It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
avatar
CarrionCrow: Okay, talk with you later. =)
We've secretly replaced Colleen's cocoa with Captain Twitchspaz's secret blend of hybrid coffee beans and ground up caffeine pills...
Let's see if she notices! ;)
*watches husband drink coffee and wonder when it's going to kick in* Good thing I don't like coffee! XD Muwahaha~
avatar
genkicolleen: *watches husband drink coffee and wonder when it's going to kick in* Good thing I don't like coffee! XD Muwahaha~
What your husband goes through is just like me on mondays.
Hey, madth3 just alerted me to an awesome game on GameGiveawayoftheDay, which you can read about here: Brink of Consciousness: Lonely Hearts Murders, which is number 2 in the series. You don't have to have played #1 to understand this one, since the only tie in is during the bonus chapter (this is the SE, so the bonus chapter is not included.)

The Brink of Consciousness games are personal favorites of mine, as far as IHOG's go~ Definitely recommend picking this up whilst it's free~!
avatar
EndreWhiteMane: Now it's my turn to say my internet is back. ;)
Don't think it'll last long though, the wind is causing all kinds of troubles today.
So if I disappear it's probably nothing too serious. :-)
avatar
CarrionCrow: It's getting back at you for making it work hard to backup your library.

Fingers crossed that you don't lose power all together or some other equally fun shit.
I thought sure as hell I'd hit that aforementioned bandwidth cap.
I share with the landlord so that wouldn't have gone over well. :-)
avatar
CarrionCrow: First red flag for Infinite - the scene with the interracial couple. Obvious attempt at emotional manipulation was obvious.
The dimension shit might as well have come with a neon sign saying, "Well, we had to string this shit together somehow."

I remember watching that and going, "Well, this is absolutely ridiculous." Watched until the end, and that was it.
I don't mind a series that talks about deeper concepts and issues, but when they give you nothing but shit that screams, "We ran out of money, so let's talk our way to the finish line 'cuz making pictures move is expensive."?
Uh uh. Total crap.
I know they did a "reimagining" of the series, but the original left enough of a bad taste in my mouth that I didn't latch onto those either.
avatar
j0ekerr: Quite. I saw it too, but I am more passive in that respect, and allow myself to be manipulated, who knows, if I go along with a game's silly bullshit I might even end up having a good time.

As for Evangelion. I've remained a fan throughout the years Metron knows why. I even have the DVD collection staring right at me.

The thing is that Evangelion presents extremely compelling and interesting story concepts. However those concepts are never explored because they had absolutely no idea what to do do with them and were added just to "look cool". Instead choosing to focus on the human characters which are almost as retarded as your typical twilight one.

What are the angels, where do they come from, how do the Evas fit in, what is Nerv's and Seelee's ultimate purpose? Those are never explained because they never bothered to come up with explanations for them. They were tacked on, instead of basing the story around them. Probably because they were aware that no matter what they came up with, it'd be ultimately disappointing. So instead they dangled the "here's an emotionally traumatised teenager with abandonment issues NOT dealing with it while piloting a giant, god-murdering robot" bit in front of the audience to keep them from realising it too soon.

The Rebuild movies, were promising, until the 3rd one royally fucked things up again.

avatar
l0rdtr3k: Almost forgot. When they've kept saying quantum in the ending of Infinite,I was like.
avatar
j0ekerr: Heh, so you also felt the pain of the quantum word barrage?
To Ken Levine it obviously means: "It's magic, I don't hafta explain shit!"
Squandered potential and a hot mess of a story with no idea how to even end it properly...
Also, what's coming to mind is the crap at the end of each episode talking about how there will be more fan service.
That told me even back then that the people making the show had no idea what the hell they actually wanted to make. You can mash genres together, but it still has to connect and make sense.
Trying to mash school drama with psychological thriller elements with robot action with apocalyptic mystery with secret society intrigue takes a hell of a lot more ability than what they had to bring to the table.
avatar
CarrionCrow: Okay, talk with you later. =)
We've secretly replaced Colleen's cocoa with Captain Twitchspaz's secret blend of hybrid coffee beans and ground up caffeine pills...
Let's see if she notices! ;)
avatar
genkicolleen: *watches husband drink coffee and wonder when it's going to kick in* Good thing I don't like coffee! XD Muwahaha~
-laughs- Hopefully you won't have to peel him off the ceiling with a shovel once all the stimulants kick in.
avatar
genkicolleen: Hey, madth3 just alerted me to an awesome game on GameGiveawayoftheDay, which you can read about here: Brink of Consciousness: Lonely Hearts Murders, which is number 2 in the series. You don't have to have played #1 to understand this one, since the only tie in is during the bonus chapter (this is the SE, so the bonus chapter is not included.)

The Brink of Consciousness games are personal favorites of mine, as far as IHOG's go~ Definitely recommend picking this up whilst it's free~!
I'm half blind, so hidden object games get really frustrating in a hurry, but thank you regardless for the heads-up. =)
Post edited March 22, 2015 by CarrionCrow
OK, chores done, meal consumed, coffee in hand - consider the Viking back.

Thanks for the link, genki ;-) I used to play those kinds of games with my daughter before she learned the pleasures of clubbing people over the head and stealing their loot (only in games, of course). It might revive her interest, you never know...
avatar
CarrionCrow: Good evening. =)

Sounds like a good idea, just relaxing and enjoying yourself during some downtime.

How often do you head out to cover stuff? Is it primarily on the weekends, or are there also weekdays that you're able to make some coin?
(Apologies if this is a painfully dumb question, I have zero experience with such things.)
Hey Crow, back from dinner.

At the moment we're out 2 days a week every week plus extra stuff when we have events. It's a Saturday and Monday night right now for the regular pitches, but the Saturday is moving to a Thursday after next week. Tomorrow is the first night for the Monday, but we've traded there on an afternoon at a Farmer's Market and done well so we're pretty hopeful.
Most of the big events (Shows, dog shows, festivals) tend to be on weekends, but you don't get too many of those. And most of them aren't worth doing (anywhere between £800 - £3000 for your pitch and then you work like a dog for the weekend just to break even) so we're moving more towards regular evening pitches in local villages, and if they continue to be as good as the Saturday one we've done the last three weeks things will turn around for us pretty quickly.
After dropping Windows (which I feel is only a temporary state of affairs) I'm finding Windows gaming on Linux to be best described as 'interesting...'

Fortunately GOG has an easily installable selection of titles which require minimal involvement from the likes of myself (about as adventurous in computer terms as a field mouse), so I'm currently not hindered by having to use the 'Terminal' and needing to know what the hell a 'Tar Ball' has got to do with either my computer or the piece of gaming goodness I want to install on it.

Linux has got to be geek's revenge for all the years of grief their skinny bespectacled zitty selves took at school from the loud mouthed physical types. Not that I was one of those - I sort of hovered on the fringe of things, not wanting to be there at all and doing my best to get through it with my mind and self respect intact, which wasn't easy when most of the 'pupils' considered the pinnacle of refinement to be a head butt and/or knee in the groin.

I'm dreading wanting to play things which require me to learn the intricacies of this highly contrived and utterly alien new language...
avatar
CarrionCrow: Good evening. =)

Sounds like a good idea, just relaxing and enjoying yourself during some downtime.

How often do you head out to cover stuff? Is it primarily on the weekends, or are there also weekdays that you're able to make some coin?
(Apologies if this is a painfully dumb question, I have zero experience with such things.)
avatar
adaliabooks: Hey Crow, back from dinner.

At the moment we're out 2 days a week every week plus extra stuff when we have events. It's a Saturday and Monday night right now for the regular pitches, but the Saturday is moving to a Thursday after next week. Tomorrow is the first night for the Monday, but we've traded there on an afternoon at a Farmer's Market and done well so we're pretty hopeful.
Most of the big events (Shows, dog shows, festivals) tend to be on weekends, but you don't get too many of those. And most of them aren't worth doing (anywhere between £800 - £3000 for your pitch and then you work like a dog for the weekend just to break even) so we're moving more towards regular evening pitches in local villages, and if they continue to be as good as the Saturday one we've done the last three weeks things will turn around for us pretty quickly.
Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
avatar
Stilton: After dropping Windows (which I feel is only a temporary state of affairs) I'm finding Windows gaming on Linux to be best described as 'interesting...'

Fortunately GOG has an easily installable selection of titles which require minimal involvement from the likes of myself (about as adventurous in computer terms as a field mouse), so I'm currently not hindered by having to use the 'Terminal' and needing to know what the hell a 'Tar Ball' has got to do with either my computer or the piece of gaming goodness I want to install on it.

Linux has got to be geek's revenge for all the years of grief their skinny bespectacled zitty selves took at school from the loud mouthed physical types. Not that I was one of those - I sort of hovered on the fringe of things, not wanting to be there at all and doing my best to get through it with my mind and self respect intact, which wasn't easy when most of the 'pupils' considered the pinnacle of refinement to be a head butt and/or knee in the groin.

I'm dreading wanting to play things which require me to learn the intricacies of this highly contrived and utterly alien new language...
I always figured that Linux to have a learning curve like a brick wall, and your commentary isn't exactly making me rethink my position.
But to be rid of Windows...that would be great.

Did your Windows crap out somehow, or did you just get sick of dealing with it in general?
Post edited March 22, 2015 by CarrionCrow
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
Wait another year, and we might be able to 3D print those pizzas. :D
Post edited March 22, 2015 by GhostwriterDoF
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
avatar
GhostwriterDoF: Wait another year, and we might be able to 3D print those pizzas. :D
That would certainly cut down on travel costs.
Unfortunately, figuring it's going to be a long time before Star Trek-style teleportation is a real thing.
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
The smaller festivals and events can be quite lucrative, and a lot of fun, but we're looking for something a bit more regular and predictable so we can make plans... hard to save or pay rent when you have no idea what your income is. For example in November and December last year we had about a dozen separate events but half of them turned out rubbish so we did loads of work but made no money, and the money we made from the good events just ended up covering the money spent on the bad ones...
So I'm very pleased we've been doing so well at these local evenings, because it's completely in our control, really cheap to do and making us decent money.

I'll look forward to it ;)

avatar
Stilton: snip
avatar
CarrionCrow: I always figured that Linux to have a learning curve like a brick wall, and your commentary isn't exactly making me rethink my position.
But to be rid of Windows...that would be great.

Did your Windows crap out somehow, or did you just get sick of dealing with it in general?
I'd love to ditch Windows and try Linux, but I find the thought of doing it a bit terrifying. Plus I know I would become one of those obsessive tinkerers who would spend more time playing around with the system and settings than doing anything I would be supposed to do...

Someday I'll look into it properly and give it a try. For the moment it's enough to be limited by what I can afford to play (system costs and game costs) and not to have to worry about whether it works on my OS or not...
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
avatar
GhostwriterDoF: Wait another year, and we might be able to 3D print those pizzas. :D
You don't have to wait.. it's possible now.
No guarantee they'd be very nice though, certainly not as nice as ours, which (without sounding too big headed) are absolutely bloody delicious.
Post edited March 22, 2015 by adaliabooks
avatar
adaliabooks: Hey Crow, back from dinner.

At the moment we're out 2 days a week every week plus extra stuff when we have events. It's a Saturday and Monday night right now for the regular pitches, but the Saturday is moving to a Thursday after next week. Tomorrow is the first night for the Monday, but we've traded there on an afternoon at a Farmer's Market and done well so we're pretty hopeful.
Most of the big events (Shows, dog shows, festivals) tend to be on weekends, but you don't get too many of those. And most of them aren't worth doing (anywhere between £800 - £3000 for your pitch and then you work like a dog for the weekend just to break even) so we're moving more towards regular evening pitches in local villages, and if they continue to be as good as the Saturday one we've done the last three weeks things will turn around for us pretty quickly.
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
avatar
Stilton: After dropping Windows (which I feel is only a temporary state of affairs) I'm finding Windows gaming on Linux to be best described as 'interesting...'

Fortunately GOG has an easily installable selection of titles which require minimal involvement from the likes of myself (about as adventurous in computer terms as a field mouse), so I'm currently not hindered by having to use the 'Terminal' and needing to know what the hell a 'Tar Ball' has got to do with either my computer or the piece of gaming goodness I want to install on it.

Linux has got to be geek's revenge for all the years of grief their skinny bespectacled zitty selves took at school from the loud mouthed physical types. Not that I was one of those - I sort of hovered on the fringe of things, not wanting to be there at all and doing my best to get through it with my mind and self respect intact, which wasn't easy when most of the 'pupils' considered the pinnacle of refinement to be a head butt and/or knee in the groin.

I'm dreading wanting to play things which require me to learn the intricacies of this highly contrived and utterly alien new language...
avatar
CarrionCrow: I always figured that Linux to have a learning curve like a brick wall, and your commentary isn't exactly making me rethink my position.
But to be rid of Windows...that would be great.

Did your Windows crap out somehow, or did you just get sick of dealing with it in general?
Windows has a regular way of turning even the simplest requirement into utter and irredeemable frustration. I was using both Chrome and Firefox as 'regular' browsers and they both suddenly decided to stop downloading anything, or rather, they both decided to be extremely selective in what they would or would not download for me. Things that half an hour before were almost as available as air. I could have got under the hood and started searching, Googling, hitting and hoping, but I'm fucked if I'm going to pander to a dimwitted OS and browsers to try and get them to do what I want them to. This is the latest in a long line of out of the blue cock ups that Windows has so generously bestowed upon me, so I thought, shit on this, I'll give Linux a go. I cannot stand Windows, I'm not wild about Linux, and Mac is about as useful as tin tonsils, so I think its only a case of trying something different until I resign myself to returning to hell and reloading Bill Gates's monster. Which kind of shit smells the worst? Take your pick, you'll end up sniffing all of them at some point or other.
avatar
GhostwriterDoF: Wait another year, and we might be able to 3D print those pizzas. :D
avatar
adaliabooks: You don't have to wait.. it's possible now.
No guarantee they'd be very nice though, certainly not as nice as ours, which (without sounding too big headed) are absolutely bloody delicious.
Quite true, I saw some company has already made a printer that you can draw your own pancake patterns and it will be served to you cooked up. Though I agree, the printed version could never replace your culinary masterpieces.

avatar
CarrionCrow: That would certainly cut down on travel costs.
Unfortunately, figuring it's going to be a long time before Star Trek-style teleportation is a real thing.
If we had transporter technology available, I would be very hesitant to trust in such a way of travel, and be more in favor, even adamant, for taking the long road. Being vaporized into a pattern of molecules to be sent through a communication channel or frequency, and then to be replicated on the other end, has too many open variables for mishaps along the way.
Post edited March 22, 2015 by GhostwriterDoF
avatar
CarrionCrow: Hmm. Interesting. Hopefully you'll be able to complete the shift of venues, since paying a fistful of cash every time and not even knowing if you'll break even sounds like high stress garbage.
And of course, continued hope that you'll keep on making better money. You can continue succeeding, I can save money for a year, then get a plane ticket for some pizza. -laughs-
avatar
adaliabooks: The smaller festivals and events can be quite lucrative, and a lot of fun, but we're looking for something a bit more regular and predictable so we can make plans... hard to save or pay rent when you have no idea what your income is. For example in November and December last year we had about a dozen separate events but half of them turned out rubbish so we did loads of work but made no money, and the money we made from the good events just ended up covering the money spent on the bad ones...
So I'm very pleased we've been doing so well at these local evenings, because it's completely in our control, really cheap to do and making us decent money.

I'll look forward to it ;)
That makes sense. Who doesn't want stability when it comes to finances, especially in light of having gotten burned and ultimately working for nothing more than once.
It sounds like you've got a good plan going. Also, one thing I've noticed from watching just ridiculous amounts of Food Network - when you've got really good stuff, word gets around. So many people are used to eating mediocre crap that when something comes along that's really good without being super expensive (and usually incredibly pretentious as well), you end up with business unless no one has any money at all.

Why not...I keep saying I could use some different scenery, so why not save up money for a ticket to get good pizza.
People spend money travelling to do stupid shit all the time, at least my trip would have a point to it. =)

Also, kiss my ass, spellchecker. Meriam Webster says travelling has two L's, so suck it.
Post edited March 22, 2015 by CarrionCrow