Hah! “the only advantage of living forever is having the time to read all of TV Tropes.”
Author Archives: Kelson
Comic-Con 2009 Complete Index
Here’s a quick index to all of our posts about last month’s Comic-Con International in San Diego: here, at Speed Force, and on Flickr.
Around the Con

- Photo set on Flickr
- Friday Night: Running Through Downtown San Diego
- Flash Costume Sightings at Comic-Con
We saved most of our long-form writing for panel and costume write-ups (see below), but I made extensive use of Twitter during the convention. These are auto-generated digests of each day’s Twitter activity, presenting a view of the convention as I experienced it.
The Paper and the Flash
In Costume
On Friday we attended in costume as Yomiko Readman from Read or Die and Jay Garrick, the original Flash from the Golden Age (1940s). On Saturday Katie attended as Kate Austen from Lost.
- Making the Flash Helmet
- Making the Flash Boots and Shirt
- Costume component photos on Flickr
- Yomiko and the Flash
- Flash Costume Sightings at Comic-Con
Panels
- Thursday: Geoff Johns Spotlight (live blog)
- Thursday: Mad Science: The Science Behind Science-Fiction with reps from Fringe, Eureka! and Caprica
- Friday: Flash Forward Looks Incredible
- Friday: DC Nation (live blog)
- Saturday: DC Universe (live blog)
- Saturday: Lost Panel Made of Win
Reflections
- Tips for Comic-Con
- The Other Ten Essentials of Comic-Con
- Hotel Review: Holiday Inn On The Bay
- Why Las Vegas is a bad idea for Comic-Con
- New Heroes Speedster Trained in the Jedi Arts
- Flash News from San Diego
That covers all the major posts we’ve written from the start of the convention onward. There are a few minor bits, like the “We’re here!” post from when we arrived in San Diego, and various posts about the build-up to the con. You can find these by looking further back in the Comic-Con 2009 category here and in posts tagged CCI SDCC 2009 at Speed Force.
Lost Food: Panda Panda

When I lived in Lake Forest during the year 2000, I used to frequent a place called Panda Panda. It was your basic steam table Chinese restaurant, but it was good. I remember the occasional evening on which I’d think, “Do I go to the store, buy ingredients, come home, then spend time cooking just for one person, or do I go out and grab some fast-ish food?” Panda Panda was a frequent winner of these decisions.
It was located at the corner of El Toro and Raymond, near the library. Panda Panda shared a building with a Quizno’s sandwich place and was one driveway away from a Wendy’s.
I don’t know if they were a small chain or a solo restaurant, but they were eventually bought out or otherwise assimilated by Panda Express, which I’ve never particularly liked. (Though Panda Inn, a table-service restaurant owned by the same company, has been consistently good.) Naturally they homogenized the menu as well.
That was the end of that.
A few years later, as part of the big project to renovate the area, both buildings were bulldozed to make way for a new strip mall segment. Panda Express got the prime spot in the new building, but all traces of Panda Panda are lost.
For the record: I’m currently sitting in a Wahoo’s taco place roughly where the driveway used to be.
Rethinking the Electric Car
We’ve started watching the first season of Leverage on Netflix instant. Last night we watched the second episode. At one point the “good guy” character explains that yes, he really did give away most of the money he got from the last job, after buying a couple of things. Like a new car. Electric. Just being responsible. He then gets into his car, the camera pulls away, and you see that it’s a Tesla Roadster — an all-electric, high performance (and very expensive at $128,000+) sportscar.
I made some remark about how the Tesla was intended to make people rethink the electric car.
Katie’s response: “Every time a Prius gets pulled over for speeding, people rethink the electric car.”
G1 Nearing Upgrade Limits?
I love my T-Mobile G1, but it’s no secret that the phone has way too little internal memory. Now Engadget reports that the limited memory could prevent the G1 from running future versions of the Android operating system.
You can add plenty of data storage (images, music, app data) by dropping in any size Micro-SD card (IIRC it came with 1 GB. I’m currently running it with an 8 GB card). But the phone system, all the apps, and the cache for updates all have to share the measly 256 MB internal storage. Android and Me breaks down the partition structure, and points out that the current system, Android 1.5 “Cupcake,” already fills 99.5% of that space. Since software usually gets bigger with each successive version, it’s been challenging for Google to keep the OS within that limit.
It seems like it would be easy to just move the update cache to the SD card and double the size of the system partition…except that it would require reformatting the phone. Doable, but risky.
Before we get too gloomy, T-Mobile has stated:
We plan to continue working with Google to introduce future software updates to the T-Mobile G1. Reports to the contrary are inaccurate.
Now, this may simply mean that they’ll continue issuing bugfix/security updates. Or it may mean that they’re working out ways to squeeze newer Android versions onto the phone.
Now, Some Perspective
Let’s face it: the G1 is a first-generation device. It’s right there in the name (Generation One). All of us who bought it are early adopters, and that carries a certain degree of risk. Just like all those people who paid, what, $600 for the first iPhone only to see the price drop heavily less than a year later.
Even so, with Cupcake, Android is already quite a capable OS. Whether the G1 hits the wall at Cupcake, Donut, Eclair or Flan, the phone won’t stop working just because it can’t get major updates. Whatever happens, it’ll still be usable for the duration of a 2-year contract (and presumably beyond).
I do worry about incompatible apps, but that’ll start happening anyway as more devices with varying hardware specs appear on the market.
Really, though: this is the first phone I’ve ever owned that had software updates of any substance. I think one of the two RAZR variants had a bugfix release that came out before I even bought the phone, but that’s it. The fact that my G1 is actually a better phone now than when I bought it is pretty damn cool!
Competing Clanks
Standing in the movie theater lobby, listening to competing CLANKing from Star Trek and Terminator: Salvation.
Launching LOL Spam
- Does anyone actually start off email to friends with “Dear Friend”?
- All right! I always wanted one of those! “Delivery Status Notification 81% 0FF.” (spam subject) Who can resist at that discount?
- “Get rid of pests for good!” – if only it would work on the spammers themselves.
- That’s it! Time to find another surgeon! “The way to her heart is through her wrist.” (spam subject)
- Usually it’s the divorced parents using the kids against each other, not the other way around: “Use Mother Nature to beat Father Time”
After posting these today, I’ve decided to set up a Twitter account dedicated to posting funny spam subjects & commentary. I plan to keep the traffic low – 1 or 2 posts a day. Please check out @lol_spam!


