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Undefeated

November 17th, 2007 · Gaming

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

So I attempted some serious online play tonight in Guitar Hero III after a bit of warm up (both at a friend’s house earlier tonight and at home). I created Pro Face-Off Expert games with best of 3 songs and started sending people home crying to their mommies. Well, the first opponent quit before the first song was even halfway through. The next three games made it through two songs each, with me winning both. Finally I came up against Jammamamma. Now, consider the name Jammamamma and just picture the implications of losing to such a person. And I did. Almost. At the start of the match, each player gets to choose a song. I chose Paint it Black (which I find is a good benchmark song for testing other player’s skills) and Jammamamma chose Impulse. After cleanly winning Paint it Black, I was confident in playing Impulse for only the second time ever, since the last match I played Impulse for the first time ever and blew my opponent out of the water, also ranking 3rd in overall score standings in the process. Booyah. However things didn’t go so well this second time around, and Jammamamma ended up whupping me just as bad as I did with Paint it Black. Owch. Slightly shaken, we moved to the third song, and the game randomly chooses the person to pick it, which turned out to be me. So I set out to exact retribution with Cliffs of Dover, laughing evilly in the process of selecting the song. However as the song opens up and goes through the first half, I find myself behind, and the score needle is alllll the way to the right favoring Jammamamma. However I manage to pull out some insane crazy riffs, hitting notes and sequences I’ve never managed to nail before, and came out on top, needle allll the way to my side, by the end of the song. Oh and I also managed to pull my score up to the all-time best 5th slot in the rankings in the process.

Kudos to Jammamamma, whoever the hell you are, for a close match. *phew!!* I’m going to call that a nite!

It’s too bad you can’t talk trash while you’re playing tho. That would be lotsa fun.

Here are the wonderful camera phone screen caps:


My first ever time playing Impulse. On Expert. I don’t even have it to select from my own play list yet! Where is it? Like one of the last songs??


Funny how I displace Jammamamma in the Impulse score rankings yet lose to him/her the next time I do battle


Here you can see, by Jammamamma’s ranking in 8th for Cliffs of Dover, how close we were in the final battle. I dunno how I did it but I did!!

Okay who’s challenging me from GDnet? Come on!! Bring it while I’m still overconfident and poised to loose horribly!! Hurry up! Won’t last forever!

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Jam session time

November 16th, 2007 · Gaming

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

If you have Guitar Hero III for the PC and wanna jam co-op or battle online let me know!! Here’s a thread with my contact info and other players speaking up on the game.

Rock on. Have a nice weekend.

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New video project

November 15th, 2007 · Production

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

I spent all night with my buddy Tighe editing his demo reel, we were both very happy with the way it turned out. I’d love to hear feedback from anyone interested in checking it out over on Vimeo.

If anyone ever needs footage of their game edited up into something cool looking let me know. I charge little or nothing at all depending on the client. This is like a fifth revenue stream for me so I can undercut anyone on price. Just drop me a line!

Right, that was my momentary break from Guitar Hero. Must… play… more… !!!

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So much for productivity

November 14th, 2007 · Gaming

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

I have Guitar Hero III. For PC. It is awesome. g2gplaymorekseeyabye

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GH Fail, Pass Gallery, New Wallpaper

November 13th, 2007 · GameDev.net, Gaming, Personal

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

So yea I went to GameStop at the mall near me after work to buy the PC version of GH III that was supposed to come out today and they didn’t have it. In fact the two clerks looked at me like I was some sort of n00b who didn’t know that GH was a console-only title. Of course it turns out that Best Buy has it – the store near me was farther than GameStop, but I knew deep down I should have gone there instead.




I got this idea from an employee at GG who had all her conference badges arrayed on a coffee table. Luckily I had saved all of mine in the conference bags I took home each year. I’m pretty sure I had a Press badge in addition to an Exhibitor badge in 2006, but if so that’s the only one I couldn’t find.

Oh and if you’re a Star Wars fan, check out my new wallpaper. Lots of people are bitching about the way things are laid out in the comments, and I do agree that they should have included Wedge instead of the other Rogue whose name I can’t even recall. I also like the Darth Vader/Anakin blend too.

Okay that’s it. Move along. Nothing to see here.

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Firefox Tweak Guide

November 9th, 2007 · Personal

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

I mentioned in an earlier entry doing a little piece on slimming down Firefox. All the things I’ve done have been taken from the site Lifehacker, so if you don’t check it daily you should because it’s an awesome blog. If you’re a fan of Firefox and use it daily and love to squeeze every spare pixel of screen real estate from your monitor and slim down the UI, then I’ve got just the stuff for you. Let’s start by looking at my daily view as seen through Firefox



This is as close to a completely functional Full Screen view (F11) you can come – at least so far as I’ve found. A number of chrome, extension, and about:config tweaks have brought me this far. Let’s tackle em one by one.

First Tip: Whoops, before I start with the rest, the very first thing you should do to slim down your interface (unless you’re blind as a bat) is to go into view->toolbars->customize and check the Use Small Icons box.

Chrome

There are several lines of code you can add to the userChrome.css to enable some really cool features. This file is located in C:\Documents and Settings\[user]\Application Data\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\[default]\chrome under Windows XP. Here are the tweaks I’ve applied:

/*
 * Eliminate the throbber and its annoying movement:
 */
 #throbber-box {
   display: none !important;
 }

This gets rid of the “throbber”, or the dotted circle that appears to the right of the search bar when you’re loading a page

 /* Remove Back button when there's nothing to go Back to */
#back-button[disabled="true"] { display: none; }

/* Remove Forward button when there's nothing to go Forward to */
#forward-button[disabled="true"] { display: none; } 

This is a nifty way to reduce clutter on your Navigation Toolbar. When you first load Firefox you’ll see no arrows. Load a new page and you’ll see a Back button. Load another new page, then go back to the original page and all the sudden you have a Forward button too. Go Forward and the button will disappear leaving just the Back button.




/*Remove magnifying glass button from search box*/
.search-go-button-stack { display: none !important; } 

Another de-clutter for your Navigation Toolbar – why bother have a magnifying glass to click on and initiate a search when pressing Enter after you finish typing is so much easier? Don’t feel like a granny. Kill it.

/* Disable "List all Tabs" Button */
.tabs-alltabs-button {
display: none !important;
}

/* Disable Container box for "List all Tabs" Button */
.tabs-alltabs-box {
display: none !important;
}

If you never use this feature, might as well get rid of it.

/* Pop-up bookmarks toolbar */ #PersonalToolbar {display: none;} 
#navigator-toolbox:hover > #PersonalToolbar {display: -moz-box;}

Here’s another space saver. If you use your Bookmarks Toolbar instead of the sidebar, this tweak hides it from view until you mouse over the Navigation Toolbar. I have to admit it can be a little annoying at first, and even after that it takes some getting used to. Some people may find it more trouble than it’s worth as accidentally mousing over the Nav bar will cause it to pop up but it’s worth a shot at trying it out

about:config

To access this, simply type in about:config to the address bar and hit enter. There are just a few UI tweaks you can use to de-clutter things some more. Type in the bolded property in the Filter box to find and modify it.

  • browser.tabs.closeButtons – use a value of 3 to revert back to Firefox 1.5 default tab behavior, or if you use the middle mouse button to close tabs, set it to 2 to disable tab close buttons completely. Setting it to 0 shows a close button only on the active tab
  • browser.urlbar.hideGoButton – set this to true to get rid of that green Go button, which is as useless as the search magnifying glass if you’re a true power user (think Enter key)

Extensions

The last frontier, extensions can be found here. The ones you’ll want to further streamline your UI are:

  • FaviconizeTab – Don’t let a browser full of tabs make you have to scroll left and right. Minimize the tabs you aren’t actively using down to their favicon.

  • Organize Status Bar – If you have lots of stuff filling your status bar or potentially filling your status bar if not everything’s always showing at once, then this extension will help make sure you see things in an order that makes sense to you
  • Personal Menu – This extension saves valuable space by letting you hide your Menu Toolbar and use a Navigation Toolbar button instead. Even better, you can customize it to show only the menus and menu items that you need.

  • Searchbar Autosizer – In case you ever deal with long URLs often, give yourself as much room as possible by keeping the search bar as small as possible, which is what this extension does until you start typing.

  • Stop-or-Reload Button – Combines these mutually exclusive buttons into one. Pure genius. You never need a Stop button until you load/reload a page, so why bother seeing it until you do?

The End

Well that’s the full story right there. All these tweaks and add-ons will help to increase your useable browsing space and decrease the clutter in your browser to make things easier to find, access and control. Hey is there any better way to live?

Thanks goes out to Gina Trapani over at Lifehacker, all the tips and extensions you see up above I’ve found through her and the blog. Here are some posts from Lifehacker that cover what I described above for chrome and about:config but more than just interface tweaks:

about:config
chrome

If you have your own interface tweaks or extensions you like, please share! Hope you found this useful.

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More NaNoWriMo

November 6th, 2007 · Personal

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

NaNoWriMo Entry #1

I finally spent some more time writing tonight, another 1:48 that netted me only 1,602 words, which is just beneath daily quota and so I’m still behind 5,515 words. But if I fall further behind at least this Saturday I actually have the entire day to myself with which to spend writing and catching up, so that’s nice. I managed to make it through Chapter Two, which does more initial story set up, as we’re introduced to another supporting character familiar to the protagonist but who is yet still unidentified like the Old Man from Chapter One. Don’t worry I won’t hold you in suspense too long, but for now there’s simply no reason for you to know their names, so I’m not telling. Plus it gives me longer to think about their names myself, haha

Speaking of which, I was asked by someone recently why I chose to name my main character Nilehm (pronounced knee – lem), as it’s a rather strange and uncommon name. However that is the point. I don’t like people being able to associate in any way to my characters, especially my main characters. If I named him George or James or (god forbid) Michael, well there are plenty of people out there with those names or people out there who know people with those names and when they see my main character being named after them or their friends they immediately picture that person, and this can possibly skew their perspectives. I like my characters being their own character, and to that extent I try to create uncommon yet still believable names (this isn’t a sci-fi novel after all, and I can’t name anyone Yychuk).

So I rethought my idea about taking the story back to the past in the second chapter and working my way back to the present (as established in Chapter One). I regret not being able to do the alternate-angle technique when the storyline would have returned to the present (the events in Chapter One), but I like my new idea better. As Nilehm cooperates with the man in the brown suit, I flash back to the part of his life he’s divulging. When we return the present, we know a little bit more of what’s going on in the current time period and we slowly start to uncover a whole new side of the story. So it’s like you’ve started in the middle of the book, and you’re reading the rest leap-frog style (past/present/past/present/etc). But towards the end it will all make sense slowly with a big reveal at the climax.

I hope 😛

Well, without further adieu allow me to present Draft Three. I’ve changed some details of Chapter One, so you’ll want to read the whole thing if you read Draft Two in my previous entry. As always, comments are welcome!

Oh yea, and this is crazy cool!! I didn’t know electricity could do that…

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VGExpo initial thoughts

November 5th, 2007 · GameDev.net

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

So I was in Philly this past weekend attending the VideoGameExpo (VGX) Breaking In conference. Philly is only about 1.5 hours from me, so I drove in both days. I’ve never driven into the city before, so of course when I got off the highway on Saturday I was of course instantly stuck in gridlocked traffic as they had closed off the street I was hoping to use to get to the convention center for some reason. I had to sit in traffic for 15 minutes to travel the 1 mile to the convention center and find some parking. I happened past a parking garage and just pulled in since it was already just turning 10am and the conference was supposed to begin. Luckily though they were running late and the first session didn’t start until almost 10:30.

The first day was pretty light, and there was only one really good session which was a Breaking In panel headed up by some recruiters and studio executives. I was also surprised by the number of people in attendance, which wasn’t much at all. In a room that could easily hold 300 people there were about 30-50. To give you an idea, this is about as many people as my local NJ chapter pulls in for meetings. And that’s just Jersey. Tickets for the event were $100, which is pretty standard for a conference of this size, even for college students that’s not entirely bank-breaking. I guess most people just don’t realize the value of getting out to these events and meeting people face to face, which is unfortunate – while at the same time fortunate for those who did make it out, as they got top dibs on chatting with Tommy Tallarico, who’s a game industry vet and Coray Seifert from Kaos Studios, who’s been a very successful industry breaking inner. Not to mention other developers from Red Storm, High Voltage, and a few more.

The Expo they had set up was a gamers mecca, they had all kinds of video games set up for free play, it was hard not to spend my entire time in there playing classics like Paperboy (the arcade version!), Defender, Mario Bros/Duck Hunt or some of the newest titles like Guitar Hero III, Rock Band and Crysis. They actually had a GH III PC version set up that I tried out, which was nice because I was debating whether I should wait for the PC version and after playing it and checking out the controller (which looks flimsier than the console versions but is actually still solid) I’m definetly waiting so I can fill up that Downloaded Songs section of the play list that I saw. They also had a tournament for Expert players I participated in. I came in 2nd of 4 people, but I do argue that it was slightly unfair in that I had to do a completely cold read of the song because I didn’t have GH III yet, and the guy that beat me (~249k pts to my ~198k pts) of course had the game already. Tho the guy that came in third was rather embarrassed to learn I had never played the song before and he had several times. Take that Junior.

Anyways the second day was filled with better content, as Tommy entertained a small crowd (now there was only about 20-30 people showing up) with ways to break into the industry like he had, a panel of game designers sharing their views on games as art, and Coray Seifert pitching his three easy steps to industry success. By then the Expo had grown rather stale for me, so I left early.

I hope to have my full write up posted on Wednesday. GDNet sent me the company RebelXT so I’ll have plenty of nice photos in the gallery as well. If you were at VGExpo as well, sorry I missed you!

Shucks – 4am already and no time to write. That means tomorrow I’ll be 5,450 words behind on my NaNoWriMo book. D’oh!!

Oh yea, new external article added to the Resources section: MegaTexture in Quake Wars

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NaNoWriMo FTW!

November 2nd, 2007 · Personal

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

Howdy folks. In case you don’t know, this is National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) and I’m trying once again to pen a 50,000 word short novel. My last attempt was back in 2005. I skipped it last year and now I’m back at the drawing board. 2005 netted me a whopping 7 pages and 4,689 words. I think I stopped writing after like the first day. I’ve just finished my second writing session, so I’m already a step ahead from where I was last time, and I’m catching up fast with 4,552 words currently on paper over 13 pages. In this case though I have my document sized to paperback novel specifications. I’m surprised Word didn’t include a default layout for a mass-market paperback – I had to do some research to get the right sizing.

So what’s the novel about this time? Well I’m afraid I can’t tell you. What’s the title? Can’t tell you that either, because I haven’t picked one. Do I even know what I’m writing about? Vaguely. It’s all up in my head, and I’ve decided that that’s exactly where it’s going to stay. It’s amazing how much creativity you lose when you decide on a title from the get-go. It really does constrict you in the long run. Likewise, if the story idea remains in my head it’s completely malleable. As soon as I write something down however, it’s almost like being set in stone and changing it is very difficult. So if anyone else is trying this month as well, those are my two tips for you.

Well since you can’t find out ahead of time what the story is about, I guess you’ll just have to follow along as I write it! I can tell you it’s a suspense thriller/action adventure story, at least that’s a close description hopefully to the way it will turn out. I have the first chapter completed. I like the mechanic of opening the story at the climax, and then backing up and building back up to that point, and then continuing on to the conclusion. This opens up an interesting story technique where when I return to the climax, I can tell it from a different angle and hopefully reveal some surprising plot twists in the process.

Untitled Novel – Chapter One

I hope you enjoy, I’ve logged roughly 4 hours on it so far. Check out my Author Page for the latest updates, and if you’re participating this year let me know so we can buddy up!

BTW I have to write 1,667 words per day, so I’m already very nearly almost a day ahead of myself. Just got to keep up the pace….


In other news, I was delayed for like 4 hours tonight when my computer got sick. I’m still not sure exactly what happened, but I was updating my video drivers and when I rebooted, the SMART test notified me that my secondary hard drive (that I used to store files I didn’t need quick access to so as to keep the Raptor drive free of clutter) was close to failure. After pressing F1 to continue the boot Windows loaded up and a dialog popped up informing me that MOM had failed to initialize something or other. MOM is a part of the ATI display drivers. When I tried to access my ATI display control panel, the same error popped up. I took a moment to load SpeedFan to run a SMART test on my failing hard drive again and it showed me the fitness level was near zero. But first I wanted to fix my video drivers so I reinstalled them and when I restarted the computer, nothing happened. The monitors stayed blank and my HDD access light remained on.

So I let it sit for a few minutes – read a book… came back and switched it off. Went back to reading for about an hour (got some snackage too) then came back hoping it was a heat issue (tho SpeedFan also reported a case temp of only 40c) and tried turning on the computer again. Still nothing. Then I realized I wasn’t even hearing the beep of a POST test. Great – did I somehow fry my motherboard??

So out comes the tower and I disassemble it and remove the offending hard drive, hoping that it was failing to read properly and just hanging up the boot process somehow. Tried again and still nothing. Pulled out the whole IDE cable and unhooked the one DVD-ROM drive I had hooked up and tried again. Still nothing. Replaced the failed drive with another I had in an external USB case and re-hooked the IDE cable. Still nothing.

Then I noticed when it would start a red light would flash on my Sapphire X1900 GT. That can’t be good right? So I hop on my laptop to search the internet and finally find that the red light is just an indicator that the card is receiving the proper voltage from the PSU (since it requires an extra power connector). Stupid ATI and their redness.

So my graphics card didn’t seem to be fried, but for some odd reason the computer failed to recognize it was plugged in. I took the bad hard drive and hooked it up to the USB case and plugged it into my laptop and got nothing – the drive didn’t even spin up when I turned it on. So perhaps the drive died in the middle of the reboot process and scrambled my driver install? Beats me, but I zip-locked it up and stuck it in the freezer anyways after researching the technique I had heard about before. Who knows, it doesn’t spin up but maybe being frozen will help.

Luckily I had my second ATI card in the other PCIx slot, so I pulled the X1900 and replaced it with the X1650 and booted up. The computer recognized the card and with relief I heard the POST beep. I loaded to the Windows welcome screen, shut down and then swapped the cards back to their proper slots and the machine started up just fine and dandy once again.

*phew* – disaster averted! I had to re-activate windows because of all the hardware changes but luckily that was hassle-free. I didn’t lose any vital data because I had done a backup yesterday. I did potentially lose some recorded TV shows, which would suck but wouldn’t be the end of the world. That’s what bit torrent is for after all 😛 We’ll see if the freezer trick works on my dead drive.


Well I have a packed weekend ahead of me, which is why I’m still awake at 11am. Needed to make sure I can tackle this weekend without getting piled up on work. I think I deserve some rest right now, so I’m going to get going.

I picked up yet another Firefox tweak to further increase my screen real-estate, I’m going to post an entry detailing all the steps you can take to slim up FF, but that’ll have to wait for another day. Ciao for now.

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Game Concept

October 29th, 2007 · Software

Transposed from Gaiiden’s Scroll

I banged this out in 30 mins or so using Paint.Net. It’s a layered image so I’ll be pulling elements out of it to use in the prototype. I’m going to code some basic functionality tomorrow, which means flying ships around the screen. Wheee. I’m not going to say any more about it, but I’m excited to finally start working on it.

Yup, that’s it.

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