December 2009

HyperBowl on Facebook

Personally, I avoid Facebook apps since they usually have obnoxious or deceptive ads, and I don’t really trust the apps, either. But from what I’ve read and all the Mafia Wars wall posts of my Facebook friends, it’s a game platform that shouldn’t be ignored. Conveniently, dimerocker started a closed beta of their platform supporting Facebook Unity games, which saves me a whole bunch of work setting up my own server-side infrastructure and figuring out how to make money on it (i.e. getting ads). I tried it out Christmas Eve and in less than two hours got HyperBowl up and running as a Facebook app. It looks promising – if all goes well, I’ll add more lanes and use the dimerocker API for leaderboards and such.

Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Internet
Unity

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2009 Best App Ever Awards

Well, I shamelessly nominated HyperBowl for every category in the 2009 Best App Ever Awards. I think there are way too may categories, but here they are:

Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Just for Fun Kids App
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Arcade Game
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Productivity Killer
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Retro Reborn Game
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Game Graphics
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Casual Game
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Most Innovative Game
Nominate
HyperBowl
for
Best Sports Game

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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Marketing Payback

If my attempts at marketing seem lackadaisical, one of my reasons, or excuses, is the do-unto-others rule – I don’t want to inflict sales tactics that annoy the heck out of me. But then it occurred to me that all those aggressive marketers who’ve pestered me have it coming. So instead of sending out Christmas cards as I should (but usually don’t), I’m planning to send end-of-year marketing missives to the LA Times and Orange County Register for all those teens they send banging on my door selling newspaper subscriptions, to Millennium Sales for that last batch of college students they sent door-to-door selling magazine subscriptions, Time Warner for the grown men they sent banging on my door selling cable/phone/internet subscriptions (and their telemarketer who called me asking why I don’t have their phone service – answer: too many telemarketing calls). Now, let’s see who else has been naughty or nice…

Hello,

Since I’ve received sales promotions from Time Warner Cable in the form of numerous door-to-door salesmen and telemarketing calls, I’m sure you won’t mind if I return the favor and tell you about the great products I’m selling – namely, the HyperBowl series of games for the iPhone and iPod touch, available on the App Store via the following links:

http://itunes.com/app/hyperbowl

http://itunes.com/app/hyperbowlclassic

http://itunes.com/app/hyperbowlrome

http://itunes.com/app/hyperbowlforest

If you purchase one or more of these titles before January 1, thirty percent of my proceeds will go to the charity Get Well Gamers, an organization that provides video games for hospitalized children to assist in pain management. General information about the game is available at http://hyperbowl3d.com/

Thanks for your attention, and have a happy holiday!

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Management
Unity

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High Seas In-Progress

Screenshots of the HyperBowl High Seas lane from the Unity Editor.

Now, off to Dave and Buster’s for more research.

Picture 43

Picture 44

Picture 46

Picture 47

Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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HyperBowl and HyperBowl Forest

Apple must have staffed up for the holidays – my last round of HyperBowl updates took less than a week to get approved, and the new apps took maybe a week and a half, despite getting a call from Apple that I needed to remove the text about the seasonal donation to Get Well Gamers from the App Store description (the rep said it was “great” but they just don’t allow it to be promoted on the App Store). These releases also coincided with some App Store changes. Conveniently, they now automatically set the Release or Update date to the approval date. But the New Releases listings only show new releases, not updates, which makes it hard to get noticed without constantly releasing new apps (which does vindicate my decision to release the HyperBowl lanes individually). On the other hand, now the New Releases list is a lot less crowded, so new releases don’t get immediately obscured as much.

Anyway, here’s the third lane, HyperBowl Forest:

Screenshot 2009.12.04 19.39.47

and a compilation of all three lanes so far, simply named HyperBowl:

photo-8

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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Pair Programming

Photo 1

Pets
Programming

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HyperBowl Classic 1.3

HyperBowl Classic 1.3 is now on the App Store, featuring more screens, lots of them.

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photo-5

photo-4

photo-1

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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HyperBowl Rome 1.1

The HyperBowl Rome 1.1 update is on the App Store – approved in less than a week!

Picture 9

It’s interesting to see the App Store now automatically lists the “Updated” date. So, thankfully, no more trying to game the system by manually adjusting the Release date with each update. It’s also interesting to see the Update date is actually tomorrow. That should address another problem – I used to set the Release date as soon as I got the app approval notice, but then it would be buried by all the app that already showed up that day. Maybe this will give it a little more visibility. Still, there’s not much visibility overall to recent updates/releases, unless you score a New and Noteworthy listing by Apple. One can hope.

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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SSAO

I finally got around to trying out one of the feature introduced in Unity 2.6 – the SSAO effect.

Without SSAO:

Picture 6

and with SSAO:

Picture 5

The effect is subtle, particularly with the existing shadow, but it’s there. There’s about a 10% frame rate hit on my MacBook Pro, so I guess I’ll keep it.

Apple
Games/Graphics
HyperBowl
Unity

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You Can’t Fight City Hall

I hate corporate meetings largely because 1) people say stupid things, and 2) you’re stuck in a room listening to it. Which is why I stayed home and watched the Huntington Beach city council meeting on HBTV while my neighbor valiantly attended to oppose the resolution for city-wide address changes.

In our case, the change is relatively minor, changing our street suffix from Street to Lane, so minor that it begs the question why it’s being done at all. The postcard announcing the change stated that there were discrepancies among databases and thus it’s a public safety issue that needs to be rectified, since the city uses an automated address system. When I inquired which databases were inconsistent, as I found none among any of the utilities, vendors or tax agencies I deal with, not to mention the authoritative Thomas Guide, I received clarification that the change for my street was to accomodate a city specification that north-south minor streets be labelled “Lane”, and then an additional plug on the public safety issue. When I pointed out one more time that since everyone else was consistent, even if there was one mystery database used by the city that wasn’t, changing the street name now would certainly generate more inconsistency, not less, the responder finally shut up about the public safety spin and said she’d forward my comments to the planning commission. I appreciate the responses, but I would have felt better if I hadn’t discovered everyone else who inquired received the same responses, word for word. Cut-and-paste is a god-send for bureaucrats.

In any case, it’s possible our complaints had some effect – the powerpoint presentation at the council meeting showed the resolution split into two parts, or perhaps two resolutions (I thought it was two resolutions, but it seemed there was one vote), the first part to resolve discrepancies among databases and the second to make addresses conform to the city specifications. But then the fire chief, police chief and former police chief touted the public safety issue again, saying they knew their way around but they rely on agencies in neighboring areas to help out and they might get lost. So, a fire truck from Long Beach is going to cruise right by my condo because they see an “St.” on the end of the street sign? To confuse issues further, councilman Hardy assured my neighbor that for a simple suffix change, the post office won’t care, because they use an automated addressing system. And then she went on to explain that we had to make the change because the public safety addressing system required it. This is one of those situations where I’m thinking I’m talking to an idiot, or they’re assuming I’m stupid enough to believe what they’re saying, or we really do have the worst IT system ever. Hey, this really is like a corporate meeting.

Law
Local
Programming

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