Archive for July, 2007

Sitting on my Toadstool

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

I came across an interesting Ubuntu forum thread the other day – where I posted this on May 26th 2006:

This thread has inspired me to do something:
http://freegamer.blogspot.com/

Fascinating. It’s come a long way since then! :-)

The big news of today is probably the Secret Maryo Chronicles 1.0 release. It’s an intriguing project and is gaining some very nice vector-based graphics. I’m still not convinced they have replaced all the ripped graphics and sounds that were in the previous version (0.99.7) nor addressed the gameplay defficiencies I felt were present – the feel of the game wasn’t quite right – there is no acceleration, you are either running or not running, making it hard to control the character. It is still an ongoing project and importantly it’s a playable game with a fair amount of levels and decent graphics so is worth checking out. It’s definitely close to being an open source game that makes people go, “Oooh, nice!” ;-)

Finity Flight II is an open source overhead 2D shooter which several episodes to play and is available for both Linux and Windows. I gave it a shot – it had nice graphics but the gameplay was mystifying to me. I struggled to shoot or be shot unless I was stationary. All artwork and code is available under GPL. It’s intriguing and the author has obviously put a lot of effort into it, and has a few other games available.

AlphaShooter is a sci-fi first person shooter. Whilst it may never become a fully fledged game in it’s own right, the author has put it online and continues to work on it it the hope that it will be useful as an example on how to get started in computer graphics and games development.

Back to the shadows to plot the expansion of my Free Gamer empire… ;-)

Eating Local, Buying Local

Monday, July 30th, 2007

farmers and produce
Not long ago I was in North Carolina visiting a beautiful garden at the Biltmore estate. I asked the gardener if it was organic and he got very agitated. “Let me get on my soap box” he said. He then proceeded to explain that most pesticides in the US were organic and that just because something is organic doesn’t mean it is free of pesticides and that some organic pesticides are not very effective. He said that sometimes he would have to use an organic pesticide 6 or 7 times instead of using a non-organic pesticide once. The gardener then told me about an integrated insect approach that he used, attracting beneficial insects to do the work to help keep his garden as healthy as possible. But when he must resort to pesticides he chooses whatever he thinks is best, organic or not. Is organic always best? Clearly, it’s not that simple.

Because a few years back I was 2005/07/eating-only-local.html” target=”_blank”>critical of a campaign to “eat only local food”, I left some people under the impression that I disagree with the principles of eating local. Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, some of the reasons I felt it wasn’t sustainable then are now changing. Here are the main reasons why I like “eating local” and why I have subscribed to a local CSA for over 5 years.
* Local food is likely to be fresher and fresher food generally tastes better and is healthier
* Buying local helps support local farmers and producers

But as with eating organic, it’s not that simple. Here are the reasons I doubt I will ever limit myself to eating ONLY local food.
* Many products I love (such as mangoes!) can’t be grown in my region
* The quality of local products is not always acceptable to me
* Some local products are just too expensive for my budget
* There are too many non-local ingredients that increase the diversity in my diet such as spices, imported cheeses, grains, wines, etc.
* Buying local doesn’t necessarily mean saving resources–a recent story in the Boston Globe called The Localvore’s Dilemma explored the issue of energy costs associated with local produce and found sometimes more energy is used than when food is imported.

A few weeks ago I did a taste test with Sonoma lamb versus New Zealand lamb and not only was the New Zealand lamb cheaper, but it tasted better to me. As far as I’m concerned, taste trumps everything. I hope one day the local lamb will be tastier not to mention cheaper than the imported lamb. But until then, I’m sticking with whatever tastes best to me and fits my budget. Diversity in my diet is too important to me to forgo eating foods that aren’t produced locally. But will I seek out local fruits, vegetables, meat? Yes. I will and I do!

New Look

Monday, July 30th, 2007

You may or may not have noticed – depending on whether you have had your morning coffee or not – that Free Gamer has a new look! Thanks go to Iwan ‘qudobup’ Gabovitch for a sterling contribution. It gives the site it’s own identity and he has come up with a cool fg logo and smart little icons. Anyway I love it, so thanks Iwan. In the spirit of open source he has made his work available as public domain.

Only a short one today as I’m short on time and energy after sorting this out…

Java CRPG

Dungeon Craft

There’s a new release of JCRPG. Whilst it’s still a long way from being a game, it is looking very nice and a few people have started to contribute models. If development pace keeps up of this 3D classic RPG framework I think we can expect some interesting games to the not-too-distant future coming from this project.

Whilst reading the comments on the JCRPG blog, somebody brought up another Dungeon Master inspired game…

Dungeon Craft:

is an effort to develop an RPG and editor that mimics SSI’s Forgotten Realms Unlimited Adventures (FRUA). This project began back in 1995 as an effort to learn more about Windows/DirectX programming.

It’s Windows only :-( but has been in development for over 12 years and is still active! (That’s impressive on it’s own!) It looks quite nice. I wonder if there is any future scope to move it towards cross-platform technology like OpenGL?

Also the new FG forums [next in line for a makeover] have somewhat recovered since that rather annoying freeforums.org crash & data loss. Back to half the number of users and 25% of posts in just under a week which is quite good considering the [currently relatively small] size of the community. Do encourage your open source gaming contemporaries to join in – it would be good to have a central place for open source game [development] discussion outside the noise of larger sites that this guy describes, I think accurately, as ironically lonely places. Certainly there are many Free Software game projects that are very difficult to find – just like Dungeon Craft – because of the noise that accompanies a site the size of Sourceforge.

Anyway, back to normal tomorrow… hope you like the new look as much as I do!

A Super Market

Friday, July 27th, 2007


What did you do during Summer vacation? I went to a supermarket. Actually, I seek out all kinds of markets every time I travel. I try to visit farmers markets, covered indoor markets, tailgate markets, you name it. I like seeing what’s on offer, what people are buying and I usually find some great souvenirs. In France I bought rhubarb and prune jam, in Mexico dulce de leche, in Vietnam lotus-scented and flowering teas, in Spain bitter orange marmalade, in Asheville sourwood honey.

The last supermarket I visited was nothing like any supermarket I’d ever seen before. While I didn’t actually purchase anything, I did check out every department. What sets this supermarket apart from the rest was that it’s an interesting reflection of where many supermarkets might just be heading.

So what does the supermarket of the future look like? It looks a lot more like a high-end specialty market. It features many distinctive departments such as a bakery that continually bakes fresh breads, a wood-fired pizza oven, 300 cheeses, a wine section with over 2,000 wines and a tasting bar with noted guest winemakers stopping by such as Mike Grgich and Suzanne Groth, a gelato bar, sushi made to order, coffee blended and roasted to order, a nut bar with fresh roasted nuts, a Callebaut chocolate dipping bar, Riedel glassware, Williams-Sonoma cookbooks, a beautiful fresh seafood display and a particular emphasis on local products. Store executives explained that in every region there are some specific local products that shoppers seek. At the Livermore store there was an impressive section of Livermore wines, olives and olive oils, not found in any other supermarket. There was local honey too. Not your typical supermarket experience! But maybe someday it will be.

For more about local produce showing up at traditional supermarkets, check out this podcast on NPR

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Battle Tanks and RPG

Friday, July 27th, 2007

Battle Tanks

Battle Tanks is, “a funny battle on your desk.”. Choose one of three vehicles and eliminate your enemy using an arsenal of weapons. Original cartoon-like graphics and cool music, “fun and dynamic,” and it has different network modes for deathmatch and cooperative style gameplay. I don’t believe it has a single player version, yet. The game is open source and available for Linux (source) and Windows. It’s a relatively new game (sf.net project was registered in 2006) so there are still some teething issues it seems.

Adonthell, a longstanding open source console RPG engine has seen it’s first update in a couple of years – version 0.4.0 alpha 1. The previous version, 0.3.5, is packaged with a small game called Wastes Edge which is one of the few completable open source games with a storyline and is available for every OS known to man. Whilst the new ‘development’ version doesn’t come packaged with a game, it’s good to see a project with nearly 10 years of history is not yet ready to be buried by the sands of time.

The developer of Damnation of the Gods (screenshots) has been in touch. When I mentioned this game last time, a commenter pointed out it hadn’t been updated in 2 years. Well, the author of DotG dropped me an email:

I am the developer of DotG – And believe me – did I get a boost from
seeing your post on the freegamer blog!

The problem with DotG right now is the graphics – When I did begin coding on DotG I did it using graphics from the Dungeon Master Java project … So I put together something – and released (with permission from the graphics artists). Later I got a mail which said something to effect that I couldn’t use the graphics any longer (or at least parts of it). Now (quite some time later I started coding again – had completely forgotten about that “small” detail ;) – And then I remembered… However I haven’t checked on which parts I can use, and which I cannot – So I think – perhaps it is better to start from scratch and try to get ahold of graphics-artists that can imagine releasing stuff for DotG under an completely open license…

So – the code is out there (GPL’d), but i have no graphics that can go
with it (Just minor stuffs). What I would like to do now is get graphics for my project (prefferable GPL’d) and release all of DotG under GPL or similar license. (I am a Debian user nowadays.. ;)

Dungeon Master Java is another DM clone available from the forums on www.dungeon-master.com – which has a few other free complete DM clones there although they don’t seem to be open source.

One Local Summer Vegetable Salad: Recipe

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Grilled Vegetable Salad
Today is National Salad Day. Would I make that up? Actually I got several emails reminding me about it. I was going to post a vegetable salad when I realized, it was also an all local dish which fits nicely with the One Local Summer event where participants make one meal a week with local ingredients. It’s an early version of a recipe I made for my recipe development client. The vegetables–zucchini, corn, peppers and eggplant all came from Capay Organic, the lemon from Los Gatos and the olive oil from Napa. Voila! One local Summer Vegetable Salad. I served it with Sonoma lamb chops.

While the idea is to eat at least one local meal a week, I actually had another meal that was primarily local this week. Ok, the rice and spices weren’t but the Spicy Eggplant and Tomatoes dish had Capay Organic eggplant and Greenbrae backyard-grown tomatoes. Delicious stuff and so fresh tasting. I got the recipe from 5 Spices, 50 Dishes, a terrific book written by local food writer and cooking instructor Ruta Kahate. Last week I posted an interview with Ruta over at Bay Area Bites. This week you can read my review of her book and see a recipe for a scrumptious beef curry.

The recipe for my One Local Summer Vegetable Salad is as easy as it is versatile. Serve it as a salad or a side dish. I could see adding some crumbled cheese to it and calling it a main dish, and any of the vegetables could be swapped out for something you prefer–tomatoes, patty pan squash, red onions, whatever you like. Change up the dressing too if you prefer something different.

Grilled Vegetable Salad
serves 4

2 Japanese eggplants
2 ears of corn
2 zucchini
2 bell peppers
2 Tablespoons olive oil
salt and pepper

Dressing
2 Tablespoons olive oil
2 Tablespoons fresh squeezed lemon juice

Cut and core the bell peppers into 1 – 2 inch pieces. Cut the zucchini and eggplants lengthwise into three strips then cut each strip into 1 -2 inch chunks. Toss the vegetables with olive oil, salt and pepper and grill for 8 minutes over a charcoal grill or in a cast iron grill pan, turning once. Cook the corn on the grill for 20 minutes (husks will burn) then husk and slice kernels off the cob (or husk the cobs, wrap in foil and bake at 375 degrees for 20 minutes) Toss all vegetables with the dressing and warm or at room temperature.

Enjoy!

READ MORE
Over at Bay Area Bites is my review of Ruta Kahate’s book 5 Spices, 50 Dishes

New Forums Available

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

With many thanks to ghoulsblade and hagish of SFZ fame, there is a new Free Gamer forum. :-)

Unfortunately there is no way to transfer to old database over and even if it was possible the majority of useful content was posted during the period of data loss (anything after June 30th). However, lessons learned, this new forum should be more responsive (freeforums.org was slow), have better uptime (freeforums.org was frequently down) and is far more customizable (i.e. expect a FG theme in the near future etc).


Parallel Universe

There’s a new release of Privateer Gemini Gold. Bug fixes and some improved artwork prompted the team to release 1.02a just a month after 1.02 – release early, release often so this is a good thing in my book. I’m not sure if they have addressed the reported high difficulty level of the game though. If you find PGG too difficult, check out Privateer Remake and/or Parallel Universe.

Or wait for the new Vega Strike release which is coming in August. It’s looking sumptuous.

JCRPG development is still at a good pace. To get an idea of the feel of this old fashioned RPG engine, the author posted a video:


JCRPG in action