Archive for March, 2009

Trivia Night at DC Improv

March 26th, 2009

Last night I went to DC Improv’s monthly trivia night over on 1140 Connecticut Ave. This was the second time our team was represented at Trivia Night, but it was the first time I competed. I joined returning competitors Allie, Adam, and Chris and fellow newbie Heather. Due to the additions to our line up, the original team name of Thomas Jefferson Airplane was changed, appropriately enough, to Thomas Jefferson Starship.

Each teammate was successful in answering some tricky questions, but a difficult opening round hurt our final score. By my estimation, our final score of 22 earned us a spot in the top third of teams; first place scored 27.

Highlights

Round 1: Lamb-themed questions. 3/10 points.
Heather correctly identified the country with the largest sheep-to-people ratio. Everyone knew an easy answer: “What film was inspired by “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?”

Round 2: Who said it? 7/13 points.
Chris and Adam scored with their sports knowledge. Calder identified Oppenheimer’s quote marking the creation of the atomic bomb.

Round 3: Casablanca-inspired questions. 5/11 points.
Allie knew that three actors who appear in Casablanca also appear in The Maltese Falcon. Calder guessed (correctly) that the point at which a black hole becomes inescapable is the “event horizon.”

Round 4: 50-50 Relative Sizes. 7/10 points.
Adam knew that the A-10 has 14 teams, while the Big 10 only has 11. Chris knew that a Lightyear is much longer than a Galactic Unit.

Some stumpers: the third ingredient in tzatziki sauce; the novel written by Wally Lamb, the significance of Sarah Josepha Hale, and the regular name of an artiodactyl. The berry used to make gin, the number of spaces on a roulette wheel, and the number of squares on a monopoly board (trick question: only the four corners are squares).

Team Thomas Jefferson Starship will return to trivia next month, but perhaps under different auspices. I think the next logical name is “Starship,” but Allie is pulling for “Boba Fettucine Alfredo.”

Michael Chabon Reading: Recap

March 25th, 2009

On Monday, Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Chabon gave a live reading and interview at GW’s Jack Morton Auditorium. My detailed notes on the event can be found at the GW English Blog.

Facebook’s new Homepage sucks, but so does Twitter

March 18th, 2009

Today I saw a poll on Facebook asking for “thumbs up, thumbs down” feedback on the recently-changed Facebook Homepage. I voted Thumbs Down and gave the following response:

“Facebook offers many services: photo sharing, event planning, group creation, personal messaging, marketplace vending, notes sharing, etc. Status updates are only a small part of Facebook. The Newsfeed is too focused on status updates, at the expense of every other Facebook service. The Homepage should reflect ALL of Facebook’s services and be an equal mix of photos, wall posts, event details, status updates, group changes, etc.

The new homepage is a lame attempt at copying Twitter. Facebook, because of its many services, is a far more useful tool than Twitter. Facebook needs to focus on what makes it better than Twitter, not what makes it the same. The new Homepage is less functional and useful than the old one. Keep the ability to sort by friend group, but balance the content of the Newsfeed.

Thumbs down to the new homepage.”

Although I dislike the new Facebook homepage, I want to be very clear that I hate Twitter. I currently use Twitter and I think the trend of bite-sized news updates is here to stay. But Twitter itself is a terrible website and service because it provides very little functionality. Twitter.com allows you to share 140 characters of text. Nothing else. Twitter’s inherent limitations have spawned a cottage industry of Twitter clients and add-ons (like TweetDeck and TwitPic) that expand Twitter’s functionality. Functionality that Twitter should have in the first place. I hope Twitter fails, because I don’t need another service sending out bite-sized info about myself. The Facebook newsfeed does that well enough (but could certainly be improved).

Twitter is limited to text. In contrast, my Facebook newsfeed features images, videos, events, groups, public communication (wall posts), and activity from other sites (like Digg and Google Reader). The newsfeed already has the functionality of Twitter, far exceeds Twitter’s basic service, and has a much larger userbase. Facebook is the easiest way for me to share pictures, plan events, and keep up with my friends. In redesigning the Homepage, Facebook has focused too much on the text status update in a misguided attempt to copy Twitter. Twitter’s limitation is the same as the new FB Homepage: I live my life in multimedia, not text. I want to easily share photos, videos, maps, wall posts, event details, status updates, group changes, and other activity. Facebook’s homepage should be a multimedia portal, not a collection of text. Engage the user. The publisher needs to focus on multimedia by default. User’s need a better way to manage their groups, events, photos, and profile. Allow for a full-screen homepage.

If Facebook wants to be the digital nexus of my physical life, then it needs to help me create, share, and promote all of the media in my life. This means more than just text. If the people at Facebook are as smart and responsive as I think they are, you can bet that within the next few months (early May, I’d say), the FB Homepage will change again. This time, to something that doesn’t overwhelm the user with text, and improves upon Twitter’s meager offering in every way possible.

Misguided outcry over Fountain Day and Spring Fling combo

March 5th, 2009

There has been minor outrage expressed over at the GW Hatchet blogs due to the announcement that Program Board and the Mount Vernon Programming Council will be co-producing a single spring concert / party, “Fountain Fling,” instead of the traditionally separate Fountain Day and Spring Fling events. Such an outcry is not unexpected, but it is misguided. Instead of focusing on the Vern’s relatively small gymnasium and the hassle of taking the Vern Express, students should realize that, in combining the events, the resulting Fountain Fling has a much larger budget and better resources than either event individually.

Yes, I ran against the current PB administration in last month’s student body elections. But as Program Board IT Chair I completely agree with the decision to combine Fountain Day and Spring Fling. The creation of Fountain Fling is not so much a reaction to the unavailability of the Smith Center, as it is a decision to provide the best experience possible to students. Both PB and PC have limited budgets for events and cannot rely on additional funding from the university. Renting a venue outside GW, or holding the event on University Yard but using the Vern as a rain site, are both unrealistic suggestions due to budgetary constraints. Instead of spending unnecessary funds on a “better” venue, PB and PC have combined their resources to bring a better band to campus. The student body will be pleased — so long as we continue to hope, as we hope every year, for a rainless day.

We have to make the best of our divided campus; we either ignore the Vern completely, or embrace what it adds to GW. I agree with one commenter that “the Vern is not and should not be considered a ‘last resort.’ ” If we want to achieve community at GW, we have to unite the Foggy Bottom and Mt. Vernon campuses despite their geographical distance. In the interest of community, it makes sense to have one major events on Foggy Bottom, and another major event at Mt. Vernon. The shuttle ride is unfortunate but bearable; certainly no worse than a walk from E St to I St. Fountain Fling is a step in the right direction: towards collaboration and away from ignorance.

I do have one concern, however: how we will differentiate between Fall Fest and Fountain Fling, now that both bear the acronym FF?

Please Pardon My Appearance

March 5th, 2009

While I transition from my campaign website to a new, regularly updated website. The transition should be completed by the end of Spring Break (March 20th). In the meantime, I will be updating the blog with my thoughts on various items related to literature, film, theatre, and The George Washington University. You can also check out my Twitter feed and my Facebook profile.

Thanks!

Bored of Capitol Hill? Go to the Theatre

March 5th, 2009