Fizzle & Pop The sound my brain makes in milk.

28Apr/100

Slides

Not the kind you ride down. The 35mm kind. My dad loved to take pictures, and he preferred slides to prints. When I was out in Tennessee for his funeral I was given five cases full of his slides with the agreement that I would scan them and upload them for anyone who wanted to see them. The slide scanner I bought through Amazon arrived today and I took it for a spin with a couple of random boxes. I uploaded the results to my SmugMug gallery.

This weekend I hope to have the time to start scanning more, starting with the oldest slides I can find. Anything not for the public will be put in hidden galleries, but everything else will be available to browse. One thing about my dad; he LOVED to travel. There will be photos that were taken all over Europe in the sixties... possibly older. It's going to be fun. I just wish he was still around to tell us about them.

When I was a kid I DREADED my dad breaking out the slide projector. Now I would give ten years off my own life for one more year to be able to sit with him and talk about his life and his adventures.

One story I'll never forget is how, when he was stationed in Turkey, he had a molar that was hurting him something fierce. As he told it, the base dentist was a butcher and there was no place off base that he could go to have the tooth extracted, so he did what he had to do. He got liquored up, took a pair of pliers and extracted his own tooth...

I'm sorry I wasn't there for you for the last 18 years dad. This project won't make up for that, but at least something you created will be out there for the world to see.

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23Apr/100

The Princess is a bling whore.

Excellent video! I'm impressed and very amused.

I really wish I could have filmed the boy doing the Russian dance to The Nutcracker last night at my daughter's school's Talent Show. It was... awesome.

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Filed under: Games, Movies No Comments
19Apr/100

An intriguing game

Ever heard of the computer game "Sleep Is Death"?

I hadn't.

Then I ran across this article.

Here's a brief excerpt:

A lot of game critics you talk to will tell you that, after making a career of playing games, it takes a lot to impress them. But that's not exactly the truth.

Perhaps I shouldn't speak for them, but I know for me that all it really takes for a game to knock my socks off is that smallest yet boldest of features: A single great, new idea. I'm not talking about squishing together the dual-stick shooting of Geometry Wars and RPG elements and hoping for the best. I'm talking about an innovation that takes a single step back from the whole idea of what video games are and reapproaches it in a way that feels utterly fresh.

Sleep Is Death is just such an idea.

Anyone who knows me knows that I'm a gamer. It's my anti-drug, as the kids would say if those dumbass commercials actually caught on with them like the government wishes they would. After reading that bit of the article above, my interest was piqued in much the same way as it was when I first heard about minecraft.net.

Sleep is Death is an art game somewhat, but not just that. There's a lot to it. It's made to be played by two players, anywhere in the world, on Windows, Mac or GNU/Linux. Here's a bit more:

Sleep Is Death is an online game for two players, one the narrator, one the player (for our demonstration, Rohrer took the former role and I took the latter). After connecting via the IP address that Rohrer gave me I was thrust into a home with two pixel people that could have been lifted from the catalog of Sierra adventure games circa 1987. They were my wife and daughter, they were thirsty and they needed my help.

With a little experimentation I found I was able to move, speak and interact with the objects and people of the world using text commands. When a troubling news report about drought started blaring from our TV, I clicked it, typed "turn off," typed that our daughter didn't need to see that sort of thing and then clicked to confirm my decisions. A few moments later, the image on the TV disappeared and my wife thanked me, admitting that she couldn't handle more news. The game was able to react flawlessly to any speech or commands I was able to throw at it, because it wasn't a game at all. It was Rohrer.

For the rest, check out the full article. Then move on to the main site @ sleepisdeath.net Yeah, I'm telling you what to do. I'm pushy on this.

In the article, Justin McElroy says the pre-order price is $9. Unfortunately, that was only before April 9th, so the price has gone up to $14. For that amount you get an access link for two people to download the files, the Windows version, Mac version and full source code bundle which can be compiled on GNU/Linux. It also includes all future updates. If this game gets as big as I feel it could, now is the time to get it.

Another thing I really like about it is that it saves each turn of a game session so you can go back through and read it like a book.

If you would like to see samples of what I mean, you can view the author's adventure with the game's creator, the creator's own intro/walkthrough, or check out what the community has done here and here.

You can watch videos of tutorials here to see how things are accomplished

Needless to say, I bought it. I'm going to try to get my son, daughter or fiancé to play it with me as soon as I have time to spend learning the ins and outs. I was an RPG player before there were video games to play, and I love making up a good story. "Good" being relative. I think they're good.

When I was showing this to my son he said he knew what kind of game I would want to play. At the time even I didn't know what kind of game I would want to play, so I asked "What kind?"

"Zombies."

Hmmmm... I actually hadn't thought of that. Fun times ahead!

I'll put together a gallery of our adventures at some point.

If you decide to get the game as well, let me know and we can try to set up some time to play.

-----------

Sidenote: I still haven't gone through my archives and cleaned up the pointless... especially pointless... posts that lack any redeeming qualities. Therefore, this post will be my 999th post. Wheeeeeee...

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14Apr/100

A short video.

Here's a short video I made showing closeups of my stippled bird drawing that I made back in 1993. I already posted the video directly to Facebook, so if you saw it there, this is the same thing.

YouTube has changed the way they do things since I last uploaded a movie. It may be time to get back to doing tutorial videos again. Learn my way around Screenflow. I bought it, I should really start using it.

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13Apr/105

An influx of subscribers has me puzzled.

So I shut off the ability for just "anyone" to be able to register for membership. I noticed a lot of the email addresses that were used for registration ended in .ru, and I would be shocked if I was that popular in Russia. I have no idea what shenanigans a person can get up to be being a subscriber to a blog, but I'm having none of it.

If you really wanted to be subscribed to my blog, and I just dropped you like a Russian spammer, I apologize. Leave a comment and I'll set it up.

Today I'm annoyed at WordPress. For my day job I had been developing a WordPress site for a client, but we didn't have access to the final hosting spot so it was set up at a testing location. The client finally wanted it moved to his real server, and I tried. Lord I tried. I thought it would be as simple as just moving the files with an ftp program to the new location. Oh no. Not so. Not at all so. It also doesn't help that the final host is very security conscious and the account I was given to log in with doesn't have permission to add a database.

Shit's all fucked up now.

Apparently not knowing jack about PHP, MySQL, and that other programmy hoodoo has finally caught up with me. "Dammit Jim! I'm a graphic designer, not a web jockey!"

*sigh*

Hopefully our service provider will be able to restore the database that I tore to shreds, burned the pieces of and then pissed on, so at least the site will be functional once again at the test location. Otherwise...

On the bright side, I'm learning from my mistakes at an awesome rate. By the time this is all done I might actually know what I'm doing.

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12Apr/100

Home again, home again…

... jiggety-jig.

Wow. I post like crazy while I'm on the road, then I get back and nothing. Not even a short post to say I made it safely. I'm blaming it on settling back in and just an overall rundown feeling.

I flew to Tennessee on Continental, and back on Delta.

Both planes were small jets, and to my untrained eye similar in size. I know I was in the Air Force for four years, but the only times I was actually near an airplane was when I flew to England and back, or walking around them when they were parked at air shows. My knowledge about planes is similar to my knowledge about ships: I can tell one when I see one.

To me they seemed like the same size. Here's my comparison of the flights:

Continental:

  • Three rows of seating; two on the right side, one on the left
  • Rock hard seats
  • Snacks consisted of mini-muffin, pretzels or peanuts
  • Good view
  • One hour layover in Houston

---

Delta:

  • Four rows of seating; so the seats seemed a bit narrower
  • The seats were more comfortable, but not great
  • Snacks consisted of cookies, pretzels or peanuts
  • Tiny windows
  • One hour layover in Minneapolis

---

Both planes sounded like riding in a vacuum cleaner. The trip from Minneapolis to Colorado Springs was bouncy from start to finish. I was glad to be off it.

Which would I rather fly in the future? I guess Delta since the seat was softer.

Looking this post over, I realize it's boring as shit. Sorry. That might be another reason I didn't post anything before now. Nothing interesting happened on the flight, nor in the past few days.

Well, almost nothing. I did splurge like a lunatic and bought a 32GB iPad on Friday. So far I really like it, but I haven't really had a lot of time to mess with it. I've put around nine art apps on it, and downloaded a crap-ton of public domain books through the iBookstore. I also installed a PDF displaying program so I can have my reference books at hand. The one thing I really hope someone will come up with is a decent/accurate stylus. I do okay using my finger to draw, but it's fat and hard to see through, so it's still tricky. It would be great if Wacom came up with one.

If I can get some time to get used to it, I'll post the results here.

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7Apr/101

Fly Bye

The Returnening.

I've got a 2.5 hour wait for my flight and 86% of a charge on my phone. I have some books in my bag for when I'll have to go low-tech.

I'm ready to be home. I have a fair amount to do when I get there.

All-in-all, I'm pretty tired.

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6Apr/101

Fortune Cookie Wisdom

Not the fortune you want to find in your cookie the night before flying: "An unexpected event will soon make your life more exciting."

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5Apr/100

It was a good service.

Really good turnout. I'm surprised by how heavy a small box of ashes can be. I love you dad. Be seeing you again someday. Not too soon though, I hope.

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4Apr/101

Tomorrow is the day

I miss you Dad. You were right, Tennessee is beautiful. I wish we could have visited you last Summer like I'd planned.

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