Author: Rocky Tripaldi

  • Drink when all else fails.…

    Drink when all else fails. http://t.co/UtalVHeOBd #maine #moxie #gelato

  • Spring wild cats

    Spring wild cats

    I spent some time on the first heated day of the season snapping pics of the wild animals I share a home with. Let’s make it irie, even if just for a few moments. #onelove #noworries #wildcats

  • The joy of a blank canvas 

    The joy of a blank canvas 

    We are making good progress at the new office. A ping pong table has been long sought after. We’ve got one now, and it’s great way to get on your feet after hours of sitting at a computer. Now we have got to do something about the blank wall. I’m excited at the prospect of painting a mural. I may post a few mock ups in the near future. Please be on the look out!

    The joy of a blank canvas 

  • ClickVentures are better than videogames

    ClickVentures are better than videogames

    I don’t care what console you play, you will love the drama, the comedy, the sheer inventiveness of the ClickVenture. It’s like Zork, but with honest-to-goodness spit takes. It’s fucking funny, ok?

    Here’s all of ’em: http://www.clickhole.com/features/clickventure/

    The latest is a spy adventure, and it is both hilarious and infuriating. Let me know if you can “win” it. Please. Comment or email me if you figure that shit out. Other exciting escapades include surviving the first day of high school, and a harrowing sleepover at Brynna’s house.

    ClickVentures are better than videogames

  • Other Desert Cities #tbt

    Other Desert Cities #tbt

    Other Desert Cities is a play by Jon Robin Baitz. Megan and I saw a fine performance of the dramedy at the Old Vic last year. I was a mere 5 feet from #MarthaPlimptonsButt. #tbt! She turned in a fabulous performance as Brook Wyeth.

    I’m throwing it back this Thursday in honor of the upcoming performance at the Mad Horse Theatre Company. They opened Other Desert Cities this evening, and it will be running through May 17. If you love a good show, go see this. Mad Horse does not disappoint. And if you are new to the theatre world, Other Desert Cities is a great intro course on contemporary theatre. Give it a try.

    Do you want to go for free? We bought season passes this year, and we have many extra tickets because we haven’t been able to make a lot of shows. Hit me up and I can hook you up.

    Here are photos from last year. #tbt!

  • Test-Driven Development

    Test-Driven Development

    On my recent trip to San Diego, my co-workers and I participated in something called a Code Retreat. It reminded me of my days in art school, when my professor would instruct me to hold my pencil in odd ways while drawing, which broke my reliance on muscle memory, and forced me to focus more on the process of mark making and see my task in a new light.

    A Code Retreat is kind of like that. You pair up with a buddy, and write some basic software as a team. Every 45 minutes you have to delete all of your code and start over. There are other limitations too, such as you cannot speak to each other for one cycle, or every function you write can be no more than 3 lines, or you can’t use `if` statements or any type of loop. These limitations force you out of stale habits and can profoundly change your perspective on tasks that have become too rote and rigid.

    On our retreat, we were tasked with making Conway’s Game of Life. Try Googling “Conway’s Game of Life” and you’ll see an easter egg of the game in action.

    My biggest take-away from the retreat, which was expertly run by the legendary Michael Douglas Adams, was a newly minted respect for test-driven development. One of the limitations of our game, was that it needed to be written in Node.js, and we had to follow the standard patterns of test-driven development. From Wikipedia:

    Test-driven development (TDD) is a software development process that relies on the repetition of a very short development cycle: first the developer writes an (initially failing) automated test case that defines a desired improvement or new function, then produces the minimum amount of code to pass that test, and finally refactors the new code to acceptable standards.

    In my opinion, the short, quick iterations of TDD make for a cleaner and more logical end product where other developers can easily follow your process. My hopes are to inject these lessons in my day-to-day work.

    Fellow developers: if you ever get the opportunity to do a Code Retreat, jump on that train fast! You’ll be surprised what you learn when you hold that pencil differently.

  • Logo Design for The Northern…

    Logo Design for The Northern New England Review http://t.co/UfNQUynv7w

  • Logo Design for The Northern New England Review

    Logo Design for The Northern New England Review

    It has been an uneventful day after a long string of eventful days. I’m exhausted, and I have nothing to write about. In order to keep this streak going, I needed to look to the past, back to 2008 when I was 1 month away from graduating from college. I was a nervous wreck, afraid that I’d never get a job as a graphic designer and be able to pay off the stupid amount of debt I accrued. Here is a logo design and cover for a literary journal called The Northern New England Review. I remember thinking that I had to take on as much commercial work as possible so that my portfolio would be ready for the “real world”.  There was a story in the journal about a dying horse, and I found this beautiful photo on Deviant Art. The horse in the photo, whose name was Sofa Potion, if I remember correctly wasn’t dead. That’s just how horses scratch their back.

    Enjoy the designs, and think back to the time when you were graduating. ( I’ve you’ve never graduated from something, you didn’t miss much, but you can try to imagine. ) Were you a nervous wreck like I was?

    Logo Design for The Northern New England Review

  • Celebrating new life with a…

    Celebrating new life with a New England potluck http://t.co/gbMLSUMRVt

  • Celebrating new life with a New England potluck

    Celebrating new life with a New England potluck

    Today we celebrated a baby shower for my niece, Taylor Webster, and her partner James Manion using my favorite style of party, the Yankee Pot Luck. First off a humble brag: I made the following in less than a half hour, and it was delicious. We have a tossed salad, a bruschetta, and not one, but two fruit salads. I’m fucking awesome. (maybe not so humble).

    Celebrating new life with a New England potluck

    And then the food kept rolling in. That’s what I love about the pot luck, each new guest brings new stuff.

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    This is the perfect way to welcome new life into this world. “It takes a village” as the saying goes, and it really is magic when everyone works together. It was a great day and I have two wonderful families to thank for it. And Taylor looked absolutely beautiful.

    Celebrating new life with a New England potluck

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