topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Thursday December 18, 2025, 11:21 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 308 309 310 311 312 [313] 314 315 316 317 318 ... 404next
7801
Living Room / Re: Bill Gates, not Steve Jobs, is the real hero
« Last post by wraith808 on November 06, 2011, 08:21 AM »
Copy paste:

No way I would have extended my comment to that which is why I never implied Mother Theresa's flaws at all. It's just not worth it. It hijacks a thread. It slips people into angry if not defensive delusions or both. It leaves nothing but a husk of a thread. Bringing up the brand should never be seen as bringing up the human. There's a time and place for that and though I would hope there are more necessary time and places to bring up such truths for those who haven't encountered it, fact of the matter is that there isn't. It wasn't a flaw in my comment to omit what any article says Mother Theresa really wasn't, it was by design. A design necessary in the world left by those who  create heroes.

^ Still confused, because that's after the fact, and your statement on that same post makes it seem like it was obvious in the complete post that I quoted.
7802
Living Room / Re: Bill Gates, not Steve Jobs, is the real hero
« Last post by wraith808 on November 06, 2011, 08:00 AM »
Well I went off because I felt my comment was obvious for what it was and to quote tomos: "the hero idea is BS" and that's why I brought up Mother Theresa as regardless of what you think of the human, her brand says different. Period. 

He does get attention but the thing is, nobody really considers either of those two as heroes. (Not in the sense of Mother Theresa at least.)

?!?!?

There's nothing there to point you to anything other than what the words say.  Which is something that a lot of people believe.

?!?!?
7803
Living Room / Re: Is "Thank you for your service" enough for veterans?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 06, 2011, 07:57 AM »
I know this is often hard on the battlefield, tough choices have to be made in a split second, and things aren't always clear.

In the middle of the battlefield, it's not just tough- it's a call you shouldn't ever make, nor have to make, at a certain level.  In a lot of ways, the system is screwed up in that there's way too much politics in the armed forces, therefore people get command positions that shouldn't have them.  Especially since there is a reason the command structure is in place- to put these decisions in the hands of one person, so they can be made as one.  This is so they can act as one mind, and not have to worry about whether someone else in their unit will make a different decision and not cover their back.  Sometimes things are obviously wrong, i.e. gunning down an unresisting civilian populace.  But in the vast majority of cases, this is the reason that unquestioning obedience is drummed into the lower ranks, starting from the moment they enter boot camp.
7804
Living Room / Re: Bill Gates, not Steve Jobs, is the real hero
« Last post by wraith808 on November 05, 2011, 08:23 PM »
I don't like people put as high-moral examples when they has a lot of issues behind their backs.
-fenixproductions (November 05, 2011, 04:33 PM)

I don't like people put as examples, high-moral or otherwise. 

Live with a man 40 years. Share his house, his meals. Speak on every subject. Then tie him up, and hold him over the volcano's edge. And on that day, you will finally meet the man.

I just like that quote :)  But seriously, how much do we know the people we are familiar with, let alone those we don't know personally?  For the longest time Tiger Woods was a role-model because he was seriously gifted at putting forth the right facade.  Now he is a pariah.  But the truth of the man is somewhere in the middle.  Our perceptions put him on a pedestal, and our perceptions brought him down.  When in the end, all he ever was was a man that knew how to hit a ball with a stick.

Mother Teresa is like most god-believers to me -- their thinking is based on a psychosis that believes suffering and evil are good for you, and not something to be fought against.

There we are with generalizations.  Most people that believe in God that I know of don't believe that suffering and evil are good for you, so there you go.  That's another side of the same problem IMO.  Instead of taking people for who they are or what they have done, we put labels on them as a whole or based on hearsay good or bad.  I just don't like it.
7805
Living Room / Re: Bill Gates, not Steve Jobs, is the real hero
« Last post by wraith808 on November 05, 2011, 04:04 PM »
I mean damn... Who ever really lives up to their own hype when put under a spotlight??

That was my point.  Mother Theresa was put up as an example to which Jobs and Gates don't live up to, but she was human also.  There is no comparing people and their contributions.  Each person gives their own contributions, and the comparisons are useless, IMO, and the little details don't detract in any way from the good- they are two separate things.
7806
Living Room / Re: Bill Gates, not Steve Jobs, is the real hero
« Last post by wraith808 on November 05, 2011, 02:53 PM »
^ I was thinking it, but I wasn't going to go there.
7807
General Software Discussion / Re: Love WorkFlowy, hate web apps.. What to do?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 04, 2011, 07:05 PM »
I love workflowy, and use it all the time.  I suppose I could be cynical about the cloud aspect, but even that has its advantages.
7808
Living Room / Re: National Novel Writing Month Has Started!
« Last post by wraith808 on November 04, 2011, 07:04 PM »
Like I said, I'm more focused on flavour text for my game than finishing, so I likely won't have 50k words by month's end, but here is an introduction that I've written.

Spoiler
The rain soaked streets and grim atmosphere echoed his own mood as Kai prowled the streets of Tangiers.  He had been in the city for over a week, but he still had not found the next step on his path.  His inattention cost him as he was close to his lodgings when he realized he was being followed.

Looking around, he realized that they had wanted to be seen; they had bracketed him from behind, just far enough in his peripheral vision that he would notice them- and fail to notice the other two now slipping from the shadows.  He could also see from their movements they were good.  And he knew he didn't have much on his side, merely the fact that they did not know whom they had been sent after.

Cold reasoning took over his movements then as he turned to face the two attackers behind, just as if he were stumbling into their trap.  One of the two stepped forward.  "Give us your money and live," the man said, his eyes not betraying the presence of his comrades.  But the other was not as careful, and he could almost see the two men in the rear of him moving into place.

“Is this the best that they could do?" Kai asked, smiling, standing unafraid in the face of death.  “Go back and tell your masters that you could not find me,” he continued.  “Live to fight another day.”

The leader's eyes narrowed at this insult, and he eschewed their plans to draw a knife from the folds of his cloak, leaping forward.  Kai stepped in to meet his charge, grabbing the knife wrist and thundering a heavy blow to the man's face.  As the thug fell back, his victim gripped his wrist with both hands, spun him around, and twisted the arm savagely, dislocating his shoulder as he disarmed him.  As the thug screamed, his three compatriots surged forward.  Kai threw the hapless thug into his friends, taking a wider, defiant stance.

"If you come at me, be prepared to meet death, for I'll send you to her smiling," he said through a menacing grimace.

They hesitated then, and one moved to pull a small pistol instead of the cudgels and knives that they already held.  The injured leader was now on his knees and shook his head, causing the pistol to disappear as quickly as it had been shown.  Then he motioned them forward, urging them on with
a low command.  "Kill him," he said with more emotion in his voice than he would like to have shown.

As the men rushed him, he flung the dagger with devastating effect; though it was not made for throwing, it took the first thug in the throat.  The violent act stopped the others in their tracks for just long enough for Kai to dash forward, gaining the initiative.

They belatedly started to move as Kai charged headlong into their midst.  Barely slipping past one blade, he was caught by another from the other side, but he paid it no heed, elbowing one man in the throat as he kicked a second man in the knee, causing it to fold in a way that nature never intended.  Before either of his targets had hit the ground, he grabbed the third man's head in his hands, coming in too close for him to bring his cudgel to bear, and head-butted him fiercely in the bridge of his nose.  The man fell heavily, blood streaming from his ruined face.  Kai twisted to one side just as a thrust from behind would have ended his struggle, continuing his turn, leading with a heavy fist he caught the man on the point of his chin, spinning him so brutally that a sharp crack from the man's neck echoed in the tight space.  The third attacker was on his feet again, and Kai dived unsheathing his own wicked blade with a cross draw from behind his back, coming up just inside of a wild strike from the thug whose leg he had crippled.  He blocked the blow with the blade of his knife, bringing the serrated edge down viciously, continuing the motion in a power assisted slash across the inner thigh of the thug's ruined leg, hearing an answering shriek in return.  Reversing his blade, he one armed it into the thug's neck as he fell, turning to face the final living attacker.

Blood streamed down the thug's face as he stood there looking at their supposedly harmless mark.  "One last time I tell you, leave before you join them in hell."  Meeting the man's eyes with a fierce look, Kai stood there unmoving until the man backed down, slinking away into the night. 
As Kai watched the man to make sure he left, he leaned back against the wall, bringing his hand to the solitary wound he’d received in the fight.  He felt warm blood flowing under his hand, and knew he would have to attend to it soon.  But he struggled to his stand putting that aside to make his own way out of the alley, wary of the thug returning with help.  Through a grimace at the pain he smiled, glad the waiting was over, knowing he was on the right track, and this was his opponent’s way of telling him the game had begun in earnest.

"Soon," he said, even as he stumbled on through the dark streets.

7809
That answer (and indeed the using of the URL) tends to start flame wars, so I'd suggest that you check the two pages and decide for yourself.  I'd also suggest we leave off the topic at this point.  Just in before the almost inevitable argument, trying to stop it.
7810
So has Direct Access become PhraseExpander?
7811
Living Room / Re: The Inside Story on How Microsof't Tablet Didn't Happen?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 03, 2011, 07:42 PM »
Renegade already posted this here. :)

Of course, that's the reason that it always rubs me the wrong way when a peripherally connected story that could be a thread in its own right is posted in another thread.
7812
I think the original article is somehow lumping the notion of sandboxes in with 'walled gardens.'

One does not imply or require the other. Sandboxes are (almost always) a force for good. And you can run 'sandboxed' in a completely open and free environment with no need to let yourself be forced onto a captive platform or through a portal to do so. No need to even install anything. Just boot off any 'live' Linux distro and you're there.

 :)

Sandboxie was definitely a good thing while my kids were younger.  So sandboxed doesn't mean bad, IMO.
7813
Living Room / Re: Anyone got an iPad and like it?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 02, 2011, 02:26 PM »
^ I can't say that I disagree with the assessment.  Apple makes the same assessment in their actions.  It's just that Apple put this priority lower on the scale than time to market.  The Apple platforms seem to converge more and more with each iteration; Microsoft could have taken the same approach, especially with the rapid OS development cycle on the more lean OS.
7814
Living Room / Re: NaGa DeMon
« Last post by wraith808 on November 02, 2011, 01:38 PM »
I think my half-baked idea last year for NANY was from being burnt out on NaNoWriMo, so this will give me more time to do both well, hopefully.
7815
Living Room / NaGa DeMon
« Last post by wraith808 on November 02, 2011, 01:24 PM »
Well, I was going to try my hand (and possibly fail) again to participate in NaNoWriMo.  But I'm not any more.  I found a more suited pursuit for the month of November.

NaGa DeMon!

(or National Game Design Month)

Short Excerpt from the link above:
National Game Design Month is about making and playing games. In 2011 during the month of November I want You to create and play your own boardgame, RPG, flash computer game, choose-your-own-adventure book, wargame, cardgame or other destracting novelty. The rules are simple – create, write and play (at least once) a game during the month.

I have many games that are the spark of an idea, but not completed- this will hopefully give me the impetus to complete at least one.  And I'll get some writing in with the sidebar blurbs.

So off I go!  I'll put a site up for it when I get into the groove, but I'm excited!
7816
Living Room / Re: Anyone got an iPad and like it?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 01, 2011, 11:43 AM »
I know you asked him, but I use OliveTree bible reader.  Integrates with Evernote, and has a lot of cool features.
7817
Living Room / Re: NAS Recommendations?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 01, 2011, 11:42 AM »
+1 - I've been pondering this one myself ... But had assumed it was due to some rare minerals (geographical) availability. Kinda like the memory shortage from a few years back caused by another natural disaster wiping out most of the countryside where it was all from.

Yes, it is due to a rare resource- money.  At least, that's my perception.
7818
Oh wow!  I now know my next utility purchase!
7819
Find And Run Robot / Re: FARR not a commonly downloaded program?
« Last post by wraith808 on November 01, 2011, 10:04 AM »
I consider the cost affordable for anyone who can afford to live.. I mean, that's a few fast food meals, or a dinner out. MANY (if not MOST) industries have some sort of barrier to entrance. Some certification, license, etc..

This isn't an industry.  An industry implies that you will make money off of it.  The only comparable thing I can see are fishing licenses, since they have commercial and non-commercial licenses.  Non-commercial fishing licenses are $15 in most municipalities for a multi-year license in a lot of cases.  There should be a non-commercial license that is either free or very low cost.  And truthfully, I already give time and money to work on free software.  But I get something for that rather than a nebulous cost that I have to foot yearly.

And don't get me wrong, I'm not blaming you, nor saying your site should fight such battles.  But I am saying it's not right- not even a little.
7820
Find And Run Robot / Re: FARR not a commonly downloaded program?
« Last post by wraith808 on October 31, 2011, 09:01 PM »
Now, I've helped you understand why this is so. Do you understand?

Nope.  Sorry, we won't see eye-to-eye on this.  If malware mandated it, and they really wanted to enforce this, then the cost should be free.  So many other things are.  And though I like to make software, I'm not footing the bill for an entrance into their glass house.  Sounds a lot like the criticisms against developing apps for Apple to me; that they pay to let you on the platform.  There are other ways that they could have phrased it, and there are other ways that they could have set it up so that the user *knew* that this wasn't necessarily a negative warning.  But the design of the dialog is made to look like a malware dialog.  And that's not cool.
7821
DC Gamer Club / Re: Humble Voxatron Debut
« Last post by wraith808 on October 31, 2011, 06:04 PM »
I'll opt out of this one.  I like to support them, but it doesn't really look like my cup of tea.
7822
DC Gamer Club / Re: Indie Royale - Similar to Humble Indie Bundle
« Last post by wraith808 on October 31, 2011, 09:42 AM »
Thanks!  It seems to work a little different than the Humble Bundle, with contributions driving down the price rather than driving the average up, and there being a minimum buy in.  But still a good deal, even if I already had ARES and Sanctum.
7823
Living Room / Re: Hard drive shortage
« Last post by wraith808 on October 28, 2011, 07:50 PM »
Wow!  I hadn't noticed this... guess I should pay better attention!  The HD I just got for my nas for $70 is going for a minimum of $129.  2TB will last for a while, though.  Glad I'm ok on space for a while.
7824
General Software Discussion / Re: personal favourites start page
« Last post by wraith808 on October 28, 2011, 05:04 PM »
http://www.only2clicks.com

and

http://www.3x3links.com/index.html

That said, I'm thinking of starting my own...
7825
Find And Run Robot / Re: FARR App Crash
« Last post by wraith808 on October 28, 2011, 10:00 AM »
It was FARR google calendar for me.  It used to work, but it all of a sudden stopped working.  I'm not sure if google changed the data api- I'd not put it past them.
Pages: prev1 ... 308 309 310 311 312 [313] 314 315 316 317 318 ... 404next