Web You.0!

It’s all about the adketeers.

The goal here is not to take control of submitted material, but to make it easy enough to submit quick, fun content that it’s not much of an inconvenience to be deprived of control of submitted material. The result is a Creative Commons-like “Attribution” license! Except with sole ownership rights granted to the site.

Thank you, Kris Straub. Thank you for being nothing more than just you. You are awesome.

Back to Firefox

With everything going on recently, and me being so incredibly busy with side projects, I completely forgot to mention that I switched back to Firefox over the holidays. I’m still a tremendous supporter of Flock and will continue to track its progress, but I simply can’t use the pre-1.0 version of the software. Not until they fix some glaring CPU leaks in the build. Flock constantly pegged my processor (a 1.4Ghz Celeron). I shut off all updating functions and even scrapped the news feeds (one of my favorite features, though using Google Reader these days means I don’t miss the built-in Flock RSS reader so much). But nothing worked. Every few seconds, it would completely hang up my computer for about 3 seconds. It was in a constant loop, and I couldn’t find any reason for it in the forums. I decided that with the 2.0 release of Firefox, I owed it to myself to jump back to my favorite browser and see how it has improved. In short: Firefox 2.0 is the most fantastic user experience I’ve ever been engaged in (at least, until 3.0 comes out).

I see now that they are up to version 7.9.1, which means they might get close to releasing 1.0 by spring. I’ll probably switch back about that time. Hopefully, all CPU issues will have been sorted out by then.

Until then, I’m loving Firefox (again).

I want to be an analyst

They probably make good money guessing things that everybody already knows.

From over at Evil Avatar, I noticed the story that some analyst has announced that PS3s are in stock, and the Wii is sold out everywhere! Really? I hadn’t noticed that. Oh, wait, yes I have. Everyone has. In fact, here’s a couple comparison camera phone shots I took at one of my local Target stores just last week.

And this is the case everywhere. Sony needs to do something to get people to buy these things, because obviously their brilliant marketing tactic of making them available just isn’t cutting it anymore.

I’ll get him to sing Blackbird next

This weekend my wife and I got into a crazy frenzy of cleaning and organizing the house. Anytime we do this (which is apt to occur roughly once a month), we always put some music in the stereo and crank it up to keep us motivated and give the boys something to dance to while mommy and daddy work. This weekend, my wife decided to throw in a Beatles compilation.

A couple hours later, after things had calmed down and the weekend laziness had finally settled in, I happen to walk by Caleb’s room as he’s playing by himself. Just as I walk by, he seems to be humming and singing what few words to one of the Beatles songs he was able to make out.

There’s something awfully surreal about listening to your four-year-old singing “Hey, Buffalo Bill! Who did you kill, Buffalo Bill?”

Can DHS put us away for something like that?

Progress on the zombie story

So, I’m still at it. I’ve been slaving away at an attempt to create a piece of zombie horror fiction set in 16th century England, and I have to admit, I’m really liking it so far. It isn’t painful, like I thought it would be, and the prose is actually coming along nicely. I’m roughly 3,000 words in, and I’m shooting for the 8,000 to 9,000 word range. My last short story that I had completed (which was scifi, in case you were wondering, a genre I’m a bit more comfortable within) was approximately 2,000 words. I’ve been wanting to challenge myself into building the characters more and giving the story a touch more depth than I’m used to applying.

Want a sample? Here’s a short excerpt from the first section (it will eventually have five sections, I just today finished the second):

“Cardinal Wolsey?” Johnathan replied incredulously. “Thomas Wolsey? I thought he was Archbishop of York.”
“The House of York is no more,” William replied with a heavy sigh. “The War of the Roses saw to that.”
Johnathan leaned himself further over the railing. William chanced a sideways glance to appraise his companion. It was difficult to discern hardly any of the man’s qualities. He was of average height, apparently average build, garbed completely in black. His black hat covered his face in shadow. His black cloak concealed his personage. A black sheath at his hip spoke volumes of man’s mortality. If the plague didn’t kill man, then man’s own warring would do the work instead.
“King Henry changes the political landscape daily, it seems,” Johnathan mused.
“He is making adjustments necessary to meet the needs of a thriving kingdom,” William stated, as though reading from a manuscript.
“Thriving in the midst of an unholy taint that seeks to ravage our fair city,” Johnathan replied.
They were silent once more. Again, off in the distance, a splash echoed across the buildings lining the cold waters of the Thames. William shuddered loudly as a sudden chill cut into his lack of proper clothing.
“The plague is worsening, is it not?” Johnathan inquired.
“It is in some ways, yes, but not in others,” William replied uncertainly. He stepped closer towards the railing and looked up into the glowing moonlight above. Johnathan noted that the pale light cast unsightly shadows onto the Archbishop’s weathered face, giving him the appearance of more years than he had reason to suspect the man had earned. “London was devastated by the black death over a hundred and fifty years ago. Millions suffered and died at the hands of that unnatural disease. There was nothing anyone could do; it swept like the fires of hell across the entire continents of Europe and Asia in just a couple of years.
“Our current affliction may appear dire, but is not proving itself drastically so. We’ve so far only recorded a few thousand cases of the disease within London proper. Against the backdrop of the black death, that knowledge is solace enough.”
“It isn’t the number that’s worrisome,” Johnathan replied. “It’s the condition itself.”
There was a quiet anguish in Johnathan’s voice that William hadn’t noticed until now. It was a somber combination of fear and hatred. The fear and hatred one feels when they are confronted with a foe that they cannot face with sword drawn and jaw clenched. A foe that is not physical, cannot be cut, and that kills without remorse. It was the worst enemy to a life-long man of the sword: an enemy you simply could not fight.
“His Holiness, Pope Leo the tenth has already given our affliction a name. He refers to it as the blood fever.”
“Fitting,” Johnathan replied.

Does it leave you wanting to read more? Less? Just curious. I’ll post more excerpts as I continue to progress through the story.

On to section three: Johnathan meets with the Cardinal! *Gasp*!

I must be insane…I’m writing zombie fiction

There is obviously something very, very wrong with me. It might have something to do with the hope and optimism of a new year. It might be the elation and freedom I’m feeling from having finally launched my big project at work. It might be the sudden and euphoric lifting of post-holiday stress. Maybe it’s just the unusually warm January weather. Whatever it is, it has driven me completely insane.

I’m actually writing zombie fiction. Or, attempting to write, I should say.

Permuted Press is a small press publisher that specializes in zombie/horror fiction. They are putting together a new anthology called History is Dead, and the concept has me interested.

The premise for this collection: We love seeing or reading about zombies taking headshots from the absolute latest in police and military weaponry. We love seeing people fight and survive in familiar settings – the mall, the high school, Pittsburgh, Yonkers, downtown Manhattan. But, it’s kind of been overdone. Most all zombie fiction and movies are set in the modern world, and most of those in the U.S.A. So what we’re proposing is a collection of zombie short stories, set in some other historical period, especially if they’re also set in another geographical locale.What we’re looking for: zombie stories set sometime pre-20th century. Use your imagination. Biblical, Roman, Medieval, or the Old West all come to mind, as well as non-Western settings like samurai fighting zombies, or hordes of zombies crashing into the Great Wall.

So, historical zombie fiction. That’s what we’re looking at here. I found out about this anthology from Evil Avatar, of course. The guy who is “Evil Avatar”, Philip Hansen, is a horror writer himself, having worked with Permuted Press on past projects. He’s thrown his hat into this ring, so the competition is evidently fierce already, combined with the fact that I have never, ever even remotely considered writing zombie horror fiction. Oh, sorry, I mean historical zombie horror fiction.

But I’m going to try. One of my New Year’s resolutions was to work on one of my writing projects and at least start submitting before the end of the year. Since I was 12 years old and first got the itch to be a writer, my goal had always been to publish something before I turned 30. That plan failed (though I did win a scifi writing contest in college back in 1999, and was published in the college literary journal, but I don’t think that really counts, does it? Well, does it?). Now, my goal is to complete something (starting to write is easy; the hardest thing for a writer to do is actually finish something they’re working on) and get it submitted for publication before December 31st, 2007. Not actually published, mind you. I’m fine dealing with several hundred rejections if I really have to. Though rejection is still hard to take.

I wasn’t sure which project to continue working on. I’m partial to my children’s story, and my wife has been helping me with that. But I’ve been thirsty for challenges, and zombie fiction is just far enough inside, and equally just far enough outside my comfort level to be a perfect fit for a challenge that I might actually be able to accomplish.

I’ll share more when I’ve actually completed something.

So, yeah. Zombie fiction. I never thought I’d go there, either.

Our Wii experience is expanding

Our Wii game collection is up to four games, now. The Wii Sports pack-in remains the favorite of the entire family, but Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess is what eats up all of my free time these days. I also managed to garner Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz for my wife for Christmas, which has taken over her life. Well, at least the 50 various mini-games have. I don’t know that she’s even attempted the main game. And lastly, I snagged Metal Slug Anthology over the past weekend while shopping with my father-in-law.

Did I happen to mention that I’ve also managed to download the original Legend of Zelda for the NES and R-Type for the Turbografx16 from the Wii Virtual Console. Yeah. That pretty much explains why there have been so few blog entries and no webcomics or sketches in the past couple of weeks. I’ve been…busy. =D

I must admit that I never thought I’d be up to four Wii games (and two VC games) so soon after buying the console, but I think it’s time to slow down a bit. There’s a multitude of great games on the horizon, and I need the bank account to have some space in preparation for some of those upcoming releases.