Here's the long and the short of it -- Rocksmith, in this and in the
earlier edition, makes its easy to practice your instrument. I bought a
guitar and I was working my way through chords from a book, but it was
taking forever. I also had no confidence. I bought the previous
edition of this game, and everything picked up. I was on chords and
arpeggios and was rocking.
I liked it so much, I bought a bass,
and I have been playing that along with my guitar (don't let anyone
steer you otherwise, the bass is the instrument of the Gods). The old
version worked, and made me want to play, but this one is even better.
The songs are different, the interface is better, and it learns along
with you. It is both a game and the ultimate teaching tool. If it
weren't for this game, I wouldn't be looking for another guitar to
replace my cheap beginner axe, nor would I ever have bought my bass.
Rocksmith
is the ultimate game. Not only is it entertaining, but you learn while
using it. I am old enough to remember the early computer games that
tried to make typing or math fun. They didn't really work because the
endeavor at the base was not inherently fun. That's the difference
here. Rocksmith quantifies your abilities, and pushes you, and you get
better every time you play. My wife earlier today said that she was
thankful that this was the game that I wanted to play (as opposed to
popular war sims etc). I'm thankful that Rocksmith exists for me to
play.
November 16, 2013
November 5, 2013
Hard to read for interesting reasons: Reading Barthes's "Mythologies"
I found these kind of hard to read. Not hard in the way that a lot of philosophical
texts are in that they drop a lot of jargon on you that the author created to
define terms that other authors have already defined but that you are unaware
of because you had not gone through your first round of reading the whole of
philosophy yet; more like hard to read because of boredom. I couldn’t figure out why. They are short little texts, no more than ten
pages. The premise is sound, basically
pulling apart the mythos behind everyday objects.
Doing some thinking led me to think of a couple of major
reasons. First off, the essays in the
book are a touchtone for some very mid-century French objects and ideas. If I was familiar with most of what Barthes
writes on, it is only in passing and some of my favorite writers are his
countrymen from this period. It felt
disconcerting, but it is what I image it will be like to read a Chuck
Klostermann book fifty years hence – familiar but uncanny. Basically, my only context for what he is
writing about is what I am reading at the moment. That fact does not allow me to see anything from
a new angle; it is only from Barthes’s angle that I see it. By not being able to create my own
interpretation of the validity of Barthes’s ideas, I am left alone to trust
that he knows what he is talking about.
And I’m pretty sure he does, because in the texts that are
unmediated solely by a Barthes’s eyes, he does have some unique insight that I
have not thought about on everyday objects.
There is an essay on cleaners that is rightly noted, and I think my explanation
earlier serves a reason that it is noted.
There is a later essay on cars that rings the same bell.
The other reason that this felt hard to read is that what he
is doing is no longer new, if it ever was.
The edition I had ends with a long theoretical essay on “Myth Today”
that explains his approach, which is adding another layer to Sausseaurain
semiotics. The problem with reading such
an essay and the derivative works is that now Barthes’s influence is such that
it doesn’t feel new at all, and is part of the discourse. Overall, I’m glad I read it, and I am happy
that I read it now instead of back in graduate school as an assigned text.
November 4, 2013
Over the Top: Paging through "Punk Rock Jesus"
So.
In the future, there’s this all-around gifted scientist. She’s already won the Nobel Prize, and there
is some research she’s working on that will create plants that use many times
more the CO2 than regular plants.
Somehow, the only person who will fund her research is a meglomanical
super-rich guy who wants to clone Jesus and show him growing up as part of a
reality show.
There’s also the young woman who was chosen to carry the
Jesus clone who is in over her head, and there’s an ex-IRA assassin who has
promised to never kill again.
The Jesus character grows up isolated, and rebels, and gets
really into punk rock, and tries to start a revolution.
It’s all over the top, and it feel like it’s trying too
hard. The art’s good, but the storytelling
is lacking. I say this as someone who randomly found the title on a shelf who
loves punk rock and mocking the Christian savoir.
The premise goes too far, and that’s assuming that there is
a historical Jesus (something dealt with, but may be a spoiler situation.) Murphy still has some good work in him, so I
look forward to what he may do next, but not this.
And I’ll digress, my biggest complaint here, as with some
other sci-fi influenced stuff is that if you are creating a world that is based
off of the current one that we live in, the reader has to be able to recognize
the world as a logical historical extension of the current world. The one in Punk Rock Jesus just doesn’t work
for me, though others may like it. It is
a very subjective thing, but one that I have no answer for.
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