<hr>s

Aug. 28th, 2008 11:25 am
prog: (Default)
Broker than I thought I was. Suddenly unable to pay bills, prior to this check that came in the mail yesterday. I shall toddle down to the bank after I finish writing this. Check is fairly fat, so it'll last for a little while, but fun spendy-spendy time is over for me until my next period of full-time consulting.

I did manage to do my taxes, finally, and I've started to track Appleseed's finances by starting a new file with plain-old Quicken. Now that I use Freshbooks to track my time and invoicing, Quicken does a fine job handling the bank accounts, including tying certain transactions to tax forms.

Hm, I think these events are connected. Suddenly having over $9,000 vanish out of one's bank accounts is liable to cause some distress.



Picked up "Dogs in the Vineyard" last week, on the grounds that it might make a nice setting for a text adventure game. I didn't know before this that all the PCs are explicitly ~20 years old, and virgins. The notion of roving gangs of indoctrinated, armed youth with little life experience, but a license to carry out God's judgement as they see it, strikes me as terrifying, like roleplaying the Chinese Red Guard. Wondering why I haven't seen anyone else take up this angle.

I haven't actually played the game, and there's much to love about the rules and setting elsewise. I would absolutely be willing to give it a try and see what came of it, but I dunno if that will actually happen, since I am not much of a role-player. I remain interested in checking out indie RPGs that have small scopes and "gamey" rulesets, like "Agon" or "Prime Time Adventures".



Was disappointed by the XNA user group meeting I attended at Microsoft's Waltham offices yesterday. It was really more of a class, with an MSFT employee behind a lectern, stepping through code for one of the XNA example games (a simple RPG). On top of that, it was a continuation of the same topic from the prior meeting. I lost interest quickly and slipped out after less than an hour.

There were no women in attendance, and I may have been the youngest person there. Two other attendees looked under 40, after which there were a dozen more guys ranging up into deep greybeard territory. This is cool, but the lack of younger folk surprised me, since to my mind the typical person who wants to make an XBox game would be significantly younger. I wonder if the idea of offline user group meetings is becoming increasingly alien to anyone under 30.

(I muttered about this on Twitter, since little else was accessible from my phone during the class. One person responded that younger folk just call user group meetings "meetups" now. I would have liked to go to an XNA meetup; in fact, I think I was rather hoping for one. This was not that.)



I may sacrifice a weekend to prototype that game scheduler idea. I've made one already, for Volity, and it would give me an excuse to learn Catalyst much better. Catalyst is what one can rudely-but-correctly call Ruby on Rails for Perl, and it's what my larger client makes use of. I like it a lot, but I don't think I'll really grasp it fore-and-aft until I build a Catalyst solution from scratch, for myself. So.

We have GO on rationalization for latest cockamamie project idea, sir.

What else

Apr. 15th, 2008 10:39 pm
prog: (Default)
In other news:

I screwed up my ability to pay taxes on time. I have the money, more or less, but it's not in the right location. I'll spare you the details. So anyway, I filed extensions for the first time in my life. The thing that people seem not to know about extensions is that you're still supposed to pay what you owe on-time; the extension's just for the paperwork.

Fortunately(-ish), tax slackers are a common case, so the gov't will happily take your payment later, plus interest for however long you slacked. The rate is based on the Fed so it's cheaper than credit cards. They won't raise too much of a stink so long as they see their tardy money in a reasonable period of time.

The feds got an in-good-faith payment of $1K from me, and the commonwealth got NOTHING. I'll have to make it up to them next month. I need to be a busy beaver with Appleseed work for the next coupla weeks to make sure I can pay all that and everything else, but the work's right here in front of me.



Climbed back on the exercise horse. I guess it's better that I keep fallin off and gettin on than just stop altogether. The funnest thing about getting back into shape is objectively observing your strength come back, day-to-day. I could barely do five push-ups last week, and now I can do six smoothly. Let us forget that I could do ten easily a coupla months ago. Stupid, slippery horse.



Been playing a lot of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. The best parts of the game are wandering the countryside on a mission, as it really is quite beautiful, and getting into utterly insane encounters due to the fact that monsters and NPCs can, if they wish, locate or follow you to literally any location in the game world. Once I had an ally from the game world's main city show up three levels deep in a dungeon to ask me about a quest I had left half-finished. Also, if crazed goblins ambush you in a cave, you can let them chase you right into the middle of the nearest city, where the imperial guards'll be like "wtf?" and stick 'em for you.

Yesterday I did this by accident, except that I got into a situation where two assassins were chasing me, and a guard was chasing them, and I got them all to run into the middle of a deep lake - I have magic boots that let me walk on water, see. None of these guys had any issue with either buoyancy or oxygen, and the assassins stood around directly beneath me, puzzled, as the guard methodically relieved them of their hit points. Presently their bodies floated up like dead guppies, which was nice, coz they're easier to loot that way. Moments later, the guard burst out of the water on a shore dozens of yards away, and zoomed off over the hills, back to wherever he came from. I laughed.

Ouch.

Feb. 6th, 2008 09:30 pm
prog: (what_you_say)
I don't have all my docs yet to confirm the final figure, but it looks like I'm going to come up with around 10 grand to cover my 2007 taxes, after business-expense deductions.

This is the final ouchie from the trouble I got into last year, but it doesn't make it any less ouchy. At least I know I can survive it.

Yes, I contend that ouchie is the noun and ouchy the adjective, OK.

Oh well

Sep. 28th, 2007 12:30 pm
prog: (Default)
Thinking about tax doom again, and how unperturbed I am by it, especially compared to the last time I screwed up tax stuff - only half a year ago, really.

Generally speaking, it's easy to say "It's only money" if all the following conditions are true.
  • It's your money, alone.

  • The time between your realizing your mistake and your having to pay for it is sufficiently long to avoid surprise and panic.

  • The mistake is one that you need never make again, by way of a minor lifestyle change.
The change I must make involves creating a new bank account, and henceforth methodically shifting a third of each fresh deposit into it. It is not hard. It's even a little fun, if you're me.

Taxes.

Sep. 24th, 2007 07:24 pm
prog: (Default)
One thing I forgot in my recounting of last weekend was like I got myself right with Quicken. This is good, but it bears bad news. I can now easily call up a total of my YTD consulting earnings, make a naïve estimate of what this implies my 2007 income taxes will be, compare this figure to the size of my savings account, and grunt.

So this is actually kind of an FYI for my friends: I am going to batten down and try to cushion the impact as much as I can by spending as little as I can get away with until I know what I owe. So please don't be sad if I regularly excuse myself from fancy dinners and such for the next several months.

It's true that I foresee some fat deductions for myself - I've poured thousands out-of-pocket into the zero-revenue Volity Games, and this will earn me great pity from the IRS. But at the same time I've earned enough from consulting that it's not going to end up a wash like 2006 was.

This is, I hope, the objectively worst bit of fallout from it taking me months and months to realize that I was actually in business for myself and had to start acting like it.
prog: (Default)
In [livejournal.com profile] xach-approved <ul> format.:
  • Blatted out a bunch of job applications, based on jobs.perl.org. Heard back from one (got as far as signing their NDA, so far) and also got an unexpected but welcome query from another old colleague about a possible task.

    So, yes, in case the implication wasn't clear enough earlier: if you know of any Perl-friendly web-hacky freelance opportunities? My gimme-sign is now lit.

  • Set a bunch of Volity deadlines, of the coarse weeks-long sort that have been working well for me so far, spread between now and mid-February(!).

  • Getting back on the video horse, though not so's you notice yet. I've decided to go ahead and release the Arcade video with some other music - watch for that soon - and sent mail to the Gameshelf crew, proposing a much less ambitious do-over of April(sigh)'s crappy shoot so I can finish that damn episode.



It's hard to work on Volity when I'm well and truly unemployed, like now. When I do have income, it's a lot easier to see Volity as my other part-time job and pretend that my work with it is being covered under the same check. But when there is no money, Volity feels like an albatross, something I pour my life into alone for uncertain purpose.

I'm worried about paying taxes next year. Ulp. At least I know I'll be able to claim lots of business losses and expenses. Whee.
prog: (Default)
I have a doctor's appointment next month. I was hoping to fit one in at the start of this week, but there were some insurance registration hangups that ended up with the completion of my 2006 tax return as a dependency, so I had to kick it forward. (They wanted to see my Schedule C as proof of self-employment, but they didn't want to see my 2005 Schedule C with its ~$1.75 in O'Reilly royalties, which doesn't appear to be the tax filing of an independent software contractor).



MICHAEL: I almost had Pop-pop in Reno.
GEORGE MICHAEL: [Sadly] Yeah, me too.

On the third and final season of my Arrested Development download bolus. I feel almost bad about laughing at jokes that are only there as rewards for long-time viewers, but then again "long-time viewer" for me means that I started with the pilot episode only four months ago.



Finally got around to gluing graphics (via <itunes:image> tags) onto my two podcasts. Hmm, and now that I look I see that the Gameshelf one shows up in iTMS but not the Arcade's pretty graphic. I tried to go with the rectangular one with old-skool screen dimensions. I guess Apple insists on squares. All right then.

I also got an email from Apple, asking us video podcasters to start exporting at 640x480 because that looks nice on both AppleTV and iPod (which scales it down). Very well.

There's a Gameshelf shoot in less than two weeks and I still don't know what's gonna be shot! I've been on such a Volity jag that I really haven't thought about the video-production pillar in weeks. No complaints from me, mind, but I nonetheless must figure out what I'm doing there.
prog: (Default)
The presentation last night went great. Far better than I expected. I recognized only [livejournal.com profile] ahkond and an editor I knew from O'Reilly (and who I was in contact with last year about this-n-that) as people who showed up specifically to hear me, but there were maybe 30-35 people all told. Everyone seemed attentive, and as soon as I got to the slides with code examples there was a lot of discussion. Lots of requests from various people for me to back up a slide and explain things further. Sometimes other folks in the crowd would grok it quickly, and then answer those questions for me! This is rather a best-case scenario for technical presentations.

Super-geeky highlights included [livejournal.com profile] daerr fixing a bug that someone found in my example code and checking it into Subversion while the discussion about it was still going on, as well as this exchange:
ME: By the way, I just posted a new release of Frivolity [the Perl libraries] this morning, so it's probably still percolating its way across the CPAN even now...

SOME GUY: [looking up from his laptop] It's up. I just checked.

ME: ... OK then. It's up!

Even Uri liked it! He rushed us after the talk to say that he hated games but he thought our network utilization was quite clever, though clearly we ought to be using his modules instead of our POE-based solution. That's our Uri.

I avoided talking about our business model during this presentation; that's quite literally a slideshow unto itself, the sort of thing I wouldn't be able to start explaining to a roomful of professional and business-cynical geeks without spending another half-hour backing it all up. We did talk about it afterwards to some folks who asked, though.

Anyway, I am pumped to start submitting to some really-real conferences' CFPs, now. We have missed Oscon's deadline, but they're not the only game in town. (Nor are they particularly in town, being in Portland OR.) Suggestions are welcome.

I will be posting a Flash version of the presentation soon, with audio track. This is because Keynote 3 is a pretty bitchin piece of software.



Also, I finally plugged my K-1 information into Turbotax, and even though I withdrew some taxable money from Volity's coffers last year, it's more than made up for by the fact that the company lost a lot of dough. So much so, in fact, that I'm ending up with a net refund. It's rather shocking.

2006 taxes

Apr. 7th, 2007 02:28 pm
prog: (Default)
I still haven't entered my Volity-related info - waiting for our accountant to email me the right forms on Monday - but it looks like my 2006 taxes are gonna come down much gentler than I had prepared for, not even reaching four digits. That I'm in line for a healthy federal Earned Income Credit helps. I'm also getting a MA refund from a state-level EIC, due even though I didn't have any withheld taxes last year. Um? Whatever you say, TurboTax.

Pair this with the fact that a CD I bought in 2003 matures in a few days, and I can state that before this month is done I will have eliminated all credit card debt and taken a bloody chunk out of that one personal loan. This is good.

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