Author Archive
WordPress fatal memory error fix
I’ve kept getting this error message at my Ussins blog whenever I try upgrading wordpress automatically, and just got it now when trying to automatically upgrade plugins:
“Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 33554432 bytes exhausted”
Fed up with seeing it, I googled it and was led to this page, with a simple fix recommended by the commenter “gestroud”:
You could also add this line to your wp-config.php
define(‘WP_MEMORY_LIMIT’, ’64M’);
This way you won’t have to constantly make the fix again whenever you upgrade WordPress.
I added that line near the top of said file in the install, but made it 128M (for 128 Megabytes), and tried the plugin upgrade again. Error fixed.
Someone else there mentioned it might be caused by a php.ini in the wp-includes folder that would have been added manually “by you or your host”. I find no such file at my web server, only a php.ini.default, and I don’t know if that applies. If it did, it would be changing the line that starts:
memory_limit 32
Which for me had a byte listing (not 32 as in the comments in that thread); I’d assume it would just be quadrupling that number to equal 128 megabytes.
Investment-related etc. posts moved
I moved a bunch of posts related to my (pricey education in) investing to my unofficially titled Obnoxious Profiteering Blog, updating a few links and comments as necessary. If you miss any of the posts (not likely, given my education in marketing, my loathing of marketing to anyone I know, and my traffic here), old links to the posts here redirect there (thanks to a handy WordPress plugin that handles redirects).
Brood 2a Fractal Flame interbreeds
These children were born too long ago; it is time to release them.
I’ve created a set of Windows batch scripts that retrieve (over the internet) and cross-breed Electric Sheep genomes, which I’ll show results for here. There are two galleries – scroll further down for the second. The batches retrieve the sheep genomes (or instructions for creating these images) either by checking against saved image names or at pure random via the random.org number service.
The first gallery is of the parent genomes, and the second is of their children, nearly 500 of them, which survive many thousands of aborted children. They are interbred by both hand-picked and randomly picked genomes. Many of these are rendered at a very high resolution of 2560 x 1960! Altogether, rendering these took a Pentium III machine working non-stop for about a week.
It is my intent to add these into the mix of my mass-customization product picker; I need to work out credit and payment sharing with generation 242+ sourced images. Images that say .242 in them are not free to reuse; everything else is. Note the links to show any showcased image in full, huge-resolution size
Here are the parents:
[svgallery name="brood-2a-parents"]
And here are the children:
[svgallery name="brood-2a-children"]
Nintendo WiiWare Boingz silliness: jump to the rhythm with antenna pinned!
This can alternately be watched in High Definition @ the YouTube site via this link.
A silly rhythmic clip. Game developed by NinjaBee. The critters’ voices in this game are my voice acting, and I did other sound and particle effects work.
Why location-aware lifestreaming spooks me
I ran across this site, foursquare. That link is to an anonymous (to me) user who volunteers exactly when and where he is, at any and many times. Specific times and addresses, and all of this is completely public. It is creepy enough knowing the founder of Facebook makes breathless declarations about how (allegedly) outmoded privacy is, and how easily people could be burglarized as a result of tweeting about their vacation (or updating their status in any of a variety of social media).
WARNING: very foul culture exposed in the first link to follow – avoid if you’d rather not know.
The article at the first of that group of links explains how easily you can locate any stranger’s house by connecting, as an example, geotags from a flikr account to an individual. But this foursquare service provides all that in one glance, in addition to time information in one glance, for anyone to look up. Any burglar (or worse) who wants to find a target doesn’t even need their name. Time and location is enough.
mindlesstweeter plane landed! did u see my tweets about my new expensive electronics? pls burglarize me!
goods4me @mindlesstweeter: in ur house raiding ur expensive electronics! u cannot find me my accnt is behind anonymus proxy hahaha
TRANSFER FAIL (Buzz-Buzz!)
I am downloading so many gigabytes of abstract art animations from where someone has uploaded their repository of Electric Sheep movie files (I’m in contact with this person; I’ll be uploading the ones I have for him – and for you! – to access). As I do this, the download eventually runs into an error: out of hard drive space.
Yoink!
I’ll need to move what I’ve downloaded to an external hard drive to free up space. So I connect the drive and start doing this. The computer hangs (several high octane applications open, music playing, and many high octane data transfers will do this – if your computer is a few years old). No usual attempts to unfreeze it succeed. Finally it occurs to me it’s the data transfer that is probably the real holdup; I’ve seen this setup unfreeze before if I simply disconnect the external drive to interrupt it. I disconnect it, and the instant I do so, everything else on my computer is freed up, including my music player, which proceeds to the next song in my queue, which it happens is not a song, but a video game sound effect, and this sound effect besides:
[audio:EB tr022 - Buzz-Buzz's Demise.mp3]
How appropriate.
If you have not enjoyed this happenstance, you may take reprieve in the idea that it is possible you may not be a nerd. And/or that you have never played (or fully understood, as it becomes any human beings’ divine duty to understand) EARTHBOUND, the classic among classic Super Nintendo video games from which this sound effect comes, at a moment at which a very important something (someone), a bee, dies. Like.. like.. like a failed data transfer. Oh, the poetry.
$5,000 fine if you refuse staggeringly invasive census questionairre
I am stunned by this.
Among the 3 million people this census variation is being (apparently) sort of tested on (hey, will they put up with this?), any one of them could be fined $5,000 for failing to answer questions like the following (I summarize):
How many people live in your home? Are any of them Hispanic? Are they citizens? How big is your home? What is your education level? Do you have difficulty making decisions or climbing stairs? Are you able to bathe, dress, or shop alone? How much do you pay for your sewage system? Are you married? What industry do you work in? What is your precise job description? What’s your rent or mortgage payment? Do you own an automobile? Are you covered by health insurance? What type? Are you on food stamps? How much money do you make?
I am not making this up. (Could I? I am not Ray Bradbury, and our world is not yet a Fahrenheit 451 world.) Here is a direct link to the publicly available .pdf form for the questionnaire, which is available from the Census web site here.
Apparently the Census Bureau “rarely” seeks fines for failing to answer. So what? What on earth caused any government official to think it is okay to compel everyday citizens to disclose such excess of private information? In regards to an everyday citizen, so much private information is not the Government’s business. (The puzzled administrative personnel respond: what is private? What exactly do you mean by this term?) Unless your government has evolved much closer to Communism than you may realize. So maybe I’ll make that statement more accurate. Evidently, as things are, precisely such information of everyday citizens is the government’s business – but it should not be.
A bit too pious about the ‘net (opentochoice.org)..
At opentochoice, “choice matters”:
“..the Web browser has become one of the most critical and trusted relationships of our modern lives – with nearly perfect knowledge of everything we do.”
Um, no.
.. And I’m thankful for the Mozilla Foundation, and search engine optimization, and my search engine ranking, and Firefox plugins.. and please bless that Google will stop nagging me to opt-in to Google Wave..”
The ‘net is great (even arguably crucial), but this sounds like.. actual worship. Wrong god. Idol Fail.
(I actually am thankful for the Mozilla Foundation, though.)
They’re Starting to Come Around Again..
You may find this useful as the days get warmer. Click the image for a much larger version. Here is the original Photoshop format file for you to mess with, and here’s a .pdf version for easier printing, too.
Three Tracks from The Guardian Legend
I find track 06 from this old Nintendo game uniquely interesting and cool.
[audio:GL-track-06.mp3]
(download mp3, ~2.39 MB, 2:44)
Also track 26, though maybe it gets older faster (still, it’s really a crime against my hardcore Nintendo music roots to even suggest that any such music could be redundant).
[audio:GL-track-26.mp3]
(download mp3, ~2.04 MB, 2:44)
I’d pick and choose other cool tracks to post here, but I’d be uploading half the game’s music. Or all of it.
I’m far overdue posting how to rip these tracks to mp3 files for those interested
But this wouldn’t be complete without the games’ title/screen/opening.. anthem?
[audio:GL-track-02.mp3]
(download mp3, ~1.94 MB, 2:44)
File Tracking with Tags (tag2find for Windows)
I’ve been wanting something like this for some time and may have finally found it. This tool is great:
After installation you can “tag” any file with a right-click, then left click “Quick Tag this..”. To “tag” a file means to associate one or more words or phrases with it. Then this tool lets you search for files you have tagged. If you copy or move the file, this background program automatically updates its database – it keeps track of the file for you. This is very useful if you move files around and otherwise have a hard time keeping track of them, or simply don’t like the dozen mouse clicks otherwise necessary to peruse your folder heirarchy
Better still, when you install it, it asks you where you want its tag database to be located. That way, when you inevitably must reformat the Windows hard drive
and assuming you maintain the good (nay, crucial) practice of backing up your files to a separate hard drive, this database will still be available and usable.
Another implication of determining the database location is (blathering now) [spoiler]you could potentially create a network share of file locations for users on a local network. I haven’t tried that, and don’t know the feasibility – you’d need to make sure all mapped network drive letters for one resource are the same for each user, and that somehow each user’s shared resources are referenced identically to each machine; also, I don’t know whether the database can be managed by multiple users simultaneously.[/spoiler]
The advantage of using an external database is there is no fuss with the varying, incompatible, dysfunctional standards for tagging files themselves. The tag data is external to the file yet perfectly managed in reference to it. Even when you can tag a file in Windows, this often uses file system informational extensions which can get wiped out if you copy the file to another drive (or other media), or worse, if they are copied elsewhere, it may be when you don’t want them to be.
The program runs in the background, apparently does not produce any noticeable slowdown, has a minimalistic and great user interface, and it can integrate with the Windows shell right-click menu (which is what allows you to right-click a file to tag it).
My initial impressions of this tool are very positive – I think this will probably be a keeper.
Best of all, it’s free.
Google Desktop, I hear you say? Problems:
- Privacy – you may not be aware it can submit its search index of your personal files to a server. Superfluous lawsuit and subpoena? There went all your privacy. (Never mind that we have very little privacy by modern practices – unless extreme self-protection is your avocation.)
- Inefficiency; it is behemoth and sluggish because it indexes everything
- As a consequence of 2, it is mostly useless – when I have used it to search for email or file name text I know exists, it hasn’t found it – because it is still indexing the other 90% of useless information on my hard drive, and it hasn’t indexed what I’m looking for yet.
- No file tagging.
- I boycott Google when I can, for reasons I’ve blathered about here too often. Google it under this domain
or search “google” in my blog’s (non-Google!) search tool.
Nope. tag2find wins hands down.
[Update 2010-01-31]
Just spotted this YouTube video about an upcoming “next generation” version of this tool. Watching this video, I’m completely baffled why an investor would drop funding for this. The project is apparently and unfortunately lagging for that reason. But watch this video.
They’re also planning an API that will allow external tools to interact with it, including, it seems implied, link tagging (like delicious.com) and web object tracking (such as individual photographs – and/or tags associated with them? – posted to Picasa)? If so, and from that video also, I think the next generation version will be very hot when it comes out.
An additional verse for Amazing Grace
‘Twas grace that taught my heart to grieve
And grace my heart to sing
For Him whose Death is my Rebirth;
The Everlasting Spring!
If you search, you’ll find that dozens of different versions of Amazing Grace and additional verses can be found. This verse is mine.
First 1080p resolution Electric Sheep Demo
From here.
The green bacterial looking clusters in the final sequence before it evolves into a blur – that is one of the coolest artistic abstractions I’ve ever seen. But I think the whole sequence is breathtaking.
Gay Mechanics
Here’s a shout out to the variants of my domain name I never managed to secure, openhatch.com and .org (I only secured this here .net).
Clearly the term “Gay Mechanics” in the article’s subject is a typographical error; Same Gender Attracted professional mechanics are never mentioned in the article, neither the assortment of alternately male-ended or female ended shafts any mechanic may often find himself, uh, handling, neither indeed the assortment of gruff, bear-like fellows they may find themselves among.
I know at least several gay mechanics, and I’ve learned to stop worrying and start loving them.
But oh, by dag nab, dontcha wish I’d gotten my hands on those domains now?
[If the subject in the linked article reads not "gay" but "game", it is because the poster of the article corrected the error.]
Why Desktop RSS Feed Readers are Not Mainstream
For example – in Mozilla Thunderbird, to add an RSS feed and manage reading it in a sensible, organized way, you must follow detailed steps involving figures A through P (or 1 to 16; PLUS, if you want to know that this is 16 steps (simply to measure the extent of your technical fatigue), you must count A-P on your fingers. Unless you happen to know off-hand that P is the 16th letter of the English Alphabet. I didn’t.)
[The header of the concluding section of that article says: "That Was Painless". Um, if you're used to following, say, 42-step technical processes in your everyday work, maybe, in comparison.]
This should be a three to four step process:
1. Click the RSS icon in the address bar of Firefox.
2. Select “Subscribe Using Thunderbird”, which should be available by default (if you want Thunderbird to even be in the equation – which, even if it is, Firefox doesn’t tell you in the subscription button – it assumes you just know). Since this is not available by default, you have to follow a 5 step configuration to make that available.
3. Thunderbird comes up with a window, asking “If you want to add [title of RSS feed] to your Thunderbird RSS Subscriptions, select the account and folder you’d like to add it to.” – providing drop-down menus to select the account and folder.
Theoretically, it’s possible to get it down to such a three or four step task (and that page only got me heading in the general right direction). I haven’t gotten it to work. And this is in lieu of many more hacking steps I’d really rather avoid.
I thought these two applications were kinda cuddly friends? My exploration of the idea doesn’t find any proof..
