Megan Miller's Blog

March 16, 2024

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Published on March 16, 2024 14:47

January 27, 2016

Stiles in Minecraft (or how to get over fences without animals following).

stiles

So here’s something. You can hop over a fence or a wall in Minecraft IF its a double wall (or fence) and you place a block on either side of the wall. And animals can’t follow you. Or mobs. (Well, rabbits can make it. And spiders.) This is called a stile.


Definition of “stile”: it’s a step or set of steps that allow you, but not farm animals, to get over fences or walls. You’ll find them in Europe where public walking paths go through farms. I hopped over many when I used to live in England, where right-of-way paths through farms is a thing. Something to do with civilization before cars.


I’ve just started investigating this feature — or is it a bug? — so I don’t know all the ins or outs. If a fence is the upper half of the structure and a wall the lower, you can use slabs and stairs on both sides of the stile. If the upper half is a wall, it seems you need at least one full cube block one side, and on the other you can have a block, slab or stair. If you have double fences, you can’t use slabs or stairs.


See, I made a video about it! It’s on Youtube. And it’s my first video. Say hi if you get there!


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Published on January 27, 2016 08:16

December 27, 2015

Sucked into Neonmob, the digital art trading card site

artwork from Neonmob

“Thornweaver” from artist Emory’s “Elementals” series on NeonMob.com


When I first read about NeonMob I thought it was kind of a strange idea. Buy (or earn) digital-only “trading cards” with art on them – with the ruse that only people with the cards own the art. Once something is digitized, isn’t it pretty much available for (illegal) digital copying and distributing? (Though I guess there are stock photo and vector sites that manage to make a profit and keep things worthwhile for the contributing artists.) And how can you own something that you just look at on a website? It didn’t make much sense.


But… I was bored one day and tried it out. Sign up, and everyday, for free, you get 6 packs of trading cards (which contain 1 or 2 cards, depending on the series). There are dozens of trading card series by different artists. The artists base their packs on a theme, like Monsters or Crazy Landscapes or Imaginary Vampires (the digital art at NeonMob skews towards pop culture-y and comic-y), and many series use a story as a binding agent, a story told through the sequence of trading cards.


And some of the artists (not all, mind you!) are quite good or are contributing interesting series. Like “Walter’s Experiments” by artist “Chaotic Experiments” – an odd story about the various nanotechnology experiments two eccentric scientists perform, and the consequences. Each card illustrates one experiment and is usually a neat math-y fractal-y video clip of some imagined extremecloseup nano molecule or nano bot. Here’s one of the cards from Walter’s experiments that I “own.” It’s “Experiment 90093″, and the accompanying text reads:


Series: S. Type: Shape-Shifting Swarm. Experiment Number: 90093. The purpose of both Series R and Series S was never to utilize the geometric shapes developed in the individual experiments for actual warfare, but to prove that the bots had the ability to do such a thing, if necessary, and to train the bots by teaching them complex shapes. Rare was the battle that would call for the bots to form a diamond, but simply harnessing the ability to do so, as in experiment 90093, endowed them with the power to battle enemy bots at any time, and in any place.



http://meganfmiller.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Walt2_scaled_landscape_video.mp4

 


 


Here’s another, one of my favorites from the series “Abstract Landscapes” by David Zobel: “Ruins in the Fall”


As with physical trading card-collecting, the packs are blind, so you don’t know what you are getting. You get the occasional extra freebie card in a pack and you often get duplicates of cards you already have. Some of cards are “rarer” than others, and some are chase cards (variants). There’s an easy-to-use trading system to find people who have cards you want and offer them a trade for your duplicates. On the downside, because there’s a set limit for how many free packs are given out for each series, you may wind up with, say, 80% of a series found, and no way to get more via freebie packs. This is where NeonMob hopes you will splurge (it actually is quite inexpensive) to purchase more blind packs of a series. This is how the artists get paid. But you can also trade for these, and I’ve done this fairly successfully for one closed-to-freebies series. But I’m no longer ruling out the possibility that I may one day purchase some extra trading card packs for five bucks, or even order a poster for fifteen.


Oddly, it’s a very pleasant way to spend a few minutes of your day. It seems also like a great way to involve kids in appreciating arts and graphics. The trading is kinda fun, and its neat to see what the artists are producing. I recommend it, if you generally get a little pleasure out of looking at artwork. And most important of all: if you sign up using this link right here, you’ll get an extra ten free packs and so will I. If you do sign up or have played on the site, I’m curious to know what you think.

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Published on December 27, 2015 08:13

December 26, 2015

Quest for the Golden Apple

My latest book was published in late November. It’s a kid’s graphic novel about Phoenix, who has to save her brother when he’s turned into a zombie. I created all of the graphics using a Minecraft animation program, Mine-imator.


Here’s the Amazon link for my book. This is an Amazon Associates link, so if you purchase through this, I will get a small amount from Amazon. I don’t get royalties for any of my books, so this helps me a lot, if you feel like it!


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Published on December 26, 2015 08:46

May 4, 2015

Hacks for Minecrafters: Redstone

New book in the “Hacks for Minecrafters” series has been published – Redstone.


hacks 4

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Published on May 04, 2015 16:22