Personal | The VidZone Network Blog - Part 2

May 22, 2009

PrE-3

After getting the news from IndieCade late last week, I’ve spent most of my time since sorting out travel plans to get to E3.  Travel and lodging have been finalized with just a few other bits to consider.

Of course the primary reason I’m attending the expo this year is to be on hand to speak about Zephyr: Tides of War, but it’d be a disservice to the video game fanatic inside me to not take part in the rest of the mania and play some new games.  I imagine that both of these things will involve a lot of standing around with a lot of dead time.  That’s why I’ve considered picking up a netbook computer to help fill the time with some blog writing and blog reading. After that my GDC trip, I also curse the inconvenient size, weight, and short battery life of a 17″ laptop.

I’m not quite sure of my plan of attack and how I intend to divide my time between duty and leisure.  Anyone have insight on the prime times when people feel like checking out indie games versus the big blockbusters?  Morning? After lunch?…  This is one thing I really want to get right because it’s a fantastic networking/job interview opportunity, and I want to meet people who can help me get back in.  That’s certainly a selfish on reasons for networking, but a guy’s gotta eat.  (And buy Punch-Out!!.)  I realize this is a retail-centric conference, rather than something for developers’ enrichment.  However, I’m pretty sure that if anyone’s going to have interest in exploring the outer fringes, it’ll be other developers.  I have about 50 business cards leftover from GDC, and I hope that’s enough.  If not, boy, that’s a fantastic problem to have.

I’m flying in on the 1st and back home late on the 4th. If anybody would like to meet up and chat or whatever, I’d like that, too. Please let me know; it currently seems I may be the only one from the team who’ll make it out to LA.

Carl @ 1:18 am
Filed under: Games,Personal — Tags: , , , , ,

May 14, 2009

Some FIEA plugging

Because FIEA (http://www.fiea.ucf.edu) is a relatively young program, just now on it’s fifth set of students, I want to make sure that its name gets out there and promoted well.  After all, if my alma mater looks good, then I look good.

FIEA (pronounced “phy-uh”) stands for the Florida Interactive Entertainment Academy and is part of the University of Central Florida. Graduates of the 16-month program will receive a master’s degree in interactive entertainment. There are three tracks available: art, programming, or production. Because classes are never scheduled simultaneously, you’re welcome to sit in on the other tracks, regardless of which track you’re in.  You may notice that one of the tracks is in production, rather than design. Everyone’s a designer, of course! So in addition to design fundamentals, producers are taught project management skills.

Unanimously, we graduates agree that thanks to the industry grade tools, group work environment, and projects at FIEA, we were able to hit the ground running with minimal ramp-up in the real world.

The faculty is ace and industry-worn, with plenty of relevant war stories to tell.  Several of them remain in active development positions outside of the university.  However, thanks to the low ratio of students to professors (current cohort is maxed out at ~50 students; mine was ~35) and one-group-of-students-at-a-time focus, they’re readily available and eager to provide guidance and feedback.

New Brochure

Our communications director Todd Deery just sent notice that the newest brochures have just left the presses, and he graciously provided me with the PDF proof so that I could share it here with you.  [PDF, right-click to download]

iPhone Crossfire Port

Our programmers were once tasked with developing and porting a simple game from the PC to the Xbox. A couple of them decided to adapt the Milton Bradley game Crossfire into a network multiplayer title. Now, its been ported and renamed x-Fire for the iPhone. Check out the website Game-Grinder.com for more details and video. I don’t think it’s network-capable anymore, but obviously with multitouch, both players can play on the same iPhone.  What is notably missing is the cheesy lounge cover of the Crossfire TV commercial song that they used as background music.

Street Fighter, ASCII Edition

Perhaps you saw this on Kotaku? This is a network rock-paper-scissors test game for the engine that the Cohort 5 programmers are working on.

Carl @ 2:02 am
Filed under: Games,Personal — Tags: , , , , ,

May 9, 2009

The New Hotness vol. 3

Video Games:

Duke Nukem

This one’s actually more of the “not hotness.” 3D Realms shut their doors this past week, leaving behind a legacy of great shareware and…not too much since then. Uh…Max Payne and Prey, I guess.

When I first saw these advertisements at GDC09 (before the city took them off their bus stops, it seems), I was excited that, just maybe, we’d hear something something about Duke Nukem Forever. If you go to the website, though, it’s a casting call to be the spokesmodel (a la Lara Croft) for Deep Silver‘s upcoming Duke Nukem Trilogy of portable games.

I still have my fingers crossed someone will pick up the project. I don’t think we’re holding our breath any longer, but there are still plenty of gamers out there eager to see the final product.

Television:

Southland (NBC)

I’m not normally one for cop shows, but about a month or so, I kept the television tuned in to NBC’s Southland after it’s Thursday night full night of comic goodness.  They’ve been promoting it as from producer of E.R. (a show I didn’t watch, either) and plastering the Ben McKenzie’s (Ryan from The O.C.) face all over the promos.

I was pleasantly surprised.  While on the surface it’s a show with cops doing cop things, it’s more of a character drama than about fighting crime.  There’s a rather large cast, and each week the show does a series of intertwining vignettes on a small handful of them rather than trying to make up some token thing so each cast member gets screen time.  It’s a true ensemble piece, and no individual character is being singled out as the “star” or center of the spokes.  The policework plots tend to merely serve as a framework to enable us to get a sense of each character’s personality and individual personal struggles in and out of the uniform.

Music:

 

Kylie Minogue North American Tour

Kylie Minogue, international pop mega-star (in all places but the US…), just announced her very first North American concert tour in her over two decades of performing.  She’ll play seven dates in September and October across the US and Canada, of course none of the stops near me.

You US folk may be familiar with her songs “Locomotion” from the late ’80s and “Can’t Get You Out of My Head” from the early ’00s or her role as Cammy in the ’90s Street Fighter live-action movie and the (Absinthe) Green Fairy in Moulin Rouge.  Apparently later this year she’ll be starring in the biggest-budget Bollywood movie yet and record a song with A.R. Rahman, the guy who scored the Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack.  Hmm.

Now if only Michael Jackson would come back and tour the US.  Or rather, the US let MJ come back.

Her 2008 album X is on my list of perfect albums.  A collection of pop perfection you can get lost in but sung a variety styles so that none of them sound like a rehash of each other.

Movies:

The Wackness

I’ve already written a review, which you can read here. In short, it’s a coming-of-age story with drama and humor supplied by the bro-mance between an old psychiatrist and his young pot-dealing patient/dealer. Cinematography is like a dreamy summer day, and the film is supported by an old-school hip-hop soundtrack. I would say its surreal visuals and bittersweet coping plot is reminiscent of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

Gadgets:

Samsung Alias2 (U750)

When you hear about e-ink, I bet that the first thing you think of is the Amazon Kindle or some other e-book reader. Or maybe the Esquire magazine cover from last year. This dual-hinge phone uses the technology for dynamic keypad/keyboard layouts, switching between vertical/horizontal layouts and numeric/QWERTY modes depending on context.

The backlight shines through the clear portion of each key behind the labels, and though B/W is high contrast, I think that much light might with such small fonts might actually make it difficult to see the proper keys. I’m only guessing, however, since I haven’t seen the phone in person.

As much as I applaud this innovative use of the low-power dynamic displays, it still comes at the expense of an ergonomic no-look layout. Aside from the space bar and a few menu buttons, the face keypad is one large grid of same-size keys, making it near impossible to accurately navigate without looking at your finger placement. This probably won’t be the best phone for people who like to T9 text on the sly with their phones kept in their pocket or by their side.

May 2, 2009

Happy 15th Birthday, Opera

Ever since Opera went freeware several years ago, I’ve always enjoyed how briskly it performed while including numerous powerful new features.  I want to use it as my everyday browser, but there are still the unfortunate few sites that act up on it or actively block access due to not officially supporting it (at least just offer a warning and give me some way to test the waters myself!).  Every so often, I even fire it up on my Android G1 when I need to go to a graphic-intensive website while on the go.  

Check out their 15th anniversary website for a trip down memory lane.

Cheers, Opera!  Keep up the good work.

Carl @ 1:57 am
Filed under: Personal — Tags: , , ,

April 15, 2009

The New Hotness vol. 2

Wow, that took quite a long while between updates. (Shhhh…don’t talk about the video show…) In the few weeks, about as many interesting consumables that I’d want to rave about passed through. Let’s get to it, though.

Music:

Completely by coincidence, continuing with Korean acts, here we have Girls’ Generation‘s (aka SNSD oveseas) “Gee.”  I stumbled upon the video while wading through the comments on a Kotaku article regarding one of the producers behind Japanese girl super-group Morning Musume.

If you know me, you know I make no secret that I’m a fan of pop music (as specifically referring to the post-grunge, teen idol era surrounding the turn of the millennium), in particular girl groups.  See Girls Aloud for a modern example.  Anyway, this song is quite catchy and (so far) not irritating.  There’s a marching percussion backing the whole composition, and the vocal melodies are very reminiscent of early ’90s pop-R&B.  What I enjoy most about this music video is the tight unity for the massive number of participants and how each feature girl is able to seamlessly apply her own flair for the current move that sometimes is played to a different beat, then jump right back in synch for the next formation shift.  I also liked the hyper-feminine sass that avoids becoming too sexualized.  To be fair, the choreography is far from complex with everybody generally doing the same thing between formation changes, but I think that they’re able to stay in unison so perfectly comes from the need to perform live constantly.  I wouldn’t be surprised if not that many takes were needed to get the shot in the can.

Though the single-shot video impressed me when I first saw it, after stumbling around the internet trying to relocate the same video as posted in the Kotaku comments, I learned that this is just a dance reel used for splicing into the actual video.  There actually exists another dance reel with a white background (not as cleanly danced as the above posted video).  I thought it was rather interesting that these full “alternate take” videos would be publically released for the fans to gobble up.  Take note, Britney!

Video Games:

Discounted XBLA games

Last week, Amazon.com began offering Xbox Live Arcade game download codes you could purchase with real money, rather than needing to invest in Microsoft Points.  The best part of it was that they offered several games for half price!  Of course the discounted offerings will rotate, but so far they’ve offered Galaga Legions, Pac-Man Championship Edition, DOOM, and Undertow.  When you make your purchase, you’ll immediately see (and be emailed) a code you can enter on your Xbox 360 or on Xbox.com to queue up the download; no waiting for a slip of paper to arrive by snail-mail.

Food:

Wonka Tinglerz

I don’t know if you’re aware it exists, but they make (official) Pop Rocks chocolate bars.  Unfortunately the chocolate is of a pretty low quality, there’s too many pop-rock nuggets per bite, and the thing is just too damned sweet.  The other week, I saw these at Target and decided to give them a try.  Thankfully, this is a much better candy.  Basically, it’s Nestle Buncha-Crunch with the occasional fizzy bit.  (Note that Wonka is a sub-brand of Nestle.)  So for the most part, your mouth isn’t exploding, but you still get some pop from the crispy “rice krispie” bits, but then every so often you get an extra kick.  It’s much a much better ratio of gimmick to food, and being a Nestle product, the chocolate actually something enjoyable.

April 7, 2009

Reason #102 why the PS3 is so damn unenticing

For some odd reason, I decided to finally upgrade my Playstation 3′s hard drive this past weekend.  It was the 80gb (w/ software backwards compatibility), and like everything else, I’ve consumed all the hard drive space.  Wanting to continue downloading–and hoarding–high-definition videos, I juggled some of my extra laptop hard drives and settled on giving it a 250gb 5400rpm drive rather than the old 160gb 7200rpm drive that’s currently in my laptop.  The 320gb 5400rpm (but Samsung fast) drive I bought who knows how long ago will eventually go into my laptop.

In all fairness, some of the issues I encountered during this torturous procedure weren’t Sony’s fault and instead problems with my own ambition.  But most of them were. (more…)

March 25, 2009

Sunrise on the sunset coast

I’m in San Francisco for the Game Developers’ Conference. I’m sort of with my parents, but while I’m at GDC, they’ll be visiting relatives. After checking to the swank hotel, we took a trip Fisherman’s Wharf. Having wandered this center strip of town, I’ve noticed a few major things.

1.) Where’s the police presence? It wasn’t until I saw one drive by that I realized I hadn’t seen any others. So far I have a grand total of two.

2.) The city buses aren’t wrapped in advertising. All they have is a smallish billboard on the side. I wonder if there’s some strong advertising regulations here.

Also, it’s frickin’ freezing here. I brought two fairly light jackets and had to double up on them. Hopefully I can survive without having to spend “California money” on something heftier. I was also interested to see United Colors of Benetton still exists. I’d thought that died when we moved back to the US from Sicily.

Carl @ 3:42 am
Filed under: Personal — Tags: , ,

March 21, 2009

The New Hotness vol. 1

In this ongoing segment, I’ll narcissistically talk about things that I’m currently enjoying or think are cool.  I’ll plan on doing this once a week, rather than random ramblings about Dancing with the Stars or the latest failed attempt at pop music.

Music:

BoA – BoA (self titled)
This is Korean pop singer BoA’s big American debut album…although she’s been singing in English…and Japanese…and of course Korean…for many years now.  For better or worse, unlike Utada Hikaru’s big American debut album, this one doesn’t sound very Asian at all.  In fact, if you tried to pass this off as Britney’s latest work, no one would be none the wiser.  It’s a collection of above average, lightweight, catchy, current dance/”hip-pop” tunes.

Fashion:

Busted t-shirt
I posted this a little while back, but at the time it wasn’t officially a shirt.  However, it’s been approved and available for purchase.  I don’t know what it is, but artsy Pac-Man shirts are able to make me pay more than $12 for mere t-shirts.

TV:

Hana Yori Dango (Boys Over Flowers)
The live-action adaptation of the classic manga/anime series.  That being said, I wasn’t familiar with the source material, but somehow I stumbled on a recommendation to check out the TV show, so I gave it a shot.  And it sank its claws into me, causing me to watch mini-marathons each night that prevented me from going to bed before 4am.

In a nutshell, Tsukushi is a poor girl whose family is putting her through the most exclusive, rich-kid high school in Japan.  Her goal was to fly under the radar until graduation, but after defending a friend, she draws the the wrath of the school’s ruling power: the F4, a group of sons of Japan’s ruling elite in commerce, culture, and the “underworld.”  Refusing to back down from the teasing and abuse from the whole school and actually socking a punch to the F4′s leader Tsukasa, she earns F4′s respect and the admiration of their self-centered, young punk leader, much to the dismay of all the rich girls doting on the boys.  Of course Tsukasa has familial obligation to become heir to the throne of Japan’s largest financial dynasty, and his wicked mother won’t stand to have him fall in love with a peasant girl.  The side characters all have interesting side-stories that are reasonably explored, and the Cinderella story is not overly melodramatic or cheesy nor girly or sappy.  However, a certain level of over-the-topness is expected from any Japanese show.  It goes on for 20 episodes between the two seasons, plus a movie.

Books:

Watchmen
I picked up the book after watching and thoroughly enjoying the movie.  I’m about a quarter of the way in, and so far the movie’s been pretty damned spot-on.  Already knowing how things are going to play out (more or less given the tweaks to the ending), I am having lots of fun seeing hidden hints and clues in the crude 1980′s artwork.

Video Games:

House of the Dead: Overkill
It’s a non-stopbloody, funny, funky, dirty-mouthed riot.  Except for those annoying half-second freezes everytime you blow someone up to smithereens…which is quite often.  It’s easy to overlook that technical quirkiness, though when the game is just this much fun thanks to it’s incredible polish.  There’s location sensitive hit-zones that let you blow off individual limbs, grindhouse-style dirtied up image and audio filters, and a genuinely funny script despite the famously frequent f-bombs.

Buy it!  Buy it new, dammit!  Otherwise we’ll still be stuck with endless mini-game collections.  Sega is sticking its neck out by publishing all these “core gamer” titles like HotD: Overkill, MadWorld, and The Conduit.  If they don’t get any love and appreciation (read: money), then the word that’s being sent their way is that it’s not profitable to aim for the “core” gaming crowd.

March 7, 2009

Pocketbook giving up the ghost

I’m not so hot on the old Pac-Man/Ms. Pac-Man video game.  BUT.  Pac-Man Championship Edition is one of my favorite Xbox Live Arcade games, and I totally dug the Pac-Man 2 point ‘n slingshot game on 16-bit.  He’s such a cultural icon that I’ve developed a sort of mini-collection of Pac-Man t-shirts within my wardrobe.  Unfortunately, being in the economic bind I’m in, I should cut back on buying any more frivolous graphic tees.  It’s a shame, though.  Just look at these cool Ghostbusters crossover designs! (Click images to go to their sites.)

Busted @ SplitReason.com
Busted design @ © SplitReason.com

Carl @ 2:15 pm
Filed under: Film,Games,Personal — Tags: , , , ,

February 26, 2009

These modern “Times”

It’s been said to me in the past that I’ve had a gift for the written word, and certainly I enjoy writing.  I’ll freely admit that part of that is a narcissistic desire to simply hear myself “talk,” but nor do I take dramatic efforts to lure in an audience.  If you want to hear what I have to say, you know what corner I’ll be standing on; come on down.

In college I decided that becoming a writer would be a decent “backup career.”  After all, you don’t necessarily need a degree in the form, simply a way with words and some knowhow.  Back in the day, I used to look at my video game magazines or mega-sites like IGN or GameSpot and say, “I could do that.”  To that end, I took a magazine writing course to dip my toes in the water and get at least some form of training.  In fact, during a very short period in high school, I used to write for teen site Kiwibox.com.

The journalistic environment has changed dramatically in just these past few years.  Though not strictly “news” sites, blogs and their writers have gained massive presence and have earned the respect of the industry.  No longer are they fan pages regurgitating news from other sources; they can now stand toe to toe interviewing their subjects and reveal scoops of their own.  (more…)

Carl @ 8:58 pm
Filed under: Personal — Tags: , ,


« Newer PostsOlder Posts »