Sobtanian's old blog. Still full of goodies, why don't you stay a while.
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Thursday, October 06, 2011
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Dark Souls is out this Friday
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
It's a Pheasant Plucking Life
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Happy Eid
Saturday, July 30, 2011
HDR shots



Saturday, July 23, 2011
Amy Winehouse RIP
Sunday, July 10, 2011
The Rise and Rise of Rameses II - Part 1
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Quick iPad 2 Update
Friday, June 17, 2011
Tuesday, June 07, 2011
pWiised to meet U
Nintendo, at their E3 conference today, have announced their next console, the "Wii U".

Tuesday, May 31, 2011
I broke my iPad 2
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Different by design
EXHIBIT ONE: This is how men carry children: Notice our forearm acts a seat for the child's bum, all his weight is carried on your forearm. Hard work.
EXHIBIT TWO: This is how women carry children: note how Kelly's arm is around Adam's back, his bum is actually seated on her hips. By design, women have wider/more stick out hips than we do, and this is used to great effect when carrying a child. His weight is almost all taken by the hip, rather than the arm.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
SpaceChem Challenge: In-Place Swap (single reactor solution)
Saturday, May 07, 2011
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Quick iPad 2 Review (for those of you with a first-gen iPad)
The new iPad is a strange beast. Fundamentally, it does almost nothing different to the first-gen machine. The addition of cameras is the major new function, used to snap (pointless) pictures, but more importantly it enables video-chatting. Currently, that's via Apple's own FaceTime software, letting iPads/iPhones/Macs chat to each other. Surely there will be loads of 3rd Party apps soon though, Skype et al. Of course there's a built-in microphone now too.
The G/CPU inside has been upgraded to an A5 SoC (System on a Chip) based on the ARM Cortex-A9. What this means is that the already-zippy iPad is even zippier. It is a palpable difference, but nothing to write home about. Apple is keen to stress that the battery life remains at 10 hours, something that is remarkably true.
The much-hyped form factor has changed as well. The iPad 2 is thinner and lighter than the iPad. The weight difference isn't huge, but it makes a big difference. Carrying the iPad single-handedly would be much simpler due to this, but the next point unfortunately works against it.
The new design has lost the side bevel of the original, meaning that the edge of the device instantly slopes inwards to form the much flatter back. This creates a sharp edge of sorts, which digs in a little bit when carrying the machine with one hand. It's not painful, but it can become uncomfortable. Unfortunately, as mentioned above, this kinda counters the weight loss advantage for single handed carrying.
Due to the lack of the side bevel, the buttons (which remain unchanged in position and function) are now at an angle , as they sit on the sloped edge. After a while you get used to this but for my first hours with the machine I thought they were getting stuck but that was because I was pushing them in the wrong direction.
Initially, the edge and back change feel weird. It's no secret that the iPad is a pleasure to use, so these changes are unwelcome to begin with. After a bit of use, you get used to them and won't turn back. I have the benefit of still having the original machine and have been comparing the two constantly, and I've reached the conclusion that the weight and back of the newer machine make it more comfortable than the first.
The speaker isn't as loud as the first machine, and that's probably a good thing if I'm honest - Kelly is playing Angry Birds right now on the first iPad near me, and it sounds like that annoying dude that sits next to you on the train with really loud music playing through open-back headphones.
My iPad is white, and I'm glad I chose that colour. It looks very slick and does not distract. But I guess the colour choice is down to personal preference.
One unmentioned but very important change is The home button. This is now much softer and barely clicks, something that, to me at least, is much better than the noisy click-clacking of the first one, especially when double-clicking.
Smart Covers are the big new addition also. Frankly, they are a stroke of genius and it's amazing how no one came up with these earlier. The cover attaches to the machine with magnets (that are polarised to accept one position only), instantly snapping on to a snug, precise fit. Lift the cover up, and the iPad unlocks automatically. The cover can also be "rolled up" to form a base or stand for the machine. Again, something very useful which incidentally I happen to be using this very minute, typing this blog post on the iPad in landscape orientation with the cover tilting it comfortably towards me.
Everything else remains exactly the same, with the iOS and apps being identical to the first iPad.
Overall, I personally don't think any of these new "additions" justify an upgrade. If you're happy with your iPad, keep it. It isn't worth paying full price for the newer machine, as the form factor and smart covers aren't enough to justify the asking price. I don't know if in the future certain apps/games will require the faster CPU, but by then the 3rd gen will probably be on the horizon.
If, on the other hand, like me you need a second machine, or have read through this post to decide if the iPad 2 is the right first tablet for you; then the design, interface, covers, and battery life make this a very worthy purchase.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Don't eat the chilli
Monday, March 07, 2011
Sunday, March 06, 2011
I have this sneaky feeling
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Here's a video of me
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
2nd of March. iPad 2?

Sunday, February 20, 2011
Wednesday, February 09, 2011
On how gareth170 made a change
Thursday, February 03, 2011
Dark Souls debut trailer
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
COD: Black Ops Easter Egg delights!
Monday, January 10, 2011
CLiNT

INDIA had many friends who studied at Baghdad International School, as such he had access to a lot of MAD copies. Of course, MAD is a very cool kinda comic. It's a satire of everything mainstream, and featured many great artists and writers, and the infamous side comics scribbled around the margins of each page.
When I came back the UK in 2000 (Damn! 11 years ago!), I almost immediately subscribed to MAD via a magazine import specialist. Unfortunately, the magazine has lost a lot of its charm. Advertising (something famously missing from it) crept in and has taken over almost every other page. Also, "political correctness" has generated a very "safe" and "bubble-wrapped" MAD. I very recently saw some digital copies of the magazine and unfortunately its just the same.
And that was about the end of my relationship with comics. When I lived in London I used to regularly visit the amazing Forbidden Planet, a haven for everything movie/cartoon/comic. But I used to mainly go there for the figurines or Muppets toys. I hardly ever went down to the basement where the comics lived.
Things changed a few years ago when I bought my first laptop, an Apple PowerBook Pro. I stumbled upon a programme called Comic Book Lover that let you read digital scans of comics on the mac, and even included an awesome portrait mode, where you held the laptop like a book, hence the screen orientation was more like a real page. The digital comic scene is still very vibrant, and still mostly underground and illegal. With the rise of iPad and the slew of tablets to follow, comic publishers like Marvel and DC have all got their own dedicated comic apps and stores for you to legally purchase and read comics. The underground scene on the other hand is a group of very dedicated people that painstakingly scan comics and compress them. You can get these scans from anywhere naughty on the net, and read them using many programmes, one of which is Comic Book Lover.
So I started reading comics again. Some I found myself, others given to me by another friend (anarki13) and so on. And I started realising how awesome the world of comics is. The art just adds a huge dimension to the story, and the stories aren't all "man has super powers and saves damsel in distress". In fact, the stories of many writers (Mark Millar, Garth Ennis to name two) are in fact dark, vicious, and very adult.
Comics also tackle some hard subjects, in a way that perhaps a traditional novel can't. The amazing Pride Of Baghdad is a great example of a comic tackling the harrowing effect war has on the country, and particularly on a pride of lions starving in the zoo of the city. The art combined with the story give a real sense of depth and emotion to such a dark and difficult topic. Something I doubt the writer could have expressed with words alone.
And, just like with music, people who read/listen to illegal material also tend to be the people that actually purchase the most legal stuff, or attend more music gigs and buy merchandise, actually spending more on the industry than the average CD buyer. Hence, I started paying attention to real print comics, and also built a collection of digital comics purchased from the publishers.
Which takes me to CLiNT. CLiNT is a magazine published in the UK by Mark Millar, and has only just reached its 5th issue. The magazine features many regular strips by Millar and others (including the phenomenal Nemesis series), but also features articles. These articles are what I love about the mag. They're simple, printed in a large font and very easy to read. The longest article is 2 pages, and they cover topics like "magicians who died on stage" to "actors who have been fired". Trivial stuff but exactly the kind of thing you want to read between comic strips.
The language throughout CLiNT is very adult, swear words and soft sexual scenes can be found in the strips and articles, but it's all done with good taste and in context. There's none of that "sexy woman in bikini holding a piece of tech" crap you find on the cover of almost every man-interest magazine out there.
In fact, what CLiNT reminds me of a lot is the heady days of MAD. True the strips and subjects are very different between the two, but it's that exciting sense of getting the magazine and reading it from cover to cover in one delicious, greedy sitting. CLiNT has literally been designed for this purpose. I've subscribed and bought all issues, only because I really want the magazine to thrive, but if it doesn't at least I'd have the full set.
I've collected every one of the 104 GamesTM issues, and it's still going strong. Here's wishing the same success to CLiNT.