Power Play

I was really excited when I saw posts on my Tumblr feed announcing Reilly Brown and Kurt Christenson’s new comic Power Play:

Our story revolves around Mac, a college student in NYC who suddenly finds himself with superpowers.  Does he try to fight crime? Maybe try to take over the world? Maybe put his underwear on the outside just for fun? NO! He he joins the Power Play Games, a full contact, extreme sports league with other people with strange powers and remarkable abilities!

The premise sounds pretty great — I’ve been saying the imaginary X-Men spinoff I want to read is about daily life in Professor Xavier’s School for the gifted. Just the kids and their superpowers and teen angst, not trying to foil Magneto’s evil plots or save the world or do anything epic.

I’ve liked Reilly’s artwork since our high school magazine days and I enjoy Kurt’s essays on Unwinnable (a great blog covering indie games and comics), and I’m pretty excited to see what they’ve made. There’s a free preview issue out today on Comixology.

 

 

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Long Walks In The Cloud

Long Walks In The Cloud, by Simpson’s Paradox

Saw this at the Microsoft table at Casual Connect.

The other shirt is “You Compute Me” — apparently these guys missed the memo that all game conference shirts must be XXL and black.

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Gamification

The other night, I was having a drink with Harold and the awesome Francesco Marconi from Herograph when we got talking about gamification. I was at a total loss for why hearing “gamification” sometimes makes me want to kick people in the shins.

I believe in the tenets of gamification. I believe that rewards and success achievements are huge motivators, and I’m happy that this marketing buzzword means educational games are being taken more seriously. When I watch (and rewatch, since I’m trying to make everyone I know see it) Jane McGonigal’s TED talk about games saving the world, I want to cheer. Games do change our behavior. There’s more to games than slacking off.

Why, then, do I have this nagging worry that gamification only means advergames and unfun branded titles? Is it just my elitist hipster belief that my hobbies are too good for the plebs?

I’ve not been able to clearly articulate why gamification often annoys me, but Wise Guys  (the guys behind Twistianapolis 500) recently summed it up:

I’m not the first to say it, and I won’t be the last, but adding points and badges don’t make a game. A game is supposed to be fun, bottom line. If there are points and badges, that’s one way to measure progress, but nobody ever said, “Hey what’s that game with all the badges and points? Let’s play that one!

Via Boss Battle: Gameification on Wise Guys Events

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Dune Fire

Dune Fire, by Simpson’s Paradox
There was a brush fire when we were at the beach this weekend, and my first action was to run up and take a picture for my blog. I’m not sure if this shows good journalistic instincts or blind indifference to danger.

Non-fire beach pictures:

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Entirely Work-Related

“Hey, Meg, you got something else about your swingers’ vacation!”

–My mom, whenever I get a mailing from Casual Connect

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Google+ Vs Facebook

From Google vs. Facebook: Should Human Rights Factor in Your Choice of Social Network? on Huffington Post

Google Plus, which launched in beta last week, has been Topic One among the “digerati,” who’ve spent much of the week kicking the tires of Facebook’s new competitor and reporting back to followers and friends.

But Luna, a masters student at Harvard Divinity School, looked at the competing services through a different lens.

He wrote that he’s come to trust Google more because of its refusal to buckle to Chinese censors:

Google is currently in a power war with China, and Google has made the correct choice in its difficult decision between compromising with a totalitarian government that would exert every pressure possible, legal and illegal, to use the information that we trust to Google to continue its campaign against freedom and dissidence.

I thought I was cutting-edge awesome when I got a Google+ invitation (Thanks, Scep!) but when I signed up, I saw that my hipper, smarter friends were all already there. At least I got invited fast enough that the Huffington Post is classing me digerati, but seriously, it turns out that all my friends are more awesome than I am.

So far, I’m enjoying Google+, making a profile and sorting my friends into circles of game devs, tech columnists, China expats, Friends Who Could Have My Kidney, Friends Who Post Too Bloody Much And Need To Be Moderated, and so forth. I like that my Google homepage has now +Meg in the top corner. (I’m flattered when friends ask me what the G+ etiquette for a share or a circle add is, but that’s not how I do my tech etiquette posts. You do things, and then I comment on them. Silly.)

But I don’t know if it’s going to replace Facebook and Twitter and my new love, Tumblr, and my toy on the side, Bnter with it’s Google awesomeness. I’m not totally sure that G+ is a direct Face

I’ve been on Team Facebook forever. In 2007, I blogged about how much I loved Facebook and how it could kick MySpace’s ass. Reading it now makes my head spin from how brilliant and insightful I am — Oregon Trail and Facebook are perfect together! — and how dead wrong I am — Signing up with Spokeo is smart! Chinese-American social network Gaah is totally going to take off! — in such rapid succession.

Rereading old, potentially embarrassing content is one of the perils of having a blog. What we share online can come back to haunt us.  My public diary here has been an absolute joy to me for, man, over eight years now, but that doesn’t mean that there are no consequences to sharing our lives online.

My blog, at last check, is still blocked in China. Now that I’m back in the US, and I don’t have to proxy around the Great Firewall to post on my blog, I feel like a hard-hitting journalist. I’m so edgy, I’m banned! (Of course, while in China, blogging by proxy was just like tepid showers or my constant low-level hunger for cold skim milk, a shruggable minor annoyance.)

I was pretty impressed with Google’s refusal to censor their search results within the Middle Kingdom, and with Google’s defense of the privacy of activists and dissidents using GMail, even after they were seriously pressured by the Chinese government to get in line.  It took serious balls to make and stick to those statements. (Oh, man, I said “balls” and “Chinese government” in the same paragraph! I’m blocked for sure now! Sorry, three readers in Yantai!)

For Luna, the choice is obvious: “I’d like to see Google win this war [with Facebook], and I know who’s side I’m on here. I kind of think that leaving Facebook is one way that we can participate…”

I don’t think I’d advocate leaving Facebook as an anti-censorship, pro-privacy statement, and I’m not entirely sure that I agree with the common assumption that G+ is Facebook’s head-to-head competitor. But I do think we should consider the lasting impact of what we share  when we choose to post or fill out a profile, and we should entrust that to someone we feel good about.

 

Quoted text via Google vs. Facebook: Should Human Rights Factor in Your Choice of Social Network? on Huffington Post

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Life, Art, Whatever.

“Guess what?” I said to a certain guy I am decidedly not seeing. “Shirtless Man Magazine* just took my article! I’ve got a new piece coming out in the summer issue!”

“That’s great, Meg! What’s it called?” my gentleman friend asked.

“Um… It’s not entirely settled… the working title is Unconventional Dating.”

 

 

 

*Not its real name. **

**But it may as well be.

 

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There, I Fixed It!

The hilarious There, I Fixed It! blog just released a hardcopy version. The book, There, I Fixed It: (No, You Didn’t), covers some of the best kludges from the blog, including my shower pictures.

My usual method for dealing with stress is imaging how hilarious it’ll be later, but even in my wildest dreams, I did not imagine my shower disaster in a coffeetable book.

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Lucky

Of course, I’m for gay marriage and accepting queer relationships. I support gay rights in an obvious and distant way, the way straight people get to be supportive. Straight allies who’ll never be at risk over their sexuality, who can be quietly supportive while living an easier life. The scale is entirely different, but I can’t help but see parallels to men in tech and gaming jobs. Not boys’ club dickwolves of course, but really good guys who agree that our industry’s a bit skewed on gender and they’d absolutely hire a girl, or take a girl journo seriously. We feel like progressive proponents of change because one’s personal choices are open-minded.

I have so many privilege as a straight girl. Each time I turn my head at a goodlooking guy, every ill-advised makeout ever, even walking hand-in-hand with my date, putting my head on my boyfriend’s shoulder,is  my privilege. When I talk about seeing someone, my friends and family react to him as an individual, not the fact that I’m seeing a man. I am lucky to be a girl who dates guys.

I hesitate to use the word heteronormative here, I hesitate to call myself a female-identified female, these terms belong to the sort of hyperviligant language sensitivity that seems to separate instead of including. I understand that there are transexuals, pre-op, post-op, intersexed, and a wide variety of gender identities, and a whole host of vocabulary options to describe them. I’m happy to be in a city (and, often, in subcultures) where that’s accepted. But in my daily life, I’m good with defaulting to he as a genderless pronoun for the player. Better writers than I have done so.

But whatever we call it, I am lucky.

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Completely Changed Today

2011-06-28 13.32.54Laying it on a bit thick, universe, but I take your point.

Related: Last time at the same restaurant.

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