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I'm moving house and will have no internet so I wanted to get in early.
Happy Esselday for Saturday!
Until then, have this:
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So a dude at work is selling a mechanical keyboard he bought and doesn't like. It's a Filco Ninja with Cherry MX Brown switches.
It's called a Ninja because it has blank keytops and the printing is on the front.
I don't like this particular keyboard because it has no numpad, but I do very much like typing on it. Going back to my regular Dell workstation keyboard feels like typing on a flimsy sponge.
I've seen these online before, at places like http://www.overclock.net/t/491752/mechanical-keyboard-guide but never got the balls up to spend the money on one.
I'm now considering ordering a full size one of these. I'm unsure whether to stick with the Brown switches, or switch to Blacks or Reds, or if it even makes much of a difference.
Do any of you use mechanical keyboards? Which ones? Am I being an elitist keyboard wanker?- Show previous comments 27 more
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Sodaholic said:
My old '89 mechanical keyboard's D key is a little too sensitive, sometimes it does the keypress twice even though I only hit it once. Is this fixable?
If it's a Model M you are referring to, then I would say just pop the key off and see how the spring looks. If it's messed up, I would just swap the spring with a near-unused key like Scroll lock or something.
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I recently read about MicroBee Z80-based microcomputers being remade with modern features like SD Card, ethernet and dual processors.
For the home hobbyist, it appears microcomputing has never died. I had a friend who used to make all sorts of things with PICAXE controllers and of course these days there's Arduino which has a large following.
For those who want something less "embedded system" and more "conventional computer", the home-made Maximite seems to have become the de-facto standard with several SoC clones available. This little thing runs a BASIC interpreter on a 32-bit 80MHz CPU and also has USB, host serial, PS2 keyboard, VGA out and SD Card storage.
All these little things amaze me. They sound so cool and seem to have a world of nostalgia in store. I've always wanted to get one except I had nothing to actually *do* with it.
Lately, a workmate came across someone who had the ThinkGeek Binary Clock on their desk. I love the idea of binary clocks but the "Binary Coded Decimal" of the ThinkGeek clock is stupid. I prefer "True Binary" like this guy's clock which he hacked into the middle of an old hard drive.
So, sometime in the next year or two I hope to make a binary clock which is powered by either USB or PoE, and uses its host power to communicate to an NTP server. Libraries and interfaces exist for the Arduino to do all this, the rest is just me learning to code and putting it all together.
Do any of you guys play around with old micro/embedded computers like these?- Show previous comments 2 more
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Super Jamie said:
You could always make little budget robots out of floppy drive motors and generally cheap old throwaway stuff? What would you build robots to do?
Initially I considered a snake-bot, but looking for mechanical parts (such as gears) sucks because they aren't sold to the public as freely as electronic components. I know I'm probably better off looking for them in used damaged appliances, but in this case I actually need kN identical parts for N snake segments, which is unlikely to find in just a few objects. I may still try it one day, considering it's interesting from an AI perspective (make lots of interconnected similar objects work together), and that once I complete a part, I know how to build the others in roughly the same way. But there are simpler concepts to try anyway...
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I was recently sitting on IRC bitching about how I couldn't run the latest Minecraft because of a bug in the Linux ATI drivers, couldn't run Doom Builder 2, was sick of messing around with Wine to get my Steam games running and I thought "Fuck this, I'll just start using Windows 7".
So a week later, everything is fine. I've been Minecrafting away, opening maps in DB2, finished Shadowgrounds and everything's happy.
Except one thing - playing Doom.
Under Linux I used the terminal to create aliases, so typing doom2 was the same thing as typing /home/superjamie/doom/prboom-plus-2.5.1.1/prboom-plus -iwad /home/superjamie/doom/iwads/doom2.wad and so on. This makes it easy to chuck PWADs on the Desktop and launch them in whatever order I want (doom2 -file file1.wad file2.wad) and to play/record demos (doom2 -playdemo file.lmp or doom2 -record file.lmp).
Under Windows a similar command would be "C:\Users\Super Jamie\Documents\doom\prboom-plus-2.5.1.1\prboom-plus.exe" -iwad "C:\Users\Super Jamie\Documents\doom\IWADs\doom2.wad" which is way too long for my liking. I played around with the frontend ZDL for a while which is good cos it lets you order wadfiles but has no facility for playing demos beyond typing in a (long) command. I also tried CDL which plays demos but doesn't order wadfiles. Jodwin kindly lent me the source but evidently C# is beyond my skill and patience level. Surely there is some way I can just type doom2 in a box and have things work the way I want them to.
There is!
I created a file called aliases.bat and filled it with the aliases I had under Linux but using DOSKey. For example:
The $* passes all additional parameters on so -file and -record work correctly.code:
Array
Some instructions here indicate how to have it auto-start when you run a Command Prompt window.
Now I can again just chuck stuff on the Desktop, type doom2 -file pwad.wad or play demos or whatever and it even has tab completion. Win.- Show previous comments 7 more
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Windows 7 comes with PowerShell, which is a pretty decent shell. Better than Command Prompt, anyway.
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(1) Why are you putting programs in your documents folder? At the very least, have a folder like \other progs\.
(2) If you install a program to the registry (as opposed to a standalone executable), typing the name in the Start Menu search box accomplishes the same thing you're doing here.
(3) Yes, making shortcuts is pretty convenient. You can also associate WAD files with your source port. I think Skulltag does this automatically.
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I can't be assed listing any of this on eBay, if you want it PM me your address and I'll send you a Paypal request to cover postage only. I don't know if any of it works so caveat emptor.
I'm in Australia so it'll cost like $15 to America, maybe a little more to Europe, posting to deep in the jungle of the Congo is probably unfeasible.
Things with thestrikehave been claimed.
-ISA CT2230 Sound Blaster 16 w/ IDE controller (OPL3)
-ISA CT3670 Sound Blaster 32 PnP w/ 2x 30pin RAM slots (OPL3)
-ISA CT4390 Sound Blaster Awe64 Gold (not OPL3)
- ISA Crystal CS4232 2 channel (OPL3)
- PCI CMI 8738 4 channel (non-genuine OPL3)
-PCI Yamaha XG YMF724 (OPL3)
The following is old garbage that probably only Maes will be interested in. These will go in the bin if nobody takes them:
-AGP GeForce 5200 with DVI and VGA port
-PCI GeForce 5200 with DVI port and optional low-form-factor bracket
- PCI 3Com 3C905 100Mbps NIC (two of these)
- PCI Intel 100Mbps NIC
- AGP TNT Vanta 64
- AGP ATI Rage II C
-PCI S3 Virge DX 4Mb
-PCI 3Dfx Voodoo 2 16Mb with VGA passthru cable and SLI cable -
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Happy Birthday Zap610!
I made you a zapmap
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Yes, apparently it's due out in a week!
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/games/p/perfectdarkxboxlivearcade/
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fraggle said:
Yeah, my girlfriend is from Naples, and I know exactly what you mean :-)
I think it's an interesting study in the ability of governments to provide good living conditions. Take that away and replace the people in power with corrupt dodgy motherfuckers like the Camorra and suddenly everything goes to shit. I just don't understand why normal civilians say in Campania, it sucks, move somewhere else already!
printz said:Don't shit me. REALLY??
Norway's prices are ridiculous. Oslo constantly comes up in the list of "most expensive places to live" and is currently the most expensive if you don't take realestate prices into account. People there earn alot - like I was talking to a dude in a metal bar who drive forklifts (ie: basic unskilled manual labour) and he gets about $40/hr - but for visitors it's ridiculous. Considering the day before I'd been paying £2.50 for pints, I got a Jim Beam at a bar and the chick's like "73 kroners". Due to the shitty Sweden train thing, I had to spend like 6250 kroners on another night in the hotel, and flights to Finland. Do the currency conversion on that :P
Mechadon said:I'd particularly like to take a trip to Scotland myself one day before I die.
Do it! The Scotland tour I did I booked through Contiki but it's run by a company called Haggis Adventures. I'd definitely recommend doing a tour for at least a little bit (ours was just 3 days) as there's really so much stuff you can drive past and miss which the guides tell you all about, giving you little snippets of history and walking stops to nice locations and basically showing you things you'd never otherwise see. Their parent company (Radical Travel) does tours of Ireland and the rest of Europe too. Definitely spend at least a couple of days in Edinburgh, we didn't get to tour the castle but you could kill half a day doing that too. On the street leading down from the castle there are walking tours of the city, including "underground tours" where they show you all little secret alleys and stuff off the normal beaten path, and ghost tours into the sections of the city which haven't been open since the 17th century where they stuffed people who had the plague and stuff like that. There's so much to see just walking around. Like there'll be a fucking 17th century castle with a sign saying it's a school or apartments or something!
Snakes said:Reading that just solidified my desire to travel to Berlin.
It is totally rad. The tour we did there was the "Famous Walk" which you'll see yellow pamphlets for everywhere. It's sposed to go for 4 hours but our guide just loves history so much and talked heaps (which is a good thing!) so it went for more like 5 and a half. The amount of museums and other sites we were shown would have filled a week to explore fully. There's even a museum which has the actual gates from the City of Babylon! You can also do tours with a Third Reich sort of angle, and there's a concentration camp one available too if you're into WW2 history like me. Definitely learn a few words of German - please, thankyou, some numbers, food, drink, table, do you speak english - and the pronunciation of all the letters like ä and ö. Most people around touristy areas speak enough English, but you'll definitely find people who don't speak any at all. The public transport system is awesome, and you can buy a Berlin Welcome Card for like 25€ that gives you free transport and discounts to heaps of tourist attractions. Go down to the U-Bahn (subway) at Hauphbahnof (central station) and there's a bakery which has the warmest softest pretzels rolling off a machine almost constantly. Mmmmmmm <3
I ran out of space on my DSLR memory card whilst in Rome, so needless to say I have plenty of photos to put up. I'll sort out a Picasa gallery or something this week. -
Super Jamie said:
Rome [...] traffic is just mayhem, pedestrian crossings are pointless, to cross the street you just walk and hope drivers see you.
Protip: wait until a local starts to cross, and then cross yourself, staying within a foot of them.
But yeah, crossing the road in Rome can certainly be a scary experience. I ended up planning my routes around the place so as to avoid having to cross any of the major roads more often than I needed to. I was briefly in Rome a year after my first visit, and put this knowledge to use when guiding a bunch of Americans (whom I'd met on the train) around some of the highlights. One of them nearly got his arm sliced off by a closing door on the Metro, but at least no one got run over.
Gotta say I loved Rome though. While a lot of the ancient buidlings have been buggered about with, there's still an astonishing wealth of them left. And often the story of what has been done with them over the centuries is just as interesting as the ancient history itself.
If you want to see more unspoilt ruins, then you might want to consider visiting Turkey. But be sure to get a few hours drive away from the main tourist centres. The more accessible sites have been made more tourist-friendly (and are busier), whereas the less popular ones are more the way the archaeologists have left them. A typical comparison would be Ephesus (highly developed) vs Miletus (with, e.g., an complete amphitheatre that has been excavated but not added to).
Otherwise, Libya reputedly has some of the best preserved Roman cities, but obviously the practical difficulties of getting there are considerable.
And if you're back in Naples area some time, go to Herculaneum if you didn't on this occasion.
In defence of Norway, their system involves heavily taxing what are regarded as luxuries, and heavily subsidizing things that are regarded as essentials, so that wherever you are in Norway they remain affordable. And while to a foreigner, this seems to be overdone and the definition of luxury can seem odd, consider the practical difficulties and expense of getting items to all corners of this long and sparsely populated mountainous country. What would a pint of milk, or fresh fruit or vegetables, cost in Finnmark if the price were left to market forces? Yet these truly essential items are the same price there as they are on Oslo. Scandinavia may seem strange in the way they distribute wealth, but the people seem very happy with it. I recall Danes being convinced that the UK must be a very poor country because there are homeless people. When I explained that London had the highest concentration of wealth of any Europeam city (at least it did at the time), they found that hard to believe. How could a country be considered well off when its poorest people were in desperate need? -
Super Jamie said:
I think it's an interesting study in the ability of governments to provide good living conditions. Take that away and replace the people in power with corrupt dodgy motherfuckers like the Camorra and suddenly everything goes to shit. I just don't understand why normal civilians say in Campania, it sucks, move somewhere else already
A couple of years ago I was visiting Naples at the height of the waste management issue that they've been suffering there. The bags kept on piling up into an ever increasing heap in the street outside, until they all finally vanished the day before I left (apparently, the army collected them).
It's just one example really though. There are some pretty serious problems there. As another example, during the day if you park a car in the city during the day, you have to buy a parking ticket. After the sun goes down, you no longer need a ticket; instead, some helpful gentlemen appear who will "take care" of your car for you, and it's probably a good idea to pay them.
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Additional awesomeness: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--3heVMDGAA
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I've got some friends who are pretty big into board games, but my faves of late have been Catan, for just simple easy fun, and Diplomacy for badass, complex, long games and lots of bullshitting and alliance building/breaking. Diplomacy is a great game if you have like 8 hours. Goes along well with social eating and light drinking too. It's like a day long party where you get in character and lie to your friends and total strangers.
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Creaphis said:
Market research: What if someone took all the effort that usually goes into a 10-level episode and used it to build, test and polish a single, massive map? Would you, the reader (yes YOU) find it easier to approach such a project, because, hey, there's only one level, or would the high play-time of that map make it feel even more daunting and unapproachable?
Makes no difference to me. Most big maps I get about 10 rooms in and quit.
It's funny: I remember when I was younger, wondering why developers didn't just make really really long games instead of more technologically intensive ones. You know, like make a classic Doom game, but have so many levels it takes up the space of a modern game. After playing various wads and not finishing most of them, I've started to understand why. -
Creaphis said:
Market research: What if someone took all the effort that usually goes into a 10-level episode and used it to build, test and polish a single, massive map? Would you, the reader (yes YOU) find it easier to approach such a project, because, hey, there's only one level, or would the high play-time of that map make it feel even more daunting and unapproachable?
I'd prefer episodic maps. I like HR gameplay and having large maps = more room for monsters = more action. No matter how much the limits have been raised, there is still a (actually somewhat easily obtained) limit to how detailed you can make a gigantic slaughter map and still expect it to run well, as I've been finding out with Area42. Also my ratio of interest vs. tedium usually hits 1 at about 45 minutes, any longer and I'll be very tired when I finish the level. -
Creaphis said:
What if someone took all the effort that usually goes into a 10-level episode and used it to build, test and polish a single, massive map? Would you, the reader (yes YOU) find it easier to approach such a project, because, hey, there's only one level, or would the high play-time of that map make it feel even more daunting and unapproachable?More like the latter. Without going into the performance issue, it's really nice to have stopping or starting points provided by the division into levels.
I used to have problems finishing WADs when I sucked and relied on saves to wade through. It happened because the game was not really that much fun then. I tended to seek something in playing rather than playing for its own sake. "Finishing a megawad" was some sort of chore that needed some kind of reward.
Nowadays, I might be no doomgod, but playing is less of an effort and comes more naturally. There are also ways to add play value to WADs, such as coop (private and public) or speed running objectives, if not a combination. My playing is also often related to other somewhat social events, such as when I play through a level set before watching demos recorded on it or when I play something with the intent to review it or at the very least make a public comment about it.