Hex colour wordsearch
Saturday, August 21st, 2010
And if my last hex crossword post wasn’t enough, here’s a hex colour word search too. Does life get any better than this? Right, no more, I promise.

And if my last hex crossword post wasn’t enough, here’s a hex colour word search too. Does life get any better than this? Right, no more, I promise.

So you think you know Kung Fu hex colours? Have a go at this little crossword to find out if you’e the Rain Man of the colour world.
And if you think that’s hard, I was originally going to make it for sequences or DNA…
I love bikes, but let’s be frank, cyclists commuting through London on recumbents are really embarrassing. Like those people who do offroad riding on unicycles. You know who you are. Stop it.
Anyway, if you ride a Tron Legacy bike backwards, I think you could get away with it…

function contemplate(karma) {
if (karma<uint.MAX_VALUE) {
contemplate(karma+1);
trace("Hello Buddha");
}
}
contemplate(1);
Incidentally, as a matter of scientific rigor, I ran this function in Flash and unsurprisingly, I got an stack overflow error pretty quickly. After a little testing, it seems Flash loses its state of Karma after precisely 2729 iterations.
And even more curious, 27-29 was also the score in the 2009 Rugby Union match between Stade Francais and Bath that effectively ended their Heineken Cup hopes. Spooky.

I spotted some rather curious behavior from Twitter just now. A friend tweeted 2 minutes in the future! My tweet back, 30 seconds later, was 3 minutes in the future! Each Tweet is going back 30 seconds further back in time. Very strange.
If we keep this up, in 19 years, I’ll be 1 again. Not quite the plot of Benjamin Button but I’m sure some hack will scratch out a movie plot with it at some point. I might give M. Night a ring…
I came up with two horrific code jokes a while back. Apologies in advance…
['hip','hip']
Hover over here >
< for the answer
var word:Array = new Array(‘c’,'h’,'i’,'c’,'k’,'e’,'n’);
while (true) {
word.push(word.shift());
}
Hover over here >
< for the answer

Now even though I say this myself, I have a really cool day job. I make games, I think of mad ideas, I get to sit in pink rooms with AstroTurf and beanbags, play with iPads and I can get to visit some very cool paces. I’ll save the story about the chat I had with Cameron Diaz in Beverly Hills about my socks for another day, but you get the point.
In the eyes of my kids (and to be fair, most of their mates too) I actually have the coolest job in the entire widest world, ever. Of course, I keep all the dull bits quite and concentrate on the good bits they like to hear about. My existence is spent doing the normal humdrum life stuff waiting for the next cool thing I can impress kids with”. I understand that as soon as my kids reach 13, I’ll be the most annoying, uncool and saddo dad, like, evaaaar! So I’m enjoying the run while it lasts. And today was one of those days when a cool thing happened.
How it happened
Friend, entrepreneur and “mummy blogger” Janis Curry, the brains behind ReallyKidfriendly.com kindly invited me as a +1 to a visit to the head quarters of Moshi Monsters, the kid friendly, monster-themed virtual world for kids. Clearly, this would have major kudos points for my Moshi Monster obsessed offspring so of course I jumped at the chance… and bonus… my 6-year-old son was invited too. I don’t know who was most excited.

A typical scene. mooching up and down the shopping district.
Moshi Monsters in a nutshell
If you’re not sure what Moshi Monsters is, let me do an “in a nutshell” overview. Essentially it’s a fun virtual world where you adopt and nurture cute little monsters. You play games, walk around, meet other monsters (safely!), plant seeds in the garden and also earn Rox (the local currency). You can spend your Rox on little Moshlings (sidekicks), decking out your pad and so on. Much of it is free but there are premium accounts available for monthly, 6 monthly or yearly subscriptions. It’s safe, moderated and the games aim to have an invisible undertone of education, undetectable to the kids but welcomed by parents. Got it? Good… let’s continue.

There's a lot to do... but lots more will be unlocked soon.
Behind the scenes
The offices of Mind Candy, the company behind Moshi Monsters are pretty unassuming from the outside, and from the inside to be honest but big things are afoot and a move to bigger, better and no doubt funkier offices in Shorditch are planned later in the year. Katsuma will be sporting a Hoxton quiff and riding a fixie before you know it.
Once inside, we were ushered into one of those room filled with Moshi Monster paraphernalia, not to mention sweets and dare I say it, a beanbag. We met Andy Matjaszek (Global Product Marketing Manager) and Ed Relf (Chief Marketing Manager) and the assembled kids tucked into healthy snacks and played on the Moshi Monsters site. Meanwhile, the grown-ups listened to head honcho Michael Acton-Smith (CEO) explain the origins and future plans for Moshi Monsters. The Q&A session brought up some interesting tid bits which I will share below but the overall impression seeping through every answer was that the guys behind Moshi Monsters are doing it for all the right reasons. Success has not been at the expense of values (like keeping children safe and entertained) and has also afforded them the space to explore only the opportunities that feed kids enjoyment of the Moshi Monsters brand itself. You won’t find big ads for Sunny Delight on Moshi, likewise, you won’t find mindless shoot-em-up games or free-form chat rooms on their too. “Education by stealth” as Michael put it.

Games are fun with subtle emphasis on learning along the way.
Of course, the inevitable comparison to Club Penguin (and indeed Webkins) came up but the resounding response was “There’s room for all of us”. Moshi Monsters arguably has more traction than Club Penguin with parents and teachers because of it’s smarter approach to games and activities.
TV ads still work
One of Michael’s slides showed the ubiquitous ‘growth curve’ with a fairly significant upward bend in it somewhere around last summer. When asked about it, the culprit was simple… TV advertising. It’s really interesting to see this time and time again. Online is fantastic at deep engagement for kids. TV is fantastic for awareness. Mix the two together and good things happen (assuming the online element lives up to the advert). There was, of course, a full media plan behind this meteoric rise, including outdoor, digital, press and the usual suspects but TV was the main pltform when it comes to introducing a new brand to kids. It certainly worked for my kids. Club Penguin was unceremoniously dumped in favour of Moshi Monsters a few months back, roughly the same time that the Moshi Monster aired on Disney XD.
What else?
So what other news is there from Moshi Monsters?
Fun facts
Some fun facts from Moshi Monsters

The origin of the Moshi Monster empire... say hello to Chico.
Get the crayons out
The day was topped off with a tour of the studio an appearance from Trevor White (illustrator and concept artist) who did a valiant attempt at trying to teach the assembled grown-ups and kids how to draw Katsuma, one of the Moshi Monsters. Nice touch. The guys at Aardman Studios do a similar thing and in a way, the Mind Candy crew have a very similar vibe to the Aardman folks down in Bristol. They are passionate about their craft, have been successful enough to keep hold of the creative reins and when all’s said and done, what they make does the talking… and speaks volumes.

Trevor teaching a little monster how to draw a little monster
And it gets better
And if all that excitement wasn’t enough, we were issued with several bags of Moshi Monster goodies for the kids. I won’t tell you what was in them but rest assured, I secretly wished I had one too! But on reflection, I’m not that worried about the goody bag (ish), I just had another cool moment to impress my kid’s friends with. That’ll keep me going for a few weeks at least!
I’ll be watching the new adventures of Mind Candy and Moshi Monsters with interest. The next 12 months sounds like a very exciting time both for the Moshi Monster world and it’s audience of little monsters.
If you’ve not been to Mosh Monsters… pull yourself together… go there now. And if you’re lucky, your friend’s kids will think your cool.

Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best. Cuts right to the heart of the hysteria about the Facebook Like button… and pokes a finger in it.
Get yours over at PubNub. You need a Google account but, hell, you’ve got one of those already, right?
One annoying thing is that WordPress deletes part of the embed tag if you switch to Visual in the admin tool when writing a post. Quite annoying, but I’m sure I can muscle past that. Just make it the last thing you add to your post after switching to HTML mode I guess.

I bought a set of triple-clamp Marcocchi Bomber forks from eBay a while back and needed some stickers to get them looking funky. Found the nice people at Peel ‘n’ Stick on Ebay and ordered a set for £5.99. However, as I ordered the through the Ebay app on my iPhone, there was never an opportunity to specify the colour. Couple of days later, a black set arrived… needed white. Doh!
So I now have a set of 14 black Marzocchi Bomber stickers going spare courtesy of the guys at Peel ‘n’ Stick.
If you want them, just leave a comment and pop them in the post for free. To be sensible, this is only for people in the UK so the postage doesn’t end up costing more than the stickers!
And the great circle of Karma will be complete once more.
More size info / details here