A Happy New Year?

Family portrait In these times it’s appropriate to round-up what’s happened and predict what will happen. I will make my own futile attempts at the same. This is also the last post I write from Hong Kong in the following weeks as I am about to embark on my greatest trip so far – a 23 day long backpacking trip through Singapore, Malaysia and potentially other countries that will let us in. With us I mean Patrick and me (and later we’ll hopefully meet up with Claes). Unfortunately my lovely Shirley will not be part of the team and she will stay at home. I will surely miss her!

Anyhow, let’s make a really quick sum up of 2005 (concerning me, not the world events). 2005 is by far the most eventful year in my life with great changes and challenges. I finished off my regular studies at Chalmers this spring and began to realize my lack of interest in the field I’m studying. I went to two great trips this summer, one to Scotland with my family (one of the best trips I’ve had) and one to the medieval town Visby in Gotland, Sweden where me and a couple of friends dressed up in medieval clothes and wandered around on markets. Not extremely eventful, but nice! However, overshadowing all this is the beginning of my exchange year in Hong Kong at the University of Science and Technology. I left Sweden in the end of August and by now I have forgot how that cold country up north was to live in…

Hong Kong of course broughts it’s share of changes. I found a good friend in Claes, my fellow Chalmers student on this exhchange year. I also started with some sports; swimming, squash and gymming (reduced to gymming, if anything, by now). I met many nice friends among the other exchange students and went to Beijing with some of them – a truly memorable trip and a great insight into China. I started dating in Hong Kong and recently, on my second (or so) try, I found Shirley, a real lucky draw (which might my life in the long run, who knows?). And the year ended with a visit from my family, a visit that was nice and strange. Nice of course to meet them, to talk and pretend we were just on a family holiday from Sweden. Strange that as soon as they departed, the feeling was gone and I was back in my normal HK self. I’m sometimes so adaptable I get scared…

Creatively speaking, this year has been decent. The spring and summer saw some really good roleplaying, especially the campaign played in July-August. Through that campaign I got involved in the production of the Swedish RPG Noir. In the end of 2005 my long-time employer Neogames, the biggest Swedish roleplaying publisher, got bought and hopefully this will impose some changes during 2006.

And when it comes to the materialistic side of me (which seems to grow out of control 😉 ) 2005 was very eventful. I have bought, among other things, a new laptop, iPod, mobile phone, expensive clothes, all kind of computer accessories, camera and lots and lots of DVDs. Never before has so few (I) bought so much in such a short time…


So, what about 2006? I consider myself a decent predicter of future trends in science and technology but when it comes to my own life I haven’t got a clue. Although I will make some appalling attempts right here, right now:

2006 will be the year of great decisions. The greatest decision of them all is – should I stay in Hong Kong past my remaining 6 months or not? Let me just shortly enlight you in the matter – my HK visa and housing arrangements ends in June. By then I’m supposed to return to Sweden and continue my life, business as usual. But there are reasons to think of alternatives. Hong Kong is in many ways a much more interesting place to be than Sweden. The most interesting thing with HK happens to be Shirley and that is a big reason in itself to arrange something. HK also offer a great weather and many opportunities for those who can’t take challenges. Can I?

Not knowing yet what I will decide 2006 is very ambigious. In the spring I will continue to spend time with Shirley, study what I’m supposed to and try to find ways to stay here – prolonged studies, internship, regular work or other solutions. If everything goes as planned, I also have to pursue a lot of other projects (G knows how I will find time for that?) – starting up a software business (high priority), producing for Noir and producing for Neogames, as well as continuing my efforts on this blog and other sites of mine.

Further predicions? Nah. I won’t go there. I have no clue what will happen. I can through some completely random and unsupported suggestions into the air, more or less plausible: road-trip through the US in June, massive roleplaying in Sweden during the summer, several travels to China and Japan in general, preferrably together with Shirley, getting a decent source of income in the fall. And beyond 2006? Moving to Canada and getting married, or, maybe equally plausible, becoming a Buddhist monk? Well, I dunno! 😀

I will keep you posted in the case a small part of you actually are interested 😉 As for now, I’ll pack my things up and depart on a truly unplanned journey that can take me anywhere (in Malaysia). Travel reports will come.

My Gear

An almost exhaustive list of the software I use for all kinds of different purposes on my computers. It also functions as a list of software that I should keep up to date and re-install in case of hard disk crash or something similarily horrible. Feel free to browse around and try out the software. The selection is a result of many years of extensive use so I will guarantee the quality of most of the programs.

Don’t ask how many of these programs are legal copies. You don’t want to know.

Operating System

Drivers

Codecs

  • ffdshow: I’m not even sure what ffdshow exactly does, but it does it good enough for me to keep it. Needed for video decoding.
  • ac3filter: If you want some surround sound from the latest downloaded movies, this is it. If your videos don’t play sound, you might have to download ac3filter.

Image

  • Adobe Photoshop CS2: What can I say – the standard in image editing. A must have for any digital photographer, web designer, publisher or artist (and I use it for all of that!).
  • Adobe Illustrator CS2: I actually haven’t used this software much at all but I’ve seen magic been done with it.
  • Blender: A free 3D modeler and renderer with a somewhat awkvard user interface. Haven’t used it really, but I keep it as a reminder to start doing 3D graphics.

Audio

  • Winamp: The music player (and it does video too, but not good enough). It has a plethora of plugins and visualisations that are just drop dead cool. I have been loyal to Winamp since the beginning of version 2 and I will continue…
  • Windows Media Player: Why do I have this program, you ask? Well, because it’s freaking built into Windows, that’s why. It’s not a bad piece of software, but I very seldom use it. It’s just good to have when the other media players let you down for any reason.
  • iTunes: To put it plainly – this is a real piece of crap software. Horrible user interface, slow and it’s trying to do all this Digital Right Management which I hate. Sadly to say, it’s still needed to correctly connect with my Motorola E1 ROKR and iPod Video Black 60GB. Until I find a replacement, that is…

Video

  • BSPlayer: A trustworthy video player. I can’t say it’s the best, I wouldn’t know, but it does its work as its supposed to.
  • (VLC): This is supposedly a really feature rich video player, so I’ll keep it in mind.
  • QuickTime Pro: Another DRM protecting, crappy Apple software but unfortunately it’s needed for movie trailers and panoramas you find on the net.
  • Realtime: When it comes to bad reputation, this nasty piece of zeroes and ones has it all. It’s suspiciously similar to spyware, even though it’s better lately. But like QuickTime, I just seem to need to watch online TV and listen to online radio – and that’s about it.
  • CyberLink PowerDVD: Good DVD player software, but could have more features.
  • Gspot: A must have for investigating video playing problems. It shows all the codecs needed for a movie file and also shows what codecs you got. Get this now!

Communication

  • Trillian: A couple of years ago this was a really good chat program, that could connect to all major IM networks. Now, it does the same thing, but it’s not as cool anymore. It does ICQ ok and IRC ok, but misses all the features of MSN. Promises more than it can keep, though it’s better than having ICQ itself.
  • MSN Messenger: I originally hated this program, for no certain reason, but now I use it a lot. It has really cool and easy features like video chat, sketching, nice emoticons, etc. Small drawbacks in user interface and built-in ads, though.
  • Skype: Man, I wished I made this program! It’s nothing new – audiochat has been here for ages – but Skype connects it all and makes it simple. But in my own experience, the quality is still not good. Let’s wait and see.
  • Teamspeak: This is another audio chat program, used for online gaming. I used it when playing Eve Online. It’s easy and a must in certain types of online gaming.

Desktop

Scientific

  • Matlab: I both hate and love this program. It can do so much and so fast, but I always seem to get stuck for hours trying to figure out stupidly easy things like how to address in a matrix or write a function. If you do math when programming, Matlab is your friend.
  • Mathematica: This program is creepy. Strange user interface but it can solve any equation or simplify any nasty piece of formula.

System Tools

Programming

Internet

Text & Publish

  • Microsoft Office 2003
  • Adobe Indesign CS2
  • Adobe Acrobat Reader

Games

My Software

This post is constantly updated.

An almost exhaustive list of the software I use for all kinds of different purposes on my computers. It also functions as a list of software that I should keep up to date and re-install in case of hard disk crash or something similarily horrible. Feel free to browse around and try out the software. The selection is a result of many years of extensive use so I will guarantee the quality of most of the programs.

Don’t ask how many of these programs are legal copies. You don’t want to know.

Operating System

Drivers

Codecs

  • ffdshow: I’m not even sure what ffdshow exactly does, but it does it good enough for me to keep it. Needed for video decoding.
  • ac3filter: If you want some surround sound from the latest downloaded movies, this is it. If your videos don’t play sound, you might have to download ac3filter.

Image

  • Adobe Photoshop CS2: What can I say – the standard in image editing. A must have for any digital photographer, web designer, publisher or artist (and I use it for all of that!).
  • Adobe Illustrator CS2: I actually haven’t used this software much at all but I’ve seen magic been done with it.
  • Blender: A free 3D modeler and renderer with a somewhat awkvard user interface. Haven’t used it really, but I keep it as a reminder to start doing 3D graphics.

Audio

  • Winamp: The music player (and it does video too, but not good enough). It has a plethora of plugins and visualisations that are just drop dead cool. I have been loyal to Winamp since the beginning of version 2 and I will continue…
  • Windows Media Player: Why do I have this program, you ask? Well, because it’s freaking built into Windows, that’s why. It’s not a bad piece of software, but I very seldom use it. It’s just good to have when the other media players let you down for any reason.
  • iTunes: To put it plainly – this is a real piece of crap software. Horrible user interface, slow and it’s trying to do all this Digital Right Management which I hate. Sadly to say, it’s still needed to correctly connect with my Motorola E1 ROKR and iPod Video Black 60GB. Until I find a replacement, that is…

Video

  • BSPlayer: A trustworthy video player. I can’t say it’s the best, I wouldn’t know, but it does its work as its supposed to.
  • (VLC): This is supposedly a really feature rich video player, so I’ll keep it in mind.
  • QuickTime Pro: Another DRM protecting, crappy Apple software but unfortunately it’s needed for movie trailers and panoramas you find on the net.
  • Realtime: When it comes to bad reputation, this nasty piece of zeroes and ones has it all. It’s suspiciously similar to spyware, even though it’s better lately. But like QuickTime, I just seem to need to watch online TV and listen to online radio – and that’s about it.
  • CyberLink PowerDVD: Good DVD player software, but could have more features.
  • Gspot: A must have for investigating video playing problems. It shows all the codecs needed for a movie file and also shows what codecs you got. Get this now!

Communication

  • Trillian: A couple of years ago this was a really good chat program, that could connect to all major IM networks. Now, it does the same thing, but it’s not as cool anymore. It does ICQ ok and IRC ok, but misses all the features of MSN. Promises more than it can keep, though it’s better than having ICQ itself.
  • MSN Messenger: I originally hated this program, for no certain reason, but now I use it a lot. It has really cool and easy features like video chat, sketching, nice emoticons, etc. Small drawbacks in user interface and built-in ads, though.
  • Skype: Man, I wished I made this program! It’s nothing new – audiochat has been here for ages – but Skype connects it all and makes it simple. But in my own experience, the quality is still not good. Let’s wait and see.
  • Teamspeak: This is another audio chat program, used for online gaming. I used it when playing Eve Online. It’s easy and a must in certain types of online gaming.

Desktop

Scientific

  • Matlab: I both hate and love this program. It can do so much and so fast, but I always seem to get stuck for hours trying to figure out stupidly easy things like how to address in a matrix or write a function. If you do math when programming, Matlab is your friend.
  • Mathematica: This program is creepy. Strange user interface but it can solve any equation or simplify any nasty piece of formula.

System Tools

Programming

Internet

Text & Publish

  • Microsoft Office 2003
  • Adobe Indesign CS2
  • Adobe Acrobat Reader

Games