Saturday, December 14, 2013

JavaScript - Join Method

join - Concatenates an Array together

Purpose: The Join method concatenates the elements of an Array, and returns a string.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

JavaScript

I have begun learning web development. I would like to learn how to spruce up my own webpage at brookspatton.net as well as possibly switch from the Systems Administration career that I am currently in to Web Developer. I purchased a basic introductory course at Udemy called How to Become a Web Developer from Scratch. While the class itself costs $199, I was able to get a coupon for 75% off which made it much more affordable.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Internal vs External Stresses

There are two types of stress. Okay that this a gross oversimplification, but I believe that it is possible to split stress into external stress and internal stress. I define internal stress as stress that we get through mental causes. For example thinking about all that you need to do in a limited amount of time can cause a lot of stress. Add on self-imposed time constraints and your stress level can skyrocket quickly. I consider this a bad stress, as it doesn’t do anything for us.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

My Ultimate Game

While reading reddit.com the other week I came across an interesting question posed on reddit.com/r/gaming. What game would I want to play for all eternity if I only could play one game, assuming that said game would be updated forever (http://www.reddit.com/r/gaming/comments/s3kti/if_you_had_to_choose_only_one_videogame_to_play/).

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Taking forfeits

I've written before about playing competitively, and why I believe that it's important. Playing competitively can bring out the best in us, as well as the worst. It can also show us who we truly are, and what we are capable of. These are very good characteristics to practice regularly in my opinion.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Losing on purpose

Games are competitive in nature. This nature is one of the key reasons why I argue that games can be used for self improvement. But it is important to note that winning the game is not the end-all be-all for this improvement. In my mind, winning is just a way of tracking improvement. However, losing often times forces me to improve. In other words, winning doesn’t help me improve, it only shows that I have improved enough to win against that specific opponent.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

The importance of focus

I have mentioned before that I play pool in the APA league. The APA is a friendly, but competitive league that has matches every week. Pool itself is a challenging game that is much tougher than it feels that it should be. When a competitive system is added to pool, then it becomes a difficult game to play at the best of times. Don't let anybody tell you differently, pool is not easy to play competitively.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Quality vs. Speed

Western culture has a very interesting dynamic of quality/speed. In the case of a boss/worker, the boss wants to have the project done as quickly as possible, but also as well as possible. The paradox is that quality and speed are connected together in the wrong way. The higher quality a job is, the more time it takes. Unfortunately the faster the job takes, the less quality can be expected of the job. In the software industry, a application that has a lot of bugs in it is said to have been rushed to sale.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Analyzing what happened

The ability to see what went wrong is one of the central skills to have in life. It is what allows us to analyze, and to improve so that we won't make the same mistakes over and over again. The problem is that while we are in the middle of doing something (playing Starcraft 2 for example) we don't have the time to analyze at the same time as we are playing. We have to spend all of our available brainpower on the task at hand. I don't know about you, but after I play a game of Starcraft my memories of what exactly I did wrong are not quite perfect. Often times I'll have forgotten some key element, like 'Oh yeah, I did end up supply-blocking myself right before getting attacked'.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Playing against a different style

I was playing an even match against a player who is well-known for a fast and wild style. When the need for playing a defensive shot comes up, he will play one. But for the most part he will choose the first shot that comes to mind, no matter how crazy. This results in unpredictable outcomes that work for him as often as they work against him. For instance, on a few of his shots he chose to hit a bank shot across the table. He made it in, but his cue-ball was hooked so that he couldn't hit the next ball. On those shots I got ball in hand which gave me an advantage against him. That being said he balances his game well by making the simple shots almost every time.

In contrast, I like to play with more finesse and planning. Thinking out all of my options and carefully choosing the one that I feel is the best shot. An example is one of my two-way shots, where I not only plan what will happen to the cue-ball when I make the shot, but I also attempt to plan what will happen if I miss the shot. This way I can tweak difficult shots so that if I miss, then my opponent won't have an easy shot to get back into the game.This makes me a slower player than the average, but I feel that I am made stronger by this methodical approach. I try to keep this approach across all of my life.

When playing against someone who plays a different style though it is difficult to stay true to ones own though. I had to constantly remind myself to stay true to my style and keep my rhythm going at my pace, not at my opponents.

While it was tough, I managed to keep that pace, and ended up winning the match by seven balls!

In the real world we also have our rhythms, and we are also surrounded by people who have different ways and speeds of going about their day. It is easy to temporarily lose our own rhythms and take on someone else's, which will not benefit us. Keeping true to ourselves is important to improving and staying happy.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Playing against a better opponent

One of the benefits of playing sports competitively is that you will play against a wide range of opponents. Normally, systems are put in place to match you up against similarly rated players. For my pool team with the APA, this naturally happens. My team puts me up (I’m a skill level 6), and the opposing team puts up another player. It is similar to a trading card game (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collectible_card_game). We each have our skills which allows a certain prediction in the event of the match. So when the team I was playing against put up a very good nine (the highest level attainable in the APA) I was pretty sure that I knew what the result would be. I also know that my teammates were not very confident of my abilities to take down this extremely good player.

Going into a match that most people expect you to lose can be a terrifying prospect, at least it can be for me. I’ve found that I have been ingrained with that American ideal that it is possible to do anything given then willpower and the patience. While I may tell myself consciously that this is a match that I shouldn’t be able to win, I still feel deep down that I want to win badly, and if I lose I still feel depressed afterwords..

To this end, I suggest that the strategy for playing these matches is different. You cannot just go into the match like any other night and hope for the best. These are the matches where you must go all out with everything that you have. In other words, treat these matches as if they were part of a big tournament that you are playing.

For the match that I played, I focused on keeping calm and in control. By focusing on these things I kept my mind from worrying about the break and run that my opponent had. Or the shots that he was able to make. Instead I was able to focus on my own game in a way that truly released my capabilities. My muscles were relaxed, my strategy was at top form, and my shots were doing what I visualized them doing.

This is when things can get dicey. I’m a believer in always knowing where I stand in any match, tournament, or life. And because of this I realized halfway through the match that I was on course to win the match. And not just by a few balls either. My teammate who was scoring gave me a little pep-talk every time I came over to check the score. I was able to use this confidence booster, plus my own knowledge of what happens when a player who is ahead in a match and thinks that they have the game in the bag, and how oftentimes the unexpected happens and that player who was ahead, loses the game.

This time I didn’t let the unexpected happen. I doubled down my concentration and focus. I slowed down physically and continued analyzed my game to the best of my ability. and because I took this extra effort, and made sure to keep track of any mistakes that I was making and correct them immediately, I was able to prevent any problems from creeping up. The end result was that the game kept on playing in the same way that it had been, and I won!

Looking back I realize that the lesson is to never count yourself out, no matter how the odds are stacked against you. And if you do find yourself winning the match, never relax, there is no such thing as “in the bag.” Simply continue playing the way that you have been so far. It got you this far, it will get you across the finish line.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Game vs Sport

There is a tendency to call anything that involves hard work a sport, and everything else becomes a game. Hence I was participating in the sport of surfing, while normally I play the game of pool. I don't agree with this mindset though. I believe that a game is something that you do for fun. Sure we learn a lot from games too, but the primary reason that we turn towards games in the first place is that they are fun. Even difficult activities like paddling can be fun in the right context. So does that make it a sport or a game? For paddling, or surfing in general I would say that it wasn't either of those options, but rather something else entirely.

That got me to thinking about why I feel safe in saying that I play the sport of pool. It is the competitiveness of it. When there is something on the line, and it is being played competitively, then it is a sport. Otherwise it is something else.

Taking an activity to the competitive level requires a certain dedication that is not usually seen by the casual player. The required focus, practice and dedication is monumental even for amateur of the sport. Bringing it up to the professional level is something completely different. That requires a passion that I'm not going to write about today.

But the next time you load up that game consider what kind of benefits you could gain by turning that game into a sport for yourself. The true benefits from a game are only gained when it is taken seriously.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

My History with Gaming

I was introduced to the world of gaming at a very young age by my parents. They loved (they still do but I'm trying to keep the tenses pointing in the same direction) to play a wide variety of games. They were not socialites however, and didn't have very many friends who shared the same passion. Therefore they did what any normal gamers would, they created two gamers to play with them!

All joking aside, that is one of the reasons that my parents brought me and my sister into the world. The number of kids were carefully thought out as well (two); most board or card games are best played with four people. This should give you an idea of what it was like to grow up with my family.

Early on board games were the only games available (besides the card games, but we didn't play many of those because my family is horrible at betting. I mean, with fake money I bet more than 10, and everybody else is moaning and groaning about how I'm ruining the game, and then they all fold. But I digress...) to us, so we played them a lot. Monopoly, the Farming Game, Risk, Backgammon, Mahjongg. The list goes on and on. We may have thrown more games away than most families ever play in their lives.

Not only did we play these games, but we respected them. Most of them had lots of small pieces, delicate boards, and often were works of art themselves. My parents taught us kids to treat the games and all of their parts with care, to never lose any pieces. When friends would come over to play they games, they would be amazed at the idea that young children would be so careful with the 'adult' games.

It was this reverence towards games that shaped my future, in a way. When my family purchased a computer, we all experimented with video games. And for my sister and my Dad, they were something to play with for a few years, and then go back to the old ways. But for my Mom and myself, the computer stuck. It even worked its way into my real life. I became a systems administrator, somebody who fixes the computers that I learned how to use by playing so many games on them.

I don't have a 'type' of game that I play. I enjoy them all. But there are certain genre's that I tend to gravitate towards. And I always have a main go-to game that I play if I'm not sure of what to do.

Happy gaming