Tag: Game Developers Conference

  • Where did 2023 go (and most of 2024)??

    Where did 2023 go (and most of 2024)??

    Okay, on to our updates: 2023 was the year of internal growth.

    Research

    After my presentation at the GDC in 2022, I was pleasantly surprised (and overjoyed) to learn that my talk was one of the highest-ranked presentations of the year. This earned me a spot in the much-vaunted GDC card-deck, a commemoration of the best talks of the year.

    Boosted by this knowledge, I applied to the Ambassador’s Cultural Preservation Fund with the US Embassy in Pakistan, building connections and moving past the first round for consideration. Unfortunately, this process was stalled when the Pakistan government was overthrown in a coup and by the time I got a response for my application, all funding had ceased.

    Instead, I decided to continue the work I had started in the Fall semester of 2022 (I just realized, I haven’t posted about this yet…) and to refine the test export of the building I and my students had scanned. As I did that, I also asked for user feedback from a couple of Architecture and Museum courses to see how the different audiences experience the scanned world.

    This project gets more exciting every time I get to present it to different audiences. I will put up a post specifically to discuss recent strategies and goals that I and my collaborators are cooking up!

    Leadership

    Besides my research, this was also a banner year for me as a leader. Not only was I elected to Faculty Senate Chair for a second year, but we were able to put a whole set of my ideas into practice. Starting last year, the Senate established a full-on calendar, which was amplified by our Newsletter (which I set up the year prior). The Executive Committee visited every single college and unit, and discussed in person the policies and issues with our faculty. Keeping names and populations unnamed, we honed in on some key issues plaguing our faculty and began to actively work with different administrative offices to begin to address the concerns. The COACHE survey also came out this year and provided us with even more ammunition to advocate for a better system of governing.

    This is the year I realized I had a talent for leadership. Not only was I able to defuse volatile situations and amplify concerns voiced to me, but I realize I am surprisingly good at breaking bad news to my superiors without being insolent or insulting. The fact is, without communication, everyone is working blindly, and it really helps to shed light on different perspectives.

    Additionally, my team and I were able to develop a comprehensive set of adjustments that will refine how we build our policies and will make us (the RIT Faculty Senate) much more nimble in how we approach and solve problems in the future. I feel braggy saying this, but I feel like I have a knack for organizational refinement. I attribute this to my skills in 3D rigging, because the job always demands solving problems before they arise, it really gives me the ability to see big things coming down the road.

    In retrospect

    As much as I’d like to have listed some clear wins for 2023, I realize I hadn’t set up enough small and attainable goals for myself to aim for. Instead, I was forced to slow down and put in the kind of deep work that must be done in order for true progress to be made. Of course, our shallow metrics for measuring academic progress are not equipped for such work, so naturally I received a less than great review for my efforts, but I’ve come to the conclusion that I will never be valuable to my leadership.

    Instead, I decided to be flattered by the many invitations I received to apply for leadership roles in other institutions. This is what prompted even more deep thinking as I worked with my coach to explore what types of opportunities excited me. I didn’t end the year with a single goal, nor did I have the kind of clarity I was aiming for, but I did finally get the sense that I was getting unstuck from the quagmire that has been blocking me for years. Living and working in a toxic environment can do that to a person, and getting to detach and interact with real people, active researchers and academics the like of whom I discovered through the Senate was just what I needed. I feel like I found my community and I’m grateful to have at least one more year with them. (Spoiler: I was re-elected to Faculty Senate Chair for a 3rd time in 2024! That’s got to be some sort of a record!?)

    Now it’s 2024 and I’m shocked to realize it’s almost August.

    It’s already been an insanely busy year, with some key wins (yes, clear wins!) and great strides being made in all areas of my life. As tempted as I am to cram it all into this one update, I will hold off, and give myself homework to write updates in discrete headings so that people can find them more easily.

    Till next time!

  • Frank J Romano Endowed Prize

    Frank J Romano Endowed Prize

    Exciting news continues! I won the Frank J Romano Endowed Prize for innovative use of technology working with students. The Digital Preservation Process has evolved into the Digital Interactive Preservation method, or DIP method.

    Two reasons for this: one, because the RIT CHIP Research group, led by Dr Juilee Decker and Dr David Messinger has been such a powerful source of support for my research. Two, CHIP and DIP make a wonderful pairing!

    So grateful for this show of support from my college. The DIP method has continued to expand and is living up to my initial assertions of the need to bring multiple fields of study together to ensure the best possible results.

    The DIP team has formally expanded to include the active participation of the RIT Sustainable Architecture program, with Dr Alissa De Wit-Paul joining me as co-PI in all of our applications for funding and support going forward.

    Even more exciting is the participation of students from animation, 3D Digital Design, Museum Sciences and architecture in our next venture.

    Special thanks to the Genesee Country Village and Museum, the RIT Center for Imaging Sciences and, of course RIT’s leadership for their support of our research.

  • GDC and Beyond!

    GDC and Beyond!

    What a wild ride!! If you’ve never had a chance to go, I highly recommend attending the Game Developer’s Conference. Feel like stepping it up? Go as a speaker!

    There were a number of awesome things about this conference, not least the fact that 2022 had a much bigger in-person attendance than any post-pandemic year. After being really isolated through the pandemic, this was both an exhilarating and terrifying experience.

    Getting to spend a week immersed in the world of game creation, watching and learning from the gurus of the industry and being surrounded with that level of talent is inspiring on so many levels. I attended talks about the state of the industry, learned about art, management, marketing, and the metaverse.

    For me, the GDC was (is) the most prestigious place I had ever gotten to present my idea. Even carzier was the fact that there were a few other talks related to cultural heritage development and preservation. Knowing this made me feel like my idea had real merit!

    ground-level shot of the Moscone Center entrance with a Game Developers Conference Banner stretched across it

    My talk was scheduled for Friday afternoon, the last day of the conference in the final timeslot of the conference. That entire week, I vacillated between gratitude at the idea of not drawing any attendees for my talk, and the imagined horror of potentially having to present to an empty hall.

    I rewrote my speech about a hundred times and kicked myself for applying to speak in the first place. After all, I was presenting an idea that was remarkably simple in its technical scope. I had zero proof-of-concept examples, other than some minor tests based on my own photography of a monument. My research and references focused more on games and non-academic worlds than on actual real-life cultural sites. I had nightmares about being booed off stage by game professionals who were angry that I had wasted their time with a dumb idea.

    The rest of the time, I attempted to network with people in the various social events of the week. I talk to my students a lot about the importance of networking. I need to go over my notes more carefully next time, because I’m still really bad at it! 🙂

    Friday afternoon came, I was nervous but ready, and the doors opened. I was shocked when one stranger walked in, then flabbergasted when more and more attendees started coming in. Ultimately, the crowd was about two to three times the size of my average classroom, and I began to speak.

    The thirty-minutes just flew by and I completed my speech without being booed. Then I got questions, and more, until we ended up being moved out into an overflow room!

    My mind was buzzing with excitement. I made a bunch of connections with people excited about this topic and excited to explore opportunities to collaborate. The craziest moment was when I was approached by the Director of the Cultural Antiquities Task Force from the US Department of State to explore ways to support my project both through funding and through introductions!

    Brimming with hope and the possibility of making significant progress on this project, I barely needed the plane to fly home!

  • GDC 2022

    Somewhere late in 2021, I was on a “search-apply-receive rejection” roll as I continued to develop the Lahore Fort Project. As I became more comfortable with my rejections, I became braver and started applying to more competitive awards and opportunities too.

    Enter: my application to this year’s Game Developer’s Conference, commonly referred to as the GDC. And if you do not already know what the GDC is, here is a short description.

    Literally, biggest Gaming Conference around. In order to qualify to be a part of this event, you have to submit to a multi-stage peer review process, and your reviewers are going to be straight-up Gaming Pros who are insanely smart and at the top of their fields.

    Knowing all of this, I felt quite safe applying to present the Lahore Fort. I figured I’d have two or three rejections before actually catching anyone’s attention.

    SHOCKED!

    HOLY SMOKES I CANNOT BELIEVE IT!

    And I’m actually writing this post months after the actual event, so believe me, the shock LASTED quite a while!