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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
...all women are named Sheila...
...everyone has a pet kangaroo...
...hotels have their own fisherman (?)
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
AtlanteanTroll
Pshaw. A little ham-fisted, sure, but it was visually stunning.
For bad television? Why? :smallconfused:
Yeah...I disagree. The visuals honestly didn't impress me, at all, and I felt there were flaws with it. During the scene where they're walking on a plant that glows where they touch it, it didn't always glow where they touched it. It felt off. And plot wise it was just horrendous. It was less ham fisted and more ham headed. I do sort of like how the bad guys won though, and I suppose the way the ending played out is good based on certain (read: my) interpretations on how it happened.
Haven't seen Season 3 yet. People I trust the opinion of said it's comparable to Avatar season 1!
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
I heard that in 'Strailya, their grills are dolls.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
Haven't seen Season 3 yet. People I trust the opinion of said it's comparable to Avatar season 1!
I'd say it's better than that! Maybe A:TLA Book 3 level! (IMHO, though, A:TLA Book 2 was the best of them all.)
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
*thinks*
I don't think I used any kind of search engines until like 2002, and by then Google was pretty much established as The Thing. Before that I just went to websites that were given on some magazines or played educational games. Boy, compared to the present day, educational online games back in pre-2000s sucked.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Educational games most always suck.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
I have to disagree. I've spent a lot of time playing many maths educational games for the past 3 weeks and witnessed kids actually do enjoy them. Or then they just enjoy how they get to use a computer. :smalltongue:
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
I've never encountered any fun ones in my experience, though. My school once made everybody play educational games for a required amount of time per day, but what they didn't know was that the games had a setting to disable the educational part, leaving a relatively fun Mario clone. (The games were mainly platformers, where when you beat a level, you have to complete a certain number of arithmetic problems. It was a boring as hell way to fake putting an effort into making the games "educational".)
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
From last thread:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Gnomvid
If it's a porcelain cup then there's no enamel on it, enamel is glass melted onto metal, it would be the ceramic glaceing that's getting chipped
Edit: bonded onto metal would be a better description
Uhh, right, I seem to have accidently mixed them up. Glace is the correct term. I blame being tired.
ION:
Speaking of tired, I think I just blew my Go To Bed check...
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
I've never encountered any fun ones in my experience, though. My school once made everybody play educational games for a required amount of time per day, but what they didn't know was that the games had a setting to disable the educational part, leaving a relatively fun Mario clone. (The games were mainly platformers, where when you beat a level, you have to complete a certain number of arithmetic problems. It was a boring as hell way to fake putting an effort into making the games "educational".)
That's exactly the type of games I remember playing when I was in school, and yeah, they were hella tedious and boring. No matter what the subject, they all followed the same pattern. The new games have much more variety though and have much more meaning than before. I'm kinda already waiting for the next step.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
FinnLassie
That's exactly the type of games I remember playing when I was in school, and yeah, they were hella tedious and boring. No matter what the subject, they all followed the same pattern. The new games have much more variety though and have much more meaning than before. I'm kinda already waiting for the next step.
Oh, speaking of edutainment games, Lucahjin (the girl who did the barbie videos) did a video on Freddie Fish. You watch now!
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
So, remember that Dragon Age round-robin thing LaZodiac and I found a third for a while back? Yeah, said third had to drop out for reasons of not having a CD key. :smallfrown:
Any other takers?
Spoiler: The thing
Show
So, the basic idea was that each of the three of us would play the three dragon age games in order, and swap our saves each time. So, for instance, I would play DA:O, then LaZodiac would import that save and play DA:2 with it. Then the third would play Inquisition with that save. We'd each play origins and rotate the games like that so that we'd get three DA 'universes' with their own heroes and outcomes.
It seemed like a fun idea at the time, and has actually motivated me to re-finish my origins playthrough.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
You younglings sure are lucky to have got to play games at school as a kind of learning thing, well we played games at school too but not as part of the curriculum.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Gnomvid
You younglings sure are lucky to have got to play games at school as a kind of learning thing, well we played games at school too but not as part of the curriculum.
Trust me, these games were nothing to get excited about. We still had to smuggle in games like you did. One year, I introduced the whole school to Cave Story by downloading it onto the schoolwide hard drive. Everybody loved it, for good reason.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
Trust me, these games were nothing to get excited about. We still had to smuggle in games like you did. One year, I introduced the whole school to Cave Story by downloading it onto the schoolwide hard drive. Everybody loved it, for good reason.
Games as a learning tool did not exist when I went to school, it wasn't until 7th grade the school we then moved to had any computers (well so called any way they weren't even 286's, something called Compis) we were taught typing in 8th grade on actual typewriters although they were electronic, but I learned more at home on the Commodore 128 and later Atari 1040STE.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
Trust me, these games were nothing to get excited about. We still had to smuggle in games like you did. One year, I introduced the whole school to Cave Story by downloading it onto the schoolwide hard drive. Everybody loved it, for good reason.
You have done a good deed.
OH YEAH! HUZZAH!
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Family heirloom cactus (not actuallya cactus) is dead. If you remember, it was declared dead this Christmas after the heating system had died at our family farm and indoor temperatures dropped below zero, but then we found two leaves which had miraculously survived the cold. We took it home to better care for it over summer, but to no avail. Either it couldn't stand the heat or the rains, or perhaps the root system was so damaged that it continued to deteriorate until it no longer could support the plant. With only half a centimetre left of green leaf left, I tried to replant it and supply it with lots of (cold) light, water (to compensate for its lack of roots) and carbon dioxide, but I was aware it was probably all a futile effort as I'm not schooled in emergency gardening. It kept deteriorating, slowly losing its little remaining colour, so today I decided to attempt a final drastic meassure and cut off the lower half to put it on a paper soaked with water and nutrients, thus bypassing the need for roots entirely. It was too late, though, because when I put the knife to it, it tore apart and revealed to already have rottened through, so now its officially dead, not just inevitably dying.
To be honest, I am a little sad about this. I have a tendency to grow attached to objects with history, and this plant was around a hundred years old by our estimates...
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Teddy
Family heirloom cactus (not actuallya cactus) is dead. If you remember, it was declared dead this Christmas after the heating system had died at our family farm and indoor temperatures dropped below zero, but then we found two leaves which had miraculously survived the cold. We took it home to better care for it over summer, but to no avail. Either it couldn't stand the heat or the rains, or perhaps the root system was so damaged that it continued to deteriorate until it no longer could support the plant. With only half a centimetre left of green leaf left, I tried to replant it and supply it with lots of (cold) light, water (to compensate for its lack of roots) and carbon dioxide, but I was aware it was probably all a futile effort as I'm not schooled in emergency gardening. It kept deteriorating, slowly losing its little remaining colour, so today I decided to attempt a final drastic meassure and cut off the lower half to put it on a paper soaked with water and nutrients, thus bypassing the need for roots entirely. It was too late, though, because when I put the knife to it, it tore apart and revealed to already have rottened through, so now its officially dead, not just inevitably dying.
To be honest, I am a little sad about this. I have a tendency to grow attached to objects with history, and this plant was around a hundred years old by our estimates...
You can't take a "stickling"?
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Gnomvid
Games as a learning tool did not exist when I went to school, it wasn't until 7th grade the school we then moved to had any computers (well so called any way they weren't even 286's, something called Compis) we were taught typing in 8th grade on actual typewriters although they were electronic, but I learned more at home on the Commodore 128 and later Atari 1040STE.
So you're old school! That's cool! From what I hear, though, Compis weren't regarded that highly, even back when they were released. Either way, it's cool that you got to use computers when they were just beginning.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Rotted all the way to the bark?
as trees only use the very outer most part of the trunk to carry water and nutrients so even if it is rotten at the core still does not mean it's dead dead just mostly dead, meaning it's got a very miniscule micro chance of actually surviving.
or you can amputate a branch and either transplant it to another tree (good chance of survival or stick it in the ground (not so good chance of survival)
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
So you're old school! That's cool! From what I hear, though, Compis weren't regarded that highly, even back when they were released. Either way, it's cool that you got to use computers when they were just beginning.
In the 1940's? :)
We had a Vic-20 and then a Vic-64. I have no idea what they had at school, but I remember playing SimEarth and SimCity.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
So you're old school! That's cool! From what I hear, though, Compis weren't regarded that highly, even back when they were released. Either way, it's cool that you got to use computers when they were just beginning.
Yeah they were quite crap even then, I remember much more fondly playing Civ on the 386 computers at High School although it was a pain to Switch between the four floppy's all the time.
Yes I'm older then I care to admit but as I don't feel like 38 soon to be 39 but rather 20 something I don't honestly care either so nurrr!!!
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Well, my theory that Google has been using mind control rays to take over the population seems mostly confirmed. :smallbiggrin:
Really though, it's amazing how effective search is at just spreading. It really IDs google as an invention that was just a good idea for the world because it took very little prodding for everyone to start using it and then it stuck and we all use it now.
It's like if I asked about the first time you ever used a toothpick or a paper clip. These are great things that once they're around, you don't even acknowledge that they're in any way notable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
I've never encountered any fun ones in my experience, though. My school once made everybody play educational games for a required amount of time per day, but what they didn't know was that the games had a setting to disable the educational part, leaving a relatively fun Mario clone. (The games were mainly platformers, where when you beat a level, you have to complete a certain number of arithmetic problems. It was a boring as hell way to fake putting an effort into making the games "educational".)
If you managed to play around with the program enough to alter the settings in order to avoid having to do the problem, it was an effective teaching tool.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jhunter_d
Trust me, these games were nothing to get excited about. We still had to smuggle in games like you did. One year, I introduced the whole school to Cave Story by downloading it onto the schoolwide hard drive. Everybody loved it, for good reason.
You're a hero.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Let's see...computer games at school. I think we had something called Number Munchers and of course there was The Oregon Trail. It's amazing how many people you could kill off in that game...
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Can't argue with that, I used to rely on Lycos or what it was called for all my info in the bad old days of dial up didn't like Google when they first appeared and now I can't see why I'd even want to contemplate another search engine.
EDIT:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
EmeraldRose
Let's see...computer games at school. I think we had something called Number Munchers and of course there was The Oregon Trail. It's amazing how many people you could kill off in that game...
The Oregon Trail man I really need to try to find some time to dust off some of my emulators one of these days and play some classic gems again
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Gnomvid
The Oregon Trail man I really need to try to find some time to dust off some of my emulators one of these days and play some classic gems again
The only version I've played is the DSi version.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
You know you're a programmer when... You keep accidentally ending sentences in your notes with semicolons. :smallamused:
Seriously, though. Not cool, brain. I have to read these later. :smallannoyed:
Related: The project that I'm working on for my data structures class is involves essentially building the boring parts of MatLab (e.g. basic matrix operations), except without basically any of the "user-friendly" features. :smallamused: At least I'll be (presumably) able to hold onto this for later if I ever need this sort of matrix functionality in C++ later.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
EmeraldRose
Let's see...computer games at school. I think we had something called Number Munchers and of course there was The Oregon Trail. It's amazing how many people you could kill off in that game...
I remember both of those! I think I actually beat Oregon Trail once... that game was easy to die in (although it's also possible that I just sucked).
ION: Two major projects and a test due next friday (on top of the rest of my homework). Yay. I'll be losing money for this as well, because I would otherwise be working Friday evening, and I don't realistically have sufficient free time with which to schedule another shift.
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Well, my name is officially in the ring for Student Senate. 14 out of 15 seats are open, so I guess the odds are better than normal?
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Good luck AT.
Oh man just got my early Smash 4 demo code because I'm a good Nintendo fan. I've also got three other codes to share however I please :smallamused:
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
Good luck AT.
Oh man just got my early Smash 4 demo code because I'm a good Nintendo fan. I've also got three other codes to share however I please :smallamused:
May I have one?
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Re: jhunter_d's Gelatinous Jamborie of a Random Banter: #209
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
Good luck AT.
Oh man just got my early Smash 4 demo code because I'm a good Nintendo fan. I've also got three other codes to share however I please :smallamused:
Ooooh! For 3DS or WiiU? Cause if the former... (And thanks!)