Tuesday, June 30, 2009

4e Iron Kingdoms

Iron Kingdoms

Image via Wikipedia

Very nice post with links to resources for gaming in the Iron Kingdoms (IK). For those not familiar with the Iron Kingdoms, it is the setting for the Warmachine and Hordes games by Privateer Press. The setting started out as a RPG setting for the d20 system, and has grown by leaps and bounds since that time. The world itself is a fantasy steampunk mix with both magic and blackpowder. This is one of my favorite settings, mostly due to the amazing World Guide that Privateer Press published. It is a huge reference to everything in the world. Anyway, the post below is a great summary of links to porting the IK world over to the 4th edition of D&D.

Iron Kingdoms 4e Resources

RPG Blog Carnival


[link to original | source: 1001 Bobs | published: 18 hours ago | shared via feedly]

Monday, June 29, 2009

Facebook v Google

http://bit.ly/13bsnF Some interesting history here I was not aware of. I still use Google for almost everything, but I can see a day them I will turn to Facebook for more. I certainly turn to FB for more personal interactions.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

Mini Mario on DSi

In Game Screen Shot I downloaded the new Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! from the DSi Ware store a couple days back and have been playing the game.  I had not played, or even heard of, the similar titles that came before this one.  The game is basically a puzzle game, you have a bunch of wind up mini Mario’s that you need to get through the level, a room, before time runs out.  You need to open doors, collect coins, kill or avoid bad guys, and lots of other typical Mario type things.

Top screenThe game is fun, and can be a bit challenging.  Once you reach the end of a level you need to defeat Donkey Kong by shooting mini Marios at him.  I am finding these to be the most difficult part, and I guess that’s why the reserve these for the boss challenge.  :)  It would be a little bit better game if it made use of both screens for game play.  That is my only issue thus far.

You can build, share and download levels over WiFi Connect which is a pretty cool way to keep the game fresh.  I think the game is well worth the 800 points I paid for it, especially since I was able to just snag it while laying in bed one night.

My Firefox Collection

Image representing Firefox as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

I am not using Firefox to much recently as Chrome has become my default browser, but I do still like to use some extensions which keeps Firefox installed on most of my computers.  I don't use too many, and they typically are installed to help me either collect or consume information better.  I put together my current set of extensions using the new Firefox Collections tool.  Noting terribly shocking in the collection, but I think this is a good set if you want to keep your extensions to a minimum.  I supplement these extensions with a few bookmarklets.

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/collections/editors_picks

Bit.ly Sidebar - Which makes it easy to send links to Twitter, Facebook or via Gmail.
Note in Reader - This is mostly replaced by Feedly, but sometimes I use it when I am having issues with the Feedly minibar.
Amazon Wish List
- I use Amazon to track the things I want to buy for myself and others.
Facebook - Sometimes I post directly to Facebook.
Posterous - I am playing with Posterous to make posting to my blogs and various services easier.


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Music Downloads

New music time, and this month I kept to my usual grabbing more downtempo music, and keeping to female fronted bands.  I am sure I am missing out on some amazing stuff...

I finished off Elsiane's Hybrid album, I had three tracks left on the album after last month.  By the way, I REALLY like this album  It is one of the best I have downloaded in recent months.  I also grabbed Akasha by Isobella and Different Shade of Beauty by Tearwave.

Different Shade of BeautyTearwave Different Shade of Beauty HybridElsiane Hybrid  

I have been slowly collecting links to some of my favorite female front bands.  Most of these fall into the downtempo/electronica genre.

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Friday, June 26, 2009

4E from One Year In | A Butterfly Dreaming

100% agree on this whole article. Especially where it discusses the accessibility to new GM's. I remember trying to customize things in 3.5, and I was very put off of DM'ing. I have no such troubles in 4e. I modify almost every enemy I use, and I have been changing rules and some of the pre-published modules for every session. The best thing I can say is that from an accessibility standpoint the rules in the DM Guide just work.

This is a great write up.

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Friday, June 12, 2009

Working in the Cloud?

Live Mesh

Image via Wikipedia

How much software do you use to work in the cloud?

I am just wrapping up the install and configuration of a brand new computer for work, and I was kinda surprised at how many applications I am running locally now to feed my cloud computing addiction.

I installed the Pogoplug client, Jungle Disk, and Live Mesh to control my various backup and file access needs.  I installed Offisync to give MS Office access to my Google Docs.  It seems like a lot of software to install just to feed my cloud computing needs.

I install most of this software on my EEE PC as well, where I typically try to go very light on software.  The EEE typically just gets Pogoplug and Jungle Disk.  I have stopped installing Mesh.

Do we need this much software to be effective in the cloud?  I am using both Pogoplug and Jungle Disk for backups, and Pogoplug also serves as extended storage.  Mesh I am using to synchronization, and perhaps most importantly, for remote access.  Offisync just makes working with my documents so much easier as I can use the full Office suite when needed.

I guess we are not quite to the point of ridding ourselves of client side software. 

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Brothers


Brothers, originally uploaded by seanabrady.

Not really much more to say right. Iain loves being a big brother…although I did bribe him with Oreo’s to pose for this and a few other pictures.

Fargrim Salamene – D&D Character Concept

I spent some time this weekend playing with the DDI Character Builder just to see what types of PC’s I might want to play. Of the 1/2 dozen or so I made this is the one that I am most interested in. I really like the idea of focusing on push and pull, and enhancing the bull rush option with my feat. Pushing people into terrain, off of cliffs and against walls is his typical tactic. Once he has pushed one enemy off of a cliff he uses his flail and his Thorn Strike power to pull a fresh enemy in before pushing him off a cliff as well.

Character Summary

Fargrim Salamene, Level 1 | Dwarf, Warden

Build: Earth Warden

Guardian Might: Earthstrength

FINAL ABILITY SCORES

Str 18, Con 16, Dex 10, Int 10, Wis 13, Cha 8.

STARTING ABILITY SCORES

Str 18, Con 14, Dex 10, Int 10, Wis 11, Cha 8.

AC: 16 Fort: 15 Reflex: 10 Will: 12

HP: 33 Surges: 12 Surge Value: 8

TRAINED SKILLS

Nature +6, Intimidate +4, Endurance +9, Perception +8

UNTRAINED SKILLS

Acrobatics -1, Arcana, Bluff -1, Diplomacy -1, Dungeoneering +3, Heal +1, History, Insight +1, Religion, Stealth -1, Streetwise -1, Thievery -1, Athletics +3

FEATS

Level 1: Improved Bull Rush

POWERS

Warden at-will 1: Thorn Strike

Warden at-will 1: Weight of Earth

Warden daily 1: Form of the Fearsome Ram

Warden encounter 1: Thunder Ram Assault

ITEMS

Hide Armor, Adventurer's Kit, Heavy flail

Background

For hundreds of centuries the Dwarves of Nalimutan pass protected and maintained the road through the Matang Mountains. Many decades of relative peace and prosperity brought a quiet calm to the dwarves, who began to spend more time quarrying and selling stone. Their ever vigilant eye waned, and the ancient enemy of the dwarves took the opportunity to strike.

Allied with a small group of Storm Giants, the Stone Giants who had mysteriously left the pass, returned in great numbers over running the unprepared dwarven clan. The dwarves suffered many casualties and were scattered into the surrounding valleys.

Fargrim was a young boy when the attack occurred, and fled from the giants at the demands of his father. Blindly the young dwarf ran down the mountain into the forests below, and finding a quite place to sit waited for his father to join him. While waiting, he was approached by a most unusual creature. Salamene, a forest Dryad, found young Fargrim in the forest, and thinking it odd to find a young dwarf here set about talking with him. Fargrim was quite taken aback by this odd mix of humanoid and plant, and they talked over the course of many days. Eventually, Fargrim decided to set out to find the remainder of his clan, but when he emerged from the forests edge and looked up to the mountain his heart sank. The pass that had stood open for so many hundreds of years was gone. The top of the mountain collapsed down upon the pass wiping all that Fargrim had ever known from the world. Salamene followed Fargrim from the forest, and when she arrived behind him looked up at the mountain. "Poor, poor Fargrim", she said. Salamene had watched part of the battle over the past few days and knew the power that was unleashed upon Fargrim's home. She quietly left Fargrim to his thoughts.

Fargrim searched this side of the mountain for any sign of his clan members, but if any had escaped this way he found none. Alone, Fargrim set out to build what he could on the forests edge. Unskilled in stone working, but not entirely untrained, Fargrim built a small cottage just inside the eaves of the forest. A month or more had passed since Fargrim looked up at his former home, and he had settled in as best he could. He had not seen Salamene since she left him on that day, but now heard her voice through his window, panic was in the voice. He cautiously opened the door, hefting a spear he had made from the branch of a fallen tree and a sharp stone that he carefully hewed to a perfect point. She appeared then before him, but not as he had seen her before. She was in the guise of a beautiful elf maiden, wearing the hide of some great beast across her breast. She carried a large sword, and approached him with great speed.

"You can avenge your family today Dwarf, a giant has come down from the mountains and is destroying the forest. It is my job to protect this forest, and the trees that live here. Help me to destroy this monster and free your conscious." Fargrim was running before she even finished speaking, in the direction of a sound that he now understood to be that of a giant tearing down trees. As he ran Salamene seemed to vanish and reappear again and again moving with speed that he could not match. He burst quickly into a newly cleared area of the forest and saw Salamene fighting the Giant. She danced around the giant confusing it, slicing into his think flesh with her sword. Without thinking Fargrim charged into the battle, and with the giant distracted managed to impale the giant through the lower leg. A howl of anger and pain emanated from the unsuspecting giant, and as he turned to see what had happened, he lost his balance and fell with a mighty crash. Salamene smiled a fleeting smile, and jumped upon the fallen giants body. She stabbed deep, still moving quickly across the giants body. The sounds of the giants anguish filled the forest, and Fargrim's ears. He climbed upon the giants chest and Salamene stopped next to him. She handed him her sword, and as he looked into the giants eyes, plunged the weapon deep into his heart.

Fargrim quietly turned and left the giant and Salamene behind, returning to his new home on the edge of the forest and the mountain. It was many years before Salamene returned to Fargrim. He had cultivated a small area of land just outside of the forest and grew many crops. Over the years Fargrim tended to the goats that grazed in the high mountains and on the forests edge. He explored the forest and the mountains, and learned to live from the earth. He met few others in this small area of land at the bottom of the mountain. Humans and elves mostly, but never any dwarves. When Salamene returned Fargrim was just entering his adulthood. Salamene came by regularly over the next 15 years, and slowly began teaching Fargrim what she knew about the forest, the earth, the mountains and the world. She taught him about the power in the earth, the trees and even the rams that he tends to. She taught him to use his strength to push and pull the enemies of the earth and throw them off balance.

After all of the years of training, after all of the years of unusual friendship Salamene visited Fargrim one last time. She explained that her task of finding a new guardian for this part of the world was complete. She was returning to her home, and to her kind, and to her family. Fargrim accepted that he would return to his clan if he could, and said a quick good bye. Salamene gave Fargrim a gift before she left. A flail fashioned from the materials of the land that Fargrim would now protect. She promised the weapon would be an extension of himself and all he learned, and it turns out it was.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Tabletop Gaming News - Update

Just a quick update on my post from last week.  I was very happy to fire up Google Reader this morning and see a post from TGN.  It appears that they got the site back up and running late last night, and gaming news is starting to flow again.  If you have even a passing interest in miniatures gaming you must be reading this blog to keep up with what is going on in the industry.

Welcome back Zac!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

sean.blog Updated

Image representing Blogger as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase
UPDATE: Due to a problem getting connected to the right account in Feedburner, the Feedburner feed has changed for this site.  If you subscribe to the Feedburner feed you will need to update your subscription.  Sorry about that, and I hope to get my 30 readers back some day. 


I came across an article earlier today on the Blogger Buzz blog about Blogger themes. I had been wanting to make some changes around the blog so I decided to take on the task this evening. After a few false starts with templates that looked like they would be good but turned out to be not so much so, I am ready to roll with the new site and new theme. By the way I settled on the Thesis Theme for Blogger from Deluxe Templates which is apparently a dirivative of a theme that was once done for Wordpress.
If you read my site via RSS stop by the site and see the new design. I have tried to clean things up a little bit and make use of the Social Bar gadget from Google Friend Connect. I made a few changes/additions to the default template I downloaded:
  1. Friend Connect: You can grab all sorts of Google Friend Connect gadgets from the home page. What's nice with Blogger is that all the setup is already done. You just need to copy and paste some code into the Blogger template.
  2. Added a Favicon: This is a three part process. First, head over to http://www.genfavicon.com/ and create the Favicon you want to use. Once you have the icon you need to find a place to store it, I suggest creating a site on Google Sites and uploading the file there. Finally, you need to add one line of code in your template, you can find the instructions here.
  3. Swapped comments to Disqus: This is so easy. Sign up with Disqus's commenting service and follow the options there to setup comments for your blogger blog. What they have you do is download your full template and upload it to there site. They make some changes and give you an updated template which you paste back into Blogger. Easy peasy and you have a very nice commenting system.
  4. Added a Creative Commons License: Head over to the Creative Commons site and click the license link to get started. They ask a few quick questions and give you a few buttons you can add to your site. Grab the code they offer and paste it into your footer.
I changed around a few widgets and all was done. I have been very happy with how easy it is to modify a Blogger blog and end up with something that does not really look like a blog on Blogger. Let me know what you think.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

An imaginary day with Google Wave

There has been a whole lot of buzz over the past week about the upcoming release of Google Wave. For those of you that have not had the chance to read about this new software that Google will be releasing later this year, let me try to lay things out.

Wave is a new communications platform that takes e-mail, IM, document collaboration, photo sharing, and just about every other type of communication you can think of and shakes them all up together. Sprinkle on a huge dash of real time streaming access and you have Google Wave. Don't beleive me? Tuck in for the next hour or so and check out the keynote from the Google I/O developers conference.



I have been reading a lot about the new service, and not too much is known at this time. Still, I must admit that it has me pretty excited. The last time I was this excited about a Google product launch it was for the now defunct Google Notebook, which turned out to be a dud...I think Wave will be different.

The anticipation for new products like this is perhaps more interesting than the actual release. It is this anticipation that I have been focusing on in my mind recently, and I started running through little scenarios of how a day using Wave as my main method of communication might work. Of course this is all anticipation, and I really have no idea how the product will work when it is released.

I am thinking about this tool from the perspective of my professional life. The open source nature of this product means that I should be able to download and run a Wave server behind the firewall at work. This would make a huge difference in the ability for me to actually get it implemented. So in my imagination what does a day with Wave look like?
  • I arrive at the office and notice a new wave in my inbox from our IT guy in the Beijing office. He is confirming that the changes we made to some software settings have indeed improved application performance over the WAN. Since the change affects the way things work in that office, I add the Help Desk supervisor to the Wave so that she can give the details out to her staff.
  • I notice a few new items have arrived from my Google Alerts which now feed directly into my Wave. I read through a couple, and see that Microsoft has announced that Windows 7 will release in late October. This is good to know and I add the OS team to the Wave so that we can comment on the news.
  • Later in the morning, a call comes in from the help desk about an error someone is having in Outlook. It has front line support stumped, and so they have pulled me in to help them out. Support uploads a screenshot of the error message to the wave so that I can see it. We discuss the error, and I do a bit of research. I determine that an unsupported 3rd party addin to Outlook is likey causing the issue, and add a link to a MSKB article with details on the issue. I ask support to disable the addin and see if that fixes the problem.
  • The Wave from earlier in the day regarding the change in Beijing bounces back to the top of my Inbox. The help desk staff has been added and there is a question from one of the guys wondering if the change may have an unintended consquence. Since both myself, and the analyst who made the change originally are on the wave we both see it and can do a little bit of research. Turns out the consequence will not occur, and we update the wave.
  • Around lunch time the standard lunch Wave pops up and we all add in our vote for what we should do for lunch today. It's raining, and we decide to stay in. I add a poll to the Wave offering up a few boardgames I have in the office to see if anyone wants a quick game. Ticket to Ride wins and I bring the game along to lunch.
  • After lunch I see that the removal of the Outlook addin did fix the problem, and I clean up the formatting in the wave to better describe the problem and solution. I then use the integration with our help desk KB system to automatically add a new support article.
  • We have some new software going out in a few days and need to get an e-mail notification out to the rest of the firm. The software deployment team sends a Wave with a first draft of the e-mail to the applications and training teams. There are a few small changes to be made from a technical standpoint, and the training department quickly drops in some links from the integrated learning management system. Now the e-mail will contain all the class times and dates for training. Once the message is ready we flag it to follow up in a few days when we will be ready to send it.
  • Throughout the day I see various posts from Twitter, FriendFeed and Google Reader searches on topics of interest to me. I share out the ones that are interesting to other members of my team, and tag them for easy retrieval.
This has been in my head because this was basically 'a day in the life' for me one day this week. I embelished a few of the items with extra details and we used e-mail for everything here (which was slow and resulted in literally hundreds of items in my inbox), but otherwise this what it. Google Wave would allow all of this discussion and collaboration to happen in real time, and allow people to be brought into the covnersation dynamically as they are needed. Everything happens in the Wave, and the discussions can be saved out to other systems for archival purposes. If you could throw voice and video in the mix it would be even better I think.

I am pretty excited about Google Wave, and I really hope it is not too long before I can try it out. More importantly, I hope it can do al of these things and more. I should also add that I like the Wave logo and t-shirts a lot. Google should send me one. :)

Oh, and I am sure I am not the only one to think of Firefly/Serenity when they hear or read Wave.

BGFW Gaming Tokens?


I have been looking at some game tokens for use in my D&D campaign that just started, and came across the Gaming Tokens on the Dark Platypus site. They have a number of tokens, mostly different monsters and what not. What really caught my attention was the +0/+1, +1/+1 etc counters. These might work quite well not for D&D but for Battleground Fantasy Warfare. I find it somewhat difficult to keep track of the various different effects, and these might be a pretty nice way to keep track. You could even use multiples of the same image tokens to mark objective points and the like.

They have some other nice gaming accessories, including a magnetic battle map, which is what I was going to the site to see in the first place and some dungeon walls that look a lot like the walls from Mage Knight Dungeons.