Archive for the ‘Projects’ Category

Virtual Currency and Freemium Services

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Here’s a monetization idea I’ve been playing with since participating in post-GDC “Idea Exchange: Emerging Trends in Game Development,” a sort of virtual conference that was held in both Metaplace and Second Life via a chat bridge between the two (pretty cool in itself). You can see a side-by-side screen comparison here.

During that chat, a lot of ideas were covered, and Raph briefly touched on how he thought offer-based marketing was a big new trend at GDC. Here’s the chat log, edited for relevance:

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New Theme and a Project Name

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

The new blog theme has been live for a couple days now. It still has a few tweaks to be done (single post page lacks styles for the next/previous links, for example), possibly some component rearranging, but it’s okay for now. The look and feel now matches the background on my twitter page, or you could say the background on the twitter page now matches the blog, as it was the blog that was designed first.

This is probably my first real attempt at a grid-based layout. Vertically it falls short of perfect baseline alignment, simply because I didn’t feel it was worth the effort to get it perfect. This is a blog. If it were a corporate product page, then yes, it would be worth the trouble to get everything in a perfect rhythm, but it’s not.

Also, I have not tested this in IE 6 or 7. Out of curiosity, I tested it in 8 a few seconds ago and it looks fine. Obviously, ignoring IE isn’t a luxury I can afford in the future, but in the current “I just want to get this WP theme done so I’m using something more appropriate than a public theme” context, it works.

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Predicting the Metaplace Explosion

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Note: Since the time of this post, Metaplace has been shut down, in favor of a much less ambitious (in my opinion) Facebook Games platform. I still think that given enough time and tuning, Metaplace could have been huge. We’ll never know.

Some people are overly enthusiastic about Metaplace’s potential: MPMillionaire, for example, thinks it’s the next Google. It’s not the next Google, that comparison doesn’t really make sense. Google is about data, and MP is about experience and immersion.

What is it? It’s the content, it’s the browser, it’s the server. It’s another way of viewing the web. It’s what VRML tried to be, it’s what big metacontent apps like Second Life wish they were. It’s a supplement to how you experience an enormous wealth of information.

What Metaplace is, I think, is quite possibly the most accessible rich multiplayer experience available. My understanding is that shortly after open beta it’ll be embeddable in any site. This means you can have your own personal MMO. You can have virtual locations that people can walk through. You can do pretty much anything with a virtual world, then embed a window into that world on any website.

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A Workspace Photo

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

I spent about 4 hours today on modeling the database for one project. Other time was spent reading up on the Zend framework in order to lighten my load a bit—I figure a couple days learning it will save me weeks of programming work. I also took half an hour to read up on all the manual settings on my camera, and celebrated my newfound knowledge with a photo of my (almost) newly cleaned workspace:

The desk surface in my office

The desk surface in my office

I’ve missed having a camera with manual settings. My most recent before this one didn’t have a fully-manual mode, or manual focus, and was therefore only good for tourist photography—point and click but nothing artsy. New one has a very nice manual mode: It’s a Canon Powershot A590. It’s no DSLR, but for the money (less than $100), it’s pretty damned nice. I still need to do a little Photoshop tweaking to perfect the image, though. 

I guess I should set up a Flickr account, huh?

How to Wrap Your Head Around a Project

Friday, March 20th, 2009

I was making fairly slow progress on my primary project. I headed up to stay with my folks for a couple days and try out a new dentist in the area (I detest driving more than 15 minutes if I’m not going to be staying there for at least 24 hours). When I was packing for a couple days, I made a conscious decision to leave my laptop at home. All I brought was a sketchbook that I keep some of my notes in (ruled notebooks are the pits and remind me of school).

Between just being unplugged for a few days and a few discussions with my Dad who knows a crapload more about databases and project management than I, I think I’ve mostly got my head wrapped around this project. I got about 3 pages of notes down, and I write densely. I think when I head home tomorrow, I’ll be ready to start working on the app. There’s still a little bit of brainstorming left to do, but for the most part, I’m there.

So, if you ever find yourself stuck on a project, try unplugging for a few days. Don’t stop working, but go to paper and pencil if you can. If you aren’t working in computers, do something else to change your perspective; A shift in practice/view tends to lead to new approaches or solutions you hadn’t thought of before. Probably just because you aren’t following a pattern anymore and your brain has to start improvising more readily.

At least, it worked for me. Thought I’d share.

Got another project underway as well. I’m not really going to be talking about these projects directly until they’re at least alpha ready.

A Few Software Recommendations

Friday, March 13th, 2009

So, I’m now self employed. That means I need software, and I need it to be either free or inexpensive. Since my business is web applications, I put a little research into a cheap software kit for getting started on this kind of thing. Dreamweaver’s nice, but it’s pricey, and has less-than-awesome support for full-on software development. I’ll spare you the comparisons (for the most part) and just get right down to the results. These are all for Windows…

[edit: Added note to NetBeans bit to reflect irritation at them for republishing without permission.]

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