warning: nerd content ahead |
Review of Nextfest 2006. 2. NASA. Spacesuits, Mars-roving robots, astronauts, and stickers. I waited patiently for an autograph of one Mark Kelly. He didn't understand why my hair was pink. Because the purple faded. Why was it purple? Because I like purple. Now just sign the damn photo (which incidentally, is the exact photo as on the wikipedia entry linked to above). I wanted to get an autograph for my 16-year old brother, but the Boyfriend reminded me that 16-year old boys are both too old and too young to think astronauts are cool. So no autograph for Brother. He'll be sorry in like 10 years. We did get super-futuristic blue-screen photos of our faces in a spacesuit during a spacewalk. Because I don't have a scanner, you can't see them. But they're really cool. I'd also like to point out that the NASA technology of printing digital photos was the slowest technology at the whole fair. I found it ironic. Video of Actroid***
6. Brainball. Strap special headbands on and sit at a table, staring at a tiny ball. The headbands measure brainwaves, so the ball goes away from the most relaxed person. The object is to relax so much that the ball goes in the goal across from you. I don't have to mention this, but I will to show I'm not a sore loser: The Boyfriend kicked my ass at Brainball (twice!) before I even got a chance to relax. It was a savage brain-beating. 7. Video games. What would a nerdfest be without video games? What I've learned is that the future of videogames relies on optics and cameras instead of wires and controllers. There were several games where you act out what your vg character should be doing, such as karate-chopping the enemies. There were also several in which the game was projected onto a screen and your shadow affected the action. Those were fun. 9. Vein Viewer. A special camera that you shine on your arm to show your veins so that you can get shots easier. A good idea, but it was weird to see. 10. Paro. Robotic toy seals used for therapy. When you pet them, they react. They are soft and cute, and lonely people in nursing homes like them. One lady was complaining that the reaction time was too slow, and I told her that obviously she wouldn't benefit from the therapy. Then we had a robo-fight. She's dead now. Anyway, cute little Paro even helped the Japanese Prime Minister, according to this video. 11. Xerox. As their ad campaign for their new package-less ink, the "nice" people at Xerox were taking thermal photographs of us and printing them out. Again, because I have no scanner, you can't see ours. You can actually tell whose photograph is of The Boyfriend because the outlines of his facial features were a slightly different temperature than the rest of him. It's weird. Mine doesn't look like me except for the blue triangle that is my nose. Apparently my nose is the coldest part of my body. That was weird too. There were many many more things that were super cool, a lot of them useful only for entertaining nerds. We got there early (luckily) and stayed for about 5 hours before the balance of crowd versus neat stuff to see gave out and we went home. The moral of the story is: If Nextfest comes to your city, go to it. It's worth the $15.
**We left the Q & A because the first person asked if the robots were anatomically correct. There was an akward silence, and the mediator (Adam Rogers, Senior Editor, WIRED Magazine) decided they weren't allowed to answer that question. *** You speak Japanese, right? |
Kedging Cannon
1 day ago
4 comments:
Hug shirts are creepy. Imagine if Rep. Foley had access to those tthings. Enough said on that topic.
I guess not everyone can be as lucky as I am with ghostly pale skin and giant pulsing veins, making for easy blood taking. Yet another one of my few advantages down the drain.
I want neither hug shirts nor vein trackers because neither will help me.
this is cool, and i don't think i want a hug shirt either. the seal would work, though.
anyway...if this is in nyc again, you are going to tell me ahead of time and we're going. i have spoken so it shall be.
Next year, I will be all over this. I will know in advance and invite people, and I can tell them from experience how awesomely cool it was. Plus if I forget, I just have to read this blog. :)
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