March 15, 2006

I love to shoot’em between the eyes

Posted in Category: Games — Amr Awadallah @ 5:59 pm | link | | comment (0)


Halo Sniper

“I am looking for them through my 10x scope sniper-rifle, while continuously moving left and right to make it hard for them to snipe me. I spot two of them coming from behind the far tower to the left.

I now have a tough choice to make, I can either go for body shots, which are much easier, but require at least two hits to kill, or I can go for the instant kill head-shot, which is much harder to land. Since there is two enemies, and since my bullets will leave a trail revealing my position, I opt for the head-shots to give the second guy less time to look around and fire at me.

I line up my scope, I focus, I steady my aim, and I get the first moving head within my cross-hair, I fire, he drops. Now the other dude is on to me since he saw the trail of my bullet, he turns around and I can see his visors looking towards me. He fires first, but luckily he misses, and that’s all the time I need to land a head-shot and take him out.

Just when I was about to take a sigh of relief for landing two head-shots, I see my body falling down, I just got wacked from behind, the cycle starts all over again.

This whole hunting scenario takes around 1.5 seconds within Halo, one of the most popular online first person shooter games. The purpose of this little story, besides showing you the dark side of Amr, is to emphasize how critical latency is for online gamers. Unlike doing a web search, or reading your email online, the smallest delay can turn the outcome of an online match upside down. This was the motivator behind my paper entitled “The vMatrix: Equi-Ping Game Server Placement For Pre-Arranged First-Person-Shooter Multiplayer Matches”.

Click here for a nice PowerPoint summarizing the idea I proposed in this paper.

That said, I am really puzzled why I like such killing games. I mean, I never held a rifle in the real world, and would never think about shooting a guy in the body, not to mention the head. Yet, I get an amazing kick out of Halo (its my favorite game by far), is it the visceral feeling of landing such a perfect kill ? Is it the adrenalin rush I get when in a tough situation ? Not sure, all I know is that at the end of a long working day, if I spend 60 minutes playing Halo, I feel much better and I am ready to go to bed 😉

Why do you love killing games ?

— amr

PS: This is a nice Halo l33t sniping video clip: Halo Killing Spree.

You can see a lower quality version for it at YouTube:

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March 12, 2006

I love Schipol

Posted in Category: Work — Amr Awadallah @ 1:37 am | link | | comments (5)

I did not blog for a while since I was presenting a paper at the IEEE ACS AICCSA’2006 conference in Sharjah, UAE.

I am on the way back now stopping in the super friendly Schipol Airport in Amsterdam.

Within the next couple of days I will blog about the paper I presented at the conference, the title of that blog post will be “I love to shootem between the eyes”.

Then later in the week I will blog about the United Arab Emirates, it was a very weird experience to be in this Arab Country. You can see some photos from that trip here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/awadallah

Until then, take care.

— amr

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February 28, 2006

I am filthy rich, in a parallel universe …

Posted in Category: Life — Amr Awadallah @ 11:57 pm | link | | comment (0)

I am a big SciFi geek, really addicted to that stuff, even though many of it is very absurd. For example, my favorite SciFi series is Stargate SG1 and in many of its episodes they play on the concept of parallel universes that are created every time we make a decision.

Well, if this theory is true, then my parallel amr (lets call him amr’, pronounced amr prime) is now filthy rich, sleeping on a beach in Hawaii, has a private jet, and houses across 5 continents. This is the story of amr and amr’.

In spring of 2000 both amr and amr’ existed in the same universe, at that time they were founders of a small 6-person startup called VivaSmart. Though the startup got some nice angel funding, it was not able to secure VC funding and bubble 1.0 was starting to crack. The founders decided to shop the startup around, and we got a nice offer from Excite@Home to buy the startup for $12M, not bad for such a small 1year old startup.

The acquisition deal was signed and we were working on finalizing the legal work and meeting with Excite engineering teams to see how we can integrate with them, learning their internal systems, etc. However, just one-day before we were supposed to move into the Excite@Home campus, we got sad news that Excite@Home is reneging on the deal. It was ugly and they ended up paying us $1M as penalty for backing out.

But now we were in a very bad situation, the bubble burst was becoming more evident, and we had closed our contractual relationships with all our customers (Productopia and epinions) as was dictated by the Excite@Home acquisition agreement. The $1M was enough to pay back the angel investors and shut down the company, so that was being discussed as a serious possibility, which obviously got me very concerned. I needed to line up another job so that I can continue to support my family (I had two children at the time).

So, I proceeded to shop my self around, and landed my self a very nice offer at Google, the offer was for an engineering position with $100K in salary, and 40,000 shares (these are shares, not options, since common share price was very low and you can just buy them outright). Now note that Google had two internal splits since then, so its really 160,000 shares in today’s GOOGs.

During the same time, our CEO, Charlie Oppenheimer, continued to shop the company around to other potential acquirers, and Yahoo came in and said they can buy us for $9M (which is really $8M since we had $1M in cash). Now I had a choice to make, should I say no to Google or go with the acquisition to Yahoo. Note that the acquisition value was mainly for the people and know-how, my self and Thai Tran being the core technology founders (Thai defected to Google in mid-2004 to be product manager for Google Local, rumor has it he got 20,000 GOOGs at $50 strike price).

If I did not go with the acquisition then that would have probably reduced the value of the company considerably, so if I took the Google offer I would have most likely pissed off my co-founders and investors at VivaSmart. I also did a lot of math and predictions with all the info available at the time, and Google seemed like a small startup that will eventually be acquired by Yahoo anyway since their main revenue stream (at the time) was to get money from Yahoo for every 1000 search requests that Yahoo sent to them. So I figured the right solution was to go to Yahoo, and this is where amr and amr’ got separated.

Its interesting that when Google sensed that I might turn their offer down, since the bubble was bursting, a very senior engineering chief over there (he has a short name that starts with U) sent me the following email:

——– Original Message ——–
Subject: Google
Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 11:33:56 -0700 (PDT)
From: u__@google.com (U__ _______)
To: aaa@CS.Stanford.EDU

Amr,

Just as a reminder, in case you have any questions feel free to contact me. Also, in light of last week’s stock market, let me assure you that one (additional!) difference between us and the average “.com” is that we have a clear path to profitability. For example, this quarter’s loss was smaller than last quarter’s even though we have many more employees.

Regards,

– U__

You see, amr’ agreed to join Google, so he has 160,000 GOOGs which are now worth in the neighborhood of $60M (before long-term cap gain taxes). But that is just the original GOOG shares you get upon joining, you typically get more shares every year, so I figure amr’ is now rolling in about $100M of cash 😉

Amr envies amr’, but there are many new parallel universes to come. Even if amr never beats amr’ (on wealth basis), amr is still super happy to have a loving family, and that is priceless.

— amr

PS: There is another amr” in a parallel universe in which Excite@Home did not renege on the acquisition offer, he is very pissed ;). There is an amr”’ that did not sell VivaSmart, continued to grow it, and sold it for hundreds of millions ala PriceGrabber and Shopping.com. Finally, there are two more amrs from two more universe intersections with Google in 2002 and 2004, I might cover those in a later posting.

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