 Okay, today we're answering, once again, viewer questions and let's see. Here we have, this was a nice one, it was more of a comment than a question. It says, since this is about comments too, I'd like to say thank you for your hard work and I thank you for watching because I wouldn't be doing these videos if people weren't watching them. It would be kind of a waste of time. So I appreciate that. Thank you. It says, this next question, any chances of doing more videos on Python, on making isometric games, which are kind of like a 2D game, I had to look it up because I didn't know what that was, 2D games that kind of have things on an angle to give them kind of a 3D perspective and more into textures with Blender series. Definitely something might get into in the future as far as more game stuff. I don't know about the isometric games because I've never done anything like that. If I get into it, I'll definitely do videos on it. I'm not sure if I'm going to be doing a Pygame tutorials here in the near future. I do get asked that a lot. It's just not my main focus in life right now when it comes to computer stuff. I'm really hitting the JavaScript hard. I really hope to start maybe making some simple games with JavaScript, which would make it easy to port them to mobile devices, tablets and phones and such. As far as textures and Blenders, I do plan on doing more Blender tutorials in the future. The thing is right now, the big thing with Blender is Cycles, which I have not even touched yet. I'm still using the old Blender default renderer and that completely changes how textures work once you get into Cycles. Once I learn that, I'll do some tutorials on it. Then we got Cyber Rebel asked, how old were you when you got into computers and when did you start to program? Today I thought this for like a year now. I'd like to do a Metal X 1000 Origins, just like comic books, you have Wolverine Origins where it tells the story of how they got to where they are. I kind of want to do a video on that with me with my computer stuff. It's just going to take some time. I think I have a lot of good stories. As far as when did I get into computers? When I was a kid, I was born in 81. As far back as I can remember, I had a computer in my room. I originally lived in New York and back in the early 80s to mid-80s, I had an IBM computer in my room. It was the family computer, but for some reason it got put in my room, which made me very happy. Old DOS-based machine, I couldn't tell you anything really about it other than it had two large five-inch floppy disk drives, which was so cool that it had two drives, even though we never really used them. When you turn on that machine, even though it was a DOS-based machine, it didn't go to the DOS prompt. It had some sort of menu installed where you can scroll up and down with the arrow keys, no mouse, and get to stuff. We had a basic word processor. We had this early version of Print Master, I think it was called, where you can make cards and print them up and fold the paper. I loved it. I thought it was awesome. I would just be creative with that. The word processor was a very basic once again DOS, basically like text editor, but it did have some formatting things. I would do school projects on it. I did figure out a way that you could draw lines in it, and I would make maps of my neighborhood inside the Word documents, inside the Print Master program. You could draw pictures by drawing with big old pixels. You would just draw with blocks. I actually used to get sheets of transparency paper, trace pictures out of comic books, tape it to the screen, and then trace over them using it. I'm going like this, but there was no mouse. I would go arrow, arrow, arrow space or whatever to add a block, and I would draw pictures like that, and then I would modify them a little bit. If anybody remembers the animator, it was made by the people who made Etch-a-Sketch, and it was a little thing, and it was electronic, like electronic Etch-a-Sketch, and you could have, I think, like, 12 images and then play an animation. I had one of those as a kid, and I would kind of do that with Print Master. I would draw all these pictures, put them all in a folder, and then use the arrow keys to scroll through them and make it look like it was animated. So, I mean, these are my first experiences with computers. My uncle was the first person I knew who had Windows 3.1. I used to go over there and play with paintbrush, and I used to make little animations in paintbrush. If you're curious how I did that, I'll do a video on that. Just ask below. Once again, I hope to do some sort of, maybe, origins video when I have the time. Those are my first experiences with computers, and actually, even though it was a DOS machine, it was probably okay just to shut the machine off when you're done. My father showed me, if you go to the menu, you go down, you hit Exit. When you hit Exit, it would bring you to the DOS prompt, and then he would have me type Exit, and then it would exit out of DOS, and then it was safe to turn down the machine. Well, out of curiosity, I was like, well, if I type Exit in Exits, obviously, I could probably type other stuff there. Otherwise, why would ask me to type Exit if that's the only thing I could type? So, I used to go into the DOS prompt, having no clue what I was doing, and I would type random things, thinking, hey, maybe I'll get something. So, it's like, most time, I would type something, and it would say Command Not Found, Command Not Found, and I was trying to single words, and I mean, I was just a little kid. I was probably seven or eight at the time, and so I was just, I mean, my vocabulary probably wasn't huge, so I would type different things. And I think the first word I typed that got something other than Command Not Found was the word copy. I typed in copy, hit Enter, and I don't remember exactly the message. Obviously, you've got to give it parameters, and I wasn't doing that. But I was just like, whoa, it didn't say Command Not Found. So, I tried typing all these copy, all these different things, and I never really got anywhere. I think the next word I got was probably help, which probably brought some sort of help screen that I didn't understand at that time. But I was just amazed that I was finding these words that were saying different things on the screen, even though I had no clue what I was doing. So, if you could maybe say that was my first experiment with programming. Probably wasn't until years, years later. Probably middle school or even high school. Once again around, if you watch my previous tutorial, once I started playing Doom and was able to start manipulating the game, I was doing a lot more in the DOS command prompt because a lot of the editors were DOS-based editors. And I think I started getting the batch files. And eventually I got into Visual Basic, and I love Visual Basic. And I used Visual Basic probably for like eight, nine years. All through high school, and most of my 20s until I was probably about 24, 25, which is when I started using Linux. And then I moved away from Visual Basic. And the thing about Visual Basic was I could do a lot of stuff. I figured out how to open up sockets and send messages to it so that I could make a program that I can install on someone's computer and then I could send my own commands to eject the CD-ROM drive. I mean, I was doing some pretty neat stuff, but in reality, I had no clue what I was doing. I just knew I typed this, this happened, I could do this and this happened. But I didn't understand why or exactly how it worked. I didn't even know how variables work. I would actually make text fields and type stuff in them and then get the text instead of actually using variables. I would go look at the text in this text field and then I would hide the text field, which is funny because I've seen other programmers recently do that. And I just find it so funny because I used to do that and it's such a horrible thing to do. It's just like so sloppy. So it wasn't until I really got into Linux where I actually started learning how to really program because I actually started understanding how things work. So even though I had been doing programming for 10 years, I really had no clue what I was doing up until recent years. So that is a little bit on how I started in computers. Someone asked more Python and Bash videos, please. I'll eventually do more Python videos. It'll be a while. I always do Bash videos because I know people are, most of my viewers, that's probably their main interest. So I try to put out at least one Bash video a week. I would like to hear more about HTML5, which we probably will get into here just because I'm doing a lot of videos on JavaScript and I'm doing a lot of work with JavaScript and CSS and HTML5. So we'll definitely get a little bit into HTML. I think within other tutorials, I may not do tutorials specifically on HTML5, at least not a whole series, but you'll definitely see that in my videos coming up. Next question is, they say, Thanks for your hard work. You're welcome. They've been following my videos for a while. They like the Python videos. They were wondering where I get the time. It seems that I don't have a lot of fires to fight. Once again, if you watch previous videos, I am a firefighter. And firefighting is a great job for being able to do these videos because at least where I work, it's different from department to department. We work 24-hour shifts, which breaks down to 56 hours a week. Really, we work anywhere from 48 to 96 hours a week, which seems like a lot, but we do them all in 24-hour blocks. So I work 24 hours and then I have 48 hours off. So even though I'm working a lot of hours, I have a lot of daytime off. And really what I do is it's like, I'll sit down and I'll spend two hours and I'll make five, six videos for the next, you know, two, three weeks. And then I won't make any more videos for like, you know, two or three weeks. And then I'll sit down and make five or six videos again. I'm actually, rightly, I've been making a lot of videos. You don't know this, that I've been posting videos almost every day. But these videos here are pretty easy to record and there's not really any editing to do. So that's where I get the time. So it's like, my wife also works a little bit, but like, I'll come home. I'll watch our daughter for a bit. I'll put her, she takes two naps during the day for two hours each so I can put her down. And that gives me time to record these videos. So my videos, I try to keep my videos short. I try to keep them under 15 minutes. I can keep them under five minutes even better. So like once again, I can sit down and record five of them in an hour, hour and a half and, you know, do a quick editing job and upload them. That's it for these questions. I thank you for watching once again. Visit FilmsByChris.com, that's Chris the K. There should be a link in the description of this video. I hope that you comment below, ask questions, and I hope that you have a great day.