Personal


Personal15 Jun 2007 01:08 pm

I’m really sorry for the lack of WWDC updates which i’ve promised. I’m suffering from a severe case of jet lag for the past week, and the wierdest thing is that although i’m wide awake at the most ungodly of hours, I don’t really have the mental energy to do anything except to stay awake. I’ve tried to beat the jet lag when I came over by trying not to sleep during the flight and only sleeping when I landed, but its not working at all.

The number of hours of sleep i’ve had everyday since i’ve landed in San Francisco:

Saturday: 3 hours
Sunday: 2.5 hours
Monday: 3 hours
Tuesday: 4 hours
Wednesday: 4.5 hours
Thursday (tonight): ???

What happens is that i’ll sleep at perhaps 11pm or so, then for some mysterious reason, i’ll just suddenly wake up in the early morning and i’ll be unable to get back to sleep again.

I can manage to stay awake enough during the sessions and labs in the morning, but it gets *really* difficult during the afternoon sessions, especially those between 3 - 5pm. Worst of all, those sessions in the afternoon are frequently the most interesting ones. :-( I try sooo hard to stay awake during those sessions, but its just impossible sometimes.

I’m really afraid to drink coffee too as i’m extremely sensitive to it - i’m known to drink *one* cup at 7 - 8am and then be super hyperactive and awake till around 2am. Its that bad.

This week has been absolutely *amazing* though and I have so much to write and share, but I guess that will have to wait when I return to Singapore and decompress (and hopefully get some good sleep).

Off to bed now! Hopefully, I won’t wake up again at 3am and wonder what the heck is going on anymore.

Good night!

Personal28 May 2007 01:48 pm

Mr. Wang, a fellow Singaporean has recently written a facinating blog post, challenging his readers to challenge themselves to achieve bigger things in life by attempting at and perhaps failing (hard) at those things.

So here are my five big goals (in order of importance).

1) Make FunkeeMonk Technology a financial success (instead of just being a good learning experience) by continuing to polish and improve FunkeeStory, and improving upon the ways I market it.

2) Learn Erlang for The Secret Next Big Project.

3) Improve my photography by taking more photographs and showcasing my work online, reflecting on my own work and the works of others. First step though is to process the immense backlog of over 4000 photos i’ve built up over the years using Lightroom.

4) Train up to be able to finish a marathon, hopefully by year’s end. I hope my existing ankle injury won’t prevent me from achieving this goal!

5) Learn to play a musical instrument (most probably a MIDI keyboard hooked up to Propellerhead Reason). Its been years since i’ve last played any instrument, and I dearly miss playing music.

I would love to hear about your goals too, so list them below by leaving a comment!

UPDATE: Posted a comment below recounting some of my past goals - both successes and failures.

Personal23 May 2007 03:21 am

A month ago, I chanced upon a story on TUAW on a Switcher’s Giveaway contest which was happening at MacApper.com. The prizes are amazing - 24 great Mac apps up for grabs, and a T-shirt from InsanelyGreatTees to boot, the first prize worth over $750. Although I did already have TextMate, SuperDuper! (both of which I use daily) and Disco, the rest of the prizes were still incredibly tempting, and I really wanted to enter the contest. All I needed to do was to create a contest entry on why I switched to the Mac. Piece-of-cake…

There is one problem.

My self-imposed deadline for releasing FunkeeStory 1.1 is loooooong overdue, and I really didn’t want to be distracted, spending half a day or more creating an entry to a contest when I really should be completing this new release instead. No new releases means less sales, and the longer I take between releases, the higher the chance of my business failing, with my dreams along with it.

So I continued coding away, trying to erase the memory of that contest from my mind.

But the thought just wouldn’t go away, nagging away at the back of my mind. I thought that I did have a pretty eventful story, since I essentially switched to the Mac so that I can write programs for it. But I continued battling away the thought of spending time on this when I should be coding instead.

Off I went to the public library (that’s where I usually work these days) in the morning about a week later, off to code away and bring FunkeeStory 1.1 closer to the light of day. “Hmm, what happened to the contest, I wonder if its over…”, I thought. The announcement came in - just 36 hours to go till the contest ends.

This time, the itch to write became too strong, too maddening to resist. I had to do something. I don’t even care about winning anymore, I just need to create this entry to ease this itch to write and create.

But, uh, what am I going to submit as an entry?

An essay? Nah, it’ll be too wordy (like this blog post), who’ll read it? ;-) Videos and podcasts are out - i’m in a public library! So I opened up the Applications folder, looking for nothing in particular when it struck me.




Keynote icon

I’ll use Keynote to prepare a set of presentation slides!

But then I ran into another problem - i’ve never used Keynote before… But not knowing something never stopped me from trying things out before, so I just fired it up and clicked away.

3 revisions, and hours later, something ugly which resembled a presentation emerged. Now, how will I end this thing?

I thought - If I had just ONE CHANCE in this lifetime to say something to the entire Mac community, what would it be? And the last few slides just came out by itself.

A quick email submission to MacApper just hours before the deadline, and off I go again, back to work! There’s still lots of code to be written (and re-written…).

Fast forward a few weeks…

Last Thursday morning, I woke up, getting ready to get to set off to the library to work again, to find an email from Miles Evans, senior editor of MacApper.com, telling me that my entry for their Switcher’s Giveaway contest is being featured on their website. I didn’t win the first prize, nor the second, but as the entry got chosen as an honourable mention, I won myself a T-shirt, and a chance at $100 if my entry beats the other two entries in a voting contest.

Switching to the Mac to be an Indie Mac Developer

WOOHOO! I checked my web stats, and page hits were coming in from all over the world. Unique visitors to the website and The FunkeeBlog went up to six times the usual amount of traffic received.

A link to my entry even managed to feature on the front page of programming.reddit.com, getting as high as #9 at one point. *faint* My story is getting out there! And I won myself a cool T-shirt! So I guess even if this whole startup fails, at least I can honestly repeat the cliche, that i’ve “been there, done that, and i’ve got the T-shirt”. :-)

Binary Tree T-shirt

More important than a dang-cool T-shirt though, i’m really happy that my story went out. I really hoped that this would expose to the Mac community what its like behind the scenes, being a struggling indie developer, and how every single sale can really go a long way in making sure an app grows and matures. Every sale means I get to feed myself for another day or two, improving the app, and not working for The Man instead, although it will pay a heck of a lot better at this point.

And today, the MacApper Switcher’s Giveaway is now officially over with the conclusion of the Honourable Mentions contest.

The winning entry, by just 4 votes (talk about a close finish!!) is….

Switching to the Mac to be an Indie Mac Developer - A bittersweet true story in 15 slides, by Joe Goh.

Hope you enjoyed both stories.

The End.

Big Thanks

Thanks to the sponsors for providing the wonderful prizes for this contest. I’ll definitely be wearing that T-shirt from InsanelyGreatTees around alot. :-)

Big thanks to Miles Evans @ MacApper for organising this awesome contest, and providing an opportunity for me to bring my story to the world. Cheers mate!

A massive thank you goes out to all of you who has voted for me, and even helped spread the word to your friends about my entry and the contest. THANK YOU!

But the BIGGEST thanks have to be reserved to all the software users and gamers out there, who stood together with the devs and supported their work by paying for the software. Thanks - we won’t be here without you, and its your support that keeps our dreams alive everyday.

Personal16 May 2007 11:47 pm

A few weeks ago, I submitted my story on why I switched to the Mac for entry to a contest. Though I didn’t win first prize, my entry did however get selected as an honourable mention. You can now read my story entitled - Switching to the Mac to be an indie Mac developer - A bittersweet true story in 15 slides.

Switching to the Mac to be an Indie Mac Developer

Its actually part of a contest which is still happening right now, so if you think that my story deserves to be a winner, vote for me here.

UPDATE: The contest has concluded, and you can read about the contest results and how this story came to be, at my other blog post - A Story About my Switcher Story.

Enjoy reading the story!

Personal19 Apr 2007 05:13 am

For those of you that have been waiting to see that “Coming Soon…” sign go away all these months, thank you very much for your patience. Here it is - The FunkeeBlog!

This blog is crafted by me, Joe Goh. I’m the sole developer behind FunkeeMonk Technology, and its first product FunkeeStory.

This blog will have my views on technology, computer programming, food, business, news about FunkeeStory development and a whole load of other things. So stay tuned folks, things are going to get interesting…

I’m going to follow Bob Johansen’s advice and have Strong Opinions, Weakly Held when writing posts for this blog.

I will be discussing some pretty controversial topics in the near future, and my stated opinion about those topics are going to be strong. However, i’ll be trying hard to not be too attached to my beliefs. It is my goal to be able to learn something new everytime I write a new post - and its your comments that will make this possible.

Enjoy reading The FunkeeBlog!