Broken wings and a shattered halo.
Cracked horns and eternal damnation.
Their lost souls converged into one.
A forbid love that led to alienation.
One casted out from the pearly gates;
The other banned forever from Hell.
Forced to live amongst mere mortals.
In light of immortal love they dwell.
In a past life, were husband and wife.
Their yearning transcended even death.
Both hearts were tormented by the pain.
Until names spoken with unabated breath.
They committed heresy and even treason.
To hold each other underneath the stars.
Eternity being separated was cruel enough.
Being together again was worth every scar.
From their thrones, their masters watched.
Perplexed at the trials they have endured
One casted aside their halo, the other horns.
The sacrifice for a love that remained pure.
My imagination is my pen
My decisions are chapters
In the great novel called life
However, life is truly not a book
It is a long and enduring journey
That begins from the moment of birth
And ends when we refuse to carry on
What happens on this mysterious journey
Is totally up to you, so choose wisely
For life doesn't make you who you are
You make life what you want it to be
Friday, June 23, 2017
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
"Computer Fight!"
I’ve
been meaning to write this post for a long time. As most now, I’m a
computer geek first, and this idea has been on my mind for months.
Now, with a new launch of processors from Intel this month, I figured
I will write my thoughts about the state of new computer hardware.
As some might have read over the years, every six to twelve months,
new hardware is launched, which in theory is supposed to be exciting.
Honestly, for the past few years, the launches of supposed updated
hardware have been appealing as a keg of O’Douls at a college
party. However, since March of this year, new releases are worth
looking at due to one word: competition.
In
the hardware industry, competition between the major companies is
always a good thing. I mostly focusing on processors today: Intel and
AMD. Intel is, in sode terms, Coca Cola. A brand everyone has heard
of because of countless ads over the years, and the fact shelves were
always full of Intel based computers. AMD, on the other hand, is
like RC. Even though AMD has been around, you mostly hear about them
through word of mouth, or from the person you went to for computer
advice. AMD could never truly compete outright, but they did one
thing very well: beat Intel in performance while costing less. It
always been about the best bang for your buck with AMD.
However,
AMD was more like Pepsi for a few years: Intel and AMD keep fighting
to be the top company. For a few years, AMD was actually beating
Intel in performance. There was a time during the early 2000’s
where AMD was suggested way before Intel during the Pentium 4 era.
This was great because the industry was exciting. Every new release
from AMD or Intel was worth reading because it made you wonder who
was taking back the performance crown.
Sadly,
around 2007, AMD began to lose the rivalry. By 2011 or so, AMD was
back to fighting to stay in the market. It came to a point AMD was
only suggested when Intel was too costly for one’s budget. They
weren’t bad overall, but dollar per dollar comparisons, Intel was
the way to go. A $80 Intel CPU was outperforming a $200 AMD chip in
the one area that truly drives the market: gaming. So, AMD retired
itself to being the go to for basic, everyday web browsing systems.
This
lead to Intel being the equivalent of GMC launching a new Corvette
every year with five extra horsepower. They honestly quit innovating
for the past five years, and got lazy.A new product with such a small
performance increase being released because there wasn’t no other
viable option. There’s actual test of a six year-old Intel chip
being tested against their newest offerings. The difference in
performance was only ten percent. In fact, most reviews of Intel’s
new release became copy and paste. The overall thought was this:
“Unless building and/or buying a new system, not worth the cost.”
However,
the fight is coming back as of March. Before I go into what’s
happening, some very, very layman terms. All new CPU’s will list
cores and threads when you look them up. Here is what they mean:
-
Core – the physical processing part. A quad-core for example means
there’s four physical processors i.e. it’s like a system having
four Pentium 4’s inside it.
-
Thread – The splitting of a CPU’s power virtually. Not all tasks
need the core’s full power, so it will divide itself in light loads
such as what I’m doing now: playing music and running Word.
What
happened this year which has shook up the industry is AMD finally
launched a CPU that blindside Intel: Ryzen. This new launch came
down to this: a $500 AMD CPU with 8 cores / 16 threads is trading
blows even with Intel’s $1000 newest 10 cores / 20 thread
offering. The difference in performance is so close that AMD
systems make hardcore enthusiasts wondering if the extra $500 going
Intel is even worth it to save a few minutes on some tasks. Once you
factor in that a motherboard for Intel is $400 versus $200 for AMD,
it’s a tough sell to even go with Intel these days. In other words,
they’re fighting once again, and this makes me happy because unless
it’s purely a PC gaming system (Which Intel still outperforms AMD
as of right now), I would suggest AMD over Intel once again.
Now,
keep in mind even though Intel launched this month, AMD has a new
line coming out this summer as well. AMD is launching a 16 core / 32
thread monster. With this on the horizon, the old question that used
to be around is coming back: Do I buy now or wait to see what the new
products offers? This means everyone wins because if AMD and Intel
keep going back and forth, when you do buy a newer system, the
performance over your five year old system will be noticeable. In
fact, in the $100 to $200 range, I would go with AMD way before Intel
because AMD offers more cores / threads for the money which is great
if you do a lot of multitasking.
In
conclusion, in any industry, competition is always a great thing.
Without it, there’s no more innovation. The companies will keep
slapping on shiny new labels on the same boring product, and act like
they’ve made huge changes while raising prices. I hope this trend
keeps going because for years because the biggest innovation in the
PC world was leaning towards LED lights on EVERYTHING. Now, with
real hardware being launched that does offering innovation, the
market will shake up, and everyone will reap the benefits. In the
end, I’m rooting for AMD to keep winning this fight.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
"Writing Underwear"
I’ve
been reading a lot lately about fonts and the proper formatting for
novels, so I decided to write this brief blog post. Fonts and
formatting are truly like underwear for us writers. We all have one
that we find comfortable, and will stick to it like our favorite kind
of underwear. If we try something new, it feels odd like switch from
boxers to briefs. Once we go back to our usual, we don’t feel so
restrictive. Fonts and formatting boil down to personal preference,
but in the end, there are some that you shouldn’t parade around in
public. Also, consider this blog the same as shopping for underwear:
find and do what makes you comfortable, but if unsure, nothing wrong
with taking some advise.
First of all, I’m going to get the one font that no one uses at all in the
writing world. Comic Sans in the writing world is like edible
thongs. No one will look at you without laughing if you publish
anything in this font. You can write the greatest novel ever, but
once they see it’s in Comic Sans, it will most likely end up in the
trash. That, or you’ll get a very quick response to change the font
like you wore a pair of edible thongs to a business meeting. My
advice is to never use it at all, not even for a school paper.
With
that out of the way, let’s move on to the “tighty whities” of
the writing world: Times New Roman. This font is the old, reliable
font we all know, and most of us used at first, just like briefs.
Some of us never moved on to more exotic things, enjoying the feeling
of comfort we grew up with. In fact, every writing guide I have ever
read said this is the safest choice for a font. I’m not ashamed to
admit this is the only font I use for writing. Even my book on
Kindle is formatted for Times New Roman. Again, it’s what I’m
comfortable with using.
Now,
there are other safe fonts out there. If I had to choose another
font to use besides Times, Arial would be my second choice. I love
Garamond, but some people, like my editor, find it hard to read. A
few other safe fonts I think are Book Antiqua, Bookman Old Style,
Century, and Verdana. Helvatica was another safe one, but that’s no
longer included in all modern word processing programs. It is still
available online if you really need it. In fact, can be found here.
Then
there’s the new font out there introduced with Office 2007:
Calibri. Calibri, to me, is like speedos. You think it might look
good, but there’s a major flaw with using it for heavy writing.
When using Calibri, capital i’s and lower-care l’s look exactly
alike. This would drove my editor nuts since one of my characters is
named William. I’m not sure the purpose of introducing this font,
but that glaring flaw has made me steer clear of it.
Of
course, there’s those exotic fonts, which like some kinds of
underwear, will either make you or your readers very uncomfortable.
Fonts such as Wingdings, Webdings Papyrus, etc have no place in
writing. They’re the skid marks of the publishing world. I’m not
sure why they are even installed at all, but I guess someone might
have a use for them. I might have 1,000 fonts on my system, but I
stick to about five, and the big two are Garamond and Times.
Far
as switching fonts, my advise is to stick to one overall throughout
the manuscript. I might use Courier to simulate a computer screen,
and I also have a font installed that actually looks like an old
school typewriter. After that, everything is in Times, even my
chapter titles. There’s nothing worse than seeing a chapter where
each character is a different font. It would be like changing
underwear every hour. Again, only use a different font if it makes
sense, and not to be creative.
The
last thing I want to discuss is formatting. I don’t think there’s
any wrong or right way to format in this day and age since everything
is electronic. Anyone can adjust it if need be, but a reader should
be able to tell where one paragraph ends, and another one begins at
least. When in doubt, this is the defacto standard, briefs of
formatting which is the one I use as well:
1)
1” margins all around
2)
Double spaced paragraphs
3)
Easy to read, 12 pt font.
Overall,
like underwear, to each their own. However, even one Google search
will tell you that there are some widely accepted guidelines when it
comes to font and formatting. Does it stifle your ability to write? I
never thought so. Besides, what’s the point of writing a story
when no one can read it clearly enough to make it past the first
page? So, until the industry changes, I will use the tighty whity
font and formatting with pride.
Thursday, June 1, 2017
Meatballs
-Ingredients
1lb of ground beef
1/2lb of Italian sausage
½ cup of bread crumbs
½ of grated Parmesan cheese
1 egg
1/2 tablespoon of the following:
Italian herbs
Garlic Powder
Onion Powder (Can substitute for ½ cup of sweated, minced onions )
1 teaspoon of the following
Basil
Parsley
Salt
Black Pepper
Red Pepper Flakes (Omit if you don’t like spicy)
- Directions
1) Preheat oven to 400 degrees
2) Mix everything together by hand in a large bowl
3) Roll into golf ball size balls - mixture makes about 12
4) Bake in a deep baking pan for 30 minutes. Flip about halfway through
5) Place on a paper towel lined pan, and let rest for 5 minutes before serving.
1lb of ground beef
1/2lb of Italian sausage
½ cup of bread crumbs
½ of grated Parmesan cheese
1 egg
1/2 tablespoon of the following:
Italian herbs
Garlic Powder
Onion Powder (Can substitute for ½ cup of sweated, minced onions )
1 teaspoon of the following
Basil
Parsley
Salt
Black Pepper
Red Pepper Flakes (Omit if you don’t like spicy)
- Directions
1) Preheat oven to 400 degrees
2) Mix everything together by hand in a large bowl
3) Roll into golf ball size balls - mixture makes about 12
4) Bake in a deep baking pan for 30 minutes. Flip about halfway through
5) Place on a paper towel lined pan, and let rest for 5 minutes before serving.
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