GameSpy collects sales numbers for PS2, GameCube and Xbox all in one place!

Estimated Current Installed Base (Various Sources):


Console North America Japan Europe and others Total
PlayStation 2 26,420,000 14,170,000 19,400,000 59,990,000
GBA 14,540,000 9,240,000 7,920,000 31,700,000
GBA-SP 830,000 820,000 460,000 2,110,000
GameCube 5,130,000 2,470,000 1,950,000 9,550,000
Xbox 6,200,000 1,000,000 2,200,000 9,400,000

Whoah! MS and Nintendo are getting their butts whooped. Too bad, competition is good… :-/

Ted Koppel is the Man of the Hour. He said this last weekend on Nightline, in regards to the US Patriot Act of 2001:

The men who drafted our constitution, who framed our civil rights and protected our various freedoms under the law would, I suspect, retch at some of the bone headed, self-serving, misinterpretations of their intentions that they so often use these days to undermine the very freedoms they pretend to safeguard. The miracle of American Law is not that it protects popular speech, or the privacy of the powerful, or the homes of the privileged, but rather, that the least among us, those with the fewest defenses thoses suspected of the worst crimes — the most despised in our midst, are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

That remains as revolutionary a concept now as it was in the 1780s. It makes protecting the country against terrorism excruciatingly difficult, but we cannot arbitrarily suspend the rights of one catagory of suspects without endangering all the others.

Photos from our wedding reception

Maria and I were married last Wednesday and we held our reception on Saturday down at her families’ house in Cave Junction, Oregon. I’ll have photos from the actual wedding online as soon as I can get them in a digital format.

We’re doing great! Thanks to all that attended!

The real reasons the recording industry is down

In just three years, sales of pirate CDs have more than doubled, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI). Every third CD sold is a pirate copy, says the federation.

In some countries it is hard to find legitimately produced CDs. Ninety percent of CDs in China, for instance, are pirate copies. Counterfeiters have forced the price of a fake CD down to about $4, which only makes CDs in the music shops look even pricier.

Finally, music just isn’t as important to young people as it used to be. There is more competition than ever for the cash in a teenager’s pocket. “Youths are no longer defining themselves by music in the same way they used to,” says Mr Mulligan.

Senator Wyden Calls for Immediate Disclosure on Non-Competitive Bids for Iraqi Reconstruction

An especially interesting point was made during this speech Senator Wyden gave before Congress:

It is also becoming increasingly clear that U.S. taxpayers will shoulder much of the cost of Americaโ€™s involvement in Iraq. This week civil administrator Paul Bremer said that just over the next six months, Iraqi oil revenues will be $2 billion short of what will be needed to finance occupation and reconstruction. U.S. taxpayers will fund the difference โ€“ for these six months, and for the foreseeable future. Yet the rationale behind much of the cost is unknown. Companies have been given contracts for work in Iraq with little or no competition, and no explanation. The process is not only suspect, itโ€™s historically financially unsound.

So, the U.S. is skimming oil revenues from Iraq, as I had long suspected. This was the first hard evidence I’ve read of this. The war really was about oil, and the Bush Administration underestimated the costs of occupation; a losing investment.

Where are all the far right-wing anti-tax wackos? Why aren’t you all up in arms about this? If you hate paying taxes so much, why aren’t you fuming mad at your President?

Another quotable from the speech:

…my colleagues and I detailed the daily reports of closed-bid and no-bid contracts being awarded for Iraqi reconstruction. They ranged from a $2 million deal to rebuild Iraqi schools, to a $600 million mother lode of a contract to reinvent Iraqโ€™s infrastructure.

That’s right tax-haters, the Bush Administration gave out over $600 million of your hard-earned tax dollars without any justification! Your administration is giving money away behind closed doors and answering to no one for doing so!

I don’t get it. Why do conservatives allow this happen?

Jack Valenti on… p2p networks or ?

“The growing and dangerous intrusion of this new technology,” Jack Valenti said, threatens an entire industry’s “economic vitality and future security.” Mr. Valenti, the president of the Motion Picture Association of America, was testifying before the House Judiciary Committee, and he was ready for a rhetorical rumble. The new technology, he said, “is to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston Strangler is to the woman alone.”

This is not about the internet or file sharing, it was in 1982, and he was talking about videocassette recorders. If Jack Valenti had his way back then (he almost did as the Sony BetaMax case went all the way to the Supreme Court) we wouldn’t have VCRs today, Blockbuster wouldn’t exist and 50% of Hollywoods income wouldn’t exist.

> Hello!

>

> I visited your computer graphics website and read about your music

> visualisation tools where you use beat detection. I have tried to find

> information about this but all I’ve found is hard-to-understand mathematics

> tutorials…

>

> If you have any tutorials (C#, VB, C…), links or other information that

> could help me in my beat detection project I would appreciate it a lot!

>

> Best regards from Sweden

Beat detection the way I did it was quite simple. In fact, I wouldn’t really call it beat detection, it was more like cheating. There is no beat counting or rhythm prediction, it is all done in real-time. But heck, CG is all about cheating… ๐Ÿ™‚

From winamp you’re given every “cycle” a buffer that contains the left and right channel spectrograph, or FFT of the current time slice from the music. This is the exact same data that winamp displays in it’s main window.

At first, all I did was write a simple plugin that displays the spectrograph in 3D. I wasted many hours in awe of my silly creation, studying the way the spectrograph behaved with different music.

After a while I noticed that with hip hop and most techno the beat is really apparent in the lower 2-6 bars of the spectrograph from winamp. I guess in hard-to-understand mathematics they would say that a band-pass filter on the FFT from 10Hz-50Hz would isolate the beat frequencies. All I did was snag this from winamp’s buffer.

Now that I had the bass frequencies as regular integers from winamp, I just spent a lot of time experimenting with different methods of averaging their values and incrementing a counter based on this average. When the counter reached a certain point I made the conclusion that I was in a “beat” and told the graphics engine to display… whatever it pleased. Once the average died down I decremented the counter and informed the graphics engine. That’s about all there is to it. The trick is in where you pick the cut off points for “in a beat” and “out of a beat”.

So if you want to do this yourself w/out winamp you’ll need to borrow a discrete FFT algorithm from somewhere. Otherise, winamp does 90% of the hard work for you, you just need to play with the numbers till you get something that looks right. ๐Ÿ™‚

Best of luck, show me the results when you’re done! ๐Ÿ™‚

Maria and I set a date!

Wedding: August 20th, private ceremony

Reception: August 23rd, open to friends and family, it’s gonna be at Maria’s house down in CJ

Be prepared for Scots wearing kilts. ๐Ÿ˜‰