Brian Crick

Countdown to the IGF

Submissions are now open for the 2012 Independent Games Festival. If I want to submit Tinselfly, I need something ready by October 17th…

…so have a nifty automatic timer thingie!

[fergcorp_cdt]

That’s a little over 100 days away, and given how busy work has been and how slow Tinselfly has been lately, that’s really not a lot of time. Still, I like working under concrete external deadlines, and many IGF submissions are far from done. This isn’t a drop-dead release date.

Given the choice between submitting something that’s not quite there yet and waiting another year… I’d rather just submit something and get on with my life. Or, at least, act as if I’m going to submit something sooner rather than later, and make the call when October comes around.

We’ll see.

With any luck, expect more frequent updates here. 🙂

Deer in Headlights

A deer walked into my yard last night.

I’m finding it strangely difficult to express my reaction to that.

* * *

I grew up in Oklahoma. It’s kind of a barren place. We had one tree in our back yard; it was sort of the centerpiece of the yard, all by itself, maybe six feet tall when I left there.

Somehow, I got the impression that it was a terribly fragile thing.

One day, a tree started growing in our front yard. I don’t know how it got there; maybe my parents planted there and I didn’t know it. But I thought this was a rare and wonderful and magical event. Something was sprouting. On its own. In Oklahoma, land of the dust bowls.

* * *

The other day, I had to trim some branches off a tree. It was leaning into my garage.

It pained me to do that. There were severed branches larger than that whole tree in my Oklahoma back yard. But here in Ohio, my yard is filled with trees. They frequently spring up where we don’t want them, and they frequently get cut down.

* * *

There was a lake next to my Oklahoma house. Not a real lake, mind you; there were lots of small, artificial lakes scattered throughout the cities to help with flash flooding.

There were ducks at the lake. I tend to think of ducks as decorations rather than living animals. They just sort of bob up and down, limbless, unless you offer them breadcrumbs.

But every now and then—maybe once a year or so—a great blue heron would visit the lake. And it would just stand there, all statuesque and enigmatic. I never saw it from less than a hundred yards away. I was convinced it was eight feet tall, and probably knew way more about the world than I did. It wasn’t just a random migratory bird. It was a sign. Of what, i don’t know.

* * *

So a deer walks into my yard.

And my first thought is, does it want something from me?

Of course, on any kind of rational level, I know that it hasn’t gone out of its way to visit anybody in particular, but there’s a certain logic to this: the whole concept of there existing wild animals is a little abstract to me. I hardly ever leave city life. But hey, random people I don’t know, or don’t know well, do occasionally walk into my yard. Neighbors retrieve stray dogs, phone company employees squint at power lines and inspectors from the City make sure everything’s up to code from time to time.

So in a wild animals-less universe, if there is a me-sized—not pet-sized, but a me-sized—animal in my yard, it must be there for a reason.

And it would only be polite to ask said animal if there’s anything I can do for it.

Which, of course, I can’t do.

So I find the whole situation kind of puzzling.

Planting Evidence

I won a 100 yard dash once in middle school. Got a shiny ribbon and stuff.

Now that I’ve started running regularly, I often find myself thinking about that.

I tend not to start any kind of new endeavor, whether it’s learning a new skill or improving my existing ones, unless I am absolutely confident I will succeed. I’m trying to get more comfortable taking risks with that sort of thing, but in general, I tend to stall if I’m not absolutely confident in my ability to succeed.

In the absence of real evidence suggesting that I may succeed with something, I frequently resort to making disingenuous arguments to myself, to support my position that I will succeed. The most common is working on nice-looking assets for a project before digging into code or story or whatever, so that I can look at the assets, and imagine that the finished, polished product that uses those assets already exists.

If it already exists, I must have been able to finish it. It’s sort of mental time-travel.

I think the 100 yard dash is another such disingenuous argument, but subtly different. At some indeterminate point in the past, I was singled out for being a successful sprinter. I could do this at one point. I just need to get that back.

The same sort of mental gymnastics apply to many things I do, come to think of it: I need to recapture the creativity I had as a teenager. I need to be the supportive, witty friend I was in college. I was a more daring cook ten years ago. I want my dancer’s body back, and I miss the focus I had when programming for DOS.

In all likelihood, I am a better artist, friend, cook, and programmer than I have ever been. I put a great deal more thought into taking care of my body than I used to. In all likelihood, I am steadily improving. But in terms of convincing myself that improvement is possible, it helps to believe that I am simply regaining skills I once lost. If I had them once, I can have them again, right?

Which is all just to say that it’s time to drop the reminiscing about some sort of youthful golden age and simply accept risks for what they are. Maybe I’ll sign up for a 5k in addition to the Warrior Dash next year. Maybe this training won’t go anywhere. Who knows.

In some ways, that makes it more exciting. More worth doing.

Whee Humbug!

Have a Scrooge for The Itty Bitty Galaxy.

I was going to give him a top hat and scarf and whatnot, but figured having him lying in bed would be more unique to the character. This was done really quickly, like in 20 minutes or so. Yay copying and pasting!

* * *

For this project as a whole, I basically see two options, not that I’m dying to dive back into coding right now.

  • I can rewrite what I’ve got in Unity.
  • I can continue writing in native Java code.

Despite my aversion to ever doing anything in native code again, I’m leaning towards option #2. First of all, it’s free. While the base Unity package is free, the Android libraries are not, and my track record with this sort of stuff is not good enough to justify dropping a few hundred dollars on a product I may never recoup the costs for.

Secondly, I should probably get comfortable with Java. It seems likely that I may need to know that for my current or future jobs.

* * *

I’ve started running regularly! I’ve never done this before, but I sort of hit a tipping point where this seemed worth doing.

  • I want to participate in next year’s Warrior Dash. Like pet projects, I’m much more likely to work on a skill if it’s in the service of some well-defined project. So since the Warrior Dash is like a dozen obstacle coursey activities spread out over three miles of trails, my goal is to be able to run three and a half miles uninterrupted.
  • My progress is measurable. Thanks to my phone and RunKeeper, I can see detailed statistics about every run I do and see if I’m improving. Without some objective way to see how I’m doing, I’d probably just get flustered and quit after a while.
  • I am confident that progress can be made here. I was doing an EA Sports Active routine for a while, and made noticeable progress doing the activities there, which I wasn’t sure would happen within 90-day program they have you do.
  • I am confident that this will improve, not take away from, my ability to write good code for work and keep pet projects moving. Again, my experience with EA Sports Active has shown me that exercise is essential to doing complex problem solving, which again, I did not expect.

So there you have it. Once the winter sets in again and the snow starts to fall, I’m not sure how this will work out. I can go back to indoor EA Sports stuff again of course, but I’m not sure about the running.

I’ll figure that out when it happens I guess.

Just Another WordPress Site

Welcome to my new journal!

Okay, if you’re seeing this on LiveJournal or Facebook, this won’t seem terribly new. But this is being posted to my in-the-process-of-being-overhauled-web-site at www.oogby.com, and cross-posted everywhere else.

And wow, does this site need an overhaul. The old site just wasn’t very easy to edit, and was therefore terribly outdated. So I’m replacing my homegrown, not-quite-functional editing system with WordPress, adding a blog, and I’m going to try to keep up-to-date pages around for all my pet projects.

It’s going to be a bit messy while I’m rearranging everything.

And hopefully, I’ll feel more accountable for everything this way, and if random people I’ve met Google me and find my site, as they seem wont to do, they’ll get something a bit more meaningful than has been here in the past.

At least, that’s the hope. Let’s see how it goes.

Copyright © 2017 Brian Crick.