

In the meantime though I developed the Harvest of Chaos: King's Festival + Queen's Harvest campaign based on the D&D campaign of the same name by Carl Sargent. That campaign is the Gem of Power campaign, which I am still developing several years later. When I began modding for NWN2 I first envisioned creating a large campaign to rival the Official Campaign. All of these are available on my downloads page. I developed similar containers and many other items for IWD2 as well. My containers were later adopted (without my knowledge) into a collection of fixes for BG and so were likely widely distributed. BG1, for example, lacked the ammunition containers that some other Infinity Engine games had, so I developed a set of containers using resources from those games and made them available in BG1 Tutu via WeiDU - a free installer modding utility for Infinity Engine games. When I started modding for games like Baldur's Gate and Icewind Dale II I also tended to develop things that I thought were missing in the games and would add enjoyment for players. And EncryptSelectionTEA can be used in conjunction with a free utility called FileMarkMaker to securely store and retrieve encrypted text on an iOS device (like a passwords list). Enhanced Clipboard to Note enhanced the functionality of Apple's Clipboard to Note Applescript. FixPodCal is an Applescript and Perl script that can be used to correct the inability of the iPod calendar to display event locations. GSOS Splashscreen Editor allowed custom colors to be applied to the GS/OS Splashscreen. KeyNavigator added the ability to navigate using the keyboard in Hypercard GS stacks. HC Extra Menu Installer provided a customizable Extras menu in Hypercard, just as had been provided in the GS/OS Finder. BalloonMaker GS and MacBallonMaker added Help Balloons in Hypercard stacks, a feature Apple added to the Mac OS but left out of Hypercard and GS/OS. HyperBattleship! for OS9 was my correction for the Apple HyperBattleship! stack that broke with Mac OS 9 and Apple never bothered to correct since they were abandoning Apple Events and Hypercard. See Know Your Icons for more on the history of computer icons. Apple later incorporated the slanted Copland look in Mac OS 8 and 9 and it was then adopted in a reversed form by Microsoft for Windows XP. Mine are yellow because I felt it looked better and more cheerful than periwinkle blue. I distributed mine via GEnie on July 12, 1995. GSCopland icons I created for the IIGS inspired by magazine pictures of the Mac System 7 "Copland" desktop, which was then scrapped by Apple in 1996.
