I, for one, welcome our 2010 overlords.

Holy crap, it's 2010. Twenty-ten. We can finally stop saying "two-thousand and ____." 

Update: wow, it took me a long time to correct that line from "tho-thousand." I'm losing my edge.

Back to story: I, for one, am relieved.

It's been pretty popular to make lists of the best (or worst, or whatever) of the decade we just completed, but I thought I'd try to do you guys a service and lay out a few ground rules for the decade to come.

1. Piracy will become uncool.
Trendsetters in the gaming world have already moved in this direction, and the freeloading style of downloading music and movies will no longer be edgy and cool. It's a thing of the Naughty Oughties, people. A lot of this will come thanks to affordable, usable digital content. Netflix and iTunes are leading the way, and marketplace competition from big sellers like Amazon (or legit free rides like Spotify) should make things a lot more interesting. $8 for an album ain't bad. I'd rather pay $5-7, but we're getting there.

I'm not suggesting that piracy will disappear. But it will be one of the lamer corners of the Internet, like 4chan.

2. You will be nickeled and dimed to death.
Small fees for things will go completely out of control. Have you seen those commercials for Ally Bank, the bank that doesn't deal in small print? Yeah, they deal in small print. Maybe, just maybe, we'll move toward a haggling culture in response. We've already moved this way with cable and Internet providers, for example.

3. You will carry a networked device everywhere.
iPhone users, even 3GS owners who reluctantly got one with a Christmas 2009 gift card, are early adopters in terms of buying come sort of persistently handy, persistently connected device. If I had to guess, cell phones will be our social devices and tablets will be productivity machines. As a result, asking IT to troubleshoot your iPhone 4G will be considered rude, but you'll be having lots and lots of problems with your wonderful, foldable, handwriting-recognizing tablet machine of awesomeness.

4. "Baby mama" and "baby daddy" will become commonplace social entities and will no longer be considered damaged goods.
Thanks, divorce. Easily offended groups of unmarried people with babies will come up with a politically correct term for baby mama/daddy, and it will be such a stupid term that it's beyond my creative capacity to name it now.

5. Rich Americans will finally work out and eat healthily and do these correctly.
Health gurus will go upmarket, resulting in Dr. Oz-branded foods at Whole Foods. What's more, the Ugly American will now rear his head in strange new places, like Southeast Asia, when such a tourist asks if the snake he's eating was killed humanely.

6. The price of oil will rise steadily.
You'll start paying attention to those "10 things you can do to lower your energy bill" articles, and you'll end up a miserly user of energy. You may also buy a car that looks cool and goes slow, like the Ford Fiesta or whatever becomes of the Toyota FT-86.

7. Airline crashes will increase dramatically.
Fly on big planes between big cities, amigos. Regional jets will continue to be flown by exhausted, underpaid, illegally under-rested young pilots. These guys already sit on the poverty line, and they'll continue to take the brunt of cost reductions so you can still have your $99 ticket to New York. The solution is obvious, but for deregulated airline management, easier said than done.

8. Sorry about that last one. You'll have more fun this decade.
Time management and getting things done (GTD) will be a big fad in the mainstream. You'll get more chores done in your off time, leaving you more time to chill with amigos.

I'm ringing in 2010 by being exhausted. Finishing this post now, while it still gets posted as being on January 1st. Happy new year!

Research!

I landed a pretty sweet gig on campus. My program has an office called the Global Information Industry Center, which does research on IT stuff for a lot of companies including corporate sponsors like IBM and Cisco. 

I joined that team this week, and I made myself useful already by proofreading a final report that's going out to press in the next couple of weeks. Once it's out, I'll link the finished product. It's basically a census of all the "information" that's floating around out there, whether digitally or in print or on TV.

From here on, I'll probably be focusing my research on gaming issues, which should be a lot of fun while building some valuable experience at the same time. The plans are really preliminary, but I might be looking into systems like OnLive to see if they're really feasible. In theory, I'll be starting a research blog, which will be boring and dry but might be interesting to the gamers among us.

I've always been driven by solving problems in gaming. I tried to do it as a writer and wasn't very effective, but when big companies are pouring money into your work, they tend to listen. I'm pretty psyched for the chance to really try to actually solve some problems.

Happy is a relative thing

Life is pretty grand right now. I'm making a niche in San Diego, I've got a dream job for a research gig, I can handle the academic pressures of school, and I'm beginning to be exposed to the joys of southern California, such as lots and lots of promising concerts from artists I love.

Still:

I'd rather be in Japan. I can't spend a day without walking home from school thinking I'd rather be walking home from work somewhere in Japan, following my nose to good food and beer. And sumo on TV. And trying to understand the evening news immediately thereafter.

It's easy to be nostalgic when my life in Japan was so relatively easy, but I think what draws me most is the same thing that sent me there in the first place: the sheer unpredictability of each day. I didn't know where I'd eat, or who I'd meet doing so. I didn't know what I'd learn. For all my training, I still couldn't read a lot of the signs I'd see along the way, and they became miniature intellectual curiosities as I walked along.

And I could really go for some legit sushi right about now.

I still miss that general sensation of "I'm in a foreign land! I'm in Japan! Wowwwwww!" It's still a motivator, even after having lived there. For the last three years, I've been in Japan at least once every 8 months. I'm about to break that trend, and it's disappointing.

Will work for debt reduction

It's come to my attention that out of my incoming graduate class, I'm probably on the high end of debt incurred, thanks to 
a) out-of-state tuition
b) little funding from UCSD

I'm going to start working ASAP to remedy this situation, or else I'll be repaying loans until I'm 36. Expect Blake to be very very busy sometime soon.

Still, that won't be all that bad. I signed up for this gig partially to be busy. Life as a writer in Texas was too slow to be sustainable. And now that I'm here, I've eased into having less of a life. Upon my arrival, going out three nights a week was the norm. Now, some four months later, I got back from hitching a ride across town for the sake of a free Chipotle burrito. I really don't feel that bad about the decline in activity, which makes it OK for me to marginally become a little bit more of a loser by working anywhere between 5-20 hours a week.

These days, I get my gaming once a week via CO-OP. It's the only game-related show I watch religiously, and that's saying a lot. It's six guys getting really deep about the games they review, and they're consistent about it. They'll cover everything, from AAA releases during release week to indie games and iPhone stuff. And there's some little sketches and banter, too, which keeps you from being overwhelmed with Gaming Information and lets you 'get to know the guys' in the same sense that Top Gear fans know about the hosts of that show. Give it a whirl; it's better than the rest of Youtube's Top-Gear-Wannabe gaming flotsam, and a thousand times more interesting than hearing pro bloggers mouth-breathe into a Skype call for an hour. (Unless you're Robert Ashley - if you're him, you can talk in your awesome stoner voice all day.)