Archive for August, 2007

Assembly Attendance, 2nd Day

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

So far Assembly hasn’t actually cajoled me with a great show. The practical side of things has been somewhat lacking, but I’ll expect great compos to compensate. I took this day off to trample around Helsinki, I took one of my notorious and unrational nostalgy trips to the Viikki campus area where I spent my last non-student/master’s degree Summer. I have to admit that the Tourist-tickets Helsinki City Transportation authoritys offer are well worth their salt (6euros for an adult for 24 hours).

I wonder if there are any Kimmo’s Blog readers here as well…

Attending Assembly

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

I’m currently taking part in Assembly ‘07, which means some pictures and general reportage will be posted in the next four days.

It Will Be a Shoot’em Up

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

I think it’s customary for apprentices to produce something according or set to a traditional mould before you’re allowed to come up with more original stuff. For this reason as well as because I’m stripped for original ideas, my apprenticeship project is to design a traditinional vertical scrolling shoot’em up. With a number of twists of course.

Skeleton of a design document

Dying Birds

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Note: This post isn’t particularly uplifting.

I like birds. It’s not nice to see them die, even though I recognize it as “business as usual” -type of action. Two weeks ago on a Sunday I headed to city for a cup of coffee and while parking my bike I noticed a what looked like a chick, sitting on a windowledge of a cellar window. It looked a bit dazed as chicks do and as if fallen of a nest, so I let it be and even blamed myself for not taking my camera with me. I noticed an opportunity to get my picture appear in Cuteoverload.

I proceeded to take care of my caffein needs and by chance I could see the same windowledge from my table. I could even see the small bird. I tried to spot its parents but I didn’t. When I leaving an hour or so later, I noticed the bird had died.

The next Monday I was heading to Turku early in the morning and was cycling on the campus when I heard a thud above me. I breathly pondered what an earth could make a sound like that. The question was duly answered quickly when a bird fell on the ground about two metres from me. In a way reminiscent of a number of Python sketches. I proceeded to park my bike and thought that I’d check on the bird after that. It was apparently alive.

When I came back, not many seconds later, the bird was dead and a small puddle of blood was forming under its head. How uplifting. I came to think whether it was the initial collision to a certain off-the-ground -campus facility or the following collision with the ground that killed it. Had it fallen on my lap, would it have survived?

I quickly recognized the futility of this line of questions so proceeded to think other things.