Author Archives: David Mullich

Happy New Year, 2012!

Happy New Year

My wife asked me for an unusual but heartfelt Christmas present this year. She asked me to go for an entire week without using a computer (and to only use my iPhone to make telephone calls. Apparently she thinks I spend too much time on the computer. Is 14 hours a day really too much time? Well, I wasn’t going to argue, and besides, it would make her happy.

I struggled at first, because I use my computer for everything — work, entertainment, information, communication. However, the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day didn’t put too many demands on me, so I looked for a way to occupy my time. And I found it in an ancient device I found on the shelf — it’s called a book.

I picked up the book and read it. It was Game On: Energize Your Business with Social Media Games by Jon Radoff. And you know what? It was work, entertaiment, information, and communication all rolled up into one!

I think that I’m going to make a New Year’s resolution: read more books.

Just as soon as I log off from my computer.

 

 

California State University, Northridge

CSUN

There was never any doubt about where I would go to college. I grew up within bicycling distance of California State University, Northridge — or CSUN, as we called it — and it never occurred to me that I to go anywhere else. What I didn’t know is what I would major in.

I was very much a science fiction and fantasy fan growing up. I distinctly remember watching the first episode of Star Trek when it premiered in 1966, reading The Lord of the Rings for the first time when I was twelve years old, and going to see 2001: A Space Odyssey with my friends on my birthday. Not only did I want to immerse myself in these worlds, I wanted to contribute to them as well. I would draw pictures of characters from Middle-Earth, write Star Trek stories, and film science fiction movies with a Super-8 camera. And so when I entered college, I wanted to study either art, writing, or filmmaking, but I couldn’t decide on which.

However, when I went to preregister for my classes, I saw the long line of people waiting in line at the Radio-Television-Film Department, I realized that not all of these people were going to find the jobs they wanted, and I decided to just pursue General Education courses until I found a more practical major to study.

I took class in Introduction to Computing just to fulfill my liberal arts requirements, but as I sat in the computer lab waiting print out my homework assignment on the shared printer, I began to type out a Star Trek game. It suddenly occurred to me that a computer could be a creative medium just as is an easel, typewriter, or movie camera. Mathematics could be used to create graphics, logic diagrams were one way to tell a branching story, and coding was essentially directing the computer. The next day I changed my major from Undecided to Computer Science.

The following year, my COBOL professor later took note of how I was using the college’s mainframe to print out images of the Starship Enterprise, and he offered me a job as a clerk in an Apple Computer store he owned, the second computer store ever to open up in the Los Angeles area. It was working in that store where I met the person who got me involved in game development.