Pirates, Camarillo, and Going Blind…

October 18th, 2006 by flakeboy

Been a while and it’s late so here’s gonna be a short entry…

1. So you all saw the pictures I took with my co-workers on “Talk Like a Pirate Day”, right? Well, my co-worker Guillermo submitted it to the “Talk Like a Pirate” website and guess who’s now on the splash page of www.talklikeapirate.com? That’s right. Aren’t I lucky… ahem… yeah… riiight… You may post your embarrassing remarks below.

2. So this past Monday and Tuesday I was sent to our office in Camarillo to help finish training a new hire in our marketing department which will be working out of that office. Sunday night, I drove up and checked into a hotel and then did a little shopping. I bought a pair of pants and a zip-up sweater all on sale and both were brown. On Monday, after work and a work-out at the LA Fitness in Ventura, I did a little more shopping and bought a pair of brown shoes. You might have noticed that brown is my new color of the moment. Hmmm… Brown…

But there’s more to Camarillo than shopping. So much more. Like for example, its really quite beautiful there. Most people know that I dislike driving down steep hills (with the exceptions of PV Drive, Crenshaw, and Hawthorne, I can haul over 100 down the hill from PV), but the last hill you cross before descending into the valley were Camarillo is always a beautiful drive. I always love seeing those green fields right ove the hill. I have no idea how long thos fields will stay there, but until they’re converted into housing, I’ll always enjoy the view from that hill. I’d have taken a picture but that’s quite dangerous whil driving well beyond the speed limit.

The other thing I enjoyed about Camarillo is how convenient our office there is located. It’s right off the freeway, across from the outlet mall, and right next to the Wood Ranch which I visited today for lunch. Hmmm, the drive may suck, but the food and shopping sure is sweet.

3. Tonight after getting back from Camarillo, I went over to Gimpy’s for a game of Texas Hold’ Em. I didn’t think I’d make it coming from Camarillo but traffic was remarkably light. I left our office around 5:40 and walked into Kev’s condo around 7:10. After a quick dinner, I was over at Gimpy’s losing our first round of games. The second round of Poker was getting late and at around 11:30, I was so tired I wanted to call it quits so I declared that I was going to go Blind-All-In on all subsequent hands. Well, much to my surprise, because I had simply anticipated a quick loss, I knocked out all remaining 5-players with my short stack. It was sweet. You can ask Bruce, Tommy, or Gimpy how it went down. Who says Poker requires skill? Sometimes, to win, all you need is stupidity and a pair of you-know-whats. :)

And on that high note, I will now retire to my bed which I have missed so much the past 2 evenings.

Posted in general ramblings | 3 Comments »

Slow Day = Time to Post

October 2nd, 2006 by flakeboy

Today I am not in Universal City. I am in Culver City at a business writing training class. Why? In short, my office has a contract with an educational/training group which allows CBRE’s employees to take classes on various topics until the office’s pre-purchased credits are consumed. Since my future roles at CB may include more writing, it was suggested hat I take this class (even though Communications was my major in college) and in truth, I thought I could learn something new or at the least get a good review out of it. So here I am today and it seems like a basic English composition I would have taken back in high school–the sad thing about this class is, according to the instructor, that what we would have considered high school level English even a few years ago is now too high for today’s youth. Due to the advent of IM’ing, shorter attention spans, and teachers with horrible English skills, the quality of written English coming from our proud nation is in a rapid decline… which is good for me because, as sad as it is, being capable of writing English well is fast becoming a commodity.

On a separate note, which has some sense of irony in it, he’s reiterated to us the rule of 80-20. For those of who who are unfamiliar with this, it breaks down to “20% of your work will yield 80% of your results”. So in a company, 20% of the company’s products/services will yield 80% of its profits. This is not a hard rule but it’s a relative truth. So, with that, I will listen to only 20% of the instructors’ talk an probably take away 80% of this class (I’m being optimistic). Anyway, on with my actual post…

So while it’s been over two weeks since my last post, not surprising, not much has happened that of any importance… so I will simply ramble for the next few paragraphs (I’m surprised my cat calls from Garbage Men post didn’t elicite more responses… maybe I’ve lost some readers since moving my blog location?)

  vgl intermission screen

Two weeks ago I went to Video Games Live at the Hollywood bowl with Bruce, Dave Ting and other geeks like myself. It was an ok concert and while I did enjoy it, I guess I was also a bit disappointed at the same time. I’m not sure I’d attend it again if it comes back next year unless I know in advance what the playlist includes. Why? Well, other than the classic video game medley and the Video Game Pianist’s solo, there was nothing new or impressive at the concert. All renditions were almost exactly the same as what you can get on a CD or online. I admit that this is a sensitive topic because sometimes the re-imagining of a musical piece may please some and not others, but sticking to the original is like a safe catch all. Next year, if they return, I hope they’ll play a wider variety of pieces that have not previously already been transcribed for a live orchestra. Do some work and not just reap profits from blind fanboys and freaking weird cos-players. The other complaint I would have for the concert would be this strange and long introduction tribute piece that was played before the concert started. If there’s going to be an opening act, please advertise them because I don’t want to hear them and I don’t want to get there on-time only to torture myself.

In contrast, last week I went with Jane and two of her friends to a John Mayer concert down in Irvine at the now Verizon Amphitheatre (previously know as Irvine Meadows). That was a good concert! All the acts had enthusiasm and you could feel the emotion in all the performances (Marjorie Fair opened, Sheryl Crow performed, and then John Mayer closed). Also, unlike VGL, even though I was familiar with almost all their songs, the artists still managed to change up their songs a bit to keep it entertaining and energetic. For some reason, to me at least, VGL felt very stale and almost hollow (with the exceptions again of the Olg Games Medley and the Video Game Pianist). I guess that’s what happens when you have people performing something they have no passion about and you don’t have the original composers changing up the score. Incidentally, on a side note, I wonder how much sponsorship Square-Enix gave VGL because they actually showed no footage from any of their games on screen and they only performed One-Winged Angel which is already too over-played.

  march of minis mario

Anyway, in non-concert related news, I picked up two new DS games last weekend. First is Megaman ZX, which is a classic side-scroller that is incredibly hard due to the control configuration on the DS. If I had this game on a SNES controller, I would rock it, but playing it on the small DS screen actually causes my hands to cramp up—DoublePlus NonGood I must say. The other game I picked up is Mario vs Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis. This is more of a puzzle type game and is played entirely with the stylus. If I had to compare it to a similar title, it’s almost like Lemmings but not. In Lemmings, you can’t control the individuals but you do have to guide them to safety. In this game, you have to guide miniature mechanical Marios to safety but you do have a lot of control over each little robot. The hard part of the game is restricting yourself to not using all of the little robots movement features because it will lower your overall score and a large part of this game’s challenge is to pass each stage with a “Gold” score (as opposed to a silver or bronze level score). Of the two games, I prefer the March of the Minis to ZX. It’s a more relaxed game and my hand don’t hurt after each play session… I guess I’m getting old… really old… did I mention I’m starting to get eye strain after my DS sessions? Boo! Not good! Though I must add that my eye-strain sessions after the DS are nothing compared to the strain I get from playing on the PSP. OMG I get hour-long headaches from playing the PSP…

Posted in general ramblings | 4 Comments »

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