World of Warships: High Score
Due to gentle proddings from friend Ben over at Midnight Tease, the hooligans over at Bo Time! Gaming, and my innate interest in a naval combat game similar in style to War Thunder, I downloaded the free-to-play game World of Warships a couple of weeks ago. I'm trying to catch up with Ben so we can squad up... that seems to be the best way to play in head-to-head... but the game has a fairly robust player vs bot play too. The bots can and will kill you dead if you give them half a chance. After nearly 100 matches against bots, I decided to try my hand at head-to-head earlier today. The results surprised me:
click either image for larger
The short version was that most of my team went east, while myself, another cruiser and a destroyer went west. I was lagging behind the other two (they were in Tier IV and V ships, while I was in a stock Tier III St Louis) when they rounded the islands at that end of the map... and discovered that almost all of the enemy team also went west. Meanwhile, the rest of my team discovered to the east that the bad guys had left three battleships to bottle up that side of the map. Effectively, as it turned out. When I saw the approaching red horde on my side of the map, knowing that all I could do to help my two teammates was get myself killed, I reversed course... and headed for the center capture point. The bad guys got the west point, we got the east... and a couple of minutes later, I captured the center. I did, however, take an aerial torpedo in the bows, the result of a desultory air attack that I couldn't quite dodge, and a stock St Louis has an Anti-Aircraft rating of "zero." As they flew away, I noticed that they were disappearing from view after descending about 10 km away... almost like they were landing. As the only enemy in sight was both a long ways away and something I had no desire at all to engage, I decided to see if I couldn't cause a slowdown in enemy flight operations. Sure enough, both enemy carriers were sailing together, less than a half-kilometer apart... and on the near side of a decent sized island. I told my Chief Engineer to disable the engine room's safety features and give me all ahead full as I closed in on two helpless Langley-class flattops.
My brave St Louis-class armored cruiser.
Well, "helpless" is a relative term. As I charged in, they both began flinging torpedo planes at me as fast as they could. At one point, they even managed an absolutely textbook "hammer-and-anvil" attack on me that if I hadn't seen it coming would have killed me deader than disco. As it was, I ate two torps that took my health down to below half... anything with guns could have taken me easily. But Langleys, like most carriers, are armed with slingshots and spitballs. Soon enough I was giving the lead carrier full broadsides. It rolled over and sank in a couple of minutes. The other carrier was frantically trying to reverse course back towards the Myoko, which would have had me for lunch even if I'd been at full health. It never completed the turn: my first volley disabled both his engines and his steering. The third set him afire. I didn't need many more past that.
Meanwhile, my team's carriers, given control of the air, did bad things to the Red Team's fleet; they still had the western cap point, but they never even came close to getting anything else. We won a resounding victory; I was second on the scoreboard but I rightfully feel like I won the game for us.
World of Warships isn't anywhere near perfect. It's very arcadey, destroyers are incredibly overpowered (the guy above me on the scoresheet was in a DD that sank three enemy ships), and the next time someone calls it "realistic" will be the first time. But it's pretty fun, and really, that's all I need.
1
Hm, I'm in the mood for a new game. Wanna toss me an invite code? I'll install it tomorrow.
Posted by: Avatar at January 24, 2016 05:49 AM (v29Tn)
2
Sounds like an incredible match. When it goes well, the vs. Play can be a lot of fun. It took me a while to go back to it after trying it, initially, though. You do run into the jerks spouting nonstop verbal abuse, and if the enemy team has a competent destroyer pilot or a division of guys that stick together and coordinate fire, you can go down in a hurry. Three St. Louis's in a line all firing on one target can take any comparable cruiser or early BB out in just a few rounds of fire.
Posted by: Ben at January 24, 2016 07:24 AM (DRaH+)
3
I'll plug you in my contacts, and we can division up at some point. I think I still have my Phoenix.
The St. Louis is probably the best ship in tier three. It's a floating machine gun.
You'll like the Phoenix. Big jump in speed and range. The torps suck, but all US torps suck until the upper tiers. They're mostly for keeping big-nasties at a distance (or surprising the ones stupid enough to get that close).
Posted by: Will at January 24, 2016 08:42 AM (1EtXn)
4
I'm a little confused: were you part of a team of human players, one per ship, or were you playing alone against a single human opponent?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 24, 2016 10:48 AM (+rSRq)
5
Avatar, no need for an invite code, just go to the game's website, create an account, d/l the game, and voila, done!
Ben, it was the stuff dreams were made of, lemme tell ya. When I realized I had not one but two aircraft carriers under my guns at short range, I knew I had fulfilled the fantasies of ship captains everywhere. It'll never happen again, I'm sure, but for a moment there? Oh, mama!
Will, excellent! I'm Wonderduck over there, of course. Drop me a line in-game.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 24, 2016 10:53 AM (KiM/Y)
6
Welcome aboard, mate! WoWS has been steadily improving, and the graphics with a good card are amazing.
BTW, the same Wargaming account can be used with World of Tanks too, and their other game (World of Warplanes, IIRC, but the gameplay is WAY too cartoony from what I've seen.)
I'm Dr_Mauser there.
Posted by: Mauser at January 24, 2016 11:28 AM (5Ktpu)
7
I'm, as usual, Midnitetease in WoWs. Currently working on leveling Tier 4 and obtaining my first CV.
Posted by: Ben at January 24, 2016 12:54 PM (BdQxf)
My. That's rather addictive. Not played a computer game in years.
Still learning, but it's certainly engaging. I'm using the handle of "MachineCivilization."
Posted by: Clayton Barnett at January 24, 2016 03:13 PM (lU4ZJ)
9
Steven, I'm sorry, I didn't see your question! The game that I wrote about was actually player v player... my very first PvP game in WoWS. Prior to that, my experience had all been a team of humans vs a team of bots.
In either format, it's one player, one ship. I guess aircraft carriers are slightly different (one player, one ship + squadrons of airplanes), but I'm still some way away from that experience.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 24, 2016 04:23 PM (KiM/Y)
I just watched a couple of those videos from the game that you linked to.
How the hell many torpedoes do destroyers carry in this game? I think I saw that thing fire more than 20, and they didn't carry that many in reality.
For another thing, they have a ridiculously wide angle of fire in the game. In reality they fired broadside and that was all.
(At least if this is supposed to be first-half-20th-century.)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 24, 2016 08:21 PM (+rSRq)
11
Specifically, I saw Minekaze fire 24 torpedoes in one battle, and in reality it only carried 6. No wonder you say that destroyers are overpowered!
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 24, 2016 08:45 PM (+rSRq)
12
It's an arcade game, and yeah, there's not even a -concept- of ammunition. Ships can fire until they sink. The cycle rate of torpedoes isn't that long and so it's a perfectly valid tactic to fire off spreads at -nothing- if you think there's a likelihood that the enemy will steam into them. So they're still tin cans, but they're tin cans with sledgehammers.
"Avatar_exADV". See y'all in port.
Posted by: Avatar at January 24, 2016 09:40 PM (v29Tn)
13
I downloaded the game this afternoon. It is quite addictive. My first co-op battle, running around in the Erie, I got sunk one ship and disabled two more, assisted in a capture, and as I'm cruising past the the last surviving enemy laying fire into him: "Torpedoes in the water!" from the lookout. Men, it was an honor serving with you. I'll have to start learning which ships carry what kind of armament so I don't do that again.
"TheSquirrelPatrol". Good luck and clear sailing.
Posted by: David at January 24, 2016 09:49 PM (+TPAa)
14
Yeah, if ships ran out of ammo, most battles would end in a draw. It only came off of closed beta this summer, so it's still a WIP. (Even World of Tanks has a 0.9 version number, and it's 5 years old).
OTOH, torpedoes have limited range, especially US ones (~5 km early on) and no IFF. (Japanese run about 8 km). And given the lead time they take, even if you DO use the aiming guides properly (and many players don't seem to) one change in speed or direction is a miss. The biggest problem was teamkills from fools in destroyers firing from the back of the pack and blowing up their teammates. They recently nerfed that to half damage because it was such a problem.
Posted by: Mauser at January 24, 2016 11:19 PM (5Ktpu)
In one of the videos the Duck linked to, the ship we were following ate four torpedoes fired by a friendly. I had the sound off, so I don't know what he said when it happened, but I bet it featured a lot of four-letter words. (Maybe I'll go watch that again just to see.)
Interestingly that didn't sink him. So add yet another layer of unreality.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 24, 2016 11:34 PM (+rSRq)
16
Just played a few rounds with David, quite fun, quite fun.
Was playing earlier and low on health, and a destroyer had managed a perfect spread on me - no way I was going to be able to avoid any of the fish. Was quite impressed, despite myself... right up until they ran out of range maybe 100 yards from my ship. Unfortunately for the DD, by this point he was without engines and on fire and my blood was up. Did not end well for the poor tin can.
I'd just finished a reread of Shattered Sword and am definitely in the mood for naval gaming. Not that fond of the pop-in, pop-out spotting, though.
Posted by: Avatar at January 24, 2016 11:47 PM (v29Tn)
17
Yes, thanks to David for three fun matches as a teammate!
Steven, some torps are relatively small... and battleships have a LOT of hit points.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 25, 2016 01:07 AM (KiM/Y)
18
Duck, it was a destroyer, not a battleship! 4 torps hitting a destroyer and going off (and not carrying magnetic exploders) should obliterate a destroyer.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 25, 2016 02:08 AM (+rSRq)
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Also, it did sink; slowly, gently, quietly. It should have disintegrated just as the torps hit...
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 25, 2016 02:35 AM (+rSRq)
20
I'm up at 2am, and it's all your fault! I had fun playing rounds with Avatar and Wonderduck, and then I played like 3 more hours unlocking various ships. I still haven't managed to live to the end of a player vs player match though.
Posted by: David at January 25, 2016 04:04 AM (+TPAa)
21
Dammit, I missed all the fun. Had meetings all day yesterday and went to sleep as soon as I got home.
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that the major offset to unlimited ammo is scale. The world is compressed to something like 1/4 or 1/8 actual relative size, and consequently the ships all move much, much faster at much closer distances than in real life. It creates a somewhat languid version of twitch gaming that simulates what a naval battle looks like in a movie. Or at least that's the way I look at it. It's not realistic, and destroyers are STILL overpowered despite being, apparently, severely nerfed months ago, but it's "painted" as if it's realistic. If that makes sense.
Posted by: Ben at January 25, 2016 08:09 AM (DRaH+)
22
Will, I'm sorry, I had to remove your comment due to the raw URL you posted. Please use the link button in the future... I don't wanna do that anymore.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 25, 2016 06:29 PM (KiM/Y)
23
That's odd. I did use the tool, but commenting from a mobile might have had something to do with it.
Posted by: Will at January 25, 2016 08:13 PM (1EtXn)
24
Things I learned today: being up against the zone boundary doesn't mean nothing can attack you from your back side, it just means you won't see the torpedo bombers coming. Oooh, look at the pretty sharks....
Posted by: David at January 25, 2016 09:26 PM (+TPAa)
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Avatar and I again had fun battling on the high seas tonight. Or feeding the pretty sharks, depending on your point of view.
Posted by: David at January 26, 2016 03:10 AM (+TPAa)
26
I got a carrier kill tonight. In a T1 cruiser. Oy!
Posted by: Avatar at January 27, 2016 05:11 AM (v29Tn)
Av, I played three games last night. In one, my St Louis stumbled upon a Fleet of Fog Kongo. That match didn't last long.
In the second game, my DD rounded an island... just in time to intercept every torpedo ever made by the Japanese. That match didn't last long, either.
In the third game, my DD had three battleship kills (torpedoes away!) and severe damage dealt to two cruisers. Unfortunately, the two cruisers were on MY team (torpedoes away... oh criminy!).
I gave up for the night after that.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 27, 2016 08:46 AM (KiM/Y)
28
Wonderduck, taking screenshots is easy. The printscreen key copies the image into your clipboard, and also saves a jpg in a "screenshots" folder in your game installation directory. If you want a pretty shot without the game interface, you first turn off the interface using ctrl-g.
I've played way too much of this game since you pimped it here, it's kept me up to 2am three nights in a row and I haven't gotten any of my chores around the house done....
My best battle so far was the first mission in my Tenryu, where I blew a defending DD and CA (both tier II) out of my way to get into the back field, where I then took down two opposing carriers. I had a good spread of torpedoes about to add a battleship to my tally, but a flight of torpedo bombers got to it first, and that battle was all over except for cleanup that happened on the other side of the map.
Posted by: David at January 27, 2016 11:54 AM (V4nC5)
You just inspired me to go back and watch Arpeggio of Blue Steel again. And if St. Louis (a pre-dreadnaught ship) is "Tier III" then I was wondering how Takao is rated?
The Takao class is generally considered the best cruiser the IJN built, even though there were later designs (like Mogami). With 10 8-inch guns and 16 long lance torpedoes, it should seriously kick ass in these kinds of battles.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 27, 2016 02:49 PM (+rSRq)
31
Also, do "Fleet of Fog" ships get to use the Super-Gravity Cannon? or Corrosive Torpedoes?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 27, 2016 02:50 PM (+rSRq)
32
WoWs skips the Takao class, probably because they're keeping the Japanese cruisers small, light and fast. If the Takao was offered as a premium ship in the future, I would guess it would be offered as a Tier 7.
Posted by: Ben at January 27, 2016 03:56 PM (JYung)
1James Berardinelli
gave the movie four stars, and he really doesn't do that very often. (There have
been years in which he didn't give four stars to any film.)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 22, 2016 02:34 AM (+rSRq)
2
Hmm. I've avoided this one because the science is pretty damned broken, which is likely to yank me out of the film in a hurry.
Maybe I'll give it a whirl. *shrug*
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 22, 2016 08:19 AM (rKFiU)
3I've avoided this one because the science is pretty damned broken
There's very little in the film that wasn't heavily resourced, scientifically. Yes, the science advisor on the film had to write a separate book to cover it all, but it's there. If you can accept wormholes, that is... if that doesn't work for you, then yes, it's broken.
Other than that, the biggest scientific complaint I've seen about it is that the ice is too strong.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 22, 2016 08:30 AM (KiM/Y)
4
I just noticed this--missed it watching the movie--is that _Braille_ on TARS? If so, that's pretty dumb: it's paint, so you can't read it by touch, and it's far too big to run your thumb over. So, well played, model team.
Someone could make an argument about how it's for the other robots to recognize/ID each other but that doesn't make sense either, because there's better ways to do that, and even if you wanted the Braille, it would probably make more sense to run it horizontally across the top or something.
But notice what I'm complaining about, and it's not the science. I did like what happened to Dr. Mann, though.
Posted by: rickc at January 22, 2016 06:47 PM (FvJAK)
5
RickC, I just checked and yes, those are indeed the braille patterns for "TARS". I hesitate to call it braille for the reasons you mention, though!
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 22, 2016 07:07 PM (KiM/Y)
6
The robots were a clever design, just not a particularly useful one. More style than utilitarian.
And why have such a powerful self-destruct built in to them? But I do agree with the starchild comparison. But that seems such a common problem that a friend of mine refers to it as when an anime gets "All Glowy" and in the last episode or two all hijinks are replaced with some metaphysical/spiritual sermon and the deus ex machina sets everything right.
Posted by: Mauser at January 22, 2016 07:54 PM (5Ktpu)
7
I'm glad you enjoyed it. I loved the pretty visuals but couldn't stand the rest of it, pretty much for the same reasons Scott Lowther laid out here.
Posted by: flatdarkmars at January 25, 2016 09:45 PM (wgzE6)
What? In WINTER??? Is That Even Possible?
I have to admit something to y'all... I'm sick.
No, no, not that type of sick... I mean the illness type of sick. A couple of weeks ago, I took a day off from work as a sort of mental health (shaddap you!) day; I was feeling somewhat stressed by life. The holidays have never been my favorite time of the year, and with some stuff happening at work, I needed to hide away for a while. So I did... and that Saturday night my chest started to feel a little tight. I woke up Sunday morning with an abrasive cough. By Monday morning, the cough was joined by a headache and indications that this was going to be ugly... but I had a more pressing issue: I was in training for claims processing on a new state. I couldn't miss any of that... it was scheduled for three or four half-days, mornings. So I gritted my teeth and made it through the entirety of Monday. I wasn't swell, but I could work through it easily enough. Or so I thought.
Monday night, all hell broke loose. I'll spare you the details because this isn't that sort of blog, but it wasn't pretty, it kept me awake for hours longer than I should have been, and thankfully I always have an emergency pack of toilet paper stored in a closet.
And the cough had gotten worse to boot. It had gone from a rasping thing to the biological equivalent of running piece of luon through a table-mounted router: loud, messy, and totally, epically, pointless. Tuesday's training was misery, both for myself and my fellow trainees. Once it ended, I walked back to my desk, collected my stuff, talked briefly to my boss, and went home for the day. I managed to make it through Wednesday and Thursday, finishing the training and working full days, though "death warmed over" makes it sound like there was a positive to be found in my condition somewhere. And then came Friday.
I got up, got dressed, drove to work, and told my boss I was realistically too sick to be there. When she (quite reasonably) asked why I didn't just call in, I didn't really have an answer except "I don't like to do that." So I drove back home, crawled back into bed and slept until Sunday. The cough changed from agonizing to productive, the headache wound down to tolerable levels, and all is right with the world.
Okay, no. I'm still sick. I still cough occasionally, I'm tired as hell, and while I feel okay to start the day, by the time work is done I'm miserable. So, yeah, still sick. The weather ain't helpin' none, neither. The temperature is jumping up and down like a pogo stick, highs in the negatives one day, then highs in the 30s the next. It's like my immune system tried as hard as it could, threw its metaphorical hands in the air and said "we're moving to someplace warm... like Hell.... as fast as possible." So why am I telling you all of this?
Gotta tell somebody, I guess.
1
Aw man, that sucks. Hopefully you can kick the crud and soon!
I lost a couple of workdays last month and I'm still Neo-in-the-Matrix-style dodging the various iterations of the crud that my coworkers are trying to foist off on me. UGGGH.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 20, 2016 08:26 AM (rKFiU)
2
As GreyDuck will probably attest, the older you get, the more painful life is. But the less often the creeping nussman respiratory crud gets you. Even if it feels worse.
Life is an exercise in pain management.... And your reaction to it.
Posted by: The Old Man at January 20, 2016 12:27 PM (duGaw)
Just watched the raw. Between my grasp of anime-Nihon and my re-watching of Aria for, well, all the time, comprehension was not a problem.
Moved to tears; it's a glimpse of Heaven.
Thanks for letting me know this was out, WD. What with the wife's recent chemo, we need some joy. THANK YOU.
Posted by: Clayton Barnett at January 19, 2016 07:54 PM (lU4ZJ)
3
Wonder if that's based on a real place, since it reminds me of a scene from Robot Carnival where the two giant steampunk robots fought.
Posted by: Mauser at January 19, 2016 08:25 PM (5Ktpu)
4
It's based on Venice, of course. In previous seasons, some of the plazas and waterways are quite recognizable. I don't know to what extent they might have tried to mimic the actual geography.
Posted by: David at January 19, 2016 08:48 PM (+TPAa)
5I don't know to what extent they might have tried to mimic the actual geography.
Firefoxy, Yootoob, And Thou (Updated) (Updated again)
Earlier tonight, Firefoxy and Yootoob appeared to have a sort of snitfit with each other. All of Yootoob's formatting went out the window, down a dozen stories and straight into the dumpster. The dumpster was then set on fire by a guy named Sal using a half-dozen old tires, a jerrican of gasoline, a butane torch, and a hairdryer. All the while, Firefoxy laughed and laughed and laughed, illuminated by the glow of the flames.
Yeah, kinda like that.
Even worse, the same thing happened on websites that embedded yootoob viddies. Like, for example, Wonderduck's Pond and this post. All was horror and trouble and everything had a toothache and dogs and cats living together. But it was only yootoob, and it was only in Firefoxy. Different browsers had no problem, different video sites played fine. Updating Firefoxy didn't help, nor did the usual cache and cookie cleansing. So what in tarnation was going on?
It is a puzzlement.
Some digging around hither and yon seemed to suggest that it wasn't, in fact, a problem with yootoob or Firefoxy at all, but with the AdBlockPlus add-on. I was resigned to turning it off for yootoob and going through the hell of their ads once again... which would probably drive me back to smokin' and drinkin' and carryin' on. Knowing how close the world was to a horrible fate, a couple of users over at reddit came up with a solution. If you're having this problem, open ABP, go to exceptions, and add the following lines:
Voila! Everything solved, even embeded videos play now! Apparently, the problem extended into other browsers using ABP as well, so it should work with Opera, Chrome, etc, too. So there. That's fixed. Everybody back on your heads!
UPDATE Friday 947am: A rep from ABP showed up in that reddit thread and says the culprit is the "Malware Domains filter". If you disable that, yootoob is fixed. As most people have multiple filters running, this shouldn't be a problem. I turned off the two exceptions and the filter and everything is back to normal; indeed, it's a better fix than the two exceptions provided. I've inquired as to what sort of timeframe we're looking at for the filter to be fixed... I'll let you know when I find out.
UPDATE Friday 402pm: As of right now, you need to actually press the "update" button on the Malware Domains filter. Once you do that, the problem is fixed and you can reactivate the filter!
1
Hmmm. Haven't run into the problem yet, but it's nice to know there's a quick & simple copy-pasta solution.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 15, 2016 08:26 AM (rKFiU)
2
Running Chrome, mine did what I think you're describing a day or two ago. It lasted for a few hours, then everything straightened out. Since it was Chrome, I suspect AdBlock updated, but I never looked into it to find out what was going on. Could be something different, though. I'm not having the problem now, anyway.
Posted by: Ben at January 15, 2016 08:53 AM (S4UJw)
3
Ben, see my update: it was one of ABP's filters causing the problem.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 15, 2016 09:51 AM (KiM/Y)
4
I switched from ABP to Adblock a while back and I found it more congenial.
Also, Chrome >> Firefox, but YMMV.
Posted by: Rick C at January 15, 2016 07:55 PM (FvJAK)
Clearly. The only thing that Chrome does better for me is crash, sometimes my entire computer. The only reason it's installed at all is because I needed it when I was at the Duck U Bookstore, so I could attempt to do payroll from home. And, as I said, it often crashed.
So, yes, YMMV indeed.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 15, 2016 09:38 PM (KiM/Y)
6
I haven't had to do any of the filter stuff, so I'm guessing whatever problem I had wasn't the same thing. *shrug* I preferred running Firefox or one of it's many variations, but I constantly had memory leak problems. For a few years I would switch back and forth between Chrome and Firefox, but Chrome has been stable for me for the last couple of years. Plus, it's easier in my opinion to from Firefox to Chrome than from Chrome to Firefox. IE, or Edge now, I guess, finally imports and adapts as easy as Chrome, but I still don't trust IE.
Posted by: Ben at January 16, 2016 08:56 AM (S4UJw)
I had not had any problems with Ad Blocker Plus for either Chrome or IE, even while using Youtube over the time period you describe. What has annoyed me is that trying to get to Microsoft's Safety Scanner page has proven impossible under most circumstances on either IE or Chrome. I did manage to get through to it once - only to break Windows Update in the process. Now that I fixed Windows Update, I can not get to the Safety Scanner....
Posted by: cxt217 at January 16, 2016 08:41 PM (HFKy5)
I Had No Idea!
January 13th is National Rubber Duckie Day!
Any excuse to post a picture of Scooter, The Flock's First Duck (center). He's actually around 25 years old now. That's old for a duckie, but he's still goin' strong!
A Starman Falls To Earth
David Bowie died of liver cancer late Sunday night, two days after he turned 69.
During a musical career that spanned nearly 50 years, he managed to change musical styles practically as often as he released albums. From glam to funk and soul to blues to electronica to rock to new wave to industrial and back again, one never really knew what you'd be hearing when you popped in a new Bowie disc. My first real exposure to his work came in his "new wave" period, with the 1983 album, Let's Dance.
In many ways, Let's Dance is both the best and worst way to be introduced to Bowie. It's easily his most accessible work, being unabashedly pop-flavored... and it and 1984's Tonight are rather unlike the darker, more thoughtful work he produced before and after. Ironically, the short movie/music video for "Jazzing For Blue Jean" off Tonight earned him his only Grammy out of 10 nominations. (he was given a Lifetime Achievement Grammy in 2006). I went into my next taste of Bowie's music thinking he was a slightly lightweight musician.
This is many things, but lightweight pop is not one of them. David Bowie is very much like weather in the Midwest... if you don't like it, just wait a short time: it'll change. But along with his music, the other thing that Bowie was known for was his ever-changing personae. From Ziggy Stardust to The Thin White Duke to the Scary Goatee Guy to Elder Rock Statesman, again he changed from hither to yon constantly. At one point in his life he gave an interview where he basically said that "David Bowie is the costume, the thing onstage is the real Me." In his later career, after he married supermodel Imam and "settled down", he more or less stayed in the Statesman mode. All the while, he stayed impeccably dressed.
He collaborated with artists like Queen, Mick Jagger, Nine Inch Nails, Peter Frampton, Tina Turner, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Bing Crosby. Countless artists covered his work. Countless fans adored him. I am not particularly a huge fan, to be honest... I own a couple of his CDs, know many of his hits, but beyond that? There are many others who will write more about him in the coming days, more eloquently and with more knowledge than I can. This, I admit. None of this denies the fact that I know that he was a true Rock Icon, and with his passing the music world is greatly diminished. I also know that he is the musician behind one of my favorite songs of all time.
It felt like David Bowie was immortal. We know now that wasn't true, to our sorrow.
1
He was a tremendous producer. I wish he would have had the inclination to produce for other acts at some point; or at least more than he did. Music in general would be a lot better off now.
Posted by: Ben at January 11, 2016 09:19 PM (DRaH+)
2
I'm highly amused that whoever posted that Suffragette City video on YouTube used the cover from a much, MUCH later album (one of the few I own) rather than the actual Ziggy Stardust album (one of the other few I own) cover.
One of the coolest complete weirdos to ever grace the planet.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 12, 2016 08:25 AM (rKFiU)
I Might Start Following Soccer
The Bundesliga is Germany's top-level soccer league... their version of the better known English Premiere League, I suppose. However, they are the only league anywhere of any sort that have an official rubber duck race. The 2015 season was the first, and the
Qualifying round from the Aquadome of Destiny. That frog really shouldn't have been included... it's called the BunDucksLiga for a reason, after all.
The Duck Speedway also hosted the Final Round, which was a more exciting race than anything F1's given us in recent years.
I love how totally serious the announcer was, and the camerawork / on-screen graphics quality is top-notch. Obviously the parent broadcaster must have been involved. Mindblowing.
But wait, there's more... the next season was just announced, with a new twist!
That Was A Laugh I Needed Badly
The job has been kicking my asterisk something fierce of late.
I haven't been feeling all that swell, thanks to the weather we've been having. I've got a nagging ache in my right index finger from when I slipped in the bathtub and jammed it into a broken towel rack trying (successfully) to keep myself from wiping out... the middle knuckle just hurts after a short time on the computer, which in my line of work is something of a Very Bad Thing.
And then when I came home tonight, I managed to get the Duckmobile stuck in what looked like a perfectly clear parking space here at Pond Central. Perfectly clear... except for the patch of ice that was located directly under where the front tires ended up. Did I mention that the Duckmobile is front-wheel drive? Needed a neighbor to give me a shove, but only after a half-hour of scraping and shoveling ALL the residual snow and ice from the spot and getting (literally) nowhere.
So what I'm saying is that I was in a murderous sort of mood when I got home. After doing all the usual stuff I do when I first get home, I hopped online to see if there was anything funny out there. After a while spent getting pissed off because there wasn't, I somehow stumbled across this clip.
That's some impressive vocaling right there, particularly since, y'know, t'ree a 'em ain't singin' whutall they's use'ta singin'. And yes, the humor isn't exactly "Steve Martin in the '70s" level, but what the hell, it made me laugh.
Ducks In Anime: In The Sticks -Non Non Biyori, Ep01 ED
Over at some place or another, a conversation took place concerning "shows that were like ARIA." The general consensus was that, other than YKK, there really aren't any shows like ARIA. That led to me trotting out my theory that the two shows take place in the same universe, but that's not the point of this little missive right now. One series that got a lot of support as feeling like ARIA without being anything like it was Non Non Biyori. I'll be honest, I knew absolutely nothing about the series other than the name, so what the heck, let's give it a shot. After watching the first two episodes, I've come to some general conclusions.
First, that's one darn handsome duck. Second, neh, it's closer in feel to Sketchbook than to ARIA, which is no bad thing in my opinion. Short version of story: Fifth-grader from Tokyo moves to tiny village out in the boonies, joins school that has four other students: 1st, 7th, 8th, and 9th graders. They're all in the same classroom. Hijinks occur languidly.
Third, come for Renge-chan playing the recorder, stay for the scenery porn. Everywhere you look, scenery porn. Languid scenery porn, to be sure, but there nonetheless. Should you watch it? Heck, I dunno... I've only seen two episodes and it's kinda been hit-and-miss for me. Languid scenery porn is nice and all, but something approximating a story would be useful once in a while.
Still... rubber duck in the credits. A+ for effort.
Pardon me boy,
Is this the Lair of Great Cthulhu?
In the city of slime,
Where it is night all the time.
Bob Hope never went
Along the road to Great Cthulhu,
And Triple-A has no maps,
And all the Tcho Tcho's lay traps.
You'll see an ancient sunken city
Where the angles are wrong.
You'll see the fourth demonsion
If you're there very long.
Come to the conventicle,
Bring along your pentacle,
Otherwise you'll be dragged off by a tentacle.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at January 02, 2016 09:53 PM (2yngH)
Posted by: Mauser at January 02, 2016 10:46 PM (5Ktpu)
3
What? No "didn't make it to the R'lyeh-way station" joke?
Hmm. Yeah, that's probably for the best.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 02, 2016 11:04 PM (rKFiU)
4
If you google "steam engine explosion" it's interesting how many of the photos are of Aultman and Advance agricultural steam engines. When one went up it was apparently a major event.
Posted by: Ben at January 03, 2016 07:52 AM (DRaH+)
5
What actually is going on in that picture? I gather this is the result of a locomotive's steam boiler exploding, but what the hell are all those pipes? I thought the boiler was just a big tank.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 03, 2016 06:44 PM (+rSRq)
6
This is a firetube boiler, Steven. To steal from that link, "their advantage over flued boilers with a single large flue is that the
many small tubes offer far greater heating surface area for the same
overall boiler volume," thus creating more steam faster.
Or, y'know... Cthulhu.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 03, 2016 07:12 PM (zAcee)
So the firebox is in the rear, next to the cabin. And a mongo impeller pushes hot gases from the firebox through all those pipes, which run through the boiler tank, and ultimately out of the stack at the very front. Is that the idea?
(Actually, if it's like other steam engines, the "impeller" is a jet of steam in the stack which pulls hot gases through those pipes. Right?)
That's actually a clever design. It's too easy a trap to fall into to feel contempt for technologies from a couple of centuries ago, but we should resist that urge. Design engineers from 200 years were just as smart as we are; they just had fewer tools and less materiel to work with than we do.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 03, 2016 08:06 PM (+rSRq)
8...the "impeller" is a jet of steam in the stack which pulls hot gases through those pipes. Right?
Yep!
Design engineers from 200 years were just as smart as we are; they just
had fewer tools and less materiel to work with than we do.
Arguably smarter, or more adept at using what they had... what we do with computer design, they did with slide rules, pencils and hand-drawn blueprints.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 04, 2016 08:03 AM (zAcee)
9
Then what happened to this engine seems to be that the front of the boiler blew out. Did the crew survive it?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 04, 2016 04:18 PM (+rSRq)
10
A Google image search leads to this page (way-back machine). This appears to be the C & O (Chesapeake & Ohio) #3020 in 1948. Three crew members were killed by the steam, including one who managed to get to a nearby farmhouse. The linked page has a nice picture from the opposite side of the train.
Posted by: Rick C at January 04, 2016 05:00 PM (ECH2/)
I think I'd rather be killed by concussion and/or shrapnel than by being cooked to death by steam.
Crawling away only to die later is just about the worst possible outcome IMHO.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 04, 2016 06:06 PM (+rSRq)
12
Yeah, I think I'd agree. Sadly, the first to die lasted 3 hours, if I read that scan correctly, and the guy who crawled away, blinded, to the nearby house, survived until the next morning.
Apparently they rebuilt the engine and put it back into service, but at least one engineer refused to ride on it because it killed people.
Posted by: Rick C at January 04, 2016 06:39 PM (FvJAK)
13
It looks like there's only a few feet of engine missing, and that would most likely contain the smokebox and maybe a sandbox...I'm wondering if the excess of tubes is actually the superheater tubes blown out of the steam tubes. I don't see how it would be possible, but that just seems like too much tube for how much engine is gone.
Posted by: Ben at January 04, 2016 07:40 PM (S4UJw)
14
Some of the "spaghetti" might be the rods that help hold the ends of the boiler to the body of the boiler in addition to the rivets.
Had to maintain a fire tube boiler quite a few years ago (1980's).
What is interesting is that the tubes are not welded in, just squished by a rolling tool that fits a couple of inches into the end of the tube and then makes a compression fit between the tube and the boiler end.
Lots of work doing that and replacing the tubes.
Actually the whole boiler system was labor intensive.
Posted by: jon spencer at January 04, 2016 08:07 PM (LtOnR)
So. 2016, Huh?
Thus far, I'm not overly impressed. It's cold, it's windy, the food hasn't been very good and my finger hurts. On the other hand, I went in to work today to make up some hours and there was literally nobody else in my office, and only three or four people from all offices total. Which allowed me to sing along with my music if I so chose. And lo, thus I chose to do!
On the gripping hand, anybody walking past my office is undoubtedly having a substantially worse 2016.
1
It's cold enough for a hoodie or light coat here in Dallas, but I just got Guild Wars 2 so I don't have any reason to go out except to take the dog out.
Posted by: Rick C at January 02, 2016 12:42 AM (FvJAK)
2
We're still covered in ice and snow. Still a week until I can get any good work done, probably. Just working my way up the tiers in World of Warships. So far it's been quite enjoyable, although I'm still just using co-op play to grind up the ladder. It looks like it could get quite grind-y before too long.
Rick C: hope you enjoy GW2. I played it from launch through the solo-able end of the original storyline (there's a final dungeon that finishes the story, but is multiplayer only), but dropped it when I came back for the "living story" expansions. They're persistent world is a neat idea, but it also means that if you miss something, the world can get screwed up for you. Not game-breaking or anything, but confusing and a bit unbalanced in places.
Posted by: Ben at January 02, 2016 02:52 AM (S4UJw)
3
I had, overall, a very nice first day of the year. I'll take what I can get...
GW2: My main problem with it is that with each major update (including, ESPECIALLY, the recent expansion) they make getting The Right Gear an astonishingly unpleasant grindfest. Three years in, and I've still never had a Legendary weapon, for instance. I still enjoy puttering around and joining in with guild events, so, as long as the guildies don't expect me to be a full Berzerker spec whatever, it's all good.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 02, 2016 11:04 AM (rKFiU)
New Year's Eve 2015
In the grand scheme of things, I suppose 2015 would have to count as a wash. It started out pretty badly, somehow managed to get even worse, then the metaphorical arrow began heading up. Slowly, to be sure, but up. Certainly things look brighter than they did at the end of 2014, for no other reason than I'm employed. So the prospects for 2016 look promising, yes? One can only hope so... I'm kinda tired of bad years.
Thank you all for another year of finding The Pond interesting enough to stick around. You have no idea how much I appreciate it. Without you folk, I'd just be talking to myself and you know what that means, right? ("You have a bluetooth headset?" Shut up.)
Have a happy new year! It's funny hat time for all, and for all, a funny hat!
Random Anime Picture #107: Country Cooking -Shokugeki no Soma, Ep20
After having finished the first series of SnS (the second is airing Summer of 2016), I get the distinct impression that some part of the production staff really wanted to make Shokugeki no Megumi instead. On the whole, she's a much more interesting character than the lead is, that's for sure. The titular character is a wizard in the kitchen, able to do just about anything, sometimes effortlessly, sometimes having to work at it. But it's a fait accompli that he will wind up reaching his ultimate goal: it's that sort of show, after all, and he's the lead! I find it amusing that he's actually lost substantially more head-to-head cooking battles than he's won thus far. Even in defeat, he's gained the people's ovation and his opponent's respect and won over the judges to boot.
But then there's Megumi. She's literally a hick from a fishing village, attending an elite (some would say THE elite) culinary academy in the world. Prior to the main character meeting her, she was on the verge of being kicked out in disgrace. After a couple of pep talks, though, she gained confidence in her abilities and has been surprising people left and right. To be blunt, she's a lot more interesting than Soma. I suspect that it's no coincidence that at the end of Series 1, she advances in the big tournament... on the other side of the bracket from Soma.
She's also cute as a button and owns a rubber duck. That's gotta count for something!
1
When I was going through the series to plunder it, I noticed that too. Megumi is a lot more interesting character in nearly every way. I think it wasn't an accident that Doujima chose Megumi to put Shinomiya in his place. I think eps 11 and 12 are the best ones in the series, and the reason is because it's impossible to not care about Megumi.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at December 30, 2015 09:48 PM (+rSRq)
I see what you did there...and I still think the intro to the original Iron Chef is totally cool, even after all these years and even with the high cheeze factor.
She's also cute as a button and owns a rubber duck. That's gotta count for something!
Where do you find these wonderful characters? Actually, I get the impression (rightly or wrongly) that Japanese animated movies and TV shows are, in general, much more character-driven (as opposed to plot-driven) than productions in other genres; this in turn would give more opportunity for writers to create adorable secondary characters like Megumi (and Asuka in Hibike! Euphonium).
Posted by: Peter the Not-so-Great at December 30, 2015 10:35 PM (XC8ds)
I have one huge question: How is it that Souma has a different surname than his father?
The reason the writer did that was so that people like Doujima wouldn't recognize Souma as being that guy's son. But how could it happen?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at December 31, 2015 12:25 AM (+rSRq)
4
Peter, my original idea for this post was to do it as an Iron Chef episode. It's clear that the production staff / original source material were/was huge fans. I don't think that Megumi is a secondary character, though... she's not the lead, but she's probably #2 in total screen time and has had entire story arcs about her.
Steven, my assumption, and I have nothing to base it on, is that he changed his name to avoid attention... he probably kept it real name during his first series of world tours, but when he "settled down" to his own little neighborhood cafe, he just wanted to a local guy.
I have no idea if that's correct, but that's my working hypothesis.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 31, 2015 08:05 AM (zAcee)
5
Except that when he shows up at the school and cooks for the kids, he's using the same name and the house mother at Souma's dorm knows him by that name.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at December 31, 2015 10:28 AM (+rSRq)
6
No, that's what I mean... when he settled down, he "became Soma's dad", including the different name. His real name is what the school (and gastrophiles world wide) know him as.
Why this would be the case is beyond knowing at the moment.
Working hypothesis!
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 31, 2015 05:58 PM (zAcee)
Your Weekly Asuka, the OVA... or 12.5, whichever.
It's been quite some time since we last visited the Hibike! Euphonium show, but a few days ago the long-awaited OVA came out. Considering how much I enjoyed the series, it shouldn't come as any surprise that I immediately watched it with one eye peeled for Asuka, the vice-president of the band club.
It should also come as no surprise that the Goofy Cute was being both goofy and cute... for the thirty seconds she was in the episode. Alas, KyoAni stopped using her as a character around Ep12 in the original run, so Asuka bringing the goofy was to be expected. Since that was her entire contribution to the story, it was a little bit disappointing.
The rest of the OVA was quite entertaining, and it was really nice to be back with this bunch of characters that we came to love over the course of three months or so. As usual, it was outstanding visually, but it was really quite nice to focus on the "junior leads", as it were, instead of the main characters. Which is not to say I wouldn't have liked to see more of Asuka.
Since, y'know, that was kinda the whole point of this little series of mine in the first place. I guess we'll just have to wait for the second season... or maybe the recap movie will have a little bit more about her in it. Either way, it'll be good fun. Unless KyoAni doesn't expound upon her character, in which case I'll be quite grumpy.
Residual Photoshoot Thingy
Back last August, I finally posted the "creative project" I worked on for much of my enforced extended vacation. In that post I mentioned that I had purchased a new camera for my birthday. While I was learning how to use it, something I can honestly say I haven't figured out yet because it's a little more advanced than a point'n'click, I decided to see how it did in low-light situations. The very first picture I took told me that I had gotten a nice camera.
If one wished, one could click on the picture for a bigger version.
I still think its the best picture I've taken with it. Not bad for something taken on a whim with one hand holding the camera, the other holding the EL Wire. The most surprising part was the faintly red background... that's from a glowing mushroom in my dining room. I'm going to have to explain that, aren't I?
Back when I had the Cardiac Incident in 2005, I had... concerns... that one night I'd have to call 911 and not be able to get out of bed due to whatever was happening in my chest. I thought it'd be best if the EMTs would be able to see so a light would be needed... but it would have to be relatively unobtrusive, otherwise I'd not be able to sleep. Some weeks later, I stopped at Walgreens and found a low-wattage red CFL for some decent price. I put it into a more-or-less translucent mushroom-shaped lamp, put it on a small side table in the dining room, and turned it on. Save for a few minutes here and there when I vacuum, that light has been on ever since. Nearly 10 years... well over 80000 hours! I don't care that it's "just a light bulb", that's pretty amazing. Particularly since wikipedia suggests the usual lifespan for a CFL is ~15000 hours. I don't know what I'm going to do when it finally passes from this world to Light Bulb Valhalla.
Clicky-poppy.
Amazing what a good camera can do, eh? I don't like this picture anywhere near as much as the first, but it's still a swell photo. Anyway, enjoy, won't you?
1
That first pic is quite good, yes! Cleverly done.
And wow, that's one heck of a long-lasting CFL. Longest life I've seen in one was in my lamp at work, though it wasn't on 24/7. Lasted about 8 years before finally giving up the ghost last month.
Posted by: GreyDuck at December 28, 2015 08:41 AM (rKFiU)
2
I'm trying to figure out why your number keys have 2 leds.
Posted by: Ben at December 28, 2015 09:23 AM (DRaH+)
3
Ben, probably for the symbols. Frankly, I'm kind of jealous, I'd like a lighted keyboard too, especially on my laptop.
That first picture is very nice. I got myself a good camera this year too - A Canon EOS Rebel T5. What did you get?
Posted by: Mauser at December 28, 2015 11:00 AM (5Ktpu)
4
Ben, though it looks like it, there's only one LED illuminating each number key. Mauser has it right, both the numbers and symbols are glowing (example: $ and 4).
The keyboard is a Logitech G105 Gaming keyboard, and by "gaming" they mean the WASD keys are grey, the rest black. There are also a few macro keys and a "game switch" that turns lets you hit a key rapidly without Windows asking if you'd like sticky keys turned on... important when you're trying to land on the Mun and jiggling the throttle control like a really determined hummingbird. Amazon has it for $39.99 right now.
Mauser, you've got a nicer camera than mine! I've a Sony A3000 mirrorless camera... it's sweet, but it's no Rebel. However, I got it on sale for $200, when it used to street at $399, so... yeah, great deal, and it's more than enough camera for me.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 28, 2015 03:44 PM (zAcee)
5
After the torture of trying to shoot the Reno Air Races with my Olympus Point-and-shoot, I decided I needed a DSLR with a decent zoom. You just can't read an LCD screen in the desert sun, and the trigger delay was intolerable.
What I really need though is a simple picture sharing site that I can easily share the shots in some form of organization with my box-mates. I've posted a few on DeviantArt, but I wouldn't want to send some of those folks to that site....
Posted by: Mauser at December 28, 2015 11:57 PM (5Ktpu)
6
imgur? How about talk to Big Papa Pixy and start another blog? Or have him set you up with something like he did for Shamus and "DM of the Rings"?
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 29, 2015 03:03 AM (zAcee)
7
Well, one thing that makes it kinda difficult to do a lot of images here is the awkwardness of file management. Upload one at a time, get BBCode, paste BBCode into a blog entry etc. PhotoBucket has a nice drag and drop interface, and I was using that for entries in my LiveJournal, but I've got the privacy cranked up on that. I might be able to set up some public directories, but if I move anything I might break some links in posts that admittedly nobody will ever look at again.... Also, the images in their current state are rather large, something over 3k pixels wide.
I think I have an account on Flickr, but that one has an annoying interface for browsing images. I haven't looked at it in ages. (I've also got a Blogspot I never use....)
I'll work something out once I get off my butt.
Posted by: Mauser at December 29, 2015 04:20 AM (5Ktpu)
8
BTW, If anyone's interested in the EOS Rebel T5, it IS an awesome camera. But get the 250 mm telephoto, not the 300. The 300 doesn't have image stabilization. And ask me for an Amazon Marketplace link so I can get a little kickback.
Posted by: Mauser at December 29, 2015 04:21 AM (5Ktpu)
Today, It Finally Happened.
As of today, December 25th in the year 2015 of the Gregorian Calendar, I, Wonderduck, have officially become an ADULT. Because today, Christmas Day, I received some pairs of socks and some big bath sheet towels.
AND WAS HAPPY ABOUT IT!!! Indeed, that was pretty much all I really asked for.
Because socks are useful. And bigmclargehuge fluffy towels are great. Also office supplies. And a jar of lingonberry.
See? Adult. Grownup. Me. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go watch a japanese cartoon about Santa Claus.
Merry Christmas again!
I wasn't exactly looking for a Christmas show, but I fired up an old Tenchi movie that happened to open with a Christmas scene, before everyone got stuck in an endless summer.
Posted by: Mauser at December 26, 2015 02:42 AM (5Ktpu)
3
I'm 59, and I got a Groot mug. Still a kid. Wouldn't mind some lingonberry, though. Been many years.
Posted by: skyhack at December 26, 2015 09:02 AM (wa1Z/)
4
Skyhack, if there's an Ikea near you, they carry their own brand of lingonberry. It's not as good as Roland (the one I linked) I don't think... it's a little too sweet... but it's not bad.
If you're truly desperate, you can get Roland lingonberry jam on Amazon... for a ridiculous $18/jar. Here in Duckford, the same size jar is $5.95... if you can find it.
The problem is that the city has a LOT of Swedes or descendants of Swedes in it, and general consensus is that Roland has the best lingonberry jam, followed by Felix, with Hafi being a distant third and Ikea's "Sylt Lingon" close behind that.
So Roland sells out fast.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 26, 2015 09:20 AM (zAcee)
Christmas 2015
Merry Christmas, my friends... or, if you don't celebrate that particular holiday, Happy Chinese Take-Out Day! It's been quite the year, but without you folks it would have been even moreso. Thanks for putting up with me.
Well. THAT Was A Day.
It was sixty degrees today, the highest high ever for this day in Duckford history. We also had a half-inch of rain fall, mostly when I was walking from my spot in the parking lot to the office. Now we're getting 60mph wind gusts. I love winter in Illinois... I just wish it was, y'know, happening this year.
At work, I can honestly say that the claims kicked my ass all day. Twerent none of 'em what went down easy. It felt like every one of them had something wrong with it, as opposed to being of the "three key presses, two mouse clicks and get paid" variety. It isn't really that simple, but I'm not exaggerating by all that much. It's nowhere near as intimidating as it used to be... mostly. When you have a claim for $60000 hit your screen and you know that every auditor between here and the home office in Texas is just dying to find the teeniest mistake and doom you to a lower tax bracket forever, it can be a little stressful.
When a claim enters your queue, it's supposed to be all set and ready to be processed. Today, though... today was apparently Drive Wonderduck To Drink day. Literally a quarter of the 200 or so claims I worked today didn't have the name of the doctor or the organization he bills through listed correctly. Sometimes you can fix that... the computer isn't so smart that it can pick out the right organization when the doc works with, like, eight different places. Think I'm exaggerating? Doctor's own office. The hospital he works with. Two different hospital-associated clinics: one pediatric, one adult. His office might have a clinic as well. The doc's specialty practice. The partnership he has with another doc. Then the Urgent Care place people go to when they can't get appointments with their "real" doctor. That's eight right there, and while they're all the same doctor, he might be billing to any of them at any time... fortunately each of them has a separate ID number. In theory. That's where the computer falls over and we have to come in and fix the mess.
Except when we can't, because sometimes a doctor was hired by an Urgent Care two months ago and is only now getting around to sending us the bills for his patients. And gosh, lookit that, we have no record that Dr Smith works at that place! So away goes those claims to the home office to deal with... hopefully we'll get them back at some point, after Dr Smith has been added to the rolls.
Imagine beating your head against a wall. It's kinda like that, except the wall is covered with broken glass, razor blades, and that stupid hot mustard Chinese places serve for you to dip your egg rolls in. Each one of those takes time and doesn't pay you anything. Bah.
Oh, and I discovered that I had been looking at the wrong Holiday Days Off list, too! I had been looking at the one for the other branch of our business, the collections folk based in Colorado or somewhere like that, and they get Christmas Eve off. Me, I have to be in tomorrow. Well, shucks.
It could be a lot worse, though. I stopped at the Walgreens near the office to pick up my monthly batch of Keep Wonderduck Alive pills on the way home tonight. That's the Walgreens that's a block away from the Big Shopping Mall in the area. The place was packed with Crazy... and that's just a drugstore near the mall. What must the mall itself be like? I know not, nor wish I to know. I've done my time in Hell after all, and to that place I intend to never return. If I'm lucky.
1
In years past, the week of Thanksgiving and the one leading up to Christmas are traditionally slow-slow-slow so everyone clears out on vacation and/or schedules their "rainy day" projects into that period.
So of course this year the week of Thanksgiving was a bleepin' madhouse and this week has been one wackadoodle call after another. In both cases we had a new guy starting that Monday as well. New guys in "my" "department." Who I haven't gotten to actually train because: Wackadoodle calls. Which we can't escalate because all the lead techs are on vacation.
One of these days, someone in charge is going to deny a vacation request. It'll be a first.
Posted by: GreyDuck at December 24, 2015 08:25 AM (rKFiU)
2
You won't be alone working Christmas Eve. I've been at it since early. I probably wouldnt, but we're supposed to get a ton of snow, if the weather reports are right.
Posted by: Ben at December 24, 2015 10:29 AM (0PD0H)
3
It was colder here today! Our high was only in the mid-40s... and it drizzled a little bit.
I was talking to one of my cow-orkers today... he has to mow his lawn.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 24, 2015 06:43 PM (zAcee)
At Last, Closure.
Duckford is many things, but "large" would not be considered one of them. However, many people would consider that a feature, not a bug, and whatever else, it's still a city of respectable size. What I'm saying is that just bumping into someone randomly must be considered quite unlikely. Throw in my hermitish tendencies and all in all, bumping into one of my old employees from the Duck U Bookstore must be in the "ridiculously low" category.
"But."
This past Sunday, I had brunch with Ph.Duck and RN(ret)Duck at a place that falls into the category of "Duckford Original", the Stockholm Syndrome Inn. Try the swedish pancakes! Feel your arteries clog like someone poured fast-setting concrete into 'em! Make sure you apply liberal amounts of lingonberry because oh my. Please note that I'm not a huge fan of swedish pancakes, but I'm probably the only person in Duckford that's true for. Me, I had a stack of regular pancakes and a hashbrown-like thing with cheese and onion.
As we were all nomming away, catching up on our adventures (or lack thereof) over the past while, I suddenly heard someone saying "I thought that sounded like you, Wonderduck!" I immediately scanned the area for escape routes, cursing myself for letting down my guard. Turning my head towards the voice, I found myself facing one of the three employees that I had on staff when my Bookstore Management career came to a screeching halt. We'll call her Betty because that's not her name. She was still working at the Duck U Bookstore, and we began catching up... it had been 18 months since I last saw her, after all. Eventually I asked how THAT fall semester went after I was gone. Turns out there were some problems, as expected... and I'm willing to believe that at least some of them were because I wasn't there anymore because, y'know, 10 years and stuff, and I'm willing to delude myself.
But none of the problems Betty told me about had to do with textbook acquisition. THAT part, at least, went smooth as butter on silk. Hearing that bit of information made me feel pretty darn good... I may have been unceremoniously kicked to the curb, but I'll be damned if it was because of poor performance. I also heard that they finally got spiral notebooks and folders with the school's new name on 'em... some two-plus years after the change from "college" to "university" occurred, and over three years since the announcement was made... at which point, I immediately began trying to get things with the new name. See? Not my fault, and screw anybody who thought it was.
But I can finally say that I know that when I got canned, the store was in good shape. It wasn't perfect, but it wasn't for lack of trying... and I can finally close the book on that substantial bit of my life. And good riddance.