08
Jun 04

Blogamp working

That thing on the left, near the bottom, where it lists what I’ve been listening to, Blogamp, finally fixed it. Not that YOU would care. I have something I should be working on, so as a result I work on stuff I’ve been putting off rather than work on this thing I really should be doing.

I also noticed that Wikipedia has a new look. Super mignon!


08
Jun 04

Wanted: Trillian Pro Plugin Developer

I will pay someone to implement my Trillian Pro Plugin ideas. Plugins are basically addons to add extra abilities to the application. Usually, they are written by third-parties. I even had a dream I tried to persuade this chubby kid to write Trillian plugins for me. I’m obsessed. Here a few ideas I don’t mind blabbing about:

  • Plugin to save chat logs as formatted HTML (colors and all) which can be saved locally and/or uploaded as blog entries
  • Plugin to query whois records to look for new domains.
  • Plugin to send a message to people when they log into AIM if you are not at the keyboard.

I have more floating around but I can’t remember just what they were at the moment. I need you mysterious programmer, if you’re out there. Send help.

he plugins I am very happy with now:

There are a lot more, but there are so many it’s just best to load the ones you’ll actually use.


07
Jun 04

Hi, my name is Chris…

…and I am an eBay addict. I even bought a digital postage scale. This is probably a phase that will pass as soon as I unload all my junk. The good news is, it is an obsession that is making me a little money while ridding me of some unnecessary stuff. Here are a few things I’ve learned while researching and through my own experience:

  1. Start your auctions on the weekend since they will end on the weekend (for 7 day auctions) when most people are using eBay
  2. Don’t use any of the auction upgrades. They may help, but the costs are prohibitive unless you are selling expensive items. Instead of auction upgrades, add more photos (using your own image hosting) to your descriptions and spend some time writing good descriptions.
  3. Set your opening fee low, that way you capitalize on the lower listing fees and attract more bids.
  4. Figure out the shipping costs BEFORE you submit the auction. A few times I’ve either overcharged and had to refund, or undercharged and got stuck with the remaining due postage.
  5. Accept most forms of payment. It will bring you more bids and may save paypal fees.
  6. Maintain a good rating. Some people won’t buy from anyone with a less than perfect seller rating.
  7. Communicate with your buyers even though they can be really time-consuming with their requests.

I’m sure I’m forgetting some stuff, but that’s a good start. Ebay fees suck suck suck, but where else can you sell stuff to so many people?


11
May 04

Impulsive declaration

I was going to make some impulsive declaration about having some sort of blogging ennui, but I decided that would turn out to be a very temporary feeling. I do feel like I should have something important and/or profound to say, but I really don’t. I don’t even feel remotely self-promoting. I do feel a duty to a few individuals who expect the text here to rearrange itself from time to time. I feel like I’ve been pretty busy at work and everywhere else, especially with E3 coming this week. I’ll be working with people at the show… over the internet… via voicechat… while in game. That should be interesting for the first hour and then tedious, I would imagine. I’ll be helping demo one of our games from Austin to convention attendees in Los Angeles.


13
Apr 04

Battlefield Vietnam, the game

I don’t play many video games, but I do enjoy fps (first person shooters) because of their low commitment level and fast-paced gameplay. You don’t have to mess with levels and raising character stats. You just get in when you have fifteen minutes or more and play.

The one I’ve been playing lately, produced by my former employer, is Battlefield: Vietnam. It’s a lot of fun and has a lot of features that make it different enough to be worth purchasing.

Just like in Battlefield 1942, there are vehicles and different character classes. However, in BF: Vietnam you have at least two different variants for each class per map. For example, there are two different engineer kits, one with mines and one with a mortar. On the North Vietnamese team you have “pungi sticks” and boobytraps, or mortars and mines or explosion packs. It makes it pretty interesting. There are also lots of neat new vehicles; helicopters like in desert combat but easier to fly. Temporary spawn points can be created by each team, the NVA can make tunnels and the American team can drop mobile spawn points from helicopters. Some vehicles also function as mobile spawn points. All in all, it’s a great game. If you can muster the minimum system requirements you should definitely get it.


30
Mar 01

In an interesting story the

In an interesting story the secret-service raids an online gold exchange company, E-gold. Seems that the Federal government doesn’t like the unregulated flow and exchange of large amounts of money. Have you ever heard of the raid on Steve Jackson games?