Monthly Archives: March 2022

God’s Debris Book Review

God’s Debris is not a long book, but you might be thinking about it for a long time after you read it.

It is a thought experiment, told in a fictional conversation between a delivery driver and an old man. It seems as though the author, Scott Adams, has put a good deal of thought into the questions and answers that make up the conversation.

There are a number of topics under discussion:

  1. Probability
  2. Free Will and the Soul
  3. Light and Lightspeed
  4. Gravity and Magnetism
  5. God
  6. Awareness

As well as a few others, but these were some of the ones that came readily to mind.

You don’t have to agree with any of the points that are made to find value in the perspective. Personally, I disagree with some of the assumptions and starting points that lead to the conclusions presented.

Overall rating 10/10 because it will challenge your beliefs and make you think about things that we take for granted about the universe we live in. Maybe you don’t know as much as you think you know?

Check out the full reading list for the first part of the year here.

Keep getting wiser, stronger, and better.

A Guy Named Kenney and Free Game Art

I am not great artist. I am much better at writing code than drawing, sculpting, sketching, painting, modeling, you name it.

So, whenever I find something that helps me out with game art, either because it is free assets that help me get started or tools that help me generate art that looks half decent, I try to share it.

Fortunately there is an absolute LEGEND named Kenney who has created literally thousands of assets for people to use for FREE, no strings attached as his website says.

He provides assets for all kinds of games. Platformers, top down shooters, RTS, dungeon crawlers, city builders, racing games, pirate games, you name it. I especially like the 2D Generic Items.

You can find them on his website.

He also has a couple of art creation tools for sale (at extremely reasonable prices) to help you create your own custom 2D or 3D assets.

If you are struggling with game art or just want some placeholders as you get started on a project, try it out.

Keep getting wiser, stronger, and better.

Snow Crash Book Review

I have finished the first of the books I put on my 2022 reading list. I decided to start with the fiction story Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson.

This review is going to be short in order to try to keep spoilers out.

I cannot recommend this book enough!

This is great sci fi. Its not fantasy. The world presented seems like the technology could exist, a future like this could exist.

The Setting

The story is an wild adventure thru a crazy future west coast United States where almost everything has been broken up into “franchises”. Almost like if every fast food restaurant parking you turned into or suburban community was like visiting another country.

Technology is fairly advanced. Computers draw a virtual reality right onto the retinas. Skateboards have smart wheels that can change their shape to terrain and give a smooth ride.

There is a metaverse, maybe one of the origins of the word. A big digital planet with digital real estate. People interact, work, and communicate there.

The Heroes

The hero of the story, named Hiro Protagonist of all things, is a old school programmer who is also in a reading friend of mine’s words a “samurai pizza delivery driver.” He helped in the original creation of the metaverse.

Working alongside him is a young skateboarding delivery courier who goes by Y.T.

Both of their lives are at risk at various times throughout the story as they unravel the mystery of Snow Crash.

The Plot

The plot seems to be centered on the question, “What if your brain could be infected like the software in a computer?”

The story centers around a mystery virus called Snow Crash which is an old term for a computer crash that left your screen full of static or snow. The virus is actually a thinking virus. One that affects the brain at a fundamental level. Specifically the brains of people who understand how to program computers.

Who is making this virus and why?

Our heroes must dig up information, make daring escapes, and face the notorious big bad guy Raven.

My Thoughts

I really enjoyed the story. It has a touch of the absurd that hits my sense of humor just right. Their is a good split between computers and programming and real world mayhem. The way mythological, historical and religious ideas are blended together is done in a way that makes them seem plausible.

The idea of someone being able to program your mind if they had the right words or images is something worth thinking about. Partially because there are people trying to figure out how to do that every day. Marketers trying to get you to buy their products. Governments and politicians trying to get you to support their policies. Friends and family who want something from you or think they are trying to convince you to do what is best for yourself.

What kind of guards or anti-virus do you have for your mind to keep out the garbage that is trying to infect it?

Keep getting wiser, stronger, and better.