Over the course of two hours, everyone showed up at the office today; this is the first time the entire crew has been to work on Sunday. Redacted is working between Unreal Engine 4 and Substance Designer, while Brinn is finishing some final UV unwrapping touches on an architectural piece in Blender. Dani is trying to bring closure on a quick Blender mesh she’s putting together of an organic piece, and Ariana is taking her first steps into 3D-Coat this afternoon. Rainy (pictured above) has been working on learning Allegorithmic’s Substance Painter. With not a lot of tutorials, she’s been forced to scour other sources, like she’s doing here at Polycount’s website. Tomorrow I’ll have her teaching Dani what she’s learned so far.
Employee #3 – Rainy – TimefireVR
Rainy, I mean Ray Knee, aka Ginger Davenport, is employee #3 – right? With this photo, you might start thinking I’m hiring people with issues. Well, you’d be wrong; they were simply all former baristas. Now, I’m not an expert on barista culture, and for all I know, they do all have issues, but that’s not relevant to this hire. Coming in on the lucky day of Friday the 13th, Raynee walked away from Starbucks and joined the ranks of artists at Timefire.
So, what’s the obsession with hiring baristas? Good question and one I don’t really have an adequate answer for. Maybe it was my sympathy for watching them steam their souls out of existence in an effort to make another damned venti-iced-cappuccino with eight packets of sugar and light whip during half-price happy hour while John Legend sucking the remaining life out of their limp bodies – well, that’s how I remember seeing Reignee day-in and day-out.
Ginger wasn’t just some barista mind you, this woman came out of a hippy-drenched sci-fi clad jewelry making Euro-exploration that had her on a trajectory that was colliding with 3DS Max, Photoshop, Gimp, a dabble into HTML and an interest unrivaled with 3D Printing, and how it could change her analog crafting skills into a 3D mastery of Digi-craft.
After witnessing the barista redacted, making the transition to Blender God, Radium decided that she would become a Blender Goddess, and so she embarked on a quest to put her “Espresso pulling hand” into retirement so she could better strengthen her mouse grip instead. She toiled and contorted herself between the endless hours of coffee servitude to master this 3D beast that might one day offer her salvation. It would take weeks, even months, before she would be able to show me enough progress that I would start to consider Rainier for a position with us.
Today, Raindeer is fitting right in with this motley crew, and with enough time, she just might be okay. By the way, her cat’s name is Slutty Pants – right?
Timefire at GDC 2014 – TimefireVR
Back on March 20th at the Game Developers Conference, better known as GDC, our guy redacted had the good fortune to meet Palmer Luckey – the founder of Oculus. I’d like to tell you that the guys are now hanging out, and we’re getting all the inside news regarding developments in VR headset gear, but that just wouldn’t be true. This was our first opportunity to attend GDC, and it couldn’t have been better. Our first stop during the conference was at the Oculus booth so we could be first in line to try the DK2, and that’s exactly where we were first in line!
Had we known what to expect from Epic, we’d have been hard-pressed to choose where to be the first morning of GDC. We were out of the Oculus booth maybe 20 minutes after arriving and had already tried both Couch Knights and Eve: Valkyrie – we were feeling the privilege. By the time we’d gotten around the corner to Epic’s booth, there it was writ larger than life, but it didn’t register even a little bit that the price and information we were seeing had anything to do with the Unreal Engine. It took a real Unreal person to get it through our heads that not only was Epic announcing UE4, but it was also available RIGHT NOW and for only $19 a month – TO ANYONE! This was overwhelming news. We recognized that the greatest game engine ever was being unleashed on everyone for a price that everyone could afford. Like the t-shirts worn by some of the reps said, “$#!T Just Got Unreal.”
The next stop was with some people that are starting to feel like friends – Allegorithmic. Not only did we make the effort to visit them in Hollywood back in December, but I’d also run into Alexis Khouri and Jeremie Noguer at Steam Dev Days in January, and now here we are in March, seeing even more of the crew. The night before, we went to a get-together sponsored by Allegorithmic that pulled together some of the key people working with the Substance suite of tools; for some reason, redacted, and I were invited. To be honest, we’ve been on point with feedback following our testing of alpha and beta versions of their products, so I guess a free burger on the guys was in order. This was also our second encounter with the CEO of Allegorithmic, Sebastien Deguy, and Dreamworks concept artist Gee Yeung. If only we understood on these days how important FMOD Studio was going to be to our products we would have spent more time with them; blew that one.
Being in the right place at the right time. There we were, standing at the corner of the Sony booth minutes before the GDC floor was going to open to the general public, when someone said, “You’d better get in line around the corner if you want one of the 650 tickets Sony is giving out to try the Morpheus VR headset they are debuting.” redacted nor I needed to think two seconds about that before we were charging in the wrong direction for the line. When we got to the correct corner, there were already about 80 people lined up for one of the coveted tickets; we had no problem scoring one for each of us. Our tickets were stamped for an 11:00 a.m. demo, and promptly at 11:00, we showed up and were soon immersed in a shark tank, followed by another demo of Eve: Valkyre. There was no denying that the Sony experience was within a few degrees of quality of the Oculus Rift, which adds to the verification that VR is definitely on its way.
Earlier during the Conference, we’d seen Cymatic Bruce trying the Virtuix Omni. The Omni is an omnidirectional treadmill-like device that will allow players of various VR games to run, walk, jump, and crouch to allow greater realism in their VR experience. Later in the day we ran into him on the floor and took a minute to talk things Virtual. He was just coming from his encounter with the guys from Razer and STEM. Redacted, and I had met with them the night before. Cymatic is certainly one of the strongest proponents of VR out there and has introduced many of us to some Oculus demos we’d have otherwise missed as we work crazy hours to create our own environments.
Driving Home From The Yampa
This is my “Really, you want to take my photo 20 minutes after I woke up and haven’t had a sip of coffee yet” face, a face I don’t share often. Considering this long-neglected day isn’t being posted until 2023, I’m guessing no one will ever see it. Yep, this is another of those “Why didn’t I finish posting these images” oversights that took nearly a decade to rectify. So it goes.
I guess this dinosaur at JB’s Restaurant draws the kids in; well, it worked on us, too, as the promise of seeing female dinosaurs frolicking in bikinis spoke loudly before our sleepy brains kicked in and remembered that dinosaurs are extinct.
Trying to add this post proves nearly futile as I’ve run aground from the sea of stories and memories that might have conveyed a little something else to share, or maybe I’m just in a hurry to get this written so I can move on to the next task in front of me.
Not only am I done after writing something or other about this shot of Monument Valley from here in southern Utah, but from this point, Caroline and I were only about 300 miles from home. I often wonder why I neglect to capture something or other of the scenery on the way home and can only attribute it to the need, the burning urge, to just get home after a trip where we feel that we’ve seen and done enough.
Yampa – Day 5
We’ve made it to day 5 of another epic river adventure, well, a mini-epic, as this was our first river trip lasting less than two weeks. While it was wonderful, it was barely enough time to be fully lost in it all. Another great aspect of this brevity is that it means I’m on the last day I need to find something to write about while not having notes and idiotically waited nine years before tackling the last two days of our time on the Yampa and Green Rivers.
Could this be part of the Morgan Formation? I certainly don’t know, and unless I want to go raft the Yampa/Green Rivers again, I may never know, but at least I can take solace in the fact we’ve been immersed in this experience and have seen these things with our very own eyes. If we are in the Morgan Formation, also known as the Round Valley Limestone from the Pennsylvanian period, we’ve been traveling through rock layers that are between about 66 million and 300 million years old.
A bison petroglyph etched into the sandstone at Island Park. Learning more about the petroglyphs here in Dinosaur National Monument isn’t easy, but I did find out that there are many more we’ll never see as the park service doesn’t divulge their whereabouts, nor do they expose where ruins are due to vandalism. Think about this: there are those existing among us who obviously cannot steel petroglyphs nor take away an old ruin, which means they are protecting these sites from theft but from physical damage as we have people who are willing to invest the energy to go out of their way for the sake of attempting to destroy a history that might have been standing here for more than a thousand years. I can’t imagine what kind of degenerate that person might be or what their motivation is, but I definitely wish they didn’t exist.
We are heading to the exit on a fast track as lingering is about done.
I believe we are near the entrance of Split Mountain, named by John Wesley Powell here where the Green River slices over an uplifted anticline (folded rock layer). It will be the Split Mountain Boat Ramp a little further downriver, where this canyon adventure will come to an end.
Exitig Split Mountain. As I said, we are making tracks.
One more location to explore, but first, a quick group photo with everyone except the cameraman, that being me.
Just out of sight on the left is Split Mountain Beach and the boat ramp; after we cross the river, we’ll be leaving this all behind.
Exploring a small opening under a massive cliff face across the river from our takeout, this was our last stop before packing out and bringing the festivities to an end.
Yampa – Day 4
Well, this is an unmitigated disaster as it is now NINE years after this trip was taken that I’m sitting down to post something, anything, about the last two days of our rafting trip down the Yampa River through the Dinosaur National Monument that started in Colorado and is approaching the confluence of the Green and Yampa Rivers just ahead, still in Colorado. The giant rock face is part of Steamboat Rock. Back in 2018, I left a note on Days 2 and 3 that something went wrong in 2014 because after posting about Day 1 soon after our whitewater adventure, something interrupted my blogging, leaving a four-year gap between posting Day 1 and the next two days. The problem is, after pulling those two days out of the air with a promise that I was about also to include Days 4 and 5, I apparently fell off the raft and floated down the stream of oblivion until May 11, 2023. Now, I have a lot of nothing aside from these photos that documented the visuals of our journey; the details are long gone, and I curse myself for it.
The fact of the matter is back in 2014; I had already embarked on another adventure that involved a deep dive into virtual reality. Things were likely moving fast around raising money, and I never had time to look back. Then, in 2018, I was gathering distance between that VR project and its failure when I turned to repair some long-neglected aspects of the blog, but before I could get very serious about things, Caroline and I were on our way to Europe for a few weeks. Obviously, I then faced the daunting task of blogging about our jaunt into Germany, France, Italy, Slovenia, Hungary, and Austria.
Look attentively at this photo, and you can see the line delineating the merger of two rivers with the muddy Yampa on the right and the relatively clear waters of the Green River on the left.
Well, here we are with shareable information, as what is known is that Caroline took out an inflatable little kayak-like boat called a Ducky. There’s no doubt I would have been terrified that she’d crash into some major whitewater and be eaten by the river; obviously, that never happened. With the Green River being dominant, the Yampa has reached its conclusion as a tributary and is now but a memory.
These types of views will forever remain in the realm of nearly incomprehensible as to how the uplift, folding, and movement of our planet’s crust works over time. Intellectually, I have some minor understanding of this area of geology, but the fluid nature of rocks and their reorganization at the surface doesn’t mean it all makes perfect sense.
Though I ponder the jagged, almost labyrinthian nature of these forms through a filter of uncertainty, I’m no less enchanted with them as I am with the ocean, the sky, or the forest.
This is the Scotsman William “Willie” Mather, a friend of Frank and Sarge’s who’ll become a friend of Caroline and me too.
There are 23 distinct exposed rock layers here in the Dinosaur National Monument, and I can’t easily identify even one of them; this is what happens when you tune out, don’t take notes, and then let eons pass before tending to excavate memories.
We’ve left the river at Jones Hole Creek and are out for a hike. We also entered Utah just minutes before our arrival on this beautiful day.
Our hike north along Jones Hole Creek will take us about 2 miles upstream.
According to one post about these pictographs along the creek, they are thought to be nearly 7,000 years old.
Information is thin regarding the area so take this with a grain of salt.
A little-known fact about Ely Falls is that if there are a number of people in your group, there is a spot above the falls where a bunch of you can lay in the water and block the flow until it starts to go over you, then, everyone leaps up simultaneously and a rush of water spills over the falls absolutely drenching the person leaning against the rocks. Due to a bum knee that was slowing me down the entire trip, we didn’t arrive in time to witness Willie losing his pants as the water rushed over him.
And the hike back to the river.
More river miles before pulling into camp for the night.
You may not have known this about Caroline, but she’s a Class-A tent-putter-upper.
Along the way, we were talking with Frank, Sarge, Jill, and Willie about our trip down the Alsek in Alaska a couple of years before, and on this afternoon, after Frank and Sarge had taken the bait, Frank hurt his big toe proving to him and Sarge that they’d have to work on Sarge’s wife to let him chaperone his Marine buddy and after much consideration, we all felt that something like this was just the kind of convincing that would work on her. Five years later, for Sarge’s 70th birthday, that’s what we all did.
The challenges (shenanigans) the guides come up with for entertainment are not always cultural, historical, or scientific, at times they are inexplicable. Interpret this fun game any way you desire.