Friday, April 28, 2006
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Badgered now online

I thought this was one of the best shorts nominated for the Oscars this year. Shock! Horror! It was actually well animated, so of course it didn't win.
I love the way in which our hero always squishes himself into the floor. Genius.
I love the way in which our hero always squishes himself into the floor. Genius.
(via Cartoon Brew)
Tuesday, April 18, 2006
New Spiffy Site!
Wow! Moving websites turned out to be much easier than I thought. Everything should be working now, but if it isn't, please give me a shout.
I have to get back to adding content now!
I have to get back to adding content now!
Moving
Just to let you know that I will be moving to the more intuitive home of kevanshorey.com fairly soon. The site will be just the same, but I am moving to US based servers as they seem to be cheaper and offer more stuff. I think that most vistors to the site come from the US anyway, so it'll make things faster for the majority.
Hopefully transferring the blog won't be too much of a hassle, but if it breaks, I'm sure you'll find out before I do. The current domain will be live for some months yet, but once everything is working on the new space that's where you will find stuff. I plan to do all this gradually because I'm scared of destroying everything.
I'll start shouting when it's all done. Wish me luck!
Hopefully transferring the blog won't be too much of a hassle, but if it breaks, I'm sure you'll find out before I do. The current domain will be live for some months yet, but once everything is working on the new space that's where you will find stuff. I plan to do all this gradually because I'm scared of destroying everything.
I'll start shouting when it's all done. Wish me luck!
Thursday, April 13, 2006
The Art of Seat Conquest - A Study
Public transportation in Britain always makes for an interesting time. Of course, by interesting I mean time-consuming, expensive and over-crowded. Before my move to America, I used to have to take trains a lot. I'd zip from Cardiff to Bournemouth, (changing at Southampton) where I went to uni, or direct to the bright lights of London where I worked for a short time. On these journeys I would study other passengers to pass the time and conduct little experiments in human behaviour. I don't know if anyone else does this, and maybe it was a little mean spirited, but I would try to adjust my body language and see how long it would take for someone to come and sit next to me. The point wasn't to look all mean and intimidating, but to modify "neutral" just enough to have an effect.
My conclusion was that it was amazing how little you had to do to expand your territorial bubble to encompass the next seat without interacting with it in any way.
In truth, I did get a good head start on my research by way of my appearance. I was a young male with a pointy hairdo and baggy clothes, so that's clearly a stay-away. The first impression is definitely a biggie in securing that seat. I am pretty small, but height is tougher to detect when seated. I would suppliment this by stretching my legs out wide, and cross my arms to make me seem bigger and defensive. I had filled the little bit of space that I had paid for, but of course it seemed to be much more. Wearing a slight frown and not smiling completed the effect.
People would board the train and walk down the centre aisle and pass straight by my empty seat for a good while, and it wouldn't be until the train was pretty full before someone would sit down next to me. I would smile and say hello.
Within the game there were variations that could totally change people's perceptions. Looking out of the window definitely made things harder, for it made interaction necessary (to enquire as to the availability of the seat), and urban dwellers hate to actually have to talk to one another. Here's another interesting one - putting your bag on the your lap seems to totally negate most of the body language stuff I mentioned, and makes you loads more neutral again. Instead of confidently projecting outwards (an open silhouette), the bag locked up within body space starts to become internalising force (closed silhoette), increasing the sense of nervousness and vulnerability, and people pick up on that. You have lost the status of that dominant persona, just from the position of that bag!
I remembered that I did this only the other day. For some reason I totally forgot about it whenever I finished my journey, but thinking about it now with much more experience in studying people, it all makes sense, and I have a handle on the subtleties as to why people reacted the way they did.
So um.... yeah. There we go. Animators all agree that people watching is an ace thing to get into for ideas and stuff. I guess manipulating people's brains is a good compliment to those endeavours. It certainly is interesting, and maybe you'll get a spare seat of it to put your bag on.
Was that a weird post?
Probably.
My conclusion was that it was amazing how little you had to do to expand your territorial bubble to encompass the next seat without interacting with it in any way.
In truth, I did get a good head start on my research by way of my appearance. I was a young male with a pointy hairdo and baggy clothes, so that's clearly a stay-away. The first impression is definitely a biggie in securing that seat. I am pretty small, but height is tougher to detect when seated. I would suppliment this by stretching my legs out wide, and cross my arms to make me seem bigger and defensive. I had filled the little bit of space that I had paid for, but of course it seemed to be much more. Wearing a slight frown and not smiling completed the effect.
People would board the train and walk down the centre aisle and pass straight by my empty seat for a good while, and it wouldn't be until the train was pretty full before someone would sit down next to me. I would smile and say hello.
Within the game there were variations that could totally change people's perceptions. Looking out of the window definitely made things harder, for it made interaction necessary (to enquire as to the availability of the seat), and urban dwellers hate to actually have to talk to one another. Here's another interesting one - putting your bag on the your lap seems to totally negate most of the body language stuff I mentioned, and makes you loads more neutral again. Instead of confidently projecting outwards (an open silhouette), the bag locked up within body space starts to become internalising force (closed silhoette), increasing the sense of nervousness and vulnerability, and people pick up on that. You have lost the status of that dominant persona, just from the position of that bag!
I remembered that I did this only the other day. For some reason I totally forgot about it whenever I finished my journey, but thinking about it now with much more experience in studying people, it all makes sense, and I have a handle on the subtleties as to why people reacted the way they did.
So um.... yeah. There we go. Animators all agree that people watching is an ace thing to get into for ideas and stuff. I guess manipulating people's brains is a good compliment to those endeavours. It certainly is interesting, and maybe you'll get a spare seat of it to put your bag on.
Was that a weird post?
Probably.
Thursday, April 06, 2006
Lack of Blog
No regular updates at the moment, I'm afraid. Lots of things happening at once - the distant rumble of a rapidly approaching sequence deadline, not feeling very well, and also some guys tried to mug me last weekend.
Go me!
: /
Go me!
: /
Saturday, April 01, 2006
New OTH Trailer
Although my contribution to the ace-ness that is "Over The Hedge" is only one shot, I like that one shot very much. Just found out a bit of it is in the new trailer, so you can have a looky for yourself.
Here!
It is the one where Hammy zips past RJ and nearly blows him over. Woo!
Here!
It is the one where Hammy zips past RJ and nearly blows him over. Woo!













