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From August
1999 to January 2001 I worked at search engine company Ask
Jeeves, Inc., in Emeryville, CA, acting as first a senior graphic
designer and then a senior site engineer. One of the defining moments
of the Jeeves experience was when me and a friend decided to get a couple
of top-of-the-line Nikko R/C monster trucks. That decision led to my
wholehearted dive into the R/C hobby and the creation of Ultimate
Traxxas and the Ultimate R/C
Network.
The most
lasting impression I made on the company headquarters, though, was surely
my Lego City, a ~50' long, 4" wide string of creations using over
12,500 individual blocks. The City still exists today.
Click
on an image to see a larger
version, and use your browser's "Back" button to return
here.
The "Ask!"
button atop the large building is actually a pixel-for-pixel, block-for-block
exact duplicate of the 2-color version I created for the Palm Pilot
version of Ask.com. The arch bridge was contributed by another employee,
and partially destroyed by a producer who just couldn't keep her hands
off of it. I made the best of the situation by adding some construction
equipment.
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The Charles
Schultz Memorial Spaceport (dedicated to the late great Peanuts comic
creator) display was my pride & joy. It included an experimental
VSTOL (vertical/short takeoff & landing) vehicle (yellow), a visitor
center, a mobile remote mission control station, a visitor center, a
microwave satellite transceiver, a control tower, three ground support
vehicles, a robot, a retired shuttle lander, and the amazing variable-geometry
WX3 self-propelled mission platform. Why "WX3?" My original
title at Ask Jeeves was "Graphic Designer WX3," a tribute
to the Vector supercar. The Lego-built craft had dual-hinged wings that
expanded from about 4" to about 8", and the forward nacelles
were hinged as well. Best of all, though, the top opened up and inside
was a utility boom (like the one used in the American space shuttles)
that folded out to three times the length of the cargo bay and was fully
articulated.
The colorful
sculpture at left, above, was called "The Flower," dedicated
to a coworker whose last make was "Fleur." In the middle is
Gina's Pizza, and on the right is the gas station across the street
from the building Ask Jeeves was in. The tow truck is pulling in a riced
Honda hatchback that bottomed out over a tiny bump in the road and cracked
its frame.
The fire
command chopper, fortunately, never had to fly a mission. At right,
above, is the curious "Leaning Tower of Pizza," across from
Gina's. Barely seen in the lower left is a turbine-powered three-point
hydroplane speedboat of which I unfortunately have no full pictures.
The marine
biological center was my most carefully planned and meticulously executed
project. The huge aboveground tank had acetate windows and featured
an assortment of underwater flora and fauna that took over a month to
collect from across the country via eBay. The center also had a professional
diver training academy, a specimen classification center, a huge utility
barge, small skiff, and four submersible vehicles (the large passenger-carrying
blue one, its remote unmanned camera vehicle, one manned exploration
sub carried by the barge, and the high-tech self-contained deep-sea
unit with fully articulated robotic arms). Also annexed in a cooperative
project was a small particle accelerator facility.
The fire
command chopper, fortunately, never had to fly a mission. At right,
above, is the The police station was one of the first buildings made
in the city, and I was especially proud of the motorccle, which featured
a much more true-to-life design than most Lego bikes.
The Statue
of Liberty was built in an afternoon by an 11-year-old visitor. Great
work! The windmill, under attack by a black dragon and being defended
by a magic-wielding knight and a sword-wielding ninja, was supposedly
a piece of a haunted theme park that got out of hand. The yellow &
white structure at right was one of the last things I built, a building
and piece of modern art at the same time.
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