DM of the Rings XXII:
Are We There Yet?

By Shamus Posted Friday Oct 27, 2006

Filed under: DM of the Rings 57 comments

Wasting Time, Rulebooks, Giving the Finger, Legolas, Gay Jokes, Pizza

In defense of the players, I will say that when this sort of thing happens it is usually the result of the players getting restless or bored. If the players are distracted, it means it’s time to change something and recapture their interest. I’m still working on this particular skill myself.

 


 

Friday SitRep

By Shamus Posted Friday Oct 27, 2006

Filed under: Notices 9 comments

Many random notes and much pointless navel-gazing this morning. Best if you skip this. I should be out of this self-indulgent phase any minute now…

Yes, I have changed the site theme for Halloween. I don’t like it either. I don’t think this particular layout lends itself to Halloween colors. I thought of going white-on-black for Halloween, but there are all sorts of reasons why that would look just awful, unless I wanted to remake all of the graphics. Which I don’t.

My YouTube video Bowling+Rollercoaster=FUN! has had amazing success. Check it out:

YouTube Stats

135,000 viewers is just crazy. That’s more than the total number of hits to this website in the last 5 months. I stand by my original assessment that YouTube can’t possibly make money like this. Although now the deal I offered Google might not be as tantalizing as before, for reasons I’ll get into in a minute. Last week – when the movie was new – I was (briefly) the #1 favorited videogame movie on YouTube. This sort of thing tends to feed on itself. I’m guessing that once you get onto page 1 of the favorites, it becomes easier to get more visitors and thus stay there.

Still, DM of the Rings is getting many, many links (nearly doubling the total number of links to my blog, ever) and the Bowlercoaster movie went wild – both of these things happened within a few days of each other.

This morning I looked and I’d blown through my allotted bandwidth for the month. This has never been a problem before. (Not even close.) Now I wonder: Is this allotment given by the calendar month which ends in a couple of days, or by billing month, which ends in a couple of weeks? If the latter, I could be way, way, way over by the end of the month. I have no idea what will happen. I can’t find anything on the HostingMatters pages about this. Do they shut me down? Put a lien on my house? Send a couple of goons to give me a beating? This should be interesting and quite painful finding out!

Hmmm. After searching through the help pages, looks like it will just be a few extra bucks. Assuming I don’t get FARKed or Digg’ed (dug?) or otherwise linked by some huge site, I should skate through just fine. Most of this is my own dumb fault. I’ve been generally sloppy about making sure I pick the best file format for a particular image, and I’ve left JPG quality on my images needlessly high. I add lots of graphics to posts that do not need them. I use ten screenshots when three would do. I bet with a little effort (which is still too much) I could make the archives much lighter.

I’ve gone back and added titles to the old DM of the Rings, and will be giving them titles from here on out. This is to make things easier on myself, which is one of my passions in life. The old numeral names were too hard to keep straight in my head, and as I consider new strips and shuffle through the archives I find myself getting confused. So, now we have titles.

 


 

Seanbaby vs Uwe Boll

By Shamus Posted Thursday Oct 26, 2006

Filed under: Nerd Culture 18 comments

Normally I start these little posts off with a description of who I’m talking about. So, if I’m worried that you may not know who Seanbaby is then I will explain that Seanbaby is the inventor of funny and winner of the Nobel Prize for Awesome.

The problem is that I have no way of explaining Uwe Boll to someone. He’s so reviled and so universally hated that all of the insults in every language have already been used in an attempt to describe him. Then people used up all the compliments by preceding them with the word “not”. So, there is no language left at this point and the only way I could tell you about him is if I made up new words:

Snivelium [sniv‧el‧ee‧um] – noun

Unit of measure. The number of cubic meters of children’s tears caused by one of Uwe Boll’s movies.

People call Ewe Ball a “filmmaker”, but this is because – as I mentioned before – nobody knows what else to call him. Hugh Bowl makes movies in the same way that a hippo’s rectum makes fresh pastry. The best thing that can be said about him is that he provides work to actors who lack the dramatic skills to get a job making hard-core pornographic silent films. He’s famous for taking very stupid videogames and – against all odds and nature – somehow making them into even more stupid movies.

I heard a rumor that Eww Bowel was going to have some sort of celebrity boxing match against his critics, which didn’t make a lot of sense to me because that would be everyone on earth, including his own mother. While I’m pretty sure he could take her, it doesn’t seem like it would make for good television. Then he found out he might end up in the ring against Seanbaby, and once he’d changed his pants he announced he wouldn’t be available for the fight.

Although now that I think of it: If someone could make a videogame about Seanbaby punching Yoo Bole in the face over and over again, it might be enough to trick him into making a movie about it, which may lead to the real thing. However, it would be very risky to make such a game. The game would probably sell so well that the author would be fatally crushed beneath a mountain of cash and cheerleaders.

 


 

Seizing Up

By Shamus Posted Thursday Oct 26, 2006

Filed under: Personal 8 comments

As a result of the difficult business with my daughter, my wife and I have needed to learn a bit about seizures. Well, I did, anyway. My wife has training in working with the disabled, and has seen a lot of seizures of various types.

In 1971 my father, who was 29 years old, had a cerebral hemorrhage. His brain was bleeding. He collapsed and was rushed to the hospital. A couple of days later he woke up. The good news was that there was no obvious brain damage. The bad news was that all that blood had formed a clot in his brain that would kill him sooner or later if it wasn’t removed.

I’m sure if this happened today they would remove the clot with lasers, or send self-replicating nanites in after it, or maybe just use the transporter and beam the sucker out of there. But we’re talking about 1971 here, which means they had just enough medical knowledge to know that this was not a job for blunt tools and fire.

There was no way around it – to get the clot out they were going to have to go through some brain tissue. That brain tissue would be destroyed, and he would suffer some level of brain damage. So, the choice was to live with this time-bomb in his head, waiting for it to kill him at any moment, or to go in and destroy parts of his otherwise healthy brain. It wasn’t much of a choice. They did the procedure. Afterwards the left side of his body was paralyzed, and he suffered from epilepsy. As a result, he would need to take anti-seizure medication for the rest of his life. He eventually recovered limited use of his left leg, but from that day on his left arm hung limp at his side and he never made use of it again.

I was born about six months later. Without getting into a bunch of irrelevant family history, let’s just say I didn’t see much of him for the next twelve years. I got to know him as I entered my teens and eventually I began to grasp what had really happened to this guy and who he used to be.

I never saw him during a seizure, but the idea stuck in my mind. At the time I related it to the only thing I understood: computers. If you trash a block of memory, the computer can continue to operate just fine until the moment it reaches into that corrupted or missing block. At that point anything can happen, from a minor application hiccup to a full-on systemwide crash. It all depends on what was in the lost block of data and what it was being used for.

CC Photo by orangeacid
I just thought the seizure was the organic version of the blue screen of death. The brain would try to access something from the destroyed sections, which would lead to some sort of serious fault and reboot. I had it all mapped out. The memory loss was a result of files being left open: all that stuff the person was thinking about gets lost because it was never moved from memory (short term memory) to storage (long term memory). The shaking was from bad data being sent to the peripherals, just like a crash will often cause the sound card to emit a bunch of noise, or make the drives spin endlessly, or cause one of the drives to eject for no reason. When people have seizures, they often suffer a little more damage that can make future seizures more likely and more potent. In the same way, continually having hard lockups can eventually trash system files or bits of the registry, making the system more unstable. Anti-seizure meds usually slow the person down, reducing mental acuity a bit. This is sort of like limiting yourself to having one application running at a time on the computer, which can avoid crashes by not taxing the system.

Of course, everything I’ve just said is complete and utter nonsense. Computer crashes and seizures in the brain are not the same thing, and it is only my ignorance of the latter that made it possible for me to construct these parallels.

Despite the fact that I know this is mostly baloney, I still keep trying to think of things using this metaphor. I guess a bad metaphor is more comforting than cluelessness.

Yeah I know, this post is kinda wierd. Go figure.

UPDATE: Steven has a much more correct metaphor in the comments below.

 


 

DM of the Rings XXI:
The Epic Sounds of Battle

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Oct 25, 2006

Filed under: DM of the Rings 75 comments

Tomb of Balin, Chamber of Marzubal, Loot, Dice Rolls, Critical, To-hit, Damage Rolls, Totally retarded.

This happens all the time. No matter how epic the battle, once begun, the thing sounds more or less like a bingo game: People shout out numbers and other people get excited about them.

 


 

Lucky Duck

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Oct 25, 2006

Filed under: Links 1 comments

Happy Birthday to Wonderduck, who had a very close shave a year ago.

About a year ago a new ambulance station went in, less than a mile up the road. So, my house is now between the ambulance and town, which means I have the occasional wailing sirens to cope with as the thing speeds by. I thought that was pretty annoying for a while, until my daughter had her thing and we needed an ambulance ourselves. They were on our doorstep about two minutes after my wife made the call.

I don’t mind the sirens anymore. A little noise is a small price to pay for being two minutes from life-saving medical technology. Gotta love those guys.

Glad you’re still with us, Wonderduck, and still anime-blogging. I hope you’re still watching anime and F1 racing when you’re 110.

 


 

Silent Hill: Plot analysis

By Shamus Posted Tuesday Oct 24, 2006

Filed under: Movies 274 comments

Reading the reviews of Silent Hill on Netflix, it seems that a very large portion of the viewers couldn’t make any sense of the movie at all. The movie didn’t require the viewer to really know or understand any specific backstory (the characters in the movie are all new) but it does help to have a sense for how these stories work and how Silent Hill (the town) operates.

The movie leaves things very open, but below is my own take on it. Massive spoilers follow.

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Silent Hill: Plot analysis”