overidon.com Central Database for Overidon Omnimedia

May 5, 2011

Pipelines in order to compensate for Rejection

Filed under: Tips and Tricks — Tyler @ 4:17 pm
Pipeline

Pipeline

I’ve been making some short stories lately. And it is tough getting a rejection letter. But one way that I’ve been compensating for rejection is by writing a great deal of work that I am proud of and then creating a pipeline. A pipeline is a significant body of work that is in manuscript format that is either ready to be sent out to a publisher/agent or is already sent out and in the submission rejection/approval process. Since I’ve been writing short stories, I am able to fine tune the stories in less time that it may take to do the same on a novel. Many publishers do not allow simultaneous submissions for short stories, so the best way to get around this is to WRITE, WRITE, WRITE! Right now I have 4 stories that are in manuscript format that are all in the submission phase. I keep track of them using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. On the spreadsheet I write down the name of the publisher, the date of my submission, the rejection/acceptance date, any important identification information for the submission (This is MEGA important and we’ll talk about this more in a second) as well as the URL for any automated submission tracking.

For periodicals that accept digital submissions, they sometimes send you a tracking number or email that has information. Make sure to keep this information in a safe, special place. I enter the tracking number in my spreadsheet because it is often used in seeing if a story has been approved or not.

Here’s a tip: Be very careful when deleting emails. I accidentally cleaned out my emails from my webserver and I didn’t know that my Thunderbird email system was synched. So what happened is that I accidentally deleted all the emails I had. This included even the emails that were on my hard drive. It was really bad and I had to get another Story ID code from a publisher in order to keep tracking it. So make sure to be super careful when deleting any emails…and if you can avoid it altogether, then all the better!

Duotrope’s Digest is my favorite resource for finding publishers. It is a type of search engine with many different parameters for finding the right periodical that you are looking for. I really recommend that you bookmark that site if you are a writer. You will find that there are a lot more publishers out there than you may have previously thought.

When I first searched on Duotrope’s Digest, I realized that if I had a big enough pipeline of outstanding original work, then I would eventually get some of my short stories published.

Rejection letters are quite normal, so I try and not take it personally. Every piece of work should be something that I am extremely proud of, so making more stories should be pleasurable. So I take a rejection letter as an excuse to just write more.

It is important that you have enough stories that you aren’t sending the same story to two or more different publishers at once. That is usually looked down upon and can possibly complicate or even thwart a possible acceptance. So make sure that you keep good track of all your stories so that you only send a story to one publisher at a time. And then if you get a rejection letter, then you can send it to someone else after making whatever changes you deem necessary (if any at all).

-Tyler

May 4, 2011

Fun Geometry Shape

Filed under: Art and Fun — Tyler @ 11:28 pm
over cube 1a

Please CLICK to ENLARGE

This is a geometry shape I’ve been working on for a bit. I really hope you enjoy it. I’ve been talking so much about shapes lately I thought it was only fair that I made one of my own and shared it with everyone. If you click on it, you will see the larger, printable version. I recommend printing it in “landscape” mode.

-Tyler

May 3, 2011

Male Energy Cultivation Experiment 005B

Filed under: MECE — Tyler @ 7:23 pm

YES! Finally made it to 005B! Last time I wasn’t able to make it past the 30 day mark. But now I realize that Latte’s are my Achilles heel here. The only time I had a NE was after I had a latte no joke. That was compounded with how I wasn’t exercising as much that week. That was because I was sore from doing this exercise thing the week before. Overall I’ve been tired but I’m finally starting to get back into the swing of things.

It’s funny how many things count as outflows. I’ve been playing Heroes of Newerth again with my pals and that is a serious brain drain. But I’ve had enough energy to do writing as well. I just sent out my fourth short story from my pipeline to prospective periodicals and I am extremely excited. I’m keeping a database of all my stories that get sent out so that way I can keep the pipeline of science fiction cooking. And honestly, the energy cultivation has really helped in order to keep the creative vibes flowing freely.

Last night I was really pumped and I was having trouble sleeping after I sent out a medium-length short story. So I basically has three choices, one was to engage in an outflow, the other was to lie in bed and waste time, and the final choice was to listen to some relaxing music and meditiate until I calmed myself down.

So I turned off all the lights and meditated to a song by Can from their Album, ‘Tago Mago.’ The song is called, “Halleleuwah” and it has a bass line that seriously boggles the mind. After listening to the song I must have drifted deep because I didn’t snap out of it till 3AM. By then I was completely relaxed and I went to bed and literally woke up before my alarm at 7:58 AM. So I ended being able to get to school early, that’s a good thing because there was a ton of traffic.

I’ve noticed another thing with all this exercise and cultivation that my eyes have become more clear and less dull. I can breathe very easily through the nose now too. Someone mentioned that pressing the tongue on the roof of the soft palate in the mouth can help with congestion and it worked.

-Tyler

May 2, 2011

Star Trek Game on the Vectrex system

Filed under: Gaming — Tyler @ 3:26 pm
Star Trek the Game on Vectrex

Star Trek the Game on Vectrex - Click for Video

When I first heard about the Vectrex system from my friend Brett, I was extremely excited. The concept of having a vector based home video game system had some serious sizzle. Everyone remembers the game, “Asteroids.” That’s an example of a vector based game. The big difference between vector games and pixel games is that vectors use lines. Pixels are the constant in most home video game systems because pixels are tiny square dots that have the color information. The end result with the Vectrex is that the images are extremely crisp and easy to see. You can quickly discern targets and objectives. The sound quality is great too on this machine. The music, albeit generally simple, is clear and good. Big thanks to Brett for allowing overidon.com to check out this astounding technology. Star Trek the Motion Picture the Game was intense, but we didn’t read the manual first. So we ended up getting being blasted by Romulans and Klingons in the beginning.

Here’s how to play: Button 1 doesn’t do anything. Button 2 is for the tractor beam. This let’s you lock onto a space station to refuel or it also locks you into a black hole which will take you to the final stage called, ‘Sector 9.” Button 3 is a temporary shield that will draw an X on the screen. If an enemy torpedo is fired at you and you time it right, it will deflect the torpedo. This is interesting because I don’t remember torpedoes ever bouncing off of shields in any of the movies, so maybe this is an original series thing that I haven’t seen yet. Button 4 fires the guns and it is pretty intuitive…besides for the whole button 4 thing.

What is so superb about this system is that the analog control for the movement is beyond excellent. The analog sticks on even the latest systems are not as accurate as the Vectrex controller. It has a truly visceral and responsive feel. It is easy to aim the joystick and take down targets.

Another cool thing about the Vectrex is that it comes with its own little vector based TV monitor. It is heavy, so I wouldn’t consider it to be portable. But it is convenient that you don’t have to plug in anything besides the power cord to get it to work.

After we played the Star Trek game for a few minutes we decided to read the manual to find out what was going on. It turns out that the strange glowing box is actually a black hole. And if you press button 2 on the black hole you will be transported to the final battle with the Klingon Mothership. I actually did that after a few tries and I was able to defeat the mothership by pummeling it on its nose over and over again. After it was destroyed the game took me back to sector one to start the whole process over again.

 

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress