Leo’s Life

Where the world and I collide

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Red Dead Redemption - Short Film

2 June, 2010 by Asmiroth

If you weren’t aware, Rockstar released Red Dead Redemption a few weeks back.  Think Grand Theft Auto in the old west.  The game is damn good.  Here’s a short film made from the game, machinima at it’s best.

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Swagger Wagon

17 May, 2010 by Asmiroth

Ah yeah.

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Don’t Drink and Drive

16 May, 2010 by Asmiroth

I have seen many ads for this but this one, by miles, is the most poignant I have ever seen.   I wish they were allowed to show this on TV.

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Street Fighter Legacy

7 May, 2010 by Asmiroth

It’s only 3 minutes but damn, what a good 3 minutes.

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Jonah Hex

30 April, 2010 by Asmiroth

Hell Yes.

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Quebec Adopts a New Sign

29 April, 2010 by Asmiroth

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Pale Blue Dot

13 April, 2010 by Asmiroth

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Busy Busy

25 March, 2010 by Asmiroth

Lately I’ve been back on WoW.  The last big raid has been out since Xmas and the last guy was killed in Feb (Arthas, the Lich King).  I’ve always been interested in the story.  I played a lot when this expansion came out last year just didn’t have the time for the end game and pretty much burned out.  Now I’m back with a renewed vigor and a new goal.  Money.

A long time ago, I played around with the virtual market.  There are 5 ways to make money in the game.

  1. Through NPCs and quests.  Gives a steady stream of money, maybe 300g an hour.
  2. Through selling loot acquired.  Can be a huge amount can be a small amount.  Unfocused, maybe 100g an hour, focused maybe closer to the 300g.
  3. Collection skills. Herbs, ore, leather… all get a decent price on the market.  Maybe closer to 500g, if you get lucky.
  4. Buy low, sell high.  This is the riskiest one as you assume you know that an item is underpriced.  Plus you need money for the initial investment.  You could make 50g like you can make 10,000g.
  5. Tradeskills.  It seems simple enough, just make something and sell it.  If you collect the base materials, no cost to you right?  Well, there’s the time cost which is not negligible.  I’m focusing on this particular point lately.
I made the following spreadsheet to help me along.  First page are the base materials and their market cost.  Each other page is a tradeskill and the more popular items I can make with it. I then breakdown the cost of making the item and the potential sale price.  Items that have multiple steps I break down further for even more savings (Jewelcrafting is one).  I started this week (Sunday) filling in the chart and slowly have been moving my way through it.  I guess I make about 1000g a day from it right now as I’m still trying to figure out the optimal way to move forward.  Not to mention that my enchanter is missing a lot of skills and I don’t have an Inscriber.
A bit more breakdown if you will for the tradeskills and their potentials:
  • Alchemy: can make potions for some minimal profits.  you need to get the base mats yourself though.  Can transmute 1 time per day, which turns out to be around 100g profit.
  • Enchanting: can make scrolls with enchants that sell for a decent profit, if you buy the base materials at a good price.  Less about volume, more about profit.
  • Engineering: other than 2 items, I can’t figure out how to make money here as most items can only be used by the creator…
  • Jewelcrafting: You cut lower end jewels to something more valuable.  There is some money here, though not trucks of it.  Combines really well with Alchemy transmutes.  1 transmute + 1jc = 150g.  9 transmutes + 1jc = 1200g.
  • Inscription: Works on the principles of volume.  Possibly the biggest money maker if you play your cards right.
  • Leatherworking: Tough one as I don’t have a high level one.  There is potential for money though.
  • Tailoring: Pretty close to leatherworking in terms of profits.  You can make bags for a decent turnover but that only brings in about 100g a day.
I’m thinking of making more alchemists to make more money and get an inscriber too.  Though alchemy would only give me ~150g more a day (and therefore take 15 days to recoup training costs), there are long term benefits to it.  Inscription is one that requires a lot of hands on work… we’ll see!
Man I love analytical work.

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Insanity - Micro Review

22 March, 2010 by Asmiroth

I’m not all that far into Insanity yet but I have a few points to mention for the curious.  You can check a few YouTube videos out too.  Let’s get to it.

The program is essentially a pure plyometrics workout.  This means that you’re essentially always moving, using bodyweight and leg movements to keep the heartrate up.  Think of calisthenics (jumping jacks) but always jumping.  In addition to this crazy movement, it uses maximum interval training techniques.  A traditional exercise has you at maybe 50-60% heart rate for the entire duration or short spikes of activity with long breaks.  You either ride a bike for a long time or you workout muscles in batches of 30s with a minute break.

On long periods of activity, biking or running for example, your heart rate spikes, then drops to a plateau.  Basically, if you can reach the 3 minute mark, you can reach 30 minutes pretty easy.  The largest benefits are in the first 3 minutes though, since your heart rate actually drops after that point and your body plateaus at a given energy burn rate.  To put a number on it, let’s say you burn 600 calories in a 1 hour run, for 10 cals/minute on average.  Actually what happens is that you burn about 100 calories in the first 3 minutes and then the other 500 calories on the last 57.  So 33 cals/min to start then you drop down to 8 cals/min afterwards.

On spike training, like weights, your body spikes into rushes of energy into your muscles burning huge amounts of energy but for very short periods of time.  Doing 12 reps of curls might take 30 seconds but you’re only forcing energy for half that time (the way up), then you’re resting for about a minute, giving your body time to recover.  Sometimes longer.  Not to mention that you’re actively trying to get muscle fatigue that reduces the length of time you can train.  If you weight train for an hour at a regular pace, you’re looking at 300 calories burnt, half of what you’d get in the previous example, and you’re building muscle. The actual building of the muscle comes after the workout while your muscles recover.

Next we have interval training.  This is what athletes use for their programs because of the way it confuses the body.  Remember the first example where the first 3 minutes are the best and then you plateau?  Same principle here except that you do it at 80% heart rate for 3 minutes, then drop to 50% for a short period of time (up to the same cycle length), then repeat.  In that cycle, you burn about 800 calories and keep the muscles and heart rate confused.  Staying too long in a particular range, your body adapts.  Move in and out of that range and your body cannot adapt and will always work at 100% effectiveness.  P90X does this to some extent but it’s hard to with weights.  Still, I can guarantee better weight loss results with P90X that any gym session you’d have.

Finally, we have max interval training.  This takes the previous example and focuses the activity and reduces the recovery.  You go full out 80-90% heart rate for 3-5 minutes, then a 30 second break and restart.  In an hour, you burn 1000 calories, if you can last that long.  What also happens is that even when you stop working your heart continues to pump blood and energy into ever muscle for a long period of time.  The same thing happens in regular interval training but here, the effect is more pronounced.  You can feel it in your body as your heart rate will typically take 30 minutes to an hour to get back to normal resting rate.  This has an effect of increasing your post-workout burn rate by nearly 1000% compared to regular training (running).

Wow, all that before I get to the program bits.  Insanity uses a max interval training method along with plyometrics for some rather crazy results.  One particular program, Pure Cardio, had me go through about 450 calories in 30 minutes.  I had an average heart rate of 80% the entire time (since the rest periods are small).  I could feel my heart rate for a good 45 minutes after the program was complete as well.  Let’s put that into perspective a bit. The average person should eat 2000 calories a day.  I burn off 25% of that in a single exercise for 30 minutes and that’s not counting the post-workout burn. In 2 weeks, I’ve lost 6 lbs. The next time I do this workout I will take my measurements for an hour after the workout and compare them to the weight training results I have.  I’d be curious to see the comparative results.

All of that to say that if you’re looking for a program to burn through tons of calories in a short period of time, I cannot think of a program that would give better results that this.  It will make your weight melt off.

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Wil Wheaton - Pic Says It All

16 March, 2010 by Asmiroth

I think that is the same expression we would all have wearing that sweater.  Go Wil

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