In what started as an Earth Day joke on Twitter (Buy a Kindle! Use electricity and rare earth metals instead of clean, renewable paper!), and turned into a serious business decision, I bought a Kindle. I’m getting the impression that for many people the Kindle is a cheap alternative to an iPad, which means I need to be able to ensure webpages work well on it.
But, while I have it, I might as well be able to customize it a bit. So I’ve replaced the the default screensavers with my own. You see, the Kindle’s screen doesn’t actually need “saved” as such, but it can show something even when it’s off. So Amazon has it show these woodcuts of selected authors. But what if you don’t care about those authors? You have to install a “jailbreak” and a “screensaver” patch, then you can upload your own author images to the Kindle.
I’ve gone ahead and put in Isaac Asimov, William Blake, Robert Frost, Aldous Huxley, and Edgar Allan Poe into my rotation.
I’ve also uploaded the complete Sherlock Holmes onto the Kindle. I’ve never read any Holmes, but I probably should.
While making some Mega Man wallpaper* I found over at Destructoid.com an article from last year discussing the psychological effects of combat on Mega Man. It’s an interesting concept, despite the impression I get that it’s not meant altogether seriously. And that’s where the analysis fails: it only looks at the first game and the then-last game, Mega Man 9. A look at the rest of the series would make the situation clearer.
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