I tried to make some more fan animation.
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





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I tried to make some more fan animation.
A comforting dream
He's constantly on guard with everybody, constantly facing rejection from every direction, but there's only one safe place he can go to, and feel secure enough to rest.
"well, actually, as per gusu bylaw 55(b)-3...."
The games industry’s self-induced traumatic brain injury
I'm on a tour with my new book, the international bestseller Enshittification: catch me next in London, Toronto and San Diego! Full schedule here.
Words have power. In 1991, I read "The Wonderful Power of Storytelling," the transcript of Bruce Sterling's keynote speech for that year's Game Developers Conference in San Jose, CA, and within a year, I'd dropped out of university to become a programmer:
https://bruces.medium.com/the-wonderful-power-of-storytelling-by-bruce-sterling-1991-9d2846c2c5df
Bruce's speech wasn't the only reason I dropped out, but it's certainly been the most durable, and I frequently return to it in my mind as I navigate the difficult and turbulent waters of art and technology. In particular, I've had much cause to ponder Sterling's ideas about the very weird way that game developers relate to their art-form's history:
My art, science fiction writing, is pretty new as literary arts go, but it labors under the curse of three thousand years of literacy. In some weird sense I’m in direct competition with Homer and Euripides. I mean, these guys aren’t in the SFWA, but their product is still taking up valuable rack-space. You guys on the other hand get to reinvent everything every time a new platform takes over the field. This is your advantage and your glory. This is also your curse. It’s a terrible kind of curse really…
…A lot of our art aspires to the condition of software, our art today wants to be digital… But our riches of information are in some deep and perverse sense a terrible burden to us. They’re like a cognitive load. As a digitized information-rich culture nowadays, we have to artificially invent ways to forget stuff. I think this is the real explanation for the triumph of compact disks…
…The real advantage of CDs is that they allow you to forget all your vinyl records. You think you love this record collection that you’ve amassed over the years. But really the sheer choice, the volume, the load of memory there is secretly weighing you down…
…By dumping the platform you dump everything attached to the platform and my god what a blessed secret relief. What a relief not to remember it, not to think about it, not to have it take up disk-space in your head…
…I’ve noticed though that computer game designers don’t look much to the past. All their idealized classics tend to be in reverse, they’re projected into the future. When you’re a game designer and you’re waxing very creative and arty, you tend to measure your work by stuff that doesn’t exist yet…
… I can see that it’s very seductive, but at the same time I can’t help but see that the ground is crumbling under your feet. Every time a platform vanishes it’s like a little cultural apocalypse…
…I can imagine a time when all the current platforms might vanish, and then what the hell becomes of your entire mode of expression?
Even by the high standards of a Bruce Sterling keynote, this is a very good one, and Sterling does that amazing thing where he's iterating different ways of making this point, examining it from every angle, and it makes it hard ro excerpt it for an article like this. I mean, you should just go and read the whole thing and then come back, honestly:
https://bruces.medium.com/the-wonderful-power-of-storytelling-by-bruce-sterling-1991-9d2846c2c5df
But the reason I quote those specific excerpts above is because of what they say about the strange terror and exhilaration of working without history, of inhabiting a world shorn of all object permanence. This was a very live question in those days. In 1993, Wired's Jargon Watch column ran a definition for "Pickling":
Archiving a working model of a computer to read data stored in that computer's format. Apple Computer has pickled a shrink-wrapped Apple II in a vault so that it can read Apple II software, perhaps in the not-too-distant future.
https://www.wired.com/1993/05/jargon-watch-12/
In 1996, Brewster Kahle founded the Internet Archive, with the mission to save every version of every web-page, ever, forever. Today, the Archive holds more than a trillion pages:
https://blog.archive.org/trillion/
Digital media are paradoxical: on the one hand, nothing is easier to copy than bits. That's all a computer does, after all: copy things. What's more mass storage gets cheaper and faster and smaller every year, on a curve that puts Moore's Law to shame.
After dropping out of university, I got a job programming multimedia CD ROMs for The Voyager Company, and they sent me my first 1GB drive, which was the size of a toaster, weighed 3lbs and cost $4,000.
30 years later, I've just upgraded my laptop's SDD from 2TB to 4TB: it cost less than $300, and is both the size and weight of a stick of gum. It's 4,000 times larger, at least 10,000 times faster, is 98% lighter, and cost 97% less.
We can store a hell of a lot of data for not very much money. And at that price, we can back it up to hell and back: I rotate two backup drives at home, keeping one off-site and swapping them weekly; I also have another drive I travel with and do a daily backup on. Parts of my data are also backed up online to various cloud systems that are, themselves, also backed up.
OH MY GOB!
Blippo+ has been nominated for four awards for the 28th annual Independent Games Festival!
🏆 Seumas McNally Grand Prize
🏆 Nuovo Award
🏆 Excellence in Visual Art
🏆 Excellence in Audio
🏅Honorable Mention: Excellence in Narrative
See you at GDC!
I love how the faux-politeness of MDZS' climax takes its themes to its logical conclusion. All throughout, we've seem how sects and cultivators prioritise their reputations, seeking glory and status even when real lives are at danger, keeping up their appearances. We see that in the unwritten rule that major sects won't intervene in problems unless the prey is dangerous; we see it in how Lan Wangji is unique in the way he prioritises helping others over seeking glory; we see that in how the Wen situation plays out, with Wei Wuxian confronting the Jins about a concentration camp while they're focused on having a banquet.
So of course in the Guanyin Temple, even when Jin Guangyao is directly threatening people's lives, the interactions are polite! We're seeing what has always been present – the absolute disconnect between the actions and world of the Jianghu, and the real harm that real people are suffering through (both intentionally and not) as a result.
There's a new mdzs collab cafe opening in ikebukuro and here's the character themed cocktails they're offering in case anyone can't go to Japan and wants to try making their own:
(from left to right, top to bottom):
Wei Wuxian: Peach oolong tea, goji berry flavor, chervil/French parsley
Pio sidetrack note: if you wanna do a boozy version use peach liquor, it + oolong is my favorite cocktail : ) in Hokkaido they call it a guniang because it's seen as a girly drink haha I always knew wwx was one of the girlies
Lan Wangji: Mojito syrup, calpis/calpico, whipped cream, silver dragees (round sprinkles)
Lan Xichen: Butterfly pea tea, milk, whipped cream, colored sugar
Jiang Cheng: Lemon tea, butterfly pea tea, thyme
Jiang Yanli: Pu-er tea, chervil/French parsley, edible flower
Jin Ling: Pineapple syrup, sparkling water, pachipachi candy (in the US we call these pop rocks but idk if other countries have other names for them. It's basically candy that pops and fizzles in your mouth), goji berry flavor, mint
Wen Ning: Blue curacao syrup, blood orange syrup, calpis/calpico soda, strawberry flakes, mint
Lan Sizhui: Ramune syrup, drinkable yogurt, whipped cream, konpeito (Japanese star shaped sugar candies)
Pio sidetrack note: decidedly The Cum Drink™ of the bunch
Lan Jingyi: Blue lychee syrup, drinkable yogurt, whipped cream, konpeito
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Print lattes: just lattes with pics printed on them
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Special Drinks:
Wei Wuxian's Pastel Float: Apple syrup, cranberry syrup, Sprite, whipped cream, vanilla ice cream, mint, cherry
Lan Wangji's Pastel Float: Blue Hawaii syrup, Sprite, whipped cream, Ramune ice cream, mint
If anyone IS able to go and wants anything else translated feel free to let me know and I'll help the best I can! : )