Turning Gamers into Side Income

While I’m mired in the suck of unemployment, the wheels have been churning. My previous job consumed enough CPU cycles to keep my mind pretty thoroughly occupied, and what was left over, I dedicated to shooting, the Second Amendment, and blogging about shooting and the Second Amendment. Shooting is now an expense, so I’m not doing much of it these days, and blogging was never more than a part time job. So that leaves me with what to do between rounds of looking for work, and doing interviews.

In my free time I’ve been doing some more flight simming, and involving myself more in that community. A few people have made games revolving around flight sims, but those have mostly involved Virtual Airlines, and Virtual Air Traffic Control. The problem I have with all of these ideas is that they are essentially extensions of simulations, and as games go, I think that caters to more of a niche audience.

I’ve always believed that the primary purpose in any gaming community is being able to compare yourself to other people. That’s true whether you’re a video gamer, or your game is competitive pistol shooting. If you don’t look at the people under you in a ranking, and think “Heh, I’m better than all those guys,” and look at the people above you on the ranking and think, “For now, I’ll learn from you, because you are better than me, but one day, one day, I’m going to totally pwn you,” then you’re not really endowed with the competitive spirit, and may even lament what I’m talking about. A true gamer prides himself on his competence in his craft, but in order to understand the bounds of that competence, comparison is necessary.

In order to compare yourself, you have to have a pretty good social understanding of the community in which your operating, which requires an active social element, where people know and interact with each other. In my college days, I was a high wizard on a MUD. A good MUD needed to have a balance of both these elements on order to succeed; you needed to know your fellow players enough to divide them into rivals and allies, and you also needed a way to measure your skills in relation to others.

Competition is an excellent driving force, but you can not make the path to masterdom easy, lest the view from the top of the mountain seem uninspiring. You also cannot make it too difficult, for then the sensible path is just to surrender to the mountain and turn back. In my experience with competitive Silhouette shooting, competence is too difficult, and that discourages beginners. I think practical shooting is more popular today because it has the right balance of difficulty to master, but still offers enough early reward to keep it interesting for beginners.

Fantasy is another important element in any game. At the risk of offending people, this is another major appeal of IDPA and IPSC that other, more traditional shooting sport lack. Both try to be simulations of defensive handgun situations. This translates to the flight sim community as well, which feeds pretty exclusively off fantasy. Flight sims cater to aviation enthusiasts who don’t have the time, money, or good health to do the real thing. Whether you’re an actual pilot who still dreams of flying large airliners, or a diabetic who can’t get a medical certificate to fly a Cessna, the community has something to offer you. But to go back to the shooting analogy, imagine an IPSC or IDPA competition essentially boiled down to a match director scoring everything up, and going down the line at the end of the match, “You lived, you died, you lived, you lived, you died,” etc, etc. You’d probably still have people who’d be interested, but who are the winners and losers? Who is better than the next guy? Sure, you want to live, but this is a game! It has to be to keep people interested long term.

If you can combine the fantasy with community and competition, I think you have something really appealing. This is the thought that’s been obsessing me for at least the past five days. I’ve been playing a game that’s a plugin to the two major flight sims, that almost has the right idea, but it’s a poorly thought out and shoddy implementation too focused on simulation rather than social networking and gaming. I think I know how to do it much better. To top it off, Microsoft largely got out of the flight sim business, and that industry is about to be upheaved with the arrival of X-Plane 10. All I keep thinking about is, if I could get 2000 people to pay me 15 bucks a year, that’s real money. If I could get 4000 people a year to pay me 15 bucks a year, that’s almost a job. This community is willing to pay money for entertainment, and a lot of folks have made money on third party add-ons. Even if I got 500 people t pay me 15 dollars, it’s decent money versus the effort. It’ll boost my skills at software development and integration, which can’t hurt for a job. My ideas will tax my skills in Python, C++, PHP, SQL and systems administration skills such that I’m having a hard time seeing a downside to doing this. At worst I keep working with some important jobs skills, and at best I make a few bucks on the side. This is one of those times when I feel a lot of things coming together. Maybe it’s just wishful thinking, but I think this could help me out, and provide some people with entertainment, and perhaps contribute to another community that has a tough time recruiting new members.

Vindicated

At my last job, I was pretty adamant, as the person who implemented Internet policy, that we should leave things relatively free, and not do any filtering or monitoring of our employees. Except for a few instances, I never had much of an argument from executive management, though I once had to threaten to quit to maintain my policy. Now I’m glad to see my philosophy vindicated.

If you’re in a knowledge business, it is simply not possible to be focused on work for eight hours straight. Anyone who believes, in a knowledge or research field, you can spend eight hours straight focused on a singular mental task is delusional, and probably, to be blunt, not smart enough to ever have done that kind of creative work. Designing a drug is not even remotely anything like assembling a car in a factory.

You need some mental relief from the day. In tech, I’d take a break when I could no longer make headway on a problem. You get to a point where you kind of hit a wall, and you need to step away from the problem a bit. When you come back to it, often the answer is obvious. I’ve had more than a few cases where I’d step away, go read an article on an unrelated subject, then come back and see the error of my ways immediately.

Food Advice for the Jobless

Gun news is a little slow today, so I thought I’d share some of what I’ve been doing, and solicit ideas from others. A big problem with unemployment is eating. If you have a reasonable income, chances are you eat out a lot, and when you do cook at home, often enjoy cooking meals with expensive ingredients. Here’s some things I’ve discovered when it comes to eating cheap:

  • First step we took was to stop going out to eat regularly. When we do go out now, it’s either a date to Chick-fil-a, with a coupon, or to hamburger joints like Cheeburger, Red Robin, or anywhere else where two people can eat for about the cost of a Jackson. And we only do this every few weeks to celebrate good news, or some accomplishment in my job search.
  • No purchase of alcohol when out of the home. Ordering drinks at a restaurant is what runs the bill up. Purchase of alcohol for consumption for in the home during periods of joblessness is highly encouraged. You need something to help forget about the suck. There are plenty of bargains out there for wine, though I do not recommend cheap beer or liquor. If you find yourself without a job, you will probably be drinking both, however, but much like the economy, I don’t have much positive to say about it. For cheap liquor, Margaritas can be made for 10 dollars a pitcher with booze so cheap you wouldn’t strip paint with it, but will produce a very drinkable beverage.
  • Pork is the best friend you have in the whole wide world if you don’t have a job. If you’re Muslim, or Jewish, sucks to be you. You’ll have plenty of time on your hands, and if you have a BBQ,  you can take some pretty cheap cuts of meat, run them low and slow on the Q, and feed yourself for a week. Pork chops on the grill can also be a good substitute for steak, and are much less expensive.
  • If the other white meat isn’t your thing, then your next best friend is ground beef. A nice pot of chili will feed two people for several days, and for lunches offers the possibility of chili dogs. While many consider it an abomination in the eyes of Texas, beans added to the chili will help it stretch. The beans are good for you, and cheap. Ground beef can also get your burgers and dogs, hamburger helper, spaghetti with meat sauce or meat balls.
  • Not to be overlooked are various members of the sausage family. 82 million Germans can’t be wrong, can they? There is a wurst for every occasion, and they are the most versatile of the cheap foods out there. Hot dogs are among this family, and they are classic cheap eating. Italian sausage is a great addition to pasta dishes. Brats and sauerkraut with a side of mashed potatoes is a great meal, and it’s tough to find cheaper or easier.
  • Chicken can be used to provide you with a more elegant meal at home, as there are many good and varied recipes out there for chicken. My favorite dish in this category is Chicken Marsala. Marsala wine is a fortified wine that even the PA state monopoly sells for under ten dollars, and you can make a few batches with a bottle. Bread some chicken, fry it in butter and olive oil until it’s nice and brown. Remove the chicken, toss in some sliced baby ‘bella ‘shrooms, some shallots, a little bit of sage, a little bit of salt, pepper to taste. Then toss in the marsala wine and some chicken broth and reduce. Add the chicken back in before the reduction is finished to finish it off. The breading from the chicken will help thicken the sauce. It’s good served with garlic rosemary small red potatoes, halved and baked, or with rice pilaf, which is also cheap to make at home.

You can still eat pretty well, even on a budget. There’s no reason the hope and change has to reach all the way to your stomach. While the price of food has been going up, the cost doesn’t compare to thinks like your mortgage, keeping two cars on the road, or even the electric and gas bill. What cheap foods do you know of that are great for people on a budget?

And Then There Were Three

Got turned down by one of my three top choices today. This is not the same outfit I interviewed with yesterday. My phone interview with this outfit went very well, but it was a couple of weeks ago. I pinged them back Tuesday and they replied back with your standard template of liking my qualifications, but not really having a position that’s an exact fit right now. Number two I had a third round phone interview with yesterday, and number three, the in-person interview went well with them, but it’s been two weeks and I haven’t heard a peep. That’s never a good sign, but I’m reluctant to bug people if the issue is just something is taking a long time with HR, or they just have more candidates to interview before making a decision. I have a fourth possibility, but it’s a decade step back in my career, and even that’s not certain. I am facing the prospect of failing at all the top companies, and having to take a huge step back. But hey, you gotta pay the bills somehow.

I had started posting here about the job hunt situation mostly as an outlet, and to give people an idea of how things are out there, if you might be worried about your job. There are still a lot of jobs out there, but I’m finding the going much much harder than it was a decade ago, when I was last looking. I’m going to need to step it up a notch very soon.

If any of the rest of you find yourselves hitting the unemployment line, my advice is to use a breadth search, not a depth search. I started off with a depth search; identifying top employers, and spending the time and effort to try to get in to those, but which had a high probability of not panning out. That may turn out to be a strategic mistake on my part. We shall see.

Reverting to Your Level of Training

Spent the past several days brushing up on elegant ways to do various kinds of operations in shell scripts. Learned quite a few new things. Under the pressure of the interview, I reverted back to the quick and dirty ways of every day writing of shell scripts. Now that the pressure is off, I’m also thinking of the mistakes I made. Doing a pre-increment when I really should have used a post-increment. The kind of mistake I wouldn’t make except when I’m under the gun and second guessing everything I do.

We’ll see how things go. If it ends here, at least it ends. I can move on and start looking for other work. Tomorrow the free ice cream will once again flow.

Snazzy Videos

I don’t know what possessed me, but I decided to go check out one of the blogs I monitored before our trip to Hawaii last year. Turns out, there’s been some pretty nifty video captured from the volcano lately. Since Sebastian is too busy preparing for an interview today, you’re stuck with this crazy stuff before I go looking up gun, legal, or political news for the day.

Unfortunately, the video linked isn’t embeddable (yet*) so I’ll just embed this one from March that shows something else kinda cool.

In this video, the lava lake’s disappearance drops the entire crater floor more than 250 feet & brings down a section of the crater wall. Amazing little things, these webcams.

*Consider that of the embeddable videos, they were posted in July even though they were captured in March. Yes, the local government agency office can get video posted within a day of an event, and the division of the agency with keys to the YouTube account takes 4 months to upload 30 second videos. Yay, government!

Call the Maintenance Guy

The free ice cream machine is once again not serving freely. Back to interview preparation mode. I have a third round phone interview with a prospective employer tomorrow evening. Second round interview was a bear. This company is notoriously difficult to get into, and it’s not an interview you can just waltz in and impress them. They will likely not be impressed because the guy interviewing you is likely an order of magnitude better than you are.

I’ve spent quite a lot of time on this one employer, and it’s a long shot to get the job, but it’s a career making job. If I did get in, there’s essentially no where else I couldn’t go in this field. It’s also a chance to be around top people in the field. Generally speaking, I want to be the dumbest guy in the workplace, because that means I have things I can learn from the smarter folks. I’ve been places I’m the smartest guy, and that might be a bit self-satisfying in a way, but it’s a dead end for learning anything.

My only fear is, with all I’ve put into getting this job, if it doesn’t pan out, I only have one other prospect I really like, another I kind of like, but aren’t real sure about, and a third that would only be a paycheck to pay the mortgage while I look for something better. All three of my other prospects I have not heard from in a while, though I’m discovering that doesn’t necessarily convey a lack of interest. Everyone seems to be moving at glacial speed on hiring these days.

More Interviews

Today is a busy week for interviews as well. Yesterday was phone interview number two for an outfit in New York. It was a monstrously difficult technical interview. We’ll see how I did, but I feel like I got way too tripped up and twisted around. I was too nervous, which makes me fall apart at detailed thinking by rote knowledge. Today is another in-person with a new outfit I was considering consulting work for a few weeks ago. Their problem was easily diagnosed over the phone, but I guess they liked what they heard and decided to bring me in for an interview. This job would be a massive pay cut, given what they told me their budget was. It’s five minutes from home, and would be a cake job. But I’m not all that interested in cake jobs, and while I’m willing to accept a cut in pay, going back to what I made in my mid 20s is not my idea of career development.

One thing that’s frustrating me with all the hope and change is how slow companies move along the interview continuum. Back in the day you could submit your resume Monday, have a phone interview by Wednesday, an in-person by Friday, and except an offer the following week. Companies had to act quickly with tech people because if they didn’t, some other company might snatch them up.

To New York, and Back, and Back

Went up to New York yesterday to visit with a friend who is working at a place I’m going through the interview process with. Nice visit. There are things about the environment I’d find stimulating, and things I would find annoying. Space costs a premium in Manhattan, so folks are crammed together like sardines, with not much in the way of peace and quiet. Coming from the suburban office park to a boisterous, bohemian feeling work environment where I don’t have much personal space would be quite and adjustment. It’s also a very young workplace. That’s either going to make me feel very young, or very old. I’m still in the very preliminary stages with this job, so we’ll see how things progress. First round interview, after having survived the HR phone screen, is scheduled for next week.

Today I had a first round interview with another outfit in New York, and I think I nailed it. The job is right up my alley and doing the same kind of work I was doing for the previous company, in the same kind of research environment. Tomorrow I have a second round interview with the academic institution I’m seeking a job with. It would be very nice to have two offers to choose from, and I hope the timing can work out.

Free ice cream is going to be sparse for the next few days, unfortunately. Gotta pay the mortgage first.

Busy Week

I have two interviews this week. I feel like I need to hit both out of the park, as something needs to progress to an offer soon. Today I’m headed to New York City to see a former colleague, who works at one of the places I’m trying to get into. This is just a social call, but I’m also scoping the place out. I’m also meeting with another researcher I used to work with at my former company. I’m a lot more worried about some of them than I am about myself, given the state of the industry right now.

Until I return later this evening, I leave you in Bitter’s capable hands. Blogging may be a bit light as I prep for some of these interviews.