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September 30, 2005

Neil Gaiman: American Gods

I completely forgot that Neil Gaiman was in the Bay Area signing books this week, else I would have gone to see him speak.

However, seeing kwc's post about his recent signing at Cody's Books in Berkeley did prompt me to go searching through my pre-blogspot archives for my notes on his talk at Kepler's Books in Menlo Park in 2001. I won't bother to repost the 2001 entry (because my writing style has apparently changed a lot over the last four years) but I will summarize the notes in the extended entry.

Neil Gaiman, Kepler's Books, Menlo Park, June 26, 2001

Somewhere between 250 and 300 people were in attendance.

He started off by reading a chapter from American Gods about Shadow and his dead wife. Gaiman was going to read a chapter about the Bay Area, but decided to save that chapter for the reading at Cody's the next day. Following the reading was a Q & A session.

Gaiman began the Q & A session by saying that Kepler's has always had the most interesting questions out of all of the stops on his tour, and that last time in Kepler's it was "How did you meet Jon Singer?" (Which started out by people asking him how he met Dave McKean, Tori Amos and Terry Pratchett).

**How did you meet Jon Singer?** Gaiman: How long have you been waiting to ask that question? Question-Asker: Uh... one and a half years? Gaiman: No! Two and a half years. That's a long time. Gaiman then goes on to explain who Jon Singer is and how he still comes by his house occassionally to dig up more clay. **What are the lyrics to "I am an English Coastline?"** That's the most bizarre question ever asked. Next question. **Do you know when you start writing what the theme of the book will be?** No, not really. Gaiman starts with an idea, or a scene in his head, and he builds around that. How American Gods started was that he had an scene of 2 people in an airplane, one man offering the other a job, and it sat in his head for months, until one day, he decided to spend a few days in Reyjavik, Norway. Apparently, Neil didn't realize that in Norway, during June, the sun doesn't really set, and he couldn't really sleep. He wrote out a 2 page letter to his publisher with a brief outline of what's going to happen in the book, and when he got back from his trip he found it they liked the idea, and they had already gotten a cover done for the book. Life is surreal. **About being British** In the States, because of his accent, Neil gets "You're not from around here, are you?" But in Brittain, his home country, he recently went on a trip there and stayed in a hotel. At the hotel, because living in America has dulled his accent, the hotel concierge recognized him as being non-British. Neil asked for some directions to a place and the concierge said "Well, you just take the bus." The concierge then proceeded to explain what a bus and bus stop was, while describing the shape and color of the bus (It's red, it's got two levels, it looks like a cigar on wheels) as if Neil didn't know what a bus was. In Neil's mind as this was going on was a voice screaming "I'm British! I've lived in England for years, I know what a bus is!" **About Signings** Neil told a story about how because not all areas get an appearance by him for a book tour, Neil will often receive a box (or many boxes) of title pages from the publishers and have to sign them. After seeing him sign dozens of pages, his daughter comes up to him and asks what he is doing. Neil explains, and she takes one of the pages and says "Is that supposed to be Neil Gaiman? It looks more like Nel Gurgle". She asked if she could help sign some books for him as well and says that she can sign Nel Gurgle as well as he can. Neil then explained to his daughter that it wouldn't be right for her to sign the books because they were expecting Daddy's signature on them.

Losing NAVI

Earlier this week, NAVI crashed while I was driving home.

I've never in all my years of driving ever had a car stereo component outright fail on me (the car antenna doesn't count).

I spent Tuesday night diagnosing and disassembling the dashboard, pulling out the entire GPS system and reconnecting cables (in case any were loose). I patched it all up and it seemed good, but NAVI still crashes and powers off abruptly. The iPod adapter system still works, which is by far the much more crucial device, which makes me re-evaluate the need and worth of having the GPS system. The GPS system is out of warranty (and I know the rates for repair on it are bound to be astronomical).

I was also researching new Map DVDs for NAVI as well -- they are ridiculously expensive. Definitely not something to be replaced on an annual or bi-annual basis -- probably something that one might consider replacing every 5 to 10 years, just like you would replace a Thomas Guide.

All of this has had me thinking -- we spend all this time developing new technology to make our lives easier, but at the same time, this new technology complicates our lives when it doesn't work. Don't get me wrong -- GPS tech is great since I constantly find myself lost getting to a new place, but is it really worth the cost? Pioneer's current model, the AVIC-N2 Multi-Function Navigation System, costs over $1600. That's a whole lot of Thomas Guides.

Video Game Degrees and Breaking into the Video Games Industry

Washington Post: Like Video Games? Now you can major in them. (registration required or use bugmenot)

*"At Carnegie Mellon, students will have to take classes such as Intro to Entertainment Technology, Building Virtual Worlds and Game Design, as well as many others. But it's hard to measure the significance of these sorts of degrees. "*

It seems to me that the value in these classes is as preparation for the games industry -- these are the basic principles that one should know, and that one may even know intuitively. Like any other academic field, it's important to know the basic concepts at work, and to get a general introduction to games. Classes in this subject matter are at least as useful as "The Works of Shakespeare" or "Writers of the 19th Century" would be to a magazine editor -- that is to say, it provides helpful background, but is by no means a requirement.

I would think however, that anyone who wants to make a career in the video industry would naturally be an avid game player, and would have played as many games as they could have. I think there's a lot of value in playing the games, particularly in the games industry.

*"The idea of a video game education is so new that, even within the gaming industry, the jury is still out on whether these degrees are worth the sheepskin they're printed on."*

It's very true that the jury is still quite out on it -- and it seems to me, from the applicants I've seen that what matters most is not where you went to school, or what degree you attained or majored in, but rather what your abilities are. Going to one of these schools and getting a degree won't ensure a job in the games industry.

In the games industry, I've seen people who didn't finish high school and I've seen people with Ph.Ds. It really comes down to two things and I think it's true in anything that people work towards: patience and perserverence. If games is really what matters to you, then you'll find a way into it. The degree may help opening some doors a bit easier (the value of networking) but there's no substitute for experience or ability. The article has a quote from Mark Jacobs, founder of Mythic Entertainment Inc who said: "Degrees are good, experience is better."

The article ends with Ahmed, a games industry job seeker, saying about doing it on his own: "I need a team of 100 people and millions of dollars, I don't have that."

I don't agree with that. Anyone can make a game on their own. I was making my own when I was 14. Getting it published and selling millions of copies, that's another matter entirely.

The extended entry includes tips on how to get a job in the industry without experience.

**"How can I get a job in the video games industry when I don't have any experience? It seems like all the games companies want experience."**

This is the question I get asked the most by people wanting to get into the video games industry. I've answered this so many times, I feel like I should be giving a course on it. My answer is this: Create your own experience. There's nothing special about creating a game. A game is a collaborative effort between two main components: artists and programmers. Pick any modern game in your current game library. Each piece of art in the game, done by artists. All the programming that makes the game work, done by programmers. If you can do what they can do, you're at least as good as they are quality-wise. The other thing to watch out for is time. You don't need to be fast, but it helps.

**Programmers** If you want to be a programmer, learn DirectX and start programming a game. It doesn't have to be a new game. In the old days, the programmer did both art and programming for the games. Start simple. Build Pong. Then build a demo level of Super Mario Bros. 1. Both of these will teach you sprite based programming, but it'll also teach you the basic functions most games have (such as displaying graphics, taking inputs. Sprite programming is useful still for many of the web-based games. Once you have sprite programming down, learn 3-D programming, because that's the main core of today's game industry. Network Programming and Audio Programming are also useful to know, and DirectX includes a library for that as well. Learn it.

**Artists** If you want to be an artist, learn Maya (or 3DStudio Max) and start modeling, animating and texture mapping. Learn how to rig and weight things properly. Take a current game, and pick a character (or environment) and build it. Reproduce it as fully as you can. It should have Walking, Attacking and Jumping animations at the very least. Now do that for 5 other characters (or environments). For extra work, take a sprite based game and do a set of 5 characters (or environments) and their animations.

**Game Designers** The most valuable advice I can give those who feel that game design is their calling is this: Play as many games as you can. Then, after playing them, think about them. Think about what you liked, and what you didn't like. Think about how the game worked, or how the game didn't work, and then think about things that you would do differently if you were in charge of the game. Think about things that could be improved, and what things you would add if you were making a sequel. There are many tools that exist to modify current games. Use those tools and create your own. Game designer is one of the hardest jobs to get in the industry -- because there just aren't that many of them needed -- for a team of 20, you maybe need one game designer. Some studios consider artists and programmers their game designers, and there are few people in the industry who do solely game design.

**Apply for the Job** After you've done all this, it's time to send your resume and your portfolio of stuff away for game companies to look at. Standard rules for applications apply, meaning have a real person spell check your resume and view your demo reel. Apply everywhere. Gamasutra always has a listing of openings.

September 28, 2005

links for 2005-09-28

September 25, 2005

Review: Marvel 1602

I just finished reading Marvel 1602, which dabbles in an alternate universe with the Marvel Superheroes we all know and love in a different time period -- namely, the year 1602.

Some of the reasons for the origin of their superpowers does seem at times contrived.

3/5

September 23, 2005

links for 2005-09-23

September 22, 2005

Wow.

JetBlue Passengers are able to watch as their plane prepares for an emergency crash landing

I guess we've finally reached the age where live television can be televised even on the planes.

Eye of a Hurricane

Hurricane Rita causes Gridlock as masses flee US storm

They sounded the evacuation a day early, and it looks like buses are getting people out of the area, so it would appear that people have learnt from Katrina. It does make me think about my emergency preparations (or lack thereof).

From this second Hurricane, I think we can safely assume that gas prices are going to skyrocket over the next couple of months -- I'll go out on a limb and predict $4 at the pump around Thanksgiving/Christmas.

links for 2005-09-22

September 21, 2005

Media Manager

I always seem to have problems finding specific Canon 'L' Lenses on Amazon, so using my freshly installed copy ofMedia Manager, I made a page to quickly reference the lenses. This in turn led me to more experimentation with the Media Manager, and I ended up creating additional pages to cover my collections of books, DVDs and Video Games, which will eventually be filled with relevant data.

No tagbacks...

#### Number of books I own: Lots. Not sure how many, but lots. In the hundred definitely, and possibily in the thousands. #### Last book I bought: The Photoshop CS2 Book for Digital Photographers #### Last book I completed. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Book 6) #### Books that mean a lot to me. * Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things Donald Norman * Foundation (Foundation Novels (Paperback)) Isaac Asimov * Les Miserables a New Unabridged Translation (Signet Classics) * Death: The High Cost of Living, Neil Gaiman * Snow Crash (Bantam Spectra Book), Neal Stephenson * The Cross-Time Engineer (Adventures of Conrad Stargard, Book 1) * The 100 Simple Secrets of Happy People: What Scientists Have Learned and How You Can Use It * Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth * The Complete Book of Scriptwriting * The Dictionary of Imaginary Places: The Newly Updated and Expanded Classic * Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, Vol. 1 #### What I'm currently reading. * Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell : A Novel * Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West * The Color of Magic (Discworld, Book 1)

Flickr: Terry Pratchett and FlickrFiesta

Two new Photosets are up: FlickrFiesta on the Yahoo! campus, as well as a couple of photos of Terry Pratchett to go along with kwc's notes on Terry Pratchett at Books Inc. in Mountain View.

links for 2005-09-21

September 20, 2005

Thunder and Lightning

It's the first thunderstorm of the year.

I can't believe it's raining. It was such a nice day yesterday.

There's two guys paddling outside on the marsh in the pouring rain. I think they must want to make it home. With the lightning though, I'd say the smart thing to do is to head for the shore, bring the canoe to land and call for a pickup... if lightning were to strike that lake, the safest place to be is probably not in the canoe.

Thinking about Hydrogen

Water Burns Cleaner: Hydrogen Generator

His claim that it reduces pollutants entirely should be a big red flag.

The idea of putting in distilled water and some reactants in a container and then feeding it to the engine is an interesting one. To me, his idea sounds similar to what racers do when they inject nitrous oxide into their engines, except that he is adding hydrogen instead of nitrogen. Nitrogen has a cooling property on the engine, I'm not sure what Hydrogen would do.

Distilled water breaks into two pieces when a current passes through it: H+ and OH-, 2 H+'s bond to form H2 gas, and four OH-'s bond to form O2 gas, water and 4 electrons. That's basic chemistry - electrolysis.

The oxygen generated from this aids in the combustion of the gasoline (in essence filling the space in the combustion chamber). Gasoline is basically a long chain of Carbon and Hydrogen. When you add oxygen, what results is Carbon Monoxide, Carbon Dioxide, water vapor, hydrogen gas and some carbonization of the engine. The addition of Hydrogen to the mix basically means that you end up getting chains of other hydrocarbons (some which will combust early). A small amount of Carbon Dioxide and Carbon Monoxide will always result (because there is oxygen in the system and gasoline naturally has carbon in it). In addition, having the Hydrogen there is sure to produce Methane (another greenhouse gas)

If it were as simple as just putting in hydrogen into the system to increase fuel efficiency, wouldn't someone have done that already?

September 19, 2005

Mario... Where is he now?

Nintendo of Japan celebrates the 20th Anniversary of Super Mario Bros.

20 years. Hard to believe. I feel old.

Plague strikes World of Warcraft

The World of Warcraft Great Plague

"Heres the skinny: Blizzard adds in a new instance, Zul'Gurub. Inside is the god of blood, Hakkar. Well, when you fight him he has a debuff called Corrputed Blood. It does like 250-350 damage to palyers and affects nearby players. The amazing thing is SOME PLAYERS have brought this disease (and it is a disease) back to the towns, outside of the instance. It starts spreading amongst the genral population including npcs, who can out generate the damage. Some servers have gotten so bad that you can't go into the major cities without getting the plague (and anyone less than like level 50 nearly immediately die). GM's even tried quarantining players in certain areas, but the players kept escaping the quarantine and infecting other players."

As far as I know, this plague hasn't hit the server that I've currently been playing on (Dark Iron) mainly because Dark Iron just doesn't have the high level population that the older servers have (Dark Iron is only about a month old).

Update: Flash Video (with music) of some screenshots
Update 2: Movie of the Plague Spreading through Orgimar (43MB)
Update 3: Movie of the Plague Spreading through Iron Forge (8MB)

Fun Holidays

Yesterday was the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival (which I completely forgot about until my mother called), and today is International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

Nintendo Revolution Controller

In the old days you could tell when a kid was new to video games by the way they'd use the controller. Instead of just using their fingers, they'd use their entire body to play the game -- so a hard jump would be the press of button plus the upward motion of the amrs (as well as the controller) in the hopes of that upward motion adding a little extra oomph to the jump. It didn't matter of course -- the controller didn't have anything in there to detect motions (such as the sway of the body when making a hard right or left), but Nintendo announced at the Tokyo Game Show that their new controller for the Revolution (their next-gen console) would include a gyroscope to detect motions.

You can see the controller in action on this Teaser video for Nintendo Revolution Controller.

I think the controller design is an innovative idea, and it's quite likely that Nintendo developers will be making full use of the controller's abilities in the next-gen Mario and Zelda games. I'm a little less thrilled about the ergonomic design of the controller which resembles a tv remote control.

September 16, 2005

Nanowrimo

http://www.nanowrimo.org

November is National Novel Writing Month, and in honor of that, a lot of would-be novelists are going to start writing on November 1st with the goal of finishing a 175-page novel (50,000 words) by midnight of November 30th.

I'm going to do it.

Commercial Screening Room

One of the things about having a TiVo is that I skip out on commercials. Admittedly, there are some very good ones (most of which are shown during the Superbowl) as well as some very bad ones. I stumbled upon Boards Magazine Screening Room, which contains some very funny commercials:

A couple of good ones:

September 15, 2005

Movable Type 3.2

I upgraded to MT 3.2. A couple of things broke (which I'll fix as soon as I get around to it). So far, it's looking pretty nice.

The comment spam has already started flowing in... :(

Final Fantasy 7: Advent Children

I'm a bit surprised that I never mentioned Final Fantasy 7: Advent Children before in my blog, as I've been waiting for this movie for what seems like years.

The waiting is over because as of yesterday, Advent Children was released in Japan. When I originally heard of Advent Children, it was slated to be a 30 min long DVD movie, and then as time progressed, it transformed into a hour long PSP-only movie, which eventually became a one and a half hour fully computer animated DVD-movie.

Advent Children pretty much illustrates that the story of a video game can be completely ripped out and packaged in a movie that is much more enjoyable to watch as a 90 minute movie than a 100-hour long game.

September 13, 2005

Restaurant Review: Sun Tofu

Located on El Camino Real next to Fuki Sushi sits Sun Tofu, a Korean restaurant specializing in soft tofu soup. I had the Mushroom Soft Tofu Soup and my sister had the Chicken Bulgogi. Both dishes came out fresh from the kitchen sizzling on the stoneware dishes. Along with the main dishes, we were also served red bean rice and a variety of Korean sides including: bean thread noodles, rolled seaweed, candied potatoes, cabbage kimchi, pickled cucumbers, mung bean sprouts, and a raw egg. The portions were quite large and the wait staff was excellent, refilling our sides and water quickly and frequently. Sun Tofu
4127 El Camino Real, Palo Alto
650-424-8805
Open for lunch Monday through Saturday 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Open for dinner seven days 5 to 9 p.m.

One Dollar Scoops

$1 Scoop Tuesdays at Baskin-Robbins , 6pm-10pm.

Blame Bush

Bush is responsible for the federal response failure

One of the things Bush is really good at doing is putting a spin on things such that he comes out looking pretty good in the end. However, might I suggest an even crazier idea -- that he is secretly googlebombing himself so that the Katrina story overshadows the other hits for Bush and responsible (namely the follies of the Iraq war, global warming and other attrocities).

A Timeline of Hurricane Katrina

September 01, 2005

New Orleans Descendant

Sniper fire halting a hospital evacuation , Marooned Doctors and Chaos in desperate New Orleans.

I can't really believe how much the situation has totally disintegrated in New Orleans -- all this after President Bush, in an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America," said that there should be "zero tolerance of people breaking the law during an emergency such as this."

For me personally, I think that a crisis like this is not about ensuring justice, but rather ensuring survival -- I think the public is going to forgive the Jean Valjeans of New Orleans.

I've come to the conclusion that President Bush is a victim of doublethink, and that his public words when reversed reveal the truth of the matter.

Of course the thing that surprises me is that we've deployed the National Guard to deal with peacekeeping within our country -- I suppose we find new uses for them everyday... I always thought we only used them to secure foreign countries for their supplies of oil. More than one function, imagine that!