During the last year I wrote four short read collections called the Three Twisted Tales . Today they are available in aggregate as The Clock Strikes Twelve. A 265 page paperback on Amazon. If you enjoyed The Rorschach Test you should enjoy this collection. The stories are slightly longer in length. Big thanks to Daniel Anderson who once again created a beautiful cover.
How do internet systems, the world wide web, online social networks, databases and client server technologies serve relationships and the arts? What are the consequences of putting so much data about ourselves onto the web, and how can we manage the impression and information that is given out?
Tuesday, October 5, 2021
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
Hopefully you have seen the press release from the EDB about
Infoblox renewing its lease in Tacoma for another six years. Growing from sixty
employees to over two hundred and twenty and counting is an amazing story. I
would like to take a moment to tell another one.
The company has many compelling reasons to extend their stay
and grow the company here. As Co-chair of the EDB committee on the five year strategic
plan for the recruitment and retention of the technology industry in the South
Puget Sound, I have been part of an initiative to identify and promote reasons
for dong so. One of top reasons for any company is the availability of a
qualified workforce and in particular those that are coming out of our
engineering programs.
When I came on board at the UWT over twenty years ago, I was
a member of industry (CEO of Free Range Media), teaching as an adjunct for a
group of students going through a computer science program. At the time, the
program was called Computing Software and Systems. I was also on Governor Locke’s
Council on the Internet, and it was not that long after that I came on board as
a staff member at the Institute of Technology. It was legislated into existence
and situated on the University of Washington Tacoma campus. Governor Locke
actually did the announcement during my class with the full contingent of UW
and State representatives on hand.
Thinking about where we began, with a cohort of around sixty
Computer Science students, and where we are now, I am amazed and impressed. We
are now the School of Engineering and Technology at the UWT. (There were many
good reasons for the name change and I am happy to talk about it if you would
like.)
We continue to grow and add programs, serving more students
each year and hiring world class faculty.
So do this with me.
Have you ever gone through a tunnel as a kid (or with your
kids) and had a contest to see if you could hold your breath all the way
through until the exit of the tunnel?
Okay, take a deep breath. At the School of Engineering and
Technology we now provide a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Systems,
a Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering and Systems, a Bachelor of Science
in Information Technology, a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering, and
Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering and a Bachelor of Science in
Civil Engineering! Whew! Still in the tunnel, keep holding. A Master of Science
in Computer Science, a Master of Science
in Computer Engineering, a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering and a
Masters in Cybersecurity and Leadership. You can do it! I see the light at the
end of the tunnel up ahead! We offer Graduate Certificates in Software
Engineering, a Big Data Science Certificate and a minor in Applied Computing.
Oh yes, we also now have a Ph.D. in Computer Science.
You can breathe now.
Well over a thousand students are in our programs or are
prepping to enter them.
As you can imagine, I speak with members of the technology
industry and economic developers multiple times a week. I would be happy to speak with you as well,
or exchange a few emails if you would like to know more about our students, our
faculty, our research or the companies that have spawned from the campus.
https://www.tacoma.uw.edu/set/programs
Friday, April 24, 2020
Being Productive as an Artist
Friday, January 31, 2020
The Rorschach Test and Other Stories
The event ended with my crushing the low bar of 30,000 words that I set (the official site wouldn't let me adjust anyway) and I finished with 53,000 words written.
This equated to 18 first drafts of short suspense, horror and/or supernatural stories. Since then I have dropped one but written two more for a total of 19 titles.
My next effort is concentrating on piecing them together into a full collection under the title:
The Rorschach Test - and other tales of suspense, horror and the supernatural
Thursday, November 7, 2019
Looking forward to giving my first go at NaNoWriMo or National Novel Writing Month. Taking inspiration from my daughter Savannah who has successfully complete the event four times already, I am geared up and ready to go.
My launching point is the 30 short story ideas I generated in August of this year, with outlines for ten different stories.
The standard goal is 50,000 words, but I am setting mine at 30,000.
I have only found an hour to write per day so far, but have managed to do so for five days to date with a near 5,000 words completed. I will have to step up the word count to make my goal but I think I can do it. I should have at least six first draft horror/supernatural short stories by Novembers end.
Then I can use the holidays to polish them up.
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Savannah's Nine Years of Blogging
So it is with great fatherly pride that I share Savannah Fry's ninth anniversary post. She has struggled, (slightly) to maintain posting but relates nicely in her post the reasons for this struggle as well as how she is refocusing.
Here is her Playing in the Pages post.
Thursday, January 4, 2018
The South Sound Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
This year is different. Stay tuned.
I am going to be posting at least once per month on the topic of the South Puget Sound Entrepreneurial Ecosystem.
From early education to accelerators, incubators and investment, I am going to assess where we are today and what we need to do to continue the momentum being established.
This post will be replaced by one with more detail, but first I need to teach my class.
Andrew
Friday, January 6, 2017
Guest Post from Author Erik Hanberg
The Scorpion Extraction
January 5, 2017 by Erik Hanberg,
In the spring of 2015, a group of friends and I went to Portland, Oregon to “escape the room.” (An escape room, if you don’t know) is basically a chance to get locked in a small room with a group of friends or coworkers and have to figure your way by solving puzzles, figuring out clues, and then communicating with others in the room. It was an absolute blast. I came away thinking that I wanted to create an escape room in Tacoma.
The idea of an immersive experience with a ticking clock and lots of puzzles really appealed to me. There are many escape rooms all over the country, and I knew it was a matter of time before one came to Tacoma. I wanted to be involved! I started talking about it with friends, but soon realized that two kids, a business, several unfinished novels, and a seat on the Metro Parks Board might be too much to also add managing an escape room. Fortunately, my good friend Andrew Fry was eager to start one.
He created Adventures by Appointment and wrote a script for the business’s first escape room.
He called it The Last Escape. Using his connections in the theater world, he brought together a team to build a sumptuous set and an engaging mystery. I loved participating in The Last Escape in my own small way, but it made me even more excited to create a room with Adventures by Appointment.
So when Andrew approached me about a new room, I jumped at the chance.
I’m happy to say that The Scorpion Extraction, the next room of Adventures by Appointment, is open and ready to go.
I wrote the “script” for it, which is a funny thing for an immersive theatrical experience. Basically it means I laid out the premise: here’s the general storyline, here are the twists, and here is the puzzle path that a group will have to follow to get out of the room. But that’s only a thumbnail of what’s needed to make a room work.The production team at ABA are the ones who realized the vision.
My puzzle path was fun, but it was sometimes impractical (at one point the script would have required a loaf of bread be used for every run of the room, which is probably the very definition of impractical). Jen and Blake straightened things out and brought their experience from The Last Escape to bear on the creation of this room, which allowed us to jump over hurdles and figure out what would be workable and fun. And the actors who inhabit the roles needed in the story will make each show slightly different, depending on the mix of actors and the questions they get from the group trying to escape. So there’s a real improv nature of this kind of experience that I only provided the loosest of sketches for. I got to participate in some of the tech rehearsals in preparation for opening, and it was a joy to see things in real life.
I’ve written a few plays over the years, but this was a particularly fun experience because so much of the joy of it comes from things outside the “script.” So. The Scorpion Extraction is now open.
Here’s the story:
You are part of an FBI recovery team getting ready to extract an informant who has been feeding information to the FBI on the dangerous and powerful mob boss known only by the code name Red Scorpion. However, when you and your team arrive, it becomes difficult determining just exactly who is who. Be careful not to side with the wrong person, as it could be a fatal error. Can you rescue the informant before the Red Scorpion’s henchman reach you?
I think it’s a blast. If you would like to book a group for either The Last Escape or The Scorpion Extraction, you can do it on the Adventures by Appointment website.
Good luck with your escape!
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Announcing the Next Escape Room (and a surprise)
As we move into September we have had to make a decision on the small business Adventures by Appointment LLC. It has been fun and the response has been as much as I could have asked for. The month of August was busy and the month of September has filled nicely. This makes continuing the room on into the holidays and beyond an easy decision. After hiring the Jen York as the Managing Director it is time to get serious.However, without the Spaceworks advantage on rent it becomes a little trickier, plus we need to satisfy all of patrons who pleaded for another room after finishing the first.
So what to do next?
Announcing the second adventure offering from Adventures by Appointment. This next room will be in keeping with the theatrical requirements of the escapes, with two actors in the room as part of the action.
Even more exciting is that Mystery and Sci Fi Author Erik Hanberg will be penning the script and puzzle path. Erik was instrumental in pushing the first room forward and a great sounding board for what was being created. So now it is his turn.
You are part of a FBI recovery team getting ready to extract your informant who has been feeding information on the dangerous and powerful mob boss who has been terrorizing the city. However, when you and your team arrive, it becomes a challenge determining just exactly who is who.
Be careful not to side with the wrong person, as it could be a fatal error.
Complicating matters is that you are under pressure to beat the clock, as henchmen are on there way and the consequences of there arrival are to be feared.
Can you figure out who the informant is and escape, or will you fall victim to "The Dark Count".
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
All Kinds of Escapes at Court House Square
Then came the call for gift certificates so I had to figure out a way to provide the adventure ticket without a pre-determined time. I posted about how Adventures by Appointment meant that you can secure your own appointment for time and day. As soon as that became clear more phone calls came in asking for specific days and times. With enough notice and an actor and tech willing to do so, we could do a 2:00am show on a Weds. In what is supposedly one of the most haunted buildings in Tacoma! Friday, June 24, 2016
Set Up Your Adventure (by Appointment) for The Last Escape
And the room is now open! The first production of Adventures by Appointment LLC has gone through its trial runs, previews, beta tests or whatever you might like to call them and it has opened for business.
So what is it exactly?
I like the way Erik Hanberg put it.
"Tacoma's first puzzle/escape room is a new kind of theatrical experience in the South Sound. The puzzle room challenges participants to race the clock and break themselves out of a room by solving a series of elaborate puzzles that lead a group through a narrative involving eccentric billionaires, a spiritualist medium, and the most famous magician in the world."
And judging by the feedback we have been getting since it opened, we have succeeded in creating a very fun and exciting experience.
"One of the best experiences. I took my 13 year old son and he loved it as well. If you want to experience something completely different set an appointment now."
"Super fun experience! Easily the best Escape room I've done."
"I had so much fun, by the end my heart was racing as we tried to bet the clock.The puzzles were well thought thru definitely providing a challenge while remaining fun. "
Of course the reason it is an cool as it turned out to be has more to do with the sets, props and special effects. Blake York did an incredible job on creating the space that could function as a mediums parlor for tarot card reading and also keep unobtrusive the set lights, grid, false walls and other surprises. Jen York not only helped keep it on track as the director but found amazing talent to run tech and act as the medium, gamemaster, hintgiver and all around entertaining addition to the experience.
The show has three consistent running times and days. Friday and Saturday at 7:00pm and Sunday at 5:00pm. But we only need a commitment of 5 to 6 people who want to go through the room in order to coordinate a time and day of your choice.We just ran one at 3:00pm on Sunday because the group could not make any other time. One of our mediums was on vacation and the other worked, so I had to run out and get a new fake mustache, borrow a turban from our Tacoma Little Theatre friends and step up to the cards.
Honestly the mediums we have Madam Dana and Lady Jade are practically one woman shows in their own right. I may have to dedicate the next post to them.
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Another Step Closer to the Last Escape
It is one thing to get excited about an idea and quite the other to go about implementing all the necessary details to make it a reality.
Behold the LLC! Adventures by Appointment LLC is the
company that will be putting on the production of The Last Escape. That meant registering the company with the state, registering the domain name (www.adventuresbyappointment.com) , filing for a state business license, filing for a city business license and opening a business bank account which also requires things like a EIN number and an operations plan.
That of course leaves the requirement of finding the right location. How about right in the middle of downtown Tacoma? Yes, we have an address. 410 A Street, Suite 410, Tacoma WA. Many thanks are due to Spaceworks Tacoma for their help in finding the property and arranging for the first six months at a low rate.
Saturday, February 13, 2016
Finding a Room to Escape From
Location is always a consideration as well. Most businesses rely on foot traffic and those that have street front also benefit from the ongoing signage exposure to the public. But when you are serving six to ten people at a time and the adventure is by appointment then you have more flexibility as to your location. You also have more control over the tone you want to set.
The one requirement I made for myself was that this enterprise was to be in downtown Tacoma. Close to hotels and restaurants and people, but just off the street enough to be a bit mysterious.
I am no expert. Commercial space is not my forte. I needed help from someone or something. I am extremely excited to announce that I am a participant in the Spaceworks program.
We have identified a location that I think is perfect. I'll need to wait for approval but if it works out, I am going to give details about it here.
Saturday, January 30, 2016
The Last Escape
Building a puzzle/escape room is one thing, and the story
that unfolds while escaping is another.
You may love a venue, (consider the interior of the Pantages or the 5th
Ave Theater), but it is really the show that stays with you.
I mentioned Blake York, who is technical director of
TLT. He also played Ralph, the grown up
Ralphie and narrator for the recent production of A Christmas Story, in which I
played “The Old Man”. Along with doing a
great job with a ridiculous line load, he also designed and built a magnificent
set for the show and was responsible for sound cues. The set was truly a thing of beauty. He had also built the set for Fox on the
Fairway and at one after show cast party said he wanted to work with me on
something.Tuesday, January 26, 2016
RIP Marvin Minsky Artificial Intelligence Pioneer
I met him once in my life and heard him speak twice. At one point as a youngster in the late 80's I was deeply fascinated with his work on artificial intelligence. He was a character. When AI fell into a bit of a slump, (and in order to be taken seriously you had to call the next steps Expert Systems), I am sure he was as prickly as could be. But at the same time I would have loved to hear his views on Deep Blue and Watson. I suppose I will have to look those up.
Here is a snippet from an article today in Scientific America:
""Why are you asking me this question?" Minsky growled. The concern that scientists will run out of things to do is "pitiful," he said. "There's plenty to do." We humans may well be approaching our limits as scientists, but we will soon create machines much smarter than us that can continue doing science.
But that would be machine science, not human science, I said.
"You're a racist, in other words," Minsky said, his great domed forehead purpling. I scanned his face for signs of irony, but found none. "I think the important thing for us is to grow," Minsky continued, "not to remain in our own present stupid state." We humans, he added, are just "dressed up chimpanzees." Our task is not to preserve present conditions but to evolve, and create beings smarter than us."
RIP
Saturday, January 23, 2016
Juggling the Business and the Art
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| Some of the research being conducted for "The Last Escape" |
So I am working on that. Finding a venue, creating a proforma, developing marketing materials, organizing and recruiting a team, procuring funding and performing recursive reality checks are all the plates spinning right now in my off time from my day job. I am really enjoying myself.
Additionally, there is the creative element. The whole point of this was to produce something fun with theatrical elements. The balance here is going to be the practical flow of the puzzles that will be challenging, exciting and fun to do as a team, the story that needs to be told over the course of an hour that will have several endings based on how far the teams progress toward the escape, the characters who will inhabit the room from the gamemaster to the limited role playing that can be infused into the customers and how much historical accuracy can be integrated into what is a fictional situation.
I am working on that. This requires a bit of research and experimentation.
The good news is that I have the complete skeletal structure of the puzzle elements as they lead to locked boxes, strange riddles, brain teasers, hidden rooms and required tasks. When I write stories I often have it worked out completely in my head. Once I put it on paper I realize where I have holes to fill and characters to develop. It is never complete until the third or fourth rewrite (for me).
In this case I have the story down. However instead of rewriting it I need to run it. I need to know the realistic time it might take ten people working together to finish each challenge. It can't be too hard or to easy.
There are also several pieces that will need to be fabricated or procured. Then there is a set to build.
My next post will talk about the people who are helping me get this done.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Bringing an Escape Room to the South Puget Sound
Real life room escape games have been cropping
up around the United States with greater frequency over the last two
years. These stylized escape games which pit creative problem
solving against a ticking clock started in Hungary and took off in Japan where
they are extremely popular. In our own area there are currently no
less than five puzzle room companies in Seattle and at least one that I know of
in Redmond, with many in Portland as well."Know him, Hear him, See him, Free him" - Assisting Houdini in His Last Escape
Monday, November 2, 2015
The Virtual Scavenger Hunt 2015 Addition
About 12 years ago I was thinking of how to create an assignment that was both an examination of search tools and hopefully a lot of fun. I also wanted to open their eyes to how much personal information was available on the web. So for my class Living and Working in a Virtual World I put together a virtual scavenger hunt. Back in 2007 I wrote about it here on this blog.
I have been conducting the hunt once or twice every year since, depending on when I am scheduled to teach the course. Each year, as search technologies and specialized sites such as RedFin, LinkedIn, Twitter, Expedia, Amazon and Facebook further dominate our lives, the items on the list have gotten easier to find and retrieve.
It may be a bit generational, but most people don't seem to care how much personal information they give out online. I myself gave up on the concept of privacy a long time ago. Erik Hanberg recently quoted me, probably quoting someone else, probably quoting Erik with this little gem. "The privacy you have today is the most privacy you will ever have".
Where once the hunt would take an entire class period, with only one third of the items found by much the participating teams, it now takes only about one hour for several of the teams to find them all.
UPDATE: This year one team found all 19 items in less than one half hour.
And I have tried to make them more difficult. Some are items from the first hunt, which by virtue of being dated have become more difficult to find. But there is one in particular that I want to mention.Item number 19 on this years hunt reads. "What is the married name of my middle sister?"
Think about that. These students only know me as their professor, with only my name and affiliation with the university as a starting point. They need to be able to find out about my family, the order in which they were born and who they married. All in about 5 minutes, as it is the last item on the list.
Remember when "What is your mothers maiden name?" was a common password check? "The name of the best man at your wedding?". "The name of your first pet?" These are all common prompts today for password retrieval. Any of them are easy to find online.
This year of the nine teams participating, I expect several will get the correct answer.
You may not be shocked, you may be concerned, but for the most part, in the present day you should at least be aware.
(much of the text for this post is from an earlier hunt)
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Another Year of Growth for the Institute of Technology at the University of Washington Tacoma
I think back to when the Institute of Technology was just an idea with the starting point of 30 to 60 students enrolled in a computer science major that had the terrible name of Computer Software and Systems.
Let's give the credit where it is due. The Washington Technology Industry Association, Ed Lazowska and true leaders of Tacoma like Herb Simon and others pushed for more high demand degree programs and the UWT was the place to make it happen.
I was happy to have served on the education committee for the WTIA (at that time the WSA) when the workforce report came out.
The founding director of the Institute, Dr. Larry Crum, had a vision for a polytechnic with a large student body and I was lucky that he envisioned a position that would recruit someone out of industry with a strong tech business background. It was a very different type of position that required a title change and that would allow me to not only teach but to stay involved with young companies as well.
Governor Gary Locke signed the legislation that funded the Institute and I was pleased he announced the initiative and made the official declaration in my Managing Technical Teams class. At that time a single engine train used to come through the middle of campus twice a week. It felt like a single A baseball team that needs to take an outfield wall down to let the local train cross through the field.
The second director, Dr. Orlando Baiocchi, and Associate Director Dr. Larry Wear founded the Computer Engineering program, the second high tech high demand degree program that cemented the idea that the Institute wasn't just about computer science.
Dr. Sam Chung and Dr. Ankur Teredesai founded the IT program. Sam and Barbara Endicott Popovsky created the Cybersecurity Center and Ankur presides over the Center for Data Science.
The third Director Rob Friedman championed our growth at 20 to 25 percent over the last several years. The current director Dr. Raj Katti will no doubt see an EE program take shape by 2016 or so.
I feel like Woody Allen's great character Zelig, always appearing somewhere in the background.
Friday, June 5, 2015
SiteCrafting Expands into New Quarters in the (slightly tongue in check) Emerging Dome Tech District
First, the exterior is polished and professional. No messing around when it comes to knowing you have arrived at the offices. The companies logo, familiar from so many views on the web, looks great as the mantle about the door to the building.
Even more impressive is the open concept interior. The view from the loft, office at the top of the stairs gives an idea of how things are laid out.
TOP TIER FACILITYS-Vidia is moving in to office not far from theirs and another cybersecurity company is housed next door. With four companies with technology grounding as part of their product services I am now going to casually throw around the phrase "T-Dome tech-district" whenever I talk about SiteCraftings new location.
GearLab is equipped with the latest technology for testing across all platforms and screen sizes, including an eye tracking system that records the movements of a subject's saccades. The Lab is separated into two spaces - the lab itself and an observation room, creating flexibility to fit the testing that makes sense for your project.
Second Book of Short Stories Out on Amazon
During the last year I wrote four short read collections called the Three Twisted Tales . Today they are available in aggregate as The Clock...
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That time of the year again. I will be going to the Puyallup Fair with the family and riding rides (and getting ill), watching shows, check...
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During the last year I wrote four short read collections called the Three Twisted Tales . Today they are available in aggregate as The Clock...
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Looking forward to giving my first go at NaNoWriMo or National Novel Writing Month. Taking inspiration from my daughter Savannah who has ...












