Steven Paul Jobs - Memoriam: Girl With Apple, a Video Game Artist
Born in 1950, I don't remember our first TV, but my older sister and brother do.
It seems every generation has its inventive milestone that helps form the next generation's world.
As large as the Television was in creating the world we live in perhaps Plastic's plays a larger role.
My father, Thomas Henry Rogers, became a Chemical Engineer working with Polymer Chemistry for Goodyear Tire and Rubber in the early 1940's when plastics were just beginning to be invented.
He told me once the chemists at that time thought plastics would save the world by producing an inexpensive readily available way to make goods in a burgeoning population.
My father held many patents but was most known for a major patent in the development of Polyurethane Foam.
I compare the excitement the WWII generation had in the development of plastic with my generation and the development of computers.
If you are around my age 61, you will remember the popular movie The Graduate, which gave stardom to Dustin Hoffman.
Dustin was told by the father of his girlfriend; Plastics, that is where the future lies, in Plastics.
Now I'm sure many people in my generation would give and has given this advice to their children; get involved with computers because that's where it's all happening, in computers.
I remember seeing my first computer in 1969, it was at Dartmouth College in Hanover New Hampshire and it was housed in a large building.
It really couldn't do much of anything.
In the late 1970's with personal computers beginning to be, "user friendly" and families started buying computers for personal use.
We bought our first Apple Computer in 1987 when our daughter Leela was only two years old.
Even back then there were child friendly educational programs we could buy for her and a few art related programs that she loved.
She loved painting on that computer.
Now as an adult she is a Computer Graphic Artist working in the video game industry where she specializes in environments especially trees and plants.
Three years ago Leela received her Master Of Science Degree in Interactive Entertainment from Florida Interactive Entertainment Academy, (FIEA) at the University of Central Florida, Orlando.
The three semester intensive program offers a project based gaming education that allow the students to be part of a team as they would in real video game production.
They work with fellow students who work as producers, programmers, and artists on real world projects all overseen by some of the best gaming faculty in the world.
Leela studied Game Art and Development through the production of six game prototypes and build on full PC title: Zephyr: The Tides of War.
She was the lead environment artist on PC title creating dimensional clouds and worked with programmers to implement them.
She then modeled and textured structures, she created and animated Creatures and created Particle Effects including exhaust and an explosion.
Since then, until last month, she was working for Electronic Arts in Orlando Florida in environments, mainly trees and shrubs for the Tiger Woods PGA Tour Video Games 10-through 13 and their Tiger Woods PGA Tour Online and EA Sports PGA Tour Golf Challenge.
My husband Gaetano and I named Leela after a character from the popular British PBS program Dr Who.
We love this character Leela because, although she was considered a "primitive" by the Doctor's standards she would outsmart Dr Who (that is Dr Who #4) time and again using her intuitive knowledge, much to the Doctor's chagrin.
A few years later we found out her name is a sacred Hindu name meaning: Cosmic Play or Divine Creation, such an interesting coincidence now that she is involved with creating video games.
Upon hearing about Steven Paul Jobs death it got me thinking how he and Apple Computers influenced our lives and the lives of so many with his top of the line graphic art computer.
I send my blessings to you, Steven Paul Jobs, as you continue your journey into that cosmic play, AKA divine creation, which you and all of us are a part of.
It seems every generation has its inventive milestone that helps form the next generation's world.
As large as the Television was in creating the world we live in perhaps Plastic's plays a larger role.
My father, Thomas Henry Rogers, became a Chemical Engineer working with Polymer Chemistry for Goodyear Tire and Rubber in the early 1940's when plastics were just beginning to be invented.
He told me once the chemists at that time thought plastics would save the world by producing an inexpensive readily available way to make goods in a burgeoning population.
My father held many patents but was most known for a major patent in the development of Polyurethane Foam.
I compare the excitement the WWII generation had in the development of plastic with my generation and the development of computers.
If you are around my age 61, you will remember the popular movie The Graduate, which gave stardom to Dustin Hoffman.
Dustin was told by the father of his girlfriend; Plastics, that is where the future lies, in Plastics.
Now I'm sure many people in my generation would give and has given this advice to their children; get involved with computers because that's where it's all happening, in computers.
I remember seeing my first computer in 1969, it was at Dartmouth College in Hanover New Hampshire and it was housed in a large building.
It really couldn't do much of anything.
In the late 1970's with personal computers beginning to be, "user friendly" and families started buying computers for personal use.
We bought our first Apple Computer in 1987 when our daughter Leela was only two years old.
Even back then there were child friendly educational programs we could buy for her and a few art related programs that she loved.
She loved painting on that computer.
Now as an adult she is a Computer Graphic Artist working in the video game industry where she specializes in environments especially trees and plants.
Three years ago Leela received her Master Of Science Degree in Interactive Entertainment from Florida Interactive Entertainment Academy, (FIEA) at the University of Central Florida, Orlando.
The three semester intensive program offers a project based gaming education that allow the students to be part of a team as they would in real video game production.
They work with fellow students who work as producers, programmers, and artists on real world projects all overseen by some of the best gaming faculty in the world.
Leela studied Game Art and Development through the production of six game prototypes and build on full PC title: Zephyr: The Tides of War.
She was the lead environment artist on PC title creating dimensional clouds and worked with programmers to implement them.
She then modeled and textured structures, she created and animated Creatures and created Particle Effects including exhaust and an explosion.
Since then, until last month, she was working for Electronic Arts in Orlando Florida in environments, mainly trees and shrubs for the Tiger Woods PGA Tour Video Games 10-through 13 and their Tiger Woods PGA Tour Online and EA Sports PGA Tour Golf Challenge.
My husband Gaetano and I named Leela after a character from the popular British PBS program Dr Who.
We love this character Leela because, although she was considered a "primitive" by the Doctor's standards she would outsmart Dr Who (that is Dr Who #4) time and again using her intuitive knowledge, much to the Doctor's chagrin.
A few years later we found out her name is a sacred Hindu name meaning: Cosmic Play or Divine Creation, such an interesting coincidence now that she is involved with creating video games.
Upon hearing about Steven Paul Jobs death it got me thinking how he and Apple Computers influenced our lives and the lives of so many with his top of the line graphic art computer.
I send my blessings to you, Steven Paul Jobs, as you continue your journey into that cosmic play, AKA divine creation, which you and all of us are a part of.