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Not surprisingly both prior employers have contacted me asking for advice. One requested that I come back in the future saying "that your finger is really on the pulse" on what needs to be done. Er, thanks but no thanks. I still have one hefty web contract outstanding and as such I've spent quite a lot of time reviewing and rebuilding my Apache, PHP and MySQL knowledge along with installing OpenSuSE in preference to Ubuntu on my desktop - and just in time for major changes between Novell and Microsoft. Further, because it rocks, I've started programming in Free Pascal, something I haven't done for a good fifteen years.
Also simpy because I can I've joined NaNoWriMo yesterday. My novel is entitled "The Outcast Girl" and is loosely based on the Ten Thousand Islands PBeM roleplaying game I ran many months ago. In a nutshell, it's a historical and anthropological study of Malay society in the early sixteenth century, with a monomythic narrative. Two thousand words done, fourty-eight thousand to go!
Gaming this week consisted of further development in our DragonQuest world (I'm really enjoying the additional grounding in the earth sciences this is giving me), a new initiative system for AD&D that actually makes sense, Urban Arcana last Sunday where the noble PCs saved St Kilda's prostitutes from a "Jack The Ripper" demon, and Diplomacy and Carcassonne (courtesy of
anthanum on Tuesday. Came second in Diplomacy, but was thoroughly thrashed in Carcassonne, which I played for the first time. The latter is really quite a brilliant production. The rules are very simple but the strategic depth is excellent. Social life included a wonderful fourtieth birthday party for
splodgenoodles with culinary delights provided by
tenbears and halloween drinks and zombie movies with
severina_242 and
_zombiemonkey
In world politics over recent months I've noticed a run of victories for various left-wing and socialist parties, including the re-election of Lula in Brazil, the re-election of the socialist president in Bulgaria, a surprise win by the Social Democrats in Austria, and even little Montenegro. The only exception is Congo where the politics are personality-based rather than ideological. Alongside all of this, the world's biggest union has just been formed. Is the world going a slight shade of red without the mass media noticing? And what will this mean for that Stern Report? It takes New Zealand newspaper to accurately display Australia's view.
Also simpy because I can I've joined NaNoWriMo yesterday. My novel is entitled "The Outcast Girl" and is loosely based on the Ten Thousand Islands PBeM roleplaying game I ran many months ago. In a nutshell, it's a historical and anthropological study of Malay society in the early sixteenth century, with a monomythic narrative. Two thousand words done, fourty-eight thousand to go!
Gaming this week consisted of further development in our DragonQuest world (I'm really enjoying the additional grounding in the earth sciences this is giving me), a new initiative system for AD&D that actually makes sense, Urban Arcana last Sunday where the noble PCs saved St Kilda's prostitutes from a "Jack The Ripper" demon, and Diplomacy and Carcassonne (courtesy of
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In world politics over recent months I've noticed a run of victories for various left-wing and socialist parties, including the re-election of Lula in Brazil, the re-election of the socialist president in Bulgaria, a surprise win by the Social Democrats in Austria, and even little Montenegro. The only exception is Congo where the politics are personality-based rather than ideological. Alongside all of this, the world's biggest union has just been formed. Is the world going a slight shade of red without the mass media noticing? And what will this mean for that Stern Report? It takes New Zealand newspaper to accurately display Australia's view.
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Date: 2006-11-03 03:25 am (UTC)Anyhow - I haven't touched Pascal in years, but it's the language I grew up on in school. Although we used Turbo Pascal. Strangely enough, when my IT section at work failed to produce any meaningful software, workaround, or response for a request we made for a label printing program when I first started working at the National Library - I wrote one in Turbo Pascal. That was over 10 years ago.
It is still being used today.
Scarey, huh?
They use a dot matrix printer with it and a dos window.
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Date: 2006-11-03 03:53 am (UTC)Not at all. The system in question is quite adaptable.
Scarey, huh?
It shows the resilience of the program. TP is very fast, the code is clean to read and easy to write and from what I've been told, Lazarus (the Delphi-like RAD) is damn good as well.
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Date: 2006-11-03 03:59 am (UTC)Pshaw.
(that's a verbal noise of disgust and dismissal indicating my wish to not get involved in a lengthy discussion especially as I'm using Hero)
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Date: 2006-11-03 03:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-03 03:43 am (UTC)Oh, only for about twenty five years or so. Even did some writing for ICE once upon a time.
My collection, others will attest, is indeed mighty.
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:06 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:01 am (UTC)I find it strange that these people with no scientific background and no real interest in science, will still call upon websites with supposedly scientific data in order to disprove global warming. Why do people polarise themselves along these invisible lines? These people don't think for themselves, they blindly follow a vague arbitrary party line.
The funny thing was that the website he used as a reference, www.friendsofscience.org , has been debunked as a front group for oil companies. What a world!
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:21 am (UTC)There is a good argument against the "I found it on the Internet" point of view. A "friendsofscience" site has as much legitimacy as an "aliens stole my baby".
Only scientific journals and actual scientific websites (like those with a .edu on the end of them - and not some student's homepage) begin to smell of legitimate research.
I always like to start at Wikipedia. It's not quite as good as (say) Brittanica, but it's going well.
Refer your friend to this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming
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Date: 2006-11-03 06:53 am (UTC)Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo! I'm not doomed. I'm not I'm not I'm not!
Ooh - I do love that cartoon. :-P
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:09 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-03 04:46 am (UTC)I must say I'm having a lot of fun writing it as well.
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:20 am (UTC)Looking forward to the Ten Thousand Islands novel! I enjoyed the game a lot, and think it got a lot more subtle in its attention to detail and theme than most. I'm thinking of starting an Ars Magica game in a similar PBEM format (though with more use of web resources, and more rules transparency) myself soon.
AD&D? As in, super retro? D20/3E really is a much superiour game, and captures the retro elements quite adequately I feel (I enjoy the retro OTT violence, garish bizarre monsters, and utterly mad completely adventure aligned gameworlds, but I don't miss the bizarre rules inconsistencys and schizophrenic proclamations of the one true path to role playing).
Carcassone is indeed a fine game. The whole german-style board game renaissance is a very good thing.
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:43 am (UTC)As for 10K Islands, I'm glad you enjoyed it. It was attentive to detail and theme, although I feel I failed in sufficiently generating a storyline. I'm hoping I can do that with the novel.
The other thing about 10K Islands is that you (successfully) hammered into my head what narrativism really is. I have you to thank for that.
Send me an email WRT to Ars Magica. I reckon I could be very interested in that.
AD&D as in superretro (indeed the mailing list is entitled "RetroADnD). I know that 3ed is much better, but it's just what we've been playing. After all, we've been using superretro modules too (U, A, G, D, Q).
Glad to see that you approve of Carcssonne. I was a little worried when the rules were listed as "age 8 and up". But that's more an indication of how clever and subtle the rules are...
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Date: 2006-11-03 04:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-03 05:06 am (UTC)Ummm... lev_lafayette?
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Date: 2006-11-03 05:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-03 05:05 am (UTC)Historical fiction. Indeed, historical fantasy at that.
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Date: 2006-11-03 11:30 am (UTC)You forget the Conservative gains in Sweden. And the loss of left wing moment in the Ukraine.
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Date: 2006-11-03 12:24 pm (UTC)Ahh, yes the Alliance of Sweden. I had forgotten about them. A week after the elections in Montenegro, so I should have counted them in the schema.
Still, a 7 seat majority shared among a shakey coalition in a 349 seat parliament is a fairly tenuous hold on power.
Ukraine? Their parliamentary elections were a lot earlier in the year.
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Date: 2006-11-03 05:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-04 12:33 am (UTC)Not at the moment. Indeed, I haven't experimented with any online rpging unless you count pbem and MUDs in the mid-90s
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From:nanowrimo
Date: 2006-11-03 09:26 pm (UTC)Re: nanowrimo
Date: 2006-11-04 12:32 am (UTC)Oh, I will be putting it up. The feedback I've had so far has been quite positive, but of course I'm still on the first chapter.
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Date: 2006-11-17 08:06 pm (UTC)As to the socialist tide, I am not a socialist anymore but I was pleased to see Vermont has elected a socialist senator as you noted.
I kind of guess I am a liberal now, social and economic, with some serious backpedalling toward regulation on the economic.
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Date: 2006-11-17 09:38 pm (UTC)Do you play SPI DragonQuest?
Yep, but we're also including the additional colleges from the TSR edition. We're having a lot of fun with the Barbarian Kings world.
It's not quite fresh as it used to be, that's very true. But see my next post later today about some great news in that regard.
I kind of guess I am a liberal now, social and economic, with some serious backpedalling toward regulation on the economic.
As far as small businesses are concerned they can be as competitive and capitalistic. The bigger they are however the more social regulation is required.