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Month: June 2003

A Concert and a Conspiracy

2003-06-30 John Winkelman

Last night I saw Peter Gabriel in concert at DTE Energy Center Pine Knob. Pete puts on a hell of a show.

The set was an exercise in minimalism; just the band and equipment with a half-dozen screen behind, on which was projected different colored light. Overhead was a large circular screen. Everyone was dressed in black.

The concert covered pretty much all of Gabriel’s career from So to Up , with everything in between. My favorite bit was when Gabriel and his daughter wheeled themselves around the stage on Segways to Games Without Frontiers . I gotta get me one of those things!

Only microscopically less nifty was Growing Up , with PG inside a twelve-foot inflated sphere, bouncing in synch with the music. Actually, that might have been slightly cooler than the Segways. Other songs: The Tower (from Ovo ), Steam, Shock the Monkey, Digging in the Dirt – PG wearing a head-mounted camera focused in extreme close-up on different parts of his face, Sledgehammer – PG wearing the spotlight shirt, Salsbury Hill – in which PG and the band did a walkabout through the crowd, and a wondrous nifty encore of In Your Eyes , accompanied by opening singer Sevara Nazarkhan from Uzbeckistan, whose voice is without compare.

I apologize: My usually poetic tongue is dulled with fatigue and awe.

After listening to Peter Gabriel for over fifteen years, seeing him in concert was…extraordinary.

In other news…

A week ago I bought This is Spinal Tap . Great movie. During my post-movie shower I realized something: In Spinal Tap, Christopher Guest, as Nigel, has an amp that “goes to eleven” (watch the movie). In The Princess Bride , Christopher Guest plays Count Rugen, a.k.a. the Six Fingered Man. Six fingers plus five fingers equals (you guessed it!) ELEVEN! Coincidence? I don’t think so !

I’m on to something. I can feel it in my spleen.

Posted in Music comment on A Concert and a Conspiracy

The Everyday Cook Book

2003-06-28 John Winkelman

BOILED CALF HEAD (without the skin)
Calf’s head, water, a little salt, four tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one tablespoonful of minced parsley, pepper and salt to taste, one tablespoonful of lemon juice.

After the head has been thoroughly cleaned, and the brains removed, soak it in warm water to blanch it. Lay the brains also into warm water to soak, aand let them remain for about an hour. Put the head into a stewpan, with sufficient cold water to cover it, and when it boils, add a little salt; take off every particle of scum as it rises, and boil the head until perfectly tender. Boil the brains, chop them, and mix them with melted butter, minced parseley, pepper, salt, and lemon-juice in the above proportion. Take up the head, skin the tongue, and put it on a small dish with the brains round it. Have ready some parsley and butter, smother the head with it, and the remainder send to the table in a tureen. Bacon, ham, pickled pork, or a pig’s cheek are indispensable with calf’s head. The brains are sometimes chopped with hardboiled eggs.

TO CURE TOOTHACHE
The worst toothache, or neuralgia coming from the teeth, may be speedily and delightfully ended by the application of a bit of clean cotton, saturated in a solution of ammonia to the defective tooth. Sometimes the late sufferer is prompted to momentary laughter by the application, but the pain will disappear.

TO RESTORE FROM STROKE OF LIGHTNING
Shower with cold water for two hours; if the patient does not show signs of life, put salt in the water, and continue to shower an hour longer.

Taken from The Everyday Cookbook and Encyclopedia of Practical Recipes, For Family Uses , by Miss E. Neill (Economic, Reliable and Excellent). Manufactured for The Busy Bee Hive , Jackson, Michigan, c.1890

Posted in Literary Matters comment on The Everyday Cook Book

Games and Nostalgia

2003-06-24 John Winkelman

This post will mostly only be interesting for Flash coders and game developers

I have spent the past several days working out various functional specifications and data models for the Flash Adventure Game. So far, I have rudimentary versions of the following:

-XML heirarchies
-Tile placement engine
-dynamic bitmap object masking

I am particularly proud of the object masking idea.

My ultimate goal to create a game (engine) which can be modified without the requiring that the user in question have access to Flash. All that should be needed is a graphics program which can pump out .jpg files, a text editor with which to produce XML, and (maybe) an FTP program to place files on a website.

The dynamic masking is the key. It compensates for Flash being unable to dynamically load .gif or .png files; these formats support alpha transparency. .jpgs, which can be dynamically loaded, do not support transparency. But they can (using the Flash Drawing API) be masked. All I need to do is feed in the appropriate coordinates (in XML; not unlike creating an image map), and skaboom, I have one highly detailed, appropriately transparent sprite!

A lot of this reminds me of the hundreds of hours I spent back in the 80s writing games on the Commodore 64. Back then, there were no graphics applications so we had to program our images in hexadecimal. And the images, egregious hacks aside, were all 24×24, and one color. Or 12×24 and three colors, but all of the colored images had to share one of the colors.

In other words, this is a real walk down memory lane.

As I have useful information I will post it in an open directory. I will post some code after it is debugged. As always, suggestions are welcome .

Posted in ProgrammingTagged Flash, game development comment on Games and Nostalgia

Considering the Order of the Phoenix

2003-06-20 John Winkelman

The latest volume of the Harry Potter series hits the shelves tonight at Midnight. Local bookstores, which will be staying open until at least 1am, are full of witches and warlocks and all manner of pointy hats and broomsticks.

So, out of sympathy for my low-wage comrades in the retail industry, the following is a brief contemplation of Harry Potter: Order of the Phoenix.

Who knew Rowlings had it in her to write such an appealing coming- of- age, coming- out- of- the- closet book? And it was done so well, too! I mean, when Harry got Hermione pregnant I assumed they would get married and settle down together, but no , Harry spends most of the last two hundred pages playing tonsil hockey with the entirety of House Slitheryn. And polishing his black latex wand.

In chapter 5, Harry gets initiated into the Order of Priapus. Boy, I thought he was done for during the chase scene at the end of his quest for Wyckham’s Ball Gag.

Yup. Poor Hermione. Sleeping with the fishes.

You know, it’s all good clean family entertainment. Kids will especially get a kick out of Harry’s clever use of the Tony’s Turgid Timber spell which he used to defeat the Harrowing Harem.

So run to your nearest bookstore and stand in line for two more hours and get the latest volume of this wonderful series, because Ba’al knows, if you don’t get the book before your friends you could end up ostracized and cursed with Eternal Catcher-dom.

Just like poor Draco.

I made all of this up. I haven’t actually read the book. Don’t sue me. This is a legal disclaimer. If you can’t read this, why are you bothering to buy a book? Allow me to say again, for the search engines, Harry Potter. Fnord.

Posted in Literary Matters comment on Considering the Order of the Phoenix

Early

2003-06-17 John Winkelman

Up at 5:30 this morning for tai chi practice before I head off to chi kung practice. As hard as it can be to get out of bed this early, there is always something to make it worthwhile. Today it was the sunrise.

I did a little work on the Flash photo album. The newest feature is to allow the user to set variables like text and background color using the index XML file. Next will be to allow optional setting of those same variables for each page of photos, along with the option to set either a random or a specified background photo. Perhaps by this weekend.

If only work didn’t take so much time away from my work.

Posted in Life comment on Early

A Walk In the Gardens

2003-06-15 John Winkelman

Nameless horrors at Frederik Meijer Gardens .

driftwood-horse

spider-1

spider-2

demon-horse

Posted in Photography comment on A Walk In the Gardens

The Cruelest Cut

2003-06-12 John Winkelman

Well, I promised you-all the story of my most favorite work-related injury, and here it is:

The Date: Late July of 1998.
The Time: Early Morning.
The Place: The Bookstore.

My day began at 8:00am, opening mail while sitting at the bottom of a huge cup of coffee. Mornings were usually quiet; just the sound of hangovers echoing from the employee bathroom and the constant hum of writerly angst. the bookstore got mail in from all over the world; from five of the six continents, dozens of countries, and in all kinds of conditions. Not all of it was clean. Not all of it was pleasant to touch. And the mailman was rather frightening.

So opening mail was an adventure. There was always something unexpected and exciting. On this day I was opening mail with such wild abandon that I gave myself a papercut on the cuticle of my right ring finger. It was a tiny papercut. It didn’t even bleed. And I had mail from Deepest Darkest Jenison to open. Therefore, though injured, I stayed at work.

Given subsequent events, I can only assume that somewhere in here I did something stupendously vile with my right hand. Like hand-feeding a buzzard. Or unclogging the customer bathroom toilets. Or chewing my fingernails after eating at McDonald’s.

Round about 9:30 the papercut sting began to turn into a hit-it-with-a-hammer throb. I didn’t pay it much attention. What was a little finger pain, next to the horror of writing a review of Chicken Soup for the Pet-Lover’s Soul ?

After another hour, I began to feel sick. Headache, nausea, disorientation. I attributed it to the Danielle Steele novel I had just unpacked. No problem. A little Hunter Thompson, a little Howard Zinn, maybe some Allen Ginsberg, and I should feel right as rain. Right?

Wrong.

At noon, finger swollen and head pounding, I went home. As soon as ass touched couch I fell asleep.

Tracy the roommate got home from work at 5:30. I woke up feeling awful. Head pounding, vision blurry, disoriented. I hadn’t felt like this since the most recent local Slam Poetry evening (back in the day, Grand Rapids had the worst slam poets in the state). My finger was a nameless beast gibbering mindlessly at the end of my hand.

And there, on the inside of my forearm… wrinkles from the pillow? No… hallucination? No… hot, swollen skin over infected blood vessels? YES! Like a relief map of the rivers of Hell, lines of infection rooted in my hand were pointing their way up my veins to my heart.

“Tracy?”

“Yeah?”

“If you have time tonight, could you drive me to the emergency room?”

“Are you serious?”

At this point Bob the Wonder Cat came over and sniffed my finger. He ran spitting nad hissing from the room.

“If you need to go to the emergency room we’re going RIGHT FUCKING NOW!!!”

At the hospital my hand was so stiff Tracy had to fill out all of my paperwork. Also, I was so disoriented I couldn’t understand what the receptionist was saying to me.

An hour went by. Then two hours. The other people in the emergency room looked much worse than I. There was a guy with a broken nose. Some people obviously in for VD shots. A big skinny pale guy with a scythe. Crows. Flies. Some of this might have just been in my head.

All this time I could feel myself getting worse. When I checked in my temperature was 101 degrees. After over two hours, it was much higher.

A day passed. Two days. The lines of red had reached my shoulder and stopped. Well, not stopped, exactly; more like dove under the surface and shot like torpedoes into my chest cavity. My temperature continued to rise. A bratty little kid was screaming. I pointed The Finger at him and he burst into flames.

Tracy told the nurse “He’s getting worse.” Bob the Wonder Cat wandered in. He sniffed me, then tried to bury me.

Finally the doctor came out and said “Ia! Ia! Cthulhu Fthaghn!” “YO!” said I, and in we went.

One syringe of penicillin to the ass, and I was on my way. Tracy’s boyfriend Russ – a God among Men – showed up with a tub of icecream and some spoons.

The next day at work, arm still sore but red streaks diminishing, my co-workers were quite sympathetic.

“Hi John. How do you feel? OH! Ouch! A paper cut! Oooohhhh.. Tammi? Is that you? Everything is so dark… Mom?…” and the like.

So there it is. I recovered. My arm was sore for a couple of days and I learned to set fire to the mail before opening it. So if one of you sent correspondence to the bookstore between July 1998 and August 1999, sorry, but your mail was sacrificed for the greater good.

Posted in Life comment on The Cruelest Cut

Good Works

2003-06-11 John Winkelman

Because she feels intimidated by the people who think she is waaaaaay out of line for suing her school for $2,700,000, Blair Hornstine will not be attending the graduation ceremony .

I suppose, eventually, I will start feeling sorry for her. After, that is, she has learned her lesson: Just Deal With It .

I promised a couple of weeks ago that I would post the story of my other job-related injury. It will appear in my next entry.

Internet Explorer 5 sucks.

Posted in Life comment on Good Works

Soulful Tunes

2003-06-09 John Winkelman

I have just learned that Potato Moon and the Conklin Ceili Band will be at Billy’s on Wednesday, June 11, starting at 8pm. A better show is not to be had in all the world.

As a warm-up for that folk/Irish music evening Styx, (yes, Styx) will be at Schuler Books and Music on 28th Street at noon promoting their newest album, Cyclorama . This event earns the “What the…?” award for June 2003.

Posted in Music comment on Soulful Tunes

Lazy Sunday With Heavy Weather

2003-06-08 John Winkelman

Yesterday’s Kung Fu demonstration (pics and story soon at sifulee.com) was flawless, and the crowd appreciative.

I am sunburned. My scalp is pink like cotton candy.

Today, I think I will work on my Flash adventure game. It is still in the nebulous stage, but I can tell you this: It will be isometric-view, square tiles, the game engine in Flash and all of the configuration information and game variables in XML. Eventually it will be something like Winkelman’s Infinitely Extensible Universal Adventure Game Platform. But you know, at least half the fun in is figuring out how to build the thing. After that, actually building it seems like kind of a let-down.

Posted in Life comment on Lazy Sunday With Heavy Weather

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