolved (or not) piecemeal, as users act as beta-testers, report the endless bugs and firmware updates fix something – and possibly introduce new bugs.

Link: the Finnish DVD Plaza Topfield TF5100PVRt May04 Bug report thread.

facade release

Oh yes, they have finally made it into an official release; Andrew Stern and Michael Mateas have provided Façade, a “one-act interactive drama” as a whopping 800 megabyte BitTorrent download. Good to see academic games research being applied in practise! See the Procedural Arts Press Release.

chinese online addicts get the cure

Hm. Seems that the Chinese officials are getting rather experimental in curing the net/game addiction problem – administering electric pulses and intravenous medication, wow. See the AP story in CNN.com and elsewhere.

summer flus, again

My ISP, Saunalahti, did us all a favour and upgraded (with no extra cost) customer connections to higher speed combos. All nice, except the upgrade messed up with the way my (and many others) ADSL router (Zyxel Prestige 660 series) behaves. So, my first holiday week has been spent in summer flu, calling Saunalahti customer service half a dozen times, trying to get the connection working so that I could do some urgent jobs to the new DiGRA site. Oh well – at least the weekend looks nice (and I have the Half-Life 2
collectors edition also installed 😉