V-day: I love the ocean

February 18th, 2010 // art & photography, thought of the day // No Comments » //

thought of the day: if dung beetles eat faeces, what do they… um… output?

took a little walk to the ocean the afternoon of valentine’s day, and noticed the sunset casting some really wild colours across the western edge of north america, especially as it tries hiding under some thinly laid haze.

land's end trail looking to the ocean

Watch your back

February 1st, 2010 // art & photography, thought of the day // 2 Comments » //

thought of the day: when trying to be supportive, if you “stand behind” someone more than 100%, are you really just standing in front of them?

A few panoramas, click to enlarge: Dusk at the lake home. Mother’s Day 2009 at the edge of the continent. Christmas 2009 under the chills.

Dusk on Sauk Lake, September 22, 2009 Mother's Day on Seacliff, May 10, 2009 Winter at the farm Winter at the farm 2

oops!

December 1st, 2009 // everyday minutae // 1 Comment » //

thought of the day: does the church of satan observe religious holidays?

thanks to my clumsy hooves for hands, my site’s presentational theme was accidentally deleted from the server yesterday. i’ve been able to restore about 80% of the style elements, and most things should be functional. please bear with the sawdust and scattered nails until i can get things repaired.

What it could be

July 25th, 2009 // everyday minutae // 3 Comments » //

thought of the day: to see the world only how it is… is to waste what it could be.

elyse.jpg girl.jpg lake.jpg goombas.jpg jamie.jpg
A few “new” drawings, as promised

The Monster at the End of this Book

July 18th, 2009 // art & photography, everyday minutae // No Comments » //

The ‘monster’ I fear may in fact just be me.

It’s been a good two months since my last post; much of that time has been spent attending events like E3 in Los Angeles, working on personal projects, working to secure a job, and then deciding that I want to return to university life and improve my mind the old fashioned way—which has meant spending time researching programs and schools.

After having separated with my last job, which was fun, paid fairly well, came with almost unbeatable benefits, greatly grew my experience and creative diversity, and then moving literally halfway across the country during an economically depressed period of seven months afforded me plenty of time to evaluate a great number of things, the least of which were my available opportunities.

Those who have known me well enough over the past few years to have a frank discussion about my views of advertising, marketing, etc. know that I’m not exactly fond of perverting my creative talents to liberate consumers from their hard-earned cash and buy crap they either don’t really need or can’t really afford. It’s one thing to crave an audience; but its another to stage a crowd with smoke and mirrors while your business associates pick their pockets in their distracted state. I’ve been told that such an anti-entrepreneurial sentiment is the trademark of creative folk, but pardon me for having any sort of human conscience or ignoring the perceived importance of the almighty dollar.

Many people also know that for the past 3.5-4 years I’ve been volunteering countless hours on a popular gaming news and community web site. While it’s technically not paid a dime (yet), I have met countless wonderful people and it has opened doors to many new opportunities and horizons, many of which have roots here in the San Francisco area. During my months away from the workforce, I’ve had a chance to explore these options to a greater degree and have enjoyed it enough to consider officially working within the video game industry in some capacity. Many young people interested in games seem to be interested in pursuing a career in editorial capacities, which I can attest is a very exciting field, but not one that is likely to bear lifelong careers for anyone unless they have other skills that can be parlayed into much different roles within the industry, particularly in business or other managerial duties; things I have little interest in directly, so I will need to look deeper into the job well.

Last fall, my volunteer efforts with that gaming site landed me a very rare opportunity to travel with a game company to Japan, an experience that really opened my eyes in ways I could have never imagined. It’s one of those things you have to see or do for yourself to understand, not unlike parenthood—so I hear. Ten years ago I would have ignorantly written off most foreign cultures as bizarre, unnecessary, and irrelevant to my life and goals. For me, Japan specifically was perceived as a place of such other-worldly oddity that I could only laugh at the stereotypical wacky TV programmes and assign them as the single thumbnail of the whole country and its cultured history. As it turns out, that naivete has ironically become the defining factor in the goals I have now set for myself.

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iTunes 8 stopped sharing across the local network?

May 20th, 2009 // miscellaneous // No Comments » //

I’m afraid I can’t let you share that, Dave.

A bit of a diversion from my typical posts, but in case someone stumbles upon it from a search engine, hopefully my hours of turmoil will lessen another’s burden.

Last week, I updated one of my computer’s iTunes installation to version 8.1.1, while my other machine (with the primary music library) stayed on version 8.0. For whatever reason, the newer version stopped seeing the older one’s shared library across the network. Huh??

So after tinkering with the router, scouring the web, updating the other machine to 8.1.1, and fidgeting with every damn preference or setting between both machines for hours and coming up completely nowhere, I gave up.

Until someone else logged into their account on my machine…I had them try launching iTunes (a fresh account), and behold, it saw both of my other shared libraries, yet those two couldn’t see this new one nor each other. Hmm..

At that point, it was clear to me that it had something to do with the iTunes preference files (.plist) in my home directory: ~/Library/Preferences/ and ~/Library/Preferences/ByHost/.

After trashing them and rebooting iTunes on the problematic computers and accounts, re-agreeing to the license and re-enabling my sharing settings, suddenly my network sharing was back to working 100%.

An old trick from the MacOS 7,8,9 days that is often forgotten today. Hopefully it saves somebody else a lot of time and trouble!

ps.. note that the icon for iTunes 8 actually says “itunes 7″ on the center ring of the disc. interesting detail.

Titty Ditties

May 11th, 2009 // everyday minutae, thought of the day // 3 Comments » //

thought of the day: if there was a musical equivalent of the “chick flick”, would they be called Titty Ditties? Example…

Spent my internet-free day tinkering in Flash, mostly with my banner image atop this site. Looks pretty good for a start and for a first time project in the application, but even as 100% vector, it will need some heavy optimisation for the file size to be small enough to replace my static header!