Month: August 2004

  • The air up there…

    Yesterday was pretty fun; Aryntha, Rai, and I took a drive up to Fort Collins and wandered about “Rist Canyon” for a while. We were there to visit and take pictures of the AT&T microwave site at Buckhorn Mountain, but as usual we got pretty caught up in the view.

    Here’s a couple of samples of what you can see from the top of Buckhorn Mountain…

    The first photo is looking west from the site and the second is looking north into Nebraska.

    When we got back I returned back to Haven along with Aryntha and Rai for some gaming… Unfortunately as soon as I stopped moving I stopped moving for the night.

    I went to bed last night at about 11… Got up at about 10… I guess I needed the sleep.

    Anyways I’m going to go do my morning routine, update the OMFuXS web site with the info from yesterday, and go get lunch.

    Take it easy out there!

    The Alan Parsons ProjectStanding on Higher Ground

  • Music, non stop…

    Well, it all started last night while I was attempting to show Scales some of the finer points of music theory (and showing off my Mac) and I put together a quick little techno beat pattern as an example… Scales is quite enamored with techno and dance music.

    Well tonight I finally had a chance to play around with the Hammond organ I have access too, my pet sequencer, and the very pricey but worth every penny Pro Tools package.

    I started out with the idea that it would be fun to integrate an instrument *never* heard in techno or dance music into a piece of said same… So with that in mind I spent the evening composing “Hammond Cheese”.

    The Hammond organ is an amazingly mechanical device and when operating it reminds one of a steam locomotive, which is where the “mechenwerken” parts of the piece draw their inspiration from. The lighthearted aspects, and frenetic measure of the organ itself are inspired by Scales himself.

    So, without further adieu, I present “Hammond Cheese”.

    William MillerHammond Cheese

  • One down…

    Well, I’m fast approaching a week at the company and I have to say this is the most fun I’ve ever had and gotten paid for it.

    I can’t say much about what I’m doing do to all of the confidentiality agreements between the customers and us, but I’m working with some pretty cool stuff.

    I can say I’m working on a racing game right now, which has some real industry leading features (and a few dumb things as they all do), but what’s most humorous about it is that after 8+ hours of working with it, I really have to hold back from driving my Toyota like the cars in the game. Your reaction time gets so ramped up from directly linking your eyes to your hands all day that traffic on the highway seems like it’s going about 15 MPH.

    There’s also this tactical simulation we’re working on that is just amazing… And unbelievably realistic. Too bad both of these games require pinnacle technology right now, which should be mid-high end by Xmas.

    Well, Wolf just came home so I should shut down the music and head for the basement.

    SupertrampTake The Long Way Home

  • On the clock…

    I have once again joined the illustrious members of the working class… Friday I submitted my resume to a company here in Aurora that specializes in QA testing of software and performance testing of commercial web sites.

    Today I had an interview at 10, and by 11 I was working on the QA process for a new video game. Monday I’ll be taking over the performance testing arm of the company, which is what I was actually hired for. The performance testing side of the house should be a lot of fun as I’ll get to break things, albeit programmatically, but it’s still breaking things.

    The two best parts about working with this company is that it’s exactly 5 minutes away even in rush hour traffic, and the people there are so laid back that if they were any more laid back they’d be dead… I was told by the secretary that it was a casual place, but wow. And there isn’t any stress to be found anywhere.

    This is such a nice change of pace from the contractor stuff I’m used to and the software/network sweatshops I’ve been run though for years now.

    Anywho. Once I get Wolf’s computer back up and running I’ll be heading for bed… Windows XP shit the bed on her the other day due in part to the addition of a wireless card and the drivers being problematic. It’s so nice to see a bad driver rip an entire OS apart over a 48 hour period.

    Again, I know it makes certain people paranoid, but I really do like my Mac.

    Speaking of Mac, I’ll be doing some QA for a few upcoming OSX games… I can’t say which ones or even what they’re about, but it brings a smile to my face to be able to provide a service that makes publishers happier to make a port to OSX.

    And with that I have to go download about 700 megs of patches for XP… Bleh.

    G’nite all.

    MobyWe Are All Made Of Stars

  • What fools these mortals be…

    On Role Playing:

    (First off, a disclaimer for those in the game who will read this and will need a disclaimer: The character view sections of this post are from the point of view of a lawful evil character… So if he refers to you as an idiot or comments on your screeching, don’t take it personally… Ok?)

    Something I noticed long ago is that good role playing has absolutely nothing to do with ‘levels’ or the quality of your ‘stats’… Last night was a good example of this…

    For the purposes of fitting Raeshlavik into the game and the game system, he worked out to be a 4th level character to the rest of the groups 8th. This is due, in part, to what he is and the stats that he gets because of this.

    Well, after some gross game adjustment last night on Scale’s part, wherein he had an NPC that was traveling with the party kill everyone in their sleep… Ok, I need to clarify this I see…

    Ok, first off Scales has ‘played’ AD&D for a long time, but is new at the GMing thing. When the game was first set up a couple of months ago, Scales had asked everyone to create characters and two players, rather than create something new, opted to play a pre-existing character…

    Rule number one: don’t let people play a pre-papered character in your game. It’s ok if they use the concept, but have them re-create it within the bounds of your setting.

    Ok, so being as one of these two characters comes complete with heaps of pre-existing stuff (epic level intelligent soul-sucking weapons, vast cosmic powers, spelljammers full of riches, artifact-like familiars, etc) Scales has to ramp up the rest of the party with similar… So before anyone has even seen the game world, they are running around with the equivalent of epic level characters. This causes an eventual problem…

    They can’t be challenged…

    See, most gamers deep down want a challenge from the game; to surmount an epic evil, to correct some injustice, or perhaps cause the afore mentioned problems… They may not know this, but they do. Otherwise, why play? Oh, sure, there are the players who are only there for the ego stroking, but most still want a challenge.

    Where you get a problem is not that the players playing the uber-characters want to avoid the challenge, it’s that they really like the character; the persona if you will, and want to portray that being in game.

    Ok, so Scales being new to all of this makes that boo-boo and has to rectify it, but goes about it the wrong way…

    Rule numbers two and three: Don’t kill the players without a fight. Don’t take away things you’ve given them without it being their idea.

    Scales, now having a bunch of 8th level characters with another 10 levels of toys, has no choice but to create epic-level encounters and in doing this gets the party contractually obligated to an ancient dragon. Things quickly work out that the party’s inexperience with the world and swollen heads from their stats and gear, get them onto a collision course with said dragon which will end up with everyone being quite toasty and very dead… So he has an NPC thief kill them all in their sleep (as thieves do), steal all of their toys (as thieves do), and by way of a relic level item, brings them all back to life (which is something thieves never do as the dead don’t hunt you down, but…).

    I say them because I hadn’t brought myself into the game yet.

    Ok, cue the whining and discontent of a room full of players for breaking rules two and three… Fortunately everyone is pretty experienced, and I have a feeling they knew it was coming, so the whining didn’t last but 10-15 minutes.

    Whew… So after all of this everyone eventually sucks it up and gets on with the game as normal, albeit very high level, noobs.

    One of the players (the one with the epic level weapons, the artifact-like familiar, and a spelljammer full of riches) still hasn’t come to grips with loosing all of it’s toys and, due to the fact that the swords are supposed to return to it, steadfastly refuses to move from the spot…

    Sooo, it’s decided that with the money the party has accumulated (and the spelljammer full of riches) that they will build an inn here in the middle of the forest, on a trade road between Waterdeep and the towns to the west. The druid in the party sets about wood shaping while the mage and the monk return to Waterdeep to buy supplies.

    Time passes, money is spent, and rule number four is broken: Don’t give anything to the characters that they themselves haven’t bought.

    The inn, now a gargantuan facility that is nearly a small town unto itself with it’s own hirelings, magical amenities, and other such silliness, is finally open for business…

    Cue Ravik…

    The familiar of the Druid sees me approaching from the north and reports that something huge, black, and nasty is approaching. As all of the players are familiar with Ravik and the fact that the GM has asked me now, twice, what I’m doing, they almost all react accordingly based on their player knowledge of me.

    So, I naturally use that to my advantage…

    The druid runs to get Lyon’s half-fiend character, Malagar, who is the proclaimed bouncer for this little group and tells him about the evil, horrible creature approaching from the north. He, in turn, takes off to encounter me before I actually get to the Inn to protect it and everyone and the druid follows. When they get to me (I knew they were coming from miles off thanks to a great listen check) I’m laying down between the two most evil looking trees I could find looking regal and contemplative… And mostly harmless. (The trees are added to the description to add to the “evil” flag that I want to wave…)

    The druid roleplays well and upon seeing me, a unicorn, figures that I’m a spirit of the forest, a ‘good guy’, and bows to me. I in turn mention that it’s so nice to see that some of the old race still know their place which is groveling before me. (Again, reinforcing the ‘evil’ while in fact only demonstrating my ego.)

    The half-fiend who has never seen anything like me other than horses is taken aback by the fact that I spoke. The druid, kneeling there on the floor before me, agape, looks like she’s been hit with a big hammer. I turn to Malagar content to completely ignore the elf now that it has demonstrated it’s subservience.

    “Greetings brother” I rumble at Malagar, “Perhaps you could inform me as to why these mortals have defiled my forest with their construction?” (I use brother here as he is also an immortal creature… It’s not my fault if that is misconstrued.)

    During this the Druid has run back to the Inn to get the Paladin in gear with tales of the “evil unicorn” coming to get them and the fact that I referred to Malagar as ‘brother’…

    Malagar stammers a bit, but manages to squeak out that they are there because the leader of their group, a paladin, has lost all of it’s magic weapons and is waiting for their return. I smile inwardly at this information and ask him who else is there, and am told about the rest of the party… I quickly dismiss Malagar as an idiot for disclosing unit strength, position, and weaknesses to an unknown assailant. “Fine… Very well then, I shall have to go see about this myself I suppose, and deal with it as I deem necessary.” and I rise to my feet and begin heading for the Inn. (I say the word deal with as much evil, dripping, nastiness as I can, again driving the “evil” point with everything I have.)

    I have now deduced that the fiend is obviously trying to mend his ways if he comes at the beck and call of a druid, which means he’s probably not fully trusted and that he is obviously the lackey for several others. That they’ve all been stripped of their magical items by a thief, and that they are busy with the ins and outs of an Inn while none have any merchant skills with which to do this… So, a whole troupe of ‘babes in the woods’ who are ripe for the picking have landed in my lap as it were.

    I have a cunning plan…

    I saunter towards the Inn and Malagar does exactly as i figured he would: He flies back, getting there long before me, and being completely buffaloed by my act tells the paladin “The lord of the underdark tells me he can get me out of this one, but he’s pretty sure you’re fucked.” and that I’m way evil and am going to eat everyone…

    Upon my arrival at the Inn the Paladin is running for a weapon, any weapon while the druid runs around likewise trying to help. The mage and the monk have heard nothing about this so far as they are elsewhere on the ‘property’. I walk though the back door, which the elf left open and look around the main room of the establishment. Malagar watches me and decides to follow when I turn and leave the way I came in.

    Once I’m out back the paladin (now with sword) starts ranting about “the evil monster” and how she will “strike me down”… Getting the attention of the mage and the monk and stirring the druid into a complete tizzy.

    The druid snares me with vines around my hooves (vines!? Am I supposed to eat my way free?) as I head nonchalantly towards the barn and the paladin romps about waving her toy sword and screeching while Malagar looks confused. Finally I turn my head and speak to the paladin once the look of confusion as to why I’ve not broken my bonds flickers across her face.

    “I do so hope this is not how you treat all of your potential customers… For if it is, you are surely doomed to a life of poverty.”

    More jaws drop and confusion runs rampant. The paladin’s sword droops as she looks to the fiend, “You said it was evil!”

    Malagar, looking more confused than the rest, “But, but… It said it was going to ‘See about the Inn’ and ‘Deal with it’.”

    I, looking dejected and quite put out, “Yes, I wanted to see this Inn and, as it is a grand establishment I suppose I can deal with it being here in the middle of my forest as you’ve done nothing to harm anything.”

    All eyes look to Malagar.

    I continue with something about always having my intents mistaken because of my *sniffle* coloration and how I was always being persecuted because everyone thinks black unicorns are evil.

    At this I’m informed that I am welcome to stay; which means I am invited in and can now wreak some real havoc. Though the paladin (knowing Ravik) isn’t completely convinced and I have to give my word that I will not harm anyone as long as I stay. I do so, as *I* won’t be harming anyone…

    I’m asked if I would like to stay in the stable, which prompts me to change my shape and assume my human guise, much to the continued shock of the party, and ask to be shown a room…

    Thus ends the evening’s gaming. If they can convince me they have a goal that furthers my interests, I’ll join up with them. If they demonstrate that they can be useful followers, I’ll use them… Otherwise I’ll have them kill each other off and get my forest back.

    It’s good to be me.

    Anyways, as I mentioned *way* up there at the beginning, levels mean nothing. Ravik is 4th level to the party’s 8+, yet I have successfully sowed some hate and discontent, a little chaos, and a good dose of mistrust… It’s all in how you use what you have available. 🙂

    KraftwerkHeimcomputer (Edit)

  • Good morning…

    Welcome to another weekend.

    Today’s gaming session will see the first appearance of Raeshlavik in a sit-down RPG setting in about ten years. Scales, who is running an AD&D 3.5 game here on Saturdays, talked me into letting Mr. Evil out for a bit… I warned him that his game, world, and personal psyche just aren’t ready for something like Raeshlavik, but he insisted. So, warnings given, I was happy to oblige… Wolf and Lyon, who have had a brief 15 minute interlude with Ravik about ten years ago, looked at Scales and, in stereo, said “are you crazy!?”

    (chuckle)

    It’s taken the better part of a week of spare time to fit Ravik into the AD&D 3.5 rules and the only way to do it was across three character sheets to handle his aspects. He fit best under a ‘monk’ category for now, but I’ll probably put forth the effort to make a class for him if Scales can successfully keep him from ruling the universe in the first fifteen minutes of game today.

    I’ve also given Scales my copy of “Horizons” to play with. It’s that MMORPG that let’s you play a dragon… It’s been damn hard to pry him from the computer since then. 🙂

    Other than that, not a lot to report from the last few days. I’ll post reports from the game today/tonight tomorrow… It should be quite humorous – in a dark and evil kind of way.

    Gotta run, take it easy out there…

  • Cheap Entertainment…

    Yesterday was actually pretty fun after a rough start… Arythna, Rai, and I went south a ways to Colorado Springs and tooled about down there for half a day.

    We found the AT&T sites known as Truckton and Calhan, checked out some things near where Coral Bluffs should have been, ended up on an Air Force base for a few seconds, then drove around downtown Colorado Springs till we found the old Central Office. That was all we had for daylight so we aimed the car northward and headed back to Denver.

    Once we got back to Aryntha and Rai’s place we spent a few hours talking about how mass religion effects the general populace in regards to an individual’s ability to recognize their place in the universe… Fun stuff.

    BTFirewater

  • All about dead horses…

    How to Ride a Dead Horse:

    The tribal wisdom of the Dakota Indians – passed on from generation to generation – says that “when you discover that you are riding a dead horse, the best strategy is to dismount.

    In modern education and expanded government, however, a whole range of far more advanced strategies are often employed, such as:

    1. Buying a stronger whip.

    2. Changing riders.

    3. Threatening the horse with termination.

    4. Appointing a committee to study the horse.

    5. Arranging to visit other countries to see how others ride dead horses.

    6. Lowering the standards so that dead horses can be included.

    7. Re-classifying the dead horse as ”living-impaired.”

    8. Hiring outside contractors to ride the dead horse.

    9. Harnessing several dead horses together to increase the speed.

    10. Providing additional funding and/or training to increase the dead horse’s performance.

    11. Doing a productivity study to see if lighter riders would improve the dead horse’s performance.

    12. Declaring that as the dead horse does not have to be fed, it is less costly, carries lower overhead, and therefore contributes substantially more to the bottom line of the economy than do some other horses.

    13. Rewriting the expected performance requirements for all horses.

    14. Promoting the dead horse to a supervisory position.

    15. As a last resort, sell it on Ebay.

    AdiemusAdiemus

  • It’s quiz time…

    Someone forwarded me another one of these quiz things. Some of them are interesting in their observations of a set number of responses.

    This quiz aims to tell me what tarot card I am… Interesting. Everyone seems to have their favorite card for me: Wolf gave me “The Magus” a while back and I carry it with me all the time in my wallet, and years ago my ex decided I was the ace of cups.

    Being a tarot idiot I don’t have any conception of what these cards mean, but everyone is helpful and tells me all about said card they determine as mine. So here’s the next card as determined by some stranger on the internet…


     

    The Hermit Card
    You are the Hermit card. The Hermit has chosen a
    solitary spiritual path. He shines light on his
    inner self and, by this means, gains wisdom.
    The Hermit’s home is the natural world and it
    is by being in tune with that world that he
    learns the laws of nature and learn how they
    operate within himself. His path is a lonely
    one as he lives in silence and has for
    companionship only his own internal rhythms.
    But those crossing his path are touched by his
    light and wisdom. Though often alone, he
    manages nevertheless to instruct those who meet
    him and guides those who chose to follow him on
    a path towards enlightenment. Image from The
    Aleister Crowley Tarot deck.
    http://www.aeclectic.net/tarot/thoth/

    Which Tarot Card Are You?
    brought to you by Quizilla


    As always I leave it up to the folks who know me to determine if this is fitting and if this person’s analysis of the card in question is accurate.

    In other news it looks like Aryntha, Rai, and myself will be out today cruising the highways and byways of Colorado in search of the elusive AT&T tower. Over the last week we’ve made some large strides in this “hobby” in that we’ve picked up a new person, Jim Hebbeln, who is a long time phone man and AT&T employee. He’s been giving us all kinds of recollections, war stories, information, and some photos of stuff he took back in the 70’s. Really neat stuff if you’re into historical telecommunications. 🙂

    There is also something brewing that I can’t really say much about just yet in regards to getting a chance to get inside a certain facility and take pictures… We were contacted by the current owner and he’s arranging to get us inside with our bevy of cameras and video toys… Stay tuned for more info on this.

    Well, I’d better sign off here and get my act together.

    Take it easy out there…

    The Alan Parsons ProjectDays Are Numbers (The Traveller)

  • Hiking…

    Been a few days since the last update here…

    Sunday morning I drove from Avon, to Salida, through Pueblo and back up to Denver… Just to avoid the passes which the Toyota doesn’t do well on… About 400 or so miles.

    Then Sunday afternoon Aryntha, Rai, and I decided that it’d be fun to go out and do something… We wind up taking my car (it has AC *and* four doors) and end up in Colorado Springs for dinner then back to Denver… Another 200 or so miles.

    So Monday I drive Wolf to Boulder, then head north of Boulder to the old Beech Aircraft facility to get some pictures… I spent several birthdays playing with the HP mainframe, watching them test the tanks for the Shuttle, and other things there and I thought it’d be neat to have some photos of those memories. So I did that (got a tour of the place from the last Beech guy there) then returned to get Wolf and drive her back home… Another 200 or so miles.

    Today I drove Wolf back to Boulder again… See, she works at NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) and doesn’t have a car just yet since the last one I gave her got stolen…

    Well, besides NOAA being on the same campus as NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) and that in and of itself being about as cool as space travel, it’s also right close to the “Flatirons” (a series of rock formations I will explain below) and offers ample opportunity for hiking adventures.

    So today after I dropped her off at work I made for the hills, camera in hand…

    Off I went and hiked up to the top of the hill that NCAR (National Center for Atmospheric Research) sits on… Truth be told I was also looking for another one of these towers that we look for, called “Boulder Junction”. Well, the tower isn’t there anymore, but I did get a good hike out of the deal.

    Those rock formations are the Flatirons… Basically huge sheets of rock that have been forced up at an angle from tectonic motion.

    Along the way back I ran into a herd of mule deer who didn’t really seem to mind me hanging out with them and taking pictures, so I did. There were two bucks, two does, and three fawns all together. This photo shows one of the family units and their twins. In the background is south-east Boulder. As you can see I was about, oh, 20 feet from them and they seemed content to ignore me.

    Once I made it back down I got a chance to poke around a bit at NIST which is where the master clock is… They broadcast the time from this clock from a transmitter in northern Colorado which is received by my wristwatch: which was showing the same exact second as this wall clock…

    So, that was my day pretty much. About another 100 miles of fun in the traffic…

    So, about a thousand miles so far this week… Not bad for a car that doesn’t work all that well.

    And the chances are good that I’ll be driving to Boulder again tomorrow…

    Ian AndersonA Raft Of Penguins

  • On the road again…

    I’m always the gypsy…

    That’s a good thing because in my opinion people in general need to be less into their “things” and more into their “life”. Get out there and see the world!

    For example, I moved from Avon to Denver yesterday and all of my worldly possessions fit nicely into two cardboard boxes which fit in the back seat of my Toyota, a very full garment bag which sits on top of the boxes, a plastic filing cabinet full of computer stuff (the $7 one from Sprawl-Mart) which goes in the trunk along with my suitcases, which are currently holding my 30-something pounds of artwork, supplies, and books.

    To do this move requires about an hour of packing, meaning I get up late Saturday morning (10am) and hit the road by noon.

    I figure I got this way because I was in the Navy almost immediately after High School and you spend most of your time in the Navy living out of a sea-bag. Not that this is a bad thing, you just learn to appreciate the smallest, highest quality electronic gizmos you can afford… There is *no* spare room on a submarine so I’ve always had the top of the line Walkman or other portable music gizmo, audiophile headphones, and whatnot.

    So, as you can see, I’m really digging this trend towards extremely powerful laptops. I used to have to move this big PC, 19+ inch monitor, sack of wires, sack of interface devices, several peripherals, etc. every time my wanderlust kicked in. Now I stick the laptop and it’s power supply into my briefcase and the few external things into a bag and I’m on the road… I like it.

    Well, that and being able to check my email from any subdivision as there are always 4-5 open 802.11 routers in any large group of homes these days.

    So, anyways, the point of this post is that I’m living in Denver now, or at least till my wanderlust kicks in again and I move somewhere else in Colorado.

    🙂

    The Moody BluesLazy Day