GeekDad Parents, Kids and the Stuff We Obsess About

This Week in The Clone Wars: Anakin on the Attack

Anakin anticipates his opponent’s next move in “Cat and Mouse,” an all-new episode of STAR WARS: THE CLONE WARS premiering at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT Friday, March 26 on Cartoon Network. TM & © 2010 Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved.

Anakin anticipates his opponent’s next move in “Cat and Mouse,” an all-new episode of STAR WARS: THE CLONE WARS premiering at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT Friday, March 26 on Cartoon Network. TM & © 2010 Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved.

Rumor has it that Anakin Skywalker is a great pilot–”the best star pilot in the galaxy,” in fact. If you’ve been keeping up with your Star Wars: The Clone Wars comics, then you’ve gotten a recent reminder, as the “Hero of the Confederacy” storyline pits Anakin up against a Valahari master pilot.  But it’s been awhile since Anakin’s flashed his skills on the Cartoon Network’s series.

This Friday, however, he plays a dangerous game of “Cat and Mouse” with a worthy opponent, the Separatist Admiral Trench.  The voice of Anakin, Matt Lanter, sees these episodes as pivoting between Anakin and his imminent fall as Darth Vader:

“Right now, we are portraying Anakin as the hero that old Ben described in the original movie – a brave warrior and a great pilot. . . . I like getting to play the confidence in him – the cockiness. He literally thinks he always has the best plan, and can get his way out of any situation – and the cool thing is that most of the time he can. Yes, we definitely see some flashes of what’s to come. He has a temper, and he likes a good fight. But Anakin has a good heart and good intentions, and I try to bring that honesty to the character. He’s different from the Anakin we saw in the films; he is more likeable and swashbuckling at this point. I just try to bring out that confident Anakin – and I love that characteristic because it’s so much fun for me to play.

“At this point in the series, I would say he’s still a hero – but we are seeing more and more flashes of the dark side, and more of the temper which foreshadows what’s to come. . . Anakin wants to do what he believes is just and fair, but I feel like the entire Star Wars universe has shades of gray. The Republic isn’t necessarily always right and fair, and that’s why Anakin falls in the end. He doesn’t like to follow rules if he feels it doesn’t make sense to do so. For now, that turns out well, and he saves the day. Sometimes, it doesn’t turn out so well…”

The episode premieres tonight at 9pm on The Cartoon Network. Here’s your clip:

Dork Tower Friday

Dork Tower #811 by John Kovalic

Dork Tower #811 by John Kovalic

Read all the Dork Towers that have run on GeekDad.

Find the Dork Tower archives, DT printed collections, more cool comics, awesome games and a whole lot more at the Dork Tower Website.

Australian LEGO Champion In Full Flight

Photo: brickventures.com

Australia’s LEGO Brickvention Champion, Ryan McNaught is bringing his winning entry to the United States for the Brickworld event in Chicago in June.

The novel aspect to this trip, McNaught’s model is actually an airplane.

The Qantas replica of the world’s largest passenger plane, the Airbus A380 is 2.2-meter long, 1.8-meter wide and constructed from 35,000 bricks.

But, what captured this GeekDad’s fancy is that true to his geeky roots McNaught has included a cast of crew and passengers from aviation-related films Passenger 57, Snakes on a Plane, Castaway, Alive and Flying High. As the model split in half to reveal the whole inner workings of life on board the plane and boasts a touch screen that controls functions on the Airbus, including the landing gear, wing flaps and cargo doors.

The only question now is, will Qantas see the potential of this fine model and pay the shipping costs for all 55kg of the replica to get to the United States?

(Via The Age - where there is a great photo spread)

Fair Use: brickventures.com

Fair Use: brickventures.com

8 Things Parents Should Know About How to Train Your Dragon 3D

Image by DreamWorks Animation

Image by DreamWorks Animation

What better way to spend the weekend than soaring with dragons and sailing with Vikings? How to Train Your Dragon 3D combines the two for a fantastic adventure about a scrawny Viking’s coming-of-age and his friendship with his village’s mortal enemy: a fearsome dragon he improbably wounds in battle and then nurses back to health.

Will I like it?

The movie has lots of action, witty dialogue and believable characters. The pacing is good, and it’s more than run-of-the-mill dragonslayer fantasy. If you liked Shrek at all, you’ll like How to Train Your Dragon, and you’ll probably have more fun watching it. As far as the fantasy element, the existence of dragons — if it needs any justification — is treated in a naturalistic and nonmagical way, with everything else grounded in the real world as we know it.

Will my kids like it?

What’s not to like? The dragons, threatening as they are, are colorful and fun. The Vikings are humorous and heroic — we may be looking at a Viking renaissance to rival the pirate fancy of the early ’00s. If you’re attending a 3-D screening, be ready for “oohs” and “aahs” and little hands grabbing at the screen for the first few moments.

[This is a guest post by Jayson Peters]

Will we want to see it again?

It’s enough fun that many kids will leave the theater saying they can’t wait for the next time they see the movie. Those who see it in 2-D may want to see the 3-D version.

Isn’t this based on a novel?

How to Train Your Dragon is based on a 2003 children’s novel of the same name by British author Cressida Cowell. There’s a whole series including How to be a Pirate and six other dragon books, plus one written from the dragon’s point of view, How to Train Your Viking.

Continue Reading “8 Things Parents Should Know About How to Train Your Dragon 3D” »

Ten Geeky Places to Visit in Portland

Salt-and-pepper chess set at the Oregon Culinary Institute.

Salt-and-pepper chess set at the Oregon Culinary Institute.

My family spent spring break in Portland, Oregon, where we once lived for four too-short years. While a lot of our time was spent visiting beloved friends and savoring foods from our favorite restaurants, we did manage to make a few geeky trips as well. Here, in brief, are ten geeky places we visited.

Six Geeky Places We Took the Kids:

OMSI

OMSI

OMSI

The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, will get its own detailed post later. But with a T. Rex skeleton on display, the IMAX theater, and a warehouse-sized area filled with fun science to play with, it’s a great place to spend an a day. Here, my kids are playing with balls and hoops on a turntable.

Oregon Zoo

Oregon Zoo

Oregon Zoo

The zoo is always a good bet for the kids; although if you head there on a rainy day you might have better luck avoiding the crowds. We didn’t get to spend nearly as much time at the zoo as we would have liked, but we did get to see the new African predators section and a baby elephant. The Red Ape sanctuary is currently under construction so unfortunately we missed a lot of the primates this time around. (My six-year-old is “observing” a dwarf mongoose.)

Rose City Reptiles

Rose City Reptiles

Rose City Reptiles

Rose City Reptiles is a tiny little shop on SE Division near our old apartment. While it’s not the cleanest pet store I’ve been in (and has gotten some mixed reviews), the owner Thuyn is certainly one of the most accommodating people I’ve met and he’s got a fantastic collection of snakes, lizards, and turtles (and mounted insects). When we were watching the chameleons, he asked if we’d like to see them eat, and fetched a cup of crickets to dump into the terrarium. The same with the poison dart frogs (which moved so quickly that I never actually saw a tongue shoot out—just a nod of the head, and a fruit fly would vanish). And when we got to the snakes, he asked if we’d like to hold one, which my six-year-old enthusiastically did. To top it off, Thuyn then fed this corn snake a live mouse, a process my daughters watched with fascination. If you’re in the Southeast, definitely worth stopping in to take a gander.

Northwest Children's Theater

Northwest Children's Theater

Northwest Children’s Theater

My wife and kids had the opportunity to attend “Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!”—a musical based on Mo Willem’s popular book. Not all the shows at the Northwest Children’s Theater are targeted for the wee ones, but this one was high on audience interaction and my kids loved it. (Here they are hounding the Pigeon for autographs.) Our local friend tells us that the shows are generally well-done, and a lot of the actors in the plays are teens at the school, which is a cool way to get your own geeklets interested in theater.

Portland Saturday Market

Portland Saturday Market

Portland Saturday Market

The Portland Saturday Market has always been one of our favorite weekend destinations. Everything at the market is made by the sellers, and you can find anything from tutus to wooden toys to the fantastic Spoonman creations and everything in between. Oh, and the famous Duct Tape Wallet—back in 2000 when I made myself one, my co-workers said I should make a bunch and sell them for $20 a pop. I really should have taken their suggestion, because there are a couple guys who are now making all sorts of very cool wallets out of colored duct tape. When you need a break from shopping, have lunch at one of the many food carts. (The Horn of Africa is one of our faves, but you can also get some pretty good BBQ, Mexican food, or just a good ol’ elephant ear.)

Southwest Community Center

Southwest Community Center

Southwest Community Center

You can make the call whether this is geeky or not, but this community center at Gabriel Park in Southwest Portland has an awesome pool, including this fantastic two-story water slide which both my six-year-old and three-year-old enjoyed. There’s also a huge shallow pool area for the little kids, with a section of geysers and a huge pipes-and-buckets play area perfect for cooling off on a hot day. (And a hot tub for the grown-ups to warm up on a cold one.)

Mural at Floating World Comics. Photo: Jonathan Liu

Mural at Floating World Comics. Photo: Jonathan Liu

And Four Geeky Places I Went Without the Kids:

Floating World Comics

Floating World Comics

Floating World Comics

I don’t frequent comic book stores, but I do like to stop in occasionally to browse. Floating World Comics is overwhelming in its selection (this photo only shows a portion of the store) but it’s a great place to pick up the latest issue of your favorite comics, as well as discover an entire room-full of things you may never have heard of. It’s located near Old Town/Chinatown in downtown Portland, and the people there are quiet but friendly.

Compound Gallery

Compound Gallery

Compound

Nearby, a weird gallery/shoe-and-clothing store that I first discovered while living in Portland. I’m not much for the ultra-hip clothes and shoes, but I dig the upstairs art gallery (note: not always kid-safe) and the huge collection of figurines. I won’t even try to list the vast selection of cute little things you can get for your cubicle, and if you’ve got a bigger budget you can go for the big stuff, like this impressive set from “Where the Wild Things Are.”

(And a bonus geeky spot: right next door is Backspace, a coffee shop/art gallery/LAN gaming facility.)

Powell's Technical Books

Powell's Technical Books

Powell’s Technical Books

Not necessarily a place you can’t take your kids (they do have a section of kids’ books and activities near the front of the store) but definitely on the geeky end of the various Powell’s bookstores. If you’ve never heard of Powell’s, it’s a fantastic independent bookseller in Portland. Their flagship store, the City of Books, takes up an entire city block and comes with a map—it’s a book lover’s nirvana. A couple blocks away, there’s the smaller store that focuses on technical books: the table display as you walk in is filled with books on science and math and game design, and Fifty Dangerous Things was prominently displayed, too.

Drop your kids off at the nearby playground, and wander around for an hour or two.

Rainy Day Games

Possibly the biggest board games store in the Portland area (at least the biggest one I’ve been to)—its collection of store copies that you can open up and try out is larger than the entire inventory of some other games stores. Rainy Day Games is tucked into an unassuming storefront in a strip mall way out west, which is why I didn’t make it out much while I lived in Portland, but if you’re a gamer this is definitely worth a trip. Walking in can be kind of overwhelming if you’re not familiar with games, but the staff is friendly and knowledgeable if you need help. (And, equally important to me, they’ll also leave you alone to browse if that’s more your style.) Unfortunately I didn’t get a photo while I was there.

There are plenty of games and puzzle-type toys for kids, so it can be a kid-friendly place; I just happened to have a free hour sans kids and I appreciated the time to peruse the collection on my own. Alas, due to luggage constraints I didn’t buy anything this time around, but I did get some great ideas for future additions to my own games collection.

There you have it.

Obviously, there are so many places I missed—other games and comics stores, the Children’s Museum and the Academy Theater (with on-site babysitting!)—but you can only do so much on one trip. Portland is definitely a great place for geeks. If you have any other favorite locations to add to the list, please feel free to add them in the comments!

All photos by Jonathan Liu.

Need Some Help Making That iPad Decision?

While in the United States people have been able to start tossing up their options and filling out pre-orders for the latest in Apple droolware, the iPad, here in Australia (and many other countries) we are still no closer than an anticipated late April release.

So, for those geeks downunder, and others still yet to make their decision about to iPad or not to iPad here is a little flowchart that I stumbled across when trying to make my own decision.

Hope it helps.

(via Forever Geek, via BBSpot)

PAX East is Almost Here! Do You Know Where Your GeekDads Are?

ishot-21

Session Friday 7:00 Wyvern Theatre (somewhere in the Hynes Convention Center)

“How young is too young for The Hobbit? What should my kids’ first LEGO set be? How can I control my disgust if my child tells me he likes Jar Jar and the Ewoks? When should I buy my kids their first non-six-sided dice? These questions and many more will be discussed by writers for Wired.com’s GeekDad blog and other geek parents. Come share your stories and advice for how to make sure our kids grow up to be geeks like us! Don’t have kids? Show up and find out what may be in store for you if you ever do!”

Panelists:

  • Matt Blum (Moderator)
  • Dave Banks
  • Natania Barron
  • John Booth
  • Doug Cornelius
  • Michael Harrison

The inaugural PAX East convention is almost here (3/26-28/2010), and GeekDad has the honor of holding a panel on raising the next generation of geek. If you’re going, we really hope you’ll be there! Our contributors will be wandering the convention in their GeekDad shirts all weekend, so be sure to give them the secret sign (what, you don’t know the secret sign?). Happy PAXing!

Get a Clue on the Mystery Express

Mystery Express Box Cover

I always loved Clue. Okay, the die-rolling was largely unnecessary but I loved the deduction and record-keeping, the strategy behind deciding which cards to show which people to keep them in the dark. Well, now Days of Wonder is releasing a new deduction-style board game, Mystery Express. It’s like Clue, except on a train, and harder. Much harder, but it’s definitely worth the extra brain-bending effort. So far I’ve played three times (with new players each time) and everyone has given it a thumbs-up.

Since I think many of you are familiar with Clue already, I’ll draw some comparisons and then really dig into the gameplay. Clue had you looking for the murderer, weapon, and location; Mystery Express adds motive and time of murder into the mix. (Plus they use the fancy term Modus Operandi instead of “Weapon” so your kids can learn a bit of Latin, too!)

But the biggest difference is this: instead of one of each card (so that seeing a card allowed you to eliminate that particular suspect), there are two of everything (and three of each time!) so you’ll need to see both cards in order to eliminate something. Oh, and did I mention that the cards can change hands throughout the game?

Mystery Express Set-up

Mystery Express Set-up

Continue Reading “Get a Clue on the Mystery Express” »

Installing the Lego Autopilot (GeekDad Wayback Machine)

After my proof of concept of a Lego autopilot a couple weeks ago, the hard work began. First thing was to find an appropriate “avionics platform”, AKA a good-sized R/C airplane. We settled on the Electristar .40-sized trainer, which seemed to have the right balance of stability and equipment compartment size.

The HiTechnic guys had seen my previous post on my plans to build a Lego autopilot and kindly FedExed me a prototype of the gyro sensor. I’d been using a tilt sensor as a stand-in, which actually worked quite well. But programming the Lego servo to smoothly track the tilt sensor position readings had taken me and the nine-year-old all the spare time we had this weekend. The gyro sensor introduces another level of complexity (albeit a necessary one to handle the unpredictable gusts and bumps of real flying), and that’s going to take us a few more weekends to figure out. So in the meantime, we turned to the mechanical side.

Adapting the autopilot to fit turned out to be pretty easy–just a few holes in the equipment floor of the plane to bolt down the Lego base pieces. It all fit together freakishly well:

Img_4003

Img_3993
Here, to get a sense of scale, is the whole plane, minus the wings:

The Lego equipment adds about a pound to the plane’s weight. That probably won’t be a problem (the weight is right at the center of gravity and the plane has power to spare), but just in case, I switched the plane’s batteries to Lithium Polymer, which provide even more power at a pound less weight than the standard NiHM. It’s now got plenty of juice to support even more avionics to come (GPS, video, radio backchannel, etc).

Img_3996
For you Lego Mindstorms geeks, here’s the instruction page for the prototype gyro sensor (click to enlarge). Next weekend I’ll post about the programming necessary to make a real autopilot, and why you might want to consider alternatives to the basic block-based Mindstorms visual programming environment. (Short answer: if you want to do anything remotely complicated, the Mindstorms visual approach turns into a sprawling mess.)

[This post originally ran in March, 2007]

The Tiny-But-Wondrous World of Mouse Guard

Mouse Guard

What is it about talking animals that fascinates us? And by us, I mean me. I’ve always loved books involving critters, whether they behave more like real animals who just happen to talk (as in Watership Down) or like small furry people (think Secret of NIMH). And, of course, there are plenty of books in which animals are just completely anthropomorphized, where they’re living in a basically human world, wearing human clothes, doing human things. Mouse Guard by David Petersen falls somewhere in the middle: the mice behave like people, walking on two legs and wearing clothes, writing books and building cities, but they’re still mice. Tiny creatures in a world filled with much bigger things like snakes and owls and weasels who are decidedly not friendly.

I don’t remember when I first came across Mouse Guard—probably in a bookstore somewhere—but I only had time to flip through briefly and thought it looked promising. When the first two collected volumes (Fall 1152 and Winter 1152) showed up at my local library I decided it was finally time to give them a read, and I’m really glad I did. Mouse Guard is like Lord of the Rings meets Watership Down with mice. Oh, and there might be a touch of Star Wars in there, too.

Here’s the gist: the mice live in colonies scattered throughout the forest (and on the shore), somewhat camouflaged and hidden from view. But occasionally a mouse needs to travel from colony to colony, or somebody needs to send a message. That’s where the Mouse Guard comes in. A select group of trained fighters, based in Lockhaven, the Mouse Guard are responsible for the territory surrounding and separating the colonies. Their leader is Gwendolyn, and outside of the colonies their word is law—a small price to pay for their protection.

Winter 1152: Chapter One

Winter 1152: Chapter One

The artwork is amazing: Petersen depicts the various mouse colonies with painstaking detail, and the supplemental material at the end of the books shows that he has fairly detailed maps and backstories for everything. I was especially impressed with encounters between the mice and various predators. In the first book, several crabs attack some mice in a house on the beach, and the illustrations of a couple crabs crawling over the roof are absolutely striking. I enjoyed Fall 1152, about a secret plot to overthrow Gwendolyn, but it was the second volume, Winter 1152, that really hooked me, both the story and the artwork.

For the most part, the books are kid-friendly, too, as long as you’re okay with some illustrated violence. The creepiest part (which I wouldn’t show my six-year-old for fear of causing nightmares) is in the second volume: a few of the mice wind up in Darkheather, old weasel territory, and come across the bones of their victims (i.e., mice). That’s an image that won’t fade away soon.

So far those are all the collected books Petersen has completed, but he’s got a lot in the works. Legends of the Guard will be written and illustrated by various contributors with oversight by Petersen, and The Black Axe will reveal in more detail the legends of a mouse warrior that we’ve only gotten hints of up until now. Petersen has also prepared an 11-page insert for Free Comic Book Day, coming up in May.

For more about Mouse Guard, including extended excerpts, check out Petersen’s website MouseGuard.net. And one more bit of “hey, cool!” is the Mouse Guard Roleplaying Game. I haven’t played this myself, but having seen the amount of detail Petersen puts into the comics, I wouldn’t be surprised if the RPG is a richly-created world.

If you like The Lord of the Rings and talking animals, you should definitely check out Mouse Guard. You won’t be disappointed.