Rob and Kristi
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Posts in category Diversions

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.

It May Be Time.

Feb02
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Good Super Bowl, really good half time show, great commercials.

This was our favorite, hands down: CareerBuilder.

Posted in Work

Rested

Jan18
2009
Kristi Written by Kristi

I took a mental health day on Friday because I was really at the end of my rope.  I slept until noon because I was so tired and a bit depressed.  It seemed like a good idea to just stay in bed all day.

But Rob said no, let’s get out of town.  I got dressed and we drove to Carmel.  The sun was just over the horizon and we walked on the beach for over an hour.  There were dogs and their owners all over, running, playing in the water, leisurely strolls after a long week of work.  We talk often of owning a house on the coast, something small and cottage-y, where we can retire or relax for the weekend.  I would love be close enough to the beach where we could walk every night, let the dog run and just reset.

We had dinner at a lovely dive on the wharf in Monterey.  The food was amazing and we ate until we were stuffed.  There’s nothing better than eating seafood at the coast because it’s super fresh and tasty.  We drove home long after sunset and both of us slept like the dead.  The best part?  We still had an entire weekend ahead of us and Monday is a holiday.

My dad delivered the shelves for our built-in bookcase in the guest room.  It looks wonderful in there now.  We will stock the shelves today and get it all set up.  I am so excited to have all that storage.

Posted in Everyday Life

This Island Earth

Jan17
2009
Rob Written by Rob

“I’m telling you, it’s a bruise.”

“I don’t remember banging my foot on anything – it could be necrotic tissue, caused by some obscure flesh eating disease that only three doctors in the world know anything about.”

“Dammit, it’s a bruise and you’re not watching any more House episodes – ” – *BANG* – “OH MY GOD – DID SHE JUST.. ??”

“Yep. Sure did.”

“Why’d she DO that?”

“Well, she’s had a hard path – see, him, after a long relationship full of sexual tension, he finally got with her, but then she couldn’t deal with it so like, the very next morning, she ran off to marry this other guy. That left him kind of floundering, so she kind of got him on the rebound and they got married. And it was a bad marriage. And now the last hope she’s been clinging to in life has been crushed in a radioactive crater. So this is her coming to the end of a bad road.”

“Oh. So her.. is she a.. ?”

“I don’t think she’s the last one. Something a lot more complicated is happening here.”

“This show gets darker with every episode.”

“Yeah. But that’s part of its charm.”

“You’re still done with House for a while.”

“That’s okay – Galactica’s back on.”

Posted in Everyday Life
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