Rob and Kristi
And all the zaniness that ensues..
  • Home
  • About R&K
  • Books We’ve Read

Posts by Rob

Simple Pleasures

Mar03
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Kristi reminds me today that I promised to write a new R&K entry this weekend and never got around to doing it. Just preoccupied with all the very predictable things, and for the moment I’m kind of tired of writing about it. It’s all been said, all been sorted out, and now there’s really nothing left to do but get up each day, pick up the tools we have, and get on with the business of living.

So today I want to write about something entirely different.

Lately, I’ve been playing around with interactive fiction again. Anyone else remember a game company called Infocom? They were big in the early-to-mid 80’s, writing text adventure games like Zork, Deadline and (my favorite) Planetfall. Back then, a “text adventure” was a purely text-based, typing-based computer game where you moved from room to room, chapter to chapter in the story, navigating events and terrain with commands such as “GET ROCK” and “THROW ROCK” and reading the words “I DON’T UNDERSTAND” a lot. These early computer games, written by guys like Scott Adams (not the Dilbert guy), were very popular in the late 70’s and early 80’s.

Infocom created an entirely new form of text adventure – what they coined Interactive Fiction. Gone were the one-sentence room descriptions, replaced with several paragraphs of description that changed as the story developed. Instead of those damned two-word commands, you got to type whole sentences! It wasn’t just a lame romp through The Room and The House and The Hallway, but an opportunity to take part in an interactive novel, written with true literary complexity and rich and textured characters.

Infocom was the reason I had a typing speed of 90 words per minute by the time I was 13 years old.

Anyway, Infocom passed on and eventually fans of their games managed to crack open the computer codes they used. That community of interactive fiction fans then used that knowledge to build new tools for making entirely new Infocom-style games. Today, almost thirty years since Infocom first rolled these digital novels out on the first home computers, people are still writing these games to be played on PCs, Macs, iPhones, you name it.

So every so often I flip back through one of the old Infocom titles, or play one of the newer games. They’re all free and legal downloads, and a nice alternative to expensive computer games if you’re looking for quality entertainment without spending money.

Tonight I’m playing through Vespers. The plot: you’re a monk living in a 15th century Italian monastery, five days after closing the monastery gates against the Black Death. But the disease has made an appearance within its walls, and madness has crept in with it..

Yeah, I’m a geek. But I’m a well read geek.

Posted in Diversions

A Story

Feb24
2009
Rob Written by Rob

I’ve had this recollection rolling around in my head lately. It happened a number of years ago.

Back in the late 1990s, after working for a few years in Training and Development at Lockheed, I picked up a job working as a system administrator for GTE Data Services. Good job, good money, good company. I was there on contract. Anyway, in 2000 GTE was “merged” (i.e., overrun by barbarian hordes) with Bell Atlantic, creating Verizon Communications.

It was an ugly merger. Bad things happened. At one point the new management even tried to break their communications workers union by sending 50-year-old secretaries in Florida to go work in New York winter, climbing telephone poles to do repairs. I’m not making this up. No one was safe and everyone was stressed and scared.
READ MORE »

Posted in Everyday Life, Work

What Teachers Make

Feb19
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Chris passed this video along to us in a comment to Kristi’s recent post, “Respite”. We loved it, watching it again today and deciding that it needed front page treatment here on R&K.

If you dig it, be sure to dig up the other Taylor Mali videos on YouTube. They’re all great.

Thanks, Chris. It came at exactly the right time.

Posted in Everyday Life, Work

Destinations

Feb19
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Sometimes you make the right decision and know it’s going to work out. Other times, you make the necessary decision – and then make it work.

Life’s changing. We’ve both felt the change coming for a long while now, in the little frustrations and the not so little aggravations; in a gradual dissatisfaction with being dissatisfied; in the building need to build something new from the remnants of old ambitions and future dreams. We knew it was coming.

We don’t know what’s going to happen next week, when Kristi returns to work. Could be good news, could be bad. But we’re prepared to roll with the punches. Worst case scenario, we have a financial runway of about six months, plenty of time to get done what we need to get done. And so this week has been all about preparation: ordering business cards, designing new stationary and envelopes, setting up and stocking a new client database, writing new sales letters and planning out a long term marketing and sales strategy.

And gotta say, we’re kinda psyched. It’s an exciting thought. And we’re having a great time this week, both working together here in the office as business partners. The trip’s just starting.

Want to see what we’re up to? Go visit our new Destination Copy website – Kristi’s new travel writing site!

And be sure when you visit to sign up for her monthly travel newsletter, The Secret Gate. We’ve already sketched out some really great article plans, six months out – travel tips and adventuring ideas for California and beyond. So get on our mailing list and we’ll make sure you get it.

Posted in Everyday Life, Travel, Work
← Older Entries Newer Entries →

Recent Posts

  • From The Kitchen: Quick Hummus
  • Hab Life, and Catching Up
  • Life Gets in the Way
  • And, We’re Back!
  • Valleys and Farms

Categories

Archives

Blogroll

  • Our Marketing Business

Time Wasters

  • Instructables
  • LOLCats
  • Must. Have. Cute.
  • People of Walmart
  • The Oatmeal
  • There I Fixed It
  • You Suck At Photoshop
  • Zen Pencils

Pages

  • About R&K
  • Books We’ve Read

© 2012 Robert and Kristi Warren. All Rights Reserved.