December 31, 2013
New Year's Eve 2013
Well,
that year sucked awfully hard.
To all the readers of The Pond who bailed, I don't blame you.
To all the readers of The Pond, old and new, who stuck with the place despite it all, thank you. You're all great, and I'm lucky to have you. I hope to be able to tell you just what all has caused this soon, but for now, thanks.
Here's looking forwards to a great 2014, one and all.
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1
Eh, deleting the bookmark was too much work. :-)
Posted by: Mauser at December 31, 2013 11:05 PM (TJ7ih)
2
Meh, i'll just keep lurking. Although keep up the ships thing, thats a bonus.
Posted by: Carpe Jugulum at January 01, 2014 02:08 AM (aTw4s)
3
We'll always have
Rio.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at January 01, 2014 09:42 AM (+cEg2)
4
Heck, I'm more or less new here, so who did I replace, and are they smarter than me?
Posted by: topmaker at January 01, 2014 11:51 AM (2yZsg)
5
That which doesn't kill you makes you ornerier!
It's been a hard year, but we're still here. We win.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at January 01, 2014 02:01 PM (cvXSV)
6
Man, tell me about it. I've said repeatedly that this year can go straight to hell.
Which is probably where it came from.
Happy New Year, Wonderduck!
Posted by: Ben at January 01, 2014 03:12 PM (vwNc1)
7
We survived 2013.
We shall hold 2014 to a higher standard.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 01, 2014 05:51 PM (CUkqs)
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December 28, 2013
Doctor Who: I Might Regret This
Now that Matt Smith's four year run as The Doctor has come to an end, I'm going to do something bonecrushingly stupid... I'm going to state a preference for one recent Doctor over another.
To whit: I think Matt Smith was a more successful Doctor than David Tennant. This is not to say that Tennant wasn't good in the role; he clearly was. After the disastrous run of Christopher Eccleston's PTSD Doctor
1, Tennant could have sunk the franchise completely. He didn't, however, and without his years as the time-traveler,
Doctor Who would not...
could not... be as huge as it currently is.
In a broad sense, the success of Tennant's run is based on amazing
episodes. Take away "Waters of Mars," the Christmas specials (particularly 2007's "Voyage of the Damned", aka "the one with Kylie Minogue"), "Silence in the Library" (aka "the first one with River Song"), the wonderful "School Reunion", and my favorite of the bunch "The Girl in the Fireplace", and some others that I can't be bothered to look up right now, and you've got a rather lackluster overall picture.
Smith, Tennant's successor in the role of the Last Time Lord, brought more energy and humor to The Doctor. His success is undoubtedly based on the entire run of episodes, as opposed to individual ones. That's not to say there weren't excellent episodes; there surely were. "Vincent and The Doctor," "The Doctor's Wife", and "Asylum of the Daleks" immediately come to mind. However, Smith's Doctor is almost a throwback to the original serial version of
Doctor Who. While each episode is a standalone or half of a two-part, they all fit into the overarching storyline for the season, whatever that might be.
In any case, I believe that if you choose an episode at random of Doctor 10, and one at random of 11, you are more likely to see a very good one with #11.
Smith also had the better "supporting cast" with him as well. Amy & Rory were his companions for two-and-a-half seasons, and while they probably should have moved on earlier than that, they were clearly superior to anything Tennant had with him... though Rose was no slouch. It may be personal bias that believes that makes me think that Clara will be better than either A&R or Rose.
So, yes, I find that Matt Smith is the best of the recent Doctors, and probably ranks just below Tom Baker in my mind in the Great List of Doctors. The comment area is below... let the Flame War commence!
1 I will admit that the more I've watched his one season, the more I've come to appreciate what he brought to the role.
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1
Crap, I lost my comment. I hope this does not become a bad duplicate.
I stopped watching
in my teens after Pertwee, Baker and Davison (the All Creatures guy). I was alerted to the renewed series with Eccelston and I loved it from the get go. I think that the writers, Moffat and Davies in particular,
deserve a lot of the credit. At least as much as the actors. The
stories were so interesting, the ones that had long arcs were so well
conceived that it really pulled me back in.
Tennant was the better actor, but Smith was physically more how I expected the Doctor to act. Doing the "about faces" that Tennant could execute, both verbally and character-wise is a hard thing to pull off for an actor and he did a great job with it. Smith had body movements that would be unbelievable if the character was not established beforehand. He pulled that off.
I guess I don't have a favorite, but I will say that, with every regeneration, I fretted how the new guy would top the old guy, and usually by the second episode I was hooked. That is every bit the writer's doing as the actors. Each script considered the new personality, and the personality of the actor himself. It takes talent to do that.
Last, you mentioned characters. I think that Amy and Rory would have worked well for either Tennant or Smith, but I am not sure that Martha or Donna wouold work with Smith. Certainly not as good as with Tennant.
Posted by: topmaker at December 28, 2013 04:47 PM (2yZsg)
2
IDK, Smith left me cold. I thought Tennant was pretty good, tho no one has managed to top Tom Baker.
The thing that really made me stop watching the show is how BBCA was scheduling the damned thing. I could never figure out when it was on or what episode was showing, and when I did manage to find it, it was a rerun. This was about the time it switched from Tennant to Smith, so it's been a while since I bothered with the series.
Oh well.
Obligatory old fan/ hipster line: "I liked
Doctor Who before it was cool!"
Posted by: Ed Hering at December 28, 2013 07:48 PM (aEOAA)
3
Doctor Who was always cool.
I'm still trying to work out whether the whole of Matt Smith's tenure constitutes a single stable time loop.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at December 28, 2013 10:54 PM (PiXy!)
4
I have a lot of respect for Smith and Tennant and Eccleston as actors, but the show and the actors are consistently directed as though the whole thing were a panto instead of a TV show. It's a constant assault on one's suspension of disbelief, as is the whole bizarre aggrandizement of the Doctor by the writers, coupled with their obvious extreme difficulty in portraying him as genuinely virtuous and wise instead of a tin-plated dictator, with delusions of godhood supported solely by script control.
There are some good bits, but they're not really enough to keep me watching. I'm glad other people manage to enjoy the new show, but personally, I think I've gotten a lot more solid enjoyment, and suspension of disbelief, out of Joseon X-Files, Vampire Prosecutor, or Young Justice Bao. So yeah, clearly what we need is a South Korean drama version of Doctor Who.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at December 29, 2013 12:30 AM (cvXSV)
5
Personally, I liked Tennant best mainly because I couldn't stand to look at the tall gangly Mr. Chin. BUT, they were both very good for the very different Doctors they portrayed. (And Smith did grow on me, a little).
Each Doctor gets companions that are suited for them because, well, they're written that way. And in general, I think the writing improved once Davies went away (and his compulsion to make everyone gay.) Although Moffat is a little too horror oriented for my tastes.
This also seems like a good place to drop this little gift I previously put on twitter:
"The Doctor is very sensitive. The Time War made him Hurt."
Posted by: Mauser at December 29, 2013 12:31 AM (TJ7ih)
6
Oh, and as for catching the show, I use eztv to catch the torrents.
Posted by: Mauser at December 29, 2013 12:32 AM (TJ7ih)
7
Moffat is a little too horror oriented for my tastes.
So his writing is too much like...
Doctor Who for your tastes?
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 29, 2013 07:09 AM (Izt1u)
8
There's horror and then there's horror. I mean, clearly you wouldn't want to do a Doctor Who take on Jack the Ripper that featured pieces of organ flying around. You might do invisible serial killing time travelers or flying knife aliens invading, but having middle-aged ladies of easy virtue with their guts and other parts spread everywhere? No. So no splatter horror. No rapists of adults or children.
Similarly, the traditional Doctor Who horror was geared at scaring the daylights out of children and being creepy for adults -- but not being so bad as to traumatize children or adults. You didn't know whether it would be something utterly strange and fantastic, or something close to home.
But there also needs to be something for those members of the audience who aren't scared, so that they will not become bored. Horror can't be the only dramatic value in a Doctor Who ep ever, because it gets boring to be under constant suspense (or just not to be scared). The whole scary clown thing is always a mistake, because plenty of people will be staring at the screen incredulously or laughing helplessly at the whole concept of scary clowns. (Yeah, Sylvester McCoy seasons, I'm looking at you.)
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at December 29, 2013 10:02 PM (cvXSV)
9
I don't watch
Doctor Who, but is that still from a zombie episode or something? The pallor, the sunken eyes, the pronounced orbital bones... they look like extras from
Day of the Dead or
Night of the Comet.
Posted by: Mitch H. at December 31, 2013 08:45 AM (jwKxK)
Posted by: Mauser at December 31, 2013 11:07 PM (TJ7ih)
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December 26, 2013
Happy Day After Christmas
I'm tired, I'm either sad or maudlin, I'm annoyed, and I had to work today. I'm going to take a nap then go to sleep.
Thank you, everybody.
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1
St. Hildegarde of Bingen recommends a nice sugary licorice-root and fennel bulb tea for those days when one is full of melancholy. I recommend chocolate (just for the magnesium, of course!), although of course I have absolutely nothing against licorice or fennel.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at December 26, 2013 10:18 PM (cvXSV)
2
Whenever you're having a bad day, you can at least console yourself with the thought that you have it better than your poor brethren in Taiwan.
Giant yellow duck explodes in Taiwan - again!
From the article text, discussing a previous such disaster: "Powerful winds caused the duck's rear end to burst" Ouch!
Posted by: David at December 31, 2013 12:01 PM (vtKcn)
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December 24, 2013
Christmas Eve Tunage
It's Christmas Eve. For the past few weeks, the only music I've been able to play at the Duck U Bookstore has been... you guessed it... Christmas music. I am not ashamed to say that I'd rather gut myself like a fish than do that. Which means it's time for a special CHRISTMAS EVE TUNAGE with DJ Wonderduck!!!
There won't be ANY Christmas music in this one, oh no! Just great rockin' good times in an attempt to crush the holiday music out of my brain. Let's not wait, let's just do this! TUNAGE!!!
more...
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1
A Kerbal space program video would be awesome. I need to toy with that again.
I have one favorite Christmas song, the Waitresses' "Christmas Rapping" but just because I love the rhyme inside one line. "A&P Has provided me with the world's smallest Turkey."
Posted by: Mauser at December 25, 2013 06:13 AM (TJ7ih)
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 25, 2013 07:01 AM (Izt1u)
3
I thought I had. Hasn't changed since last year. Although oddly, I haven't heard ANY Christmas music this year.
Posted by: Mauser at December 25, 2013 09:14 AM (TJ7ih)
4
World of Narue is great to watch after you have seen some heavy series like Ergo Proxy or somesuch. It's a palette cleanser of sorts.
That's a great video. Thanks for posting it.
Merry Christmas!
Posted by: topmaker at December 25, 2013 01:05 PM (2yZsg)
5
Once retailers start playing Christmas music, I immunize myself with the HP Lovecraft Historical Society's
solstice carols. Then if I walk into a store without my iPod, I'll be able to keep the normal lyrics from infecting my brain.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at December 25, 2013 08:45 PM (+cEg2)
Posted by: Mauser at December 26, 2013 10:33 AM (TJ7ih)
7
Oh, that IS one of their songs. Still, a great video.
Posted by: Mauser at December 26, 2013 10:35 AM (TJ7ih)
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December 20, 2013
Well THAT Was Unexpected
As I always do...
always... I got up at 630am today when my cellphone alarm went off. For the next half-hour, I did the my usual routine: brushed my teef, took a shower, that sort of thing, y'know? As I got out of the shower in the dark (I haven't showered with the lights on in 20-some-odd years... no I don't know why), I noticed a small flash of red light from my cellphone, sitting there on the sink.
This elicited a sigh from me. Such a red light this early in the morning is never good news, as it signifies either a missed call/voicemail or a text message. Perhaps an employee checking in to let me know that they're sick, or a misguided telemarketer, maybe a wayward text from Brickmuppet, or occasionally a weather alert from a local TV station. Well, whatever it was, it could wait a few minutes while I dried off and got dressed. This I accomplished, short of putting on the shirt I'd be wearing into the store that day... fewer wrinklies that way, don'tchaknow? Sitting in front of the computer, I finally took a moment to see what was so important that it deserved my attention at 7am.
It was both a text and a voicemail from Duck U's Alert System. "Due to weather conditions, the Duck U campus and offices are closed today." I... what? As it turns out, the fog/drizzle that was just beginning when I got home Thursday night never actually stopped, and all of Duckford had an unpleasant glaze of ice over it. Heck, even Duckford Mass Transit had taken all their buses off the roads to keep them from, I dunno, ending up inside people's houses or where-ever they'd wind up after an unfortunate skid.
So, after contacting the employee who was to be working with me today and telling her not to come in, telling my boss that we were closed, re-recording the store's voicemail message from home, and double-checking with Duck U security that yep, campus was closed, I finally decided to go see what it was like outside.
Ice. Ice everywhere. Oh, don't get me wrong, it wasn't thick ice... news reports says less than 1/10th of an inch... but you don't
need much to turn streets into skating rinks. I didn't even try to head over to the DuckMobile. I could
see the sidewalk and parking lot were more appropriate for a Blackhawks game than for driving. With that, I walked back into Pond Central, switched into a pair of sweats and fuzzy slippers, and proceeded to completely enjoy my first not-normal (i.e., not holiday or weekend, not like I've had many of those either) day off in
five months.
Unsurprisingly, I did christmas shopping (thank you, Internet!) then took a very long, very needed, nap. Tomorrow is grocery shopping in preparation for our first real snowfall of the season (well, that and I'm out of stuff), and Sunday is laundry day and getting ready to go back to work on Monday, but at least for today, I could do what I wanted... and it was good.
picture unrelated
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Posted by: Steven Den Beste at December 20, 2013 11:54 PM (+rSRq)
2
It's the
Falkirk Wheel, Steven. Arguably the coolest piece of technology today, and the world's only rotating boat lift.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 21, 2013 12:23 AM (Izt1u)
3
I'd seen the Falkirk Wheel before, but didn't recognise it from the photo either. Looks more like a still from a movie version of
Red Planet.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at December 21, 2013 07:27 AM (PiXy!)
4
Every so often you see things and say to yourself, yep, we really are living in the 21st century.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at December 21, 2013 07:27 AM (PiXy!)
5
That is an amazing photo.
Posted by: Dreamshadow at December 21, 2013 08:06 AM (T5fuR)
6
Hooray for surprise downtime that doesn't involve having something terrible happen first!
Posted by: GreyDuck at December 21, 2013 10:18 AM (CUkqs)
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December 19, 2013
RIP Superjock
I don't have heroes, and I never did. I suspect most people my age feel the same way. Why bother? In the end, we always find they have feet of clay. Often enough it turns out a "hero" is really just someone who got lucky one day.
Which is why Larry Lujack wasn't my hero. What he was, however, was the reason I wanted to get into the radio biz. Growing up, his was the voice that got me going in the morning. A deadpan delivery attached to a wickedly dry sense of humor resonated in my young brain, bouncing around and mixing with Monty Python. But even in the depths of my callow youthiness, I could recognize pure genius when I heard it. I don't know when it happened, but somewhere those formative years, I set my sights on being a DJ just like Ol' Unka Lar'.
Unka Lar' was the host of the morning staple on WLS,
Animal Stories. I've written about that legendary radio skit a couple of times before, no need to repeat it here. But Lujack was more than a single gag. His "Superjock" persona, "the greatest rock & roll DJ anywhere", was just an act... but it turned out that he may very well have BEEN the greatest. He was honored with membership in the
National Radio Hall of Fame in 2004, and the
National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2008.
Larry Lujack died yesterday at the age of 73 after a year-long fight with esophageal cancer. When I heard the news this morning, I didn't react much until I made it to the Duck U parking lot. Only then did I close my eyes and let a few tears stream down my face. A big piece of my childhood has passed away, and some part of my life is a little darker than it had been.
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December 16, 2013
Ask Wonderduck (Almost) Anything, The 2013 Edition!
I've done this twice before, and it's been amusing both times, so let's do it again! It's time for the third installment of Ask Wonderduck (Almost) Anything! Here's
how this thing works... you ask a question, and I'll answer it! It's just that
simple! But wait, great news! The best question (in my opinion) will
get a full-length post devoted to the answer!
There
are a
few questions I won't answer: anything related to current politics or
religion. I started The Pond lo these many years ago in an attempt to
get away from political or religious squabbles, and to this day I've
pretty much managed to stay clear of those things. There are plenty of
people out there who write about those topics and do so in ways I
couldn't even hope to approach, so go read them for answers to those
questions. If you DO ask me a
question related to such topics, please expect to be mocked horribly.
Now, if you ask me a technical question ("How do I install a V12 engine into a Smart Fortwo?"), I'll do my best to answer it, but you use said answer at your own risk. And take pictures, please, for the sake of posterity. And humor.
So, without further ado: Ask Wonderduck (Almost) Anything!
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1
Oookay... What's your
second favourite anime series?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at December 17, 2013 07:09 AM (PiXy!)
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 17, 2013 07:47 AM (Izt1u)
3
Twisting that theme a bit.. if you were in charge of setting up an anime de-programming video (as in A Clockwork Orange), what would be shown to the poor subject?
Posted by: David at December 17, 2013 01:40 PM (vtKcn)
4
How's this one - if you could push through any rules changes in F1 that you wanted, what would you do?
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at December 17, 2013 02:07 PM (pWQz4)
5
It'd be highly entertaining seeing a V12 shoehorned into a fortwo. Reminds me of a line in one of the old Star Wars books about putting a dormer on the Falcon to fit something.
I used to own a Geo Metro with a 3cyl 1.0L engine. We always thought it'd be funny to drop a V6 in it, but figured that if you did and floored it, the engine and front wheels would tear right off the frame, cartoon-like.
Posted by: RickC at December 17, 2013 03:33 PM (A9FNw)
6
I saw a youtube video some time ago on the subject of "how to get a Smart FourTwo to do the 1/4 mile in 15 seconds." And the answer was to put in on a trailer behind a performance pickup that would normally do it in 10 or so..
Much easier than trying to retrofit a V12 into the Smart FourTwo
Posted by: David at December 17, 2013 03:56 PM (vtKcn)
7
Who is the greatest f1 driver of all time?
What is the best fighter of ww2?
What was the most important ship in Pacific in ww2?
Military blunders are always talked about. But what is the best single maneuver/action/stratagem of pacific war?
You watch a lot of anime. Ever watched Moomin? Is it counted as anime?
Posted by: Ari at December 17, 2013 05:59 PM (zvmpn)
8
Avatar, the one rule change I'd push through would be removing Ferrari's two bonuses: they get a percentage of the annual prize moneys BEFORE they're divvied up between teams, and they get veto power over any proposed rule change. They deserve neither of these anymore.
If I got another rules change, I'd remove most of the engine restrictions. Want a W12 engine? Go for it! Think of a way to stick a rotary engine in the back of a Caterham? Okay in my F1 world! The only limit would be that it would require pistons: no jet engines.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 17, 2013 09:05 PM (Izt1u)
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 17, 2013 09:10 PM (Izt1u)
10
Ari @ #7:
1) The BBC lists the best as Ayrton Senna, followed by St Fangio the Quick and Jimmy Clark. You could choose any of those three as "the best" and I wouldn't argue with you. Ph.Duck's favorite is Clark, so I'll go with that today... catch me in a good mood, though, and I'm prone to say Zsolt Baumgartner.
2) I still intend to finish my "
Best Fighter" posts, so I'm not answering this... yet.
3) The USS
Cimmaron.
4)
Sho-Go 1. In sports terms, the Japanese Navy faked Admiral Halsey out of his jockstrap and put themselves in position to just slaughter the Philippines landing forces. That Admiral Kurita peed the chance right down his leg should take nothing away from the effective strategy that put him there.
5) No, and nope.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 17, 2013 09:26 PM (Izt1u)
11
Was there ever an anime that made you angry at having sat and watched through the entirety of it? Note that this does not include any anime you just gave up part way through.
Posted by: cxt217 at December 17, 2013 11:27 PM (l1UEN)
12
CXT, yes, the original
Evangelion. Those last two episodes basically made the preceding 24 worthless... which really pissed me off.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 17, 2013 11:40 PM (Izt1u)
13
You know, I devoted half a review to Dokuro-chan....
(I'm still writing reviews, although I don't think anyone's noticed.)
My question is, when they run cute duckling pictures on iCanHazCheeseburger's RSS feed (which I view on LiveJournal) do you want to be forwarded a link? Or is it only rubber ducks?
Oh, and I did see some videos about stuffing a 1000 cc Honda Motorcycle engine in a Smart4Two, which apparently does turn it into a wee beast.
Posted by: Mauser at December 18, 2013 05:16 AM (TJ7ih)
14
> Mauser - That would be the Smart Diablo with a 1-liter Suzuki Hayabusa from the GSXR sport bike. If you look on YouTube, there's a video of the Smart Diablo smoking a Ferrari 430 in the quarter mile.
Posted by: JT at December 18, 2013 07:33 AM (iStSI)
15
From the Hero Ship post - why is HMS
Ark Royal "the greatest name for a ship ever?"
If the two
Akrons
had not gone down by the mid-1930s, but radar development had run as normal, would production ZRSs (
Independences to the
Akron's
Ranger) have had a significant role in the Pacific war?
What is the most significant engagement that gets the least written about it in the Pacific war (the un-Midway, so to speak)?
Posted by: Ranger Rick at December 18, 2013 10:20 PM (G1HTO)
16
Rick...
1) Cuz I said so?
2) No, I don't think so. Oh, perhaps as sub hunters, sure, but I just don't see much advantage otherwise to something as fragile as a zeppelin/blimp/whatever in wartime.
3) The Kokoda Trail. Epic stuff, rarely written about here in the States.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 18, 2013 10:37 PM (Izt1u)
Posted by: Mauser at December 20, 2013 02:15 AM (TJ7ih)
Posted by: Ari at December 20, 2013 10:59 AM (vVZ0M)
19
Mauser: no need.
Ari: because Minardi was the greatest team ever, Zsolt Is God, and Takuma Sato is his prophet.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 20, 2013 12:48 PM (Izt1u)
20
Do you have an opinion on Last Exile?
Posted by: Dreamshadow at December 20, 2013 06:43 PM (T5fuR)
21
None whatsoever. Sorry!
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 20, 2013 08:24 PM (Izt1u)
22
As a fan of WWII naval ships, do you plan on watching
Arpeggio of Blue Steel or the
KanColle anime?
Posted by: muon at December 24, 2013 03:56 AM (jFJid)
23
Blue Steel, no. I watched the first couple of episodes, and decided the premise was too stupid for me to stand.
KanColle, on the other hand, I'm very much looking forward to. No, I can't tell you the difference between the two series, and no, that doesn't bother me.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 24, 2013 07:33 AM (Izt1u)
24
I haven't seen it yet, so can you say what the problems with the premise were? (
Blue Steel seems to going for straight SF, while
KanColle seems to be more comedic.)
Posted by: muon at December 25, 2013 04:15 AM (jFJid)
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December 14, 2013
Today Was A Good Day
...except for the whole "going into work on a Saturday" part. I mean, yeah, that was a drag, but it was a
successful drag. Like "
RuPaul meets
Tony Pedragon" successful. I had three major and two minor tasks to accomplish, and had them all done by 5pm, a mere six hours after I got there... not so bad.
Of course, I could have spent another six hours at the store doing stuff... there's easily that much and more to do every day... but I was tired and hurty and hungry and I wanted to be not there anymore. So home I went.
In retrospect, it wasn't really that great of a day. But in comparison to what I've had of late? Today was a good day.
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December 13, 2013
Well, This All Seems... Horrible.
Buyback Week is over. But guess who'll be going into his Bookstore on Saturday for at least five hours, and probably longer?
Shhhhh... only dreams now...
Yup... yours truly. I'm so exhausted I can barely type.
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December 10, 2013
Oh My Aching... Um... Everything.
I should have known better. Any day that started the way today did deserves to be drowned right at the beginning. I mean, it started with my alarm going off at 615am... that right there makes it a bad day.
It also involved me getting into the shower without a washcloth. But that's okay, because I also didn't have a towel. I managed the rest of the pre-going-to-work routine without incident... even put on my shirt correctly... and headed out into the HOLYCRAPWHERE'DALLTHEHEATGO to get the DuckMobile warmed up.
Walking towards it, I saw there was some small amount of snow covering the right side of the car... y'know, the type that'll blow away the moment you put the car in gear and barely touch the accelerator... so I change course, brush it off with my glitten-covered hands, then begin walking around the rear of the DuckMobile, heading towards the driver's side door.
I'm sure my readers who live in the Midwest may have noticed a small earthquake around 745am central time. I need to apologize for that, as it was my fault. My bad. I rounded the corner of the car, made it about even with the license plate ("WNDRDUK"), when the invisible asphalt weasels reached up and grabbed my ankle. Next thing I know, I'm headed towards the surface of the parking lot at fairly high (and increasing!) velocity.
Left knee hit first, followed by the right knee, my face, and then the rest of me. I'm lying there, spitting out snow and meltysalt, probably looking like a particularly comedic walrus, and all I can say is "ow." Yeah, that's me, Mr Witty Repartee, in the flesh. I haul myself to my feet, get to the driver's door, and where the
fsck are my keys? Sure enough, they were lying there, in the middle of the Khumbu Icefall, right where I dropped them during my failed attempt at a gravity turn. Fortunately, my recovery mission did not result in Impact: Parking Lot 2: Electric Boogaloo.
While I drove in to the Duck U Bookstore, I began to realize that I might have done myself some harm. The giveaway was the intense throbbing in my knees, though it was with a sense of relief I noticed no marks on my face... surprising, considering that it felt like I left an imprint of my chin in the concrete. Not because I'm vain about my looks... after all, I know what I look like... but because customers find blood and open wounds to be off-putting.
By the middle of the day, I could feel my left knee stiffening up something fierce. Great, just swell! Then the student came in to sell some books back who decided that since I wasn't offering 200% back on her titles, it was okay to start swearing at me. It's not like I'm unused to that... during Finals week, I'm the most hated duck on campus, after all... but on top of the rest of the day, it was quite the moment.
So eventually the day ended, I limped out to my car, picked up some stuff at the grocery store, came home, and took another header in the Icefall... this time while carrying two cases of soda. It should go without saying that once again my left knee discovered that gravity ain't just a good idea, but the law. The bruise should be
amazing.
So here I am, blogging, and I've got to go to bed and do it all over again tomorrow. I love my life and everything about it right now.
Posted by: Wonderduck at
11:31 PM
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1
Ibuprofen 600 mg NOW, Wonderduck (unless you took it already). It has anti-inflamatory properties which may be vital.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at December 11, 2013 12:28 AM (RqRa5)
2
And oddly enough... an ice pack.
Posted by: Will at December 11, 2013 12:55 AM (1EtXn)
3
Wonderduck, get well quickly! I enjoy reading your blog, alongside of Steven, Brickmuppet, and others.
Posted by: Dreamshadow at December 11, 2013 04:07 PM (T5fuR)
4
I feel your pain, man. My first encounter with slick ice a couple years ago landed me right on my ass. After this one, I've had it, no more! I'm moving to the tropics.
Well, I was anyway...
Icepack, yeah. Save the hot soak for day 2.
Posted by: Avatar at December 11, 2013 07:54 PM (33Kys)
5
Then the student came in to sell some books back who decided that since I
wasn't offering 200% back on her titles, it was okay to start swearing
at me.
If your bosses won't hire an assistant manager to help you run the bookstore, the least they could do is hire a bouncer to deal with people like her.
Posted by: Peter the Not-so-Great at December 11, 2013 08:50 PM (BFA4r)
6
Well, I was anyway...
Wait, what?
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 11, 2013 11:31 PM (Izt1u)
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Ah, sorry, awkward wording. "I was already moving to the tropics anyway", not "I was going to but now I'm not". The move is on (and next week too... eep.)
Posted by: Avatar at December 12, 2013 05:26 AM (GJQTS)
8
Oh good... scared me for a minute there!
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 12, 2013 07:18 AM (Izt1u)
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December 06, 2013
Work
The Fall semester has come to an end at the Duck U Bookstore... except for Finals week. And when it's Finals Week, that means it's also Buyback week, which means that Wonderduck is going to be in Hell.
Which would be bad, except I've been there all semester. As yet, I still can't get into all the details, but let's just say that I still don't have an assistant manager, and probably never will again. What I also haven't had is another keyholder. Yup... since July 30th, I've been open-to-close every day, minimum 9.5 hours.
Minimum. Also five home football games, a few visit days, and quite a few days where I went in on Saturday to get stuff done.
Like I'll be doing tomorrow. Because I've got to get that stuff done before Monday, or we're seriously screwed. But I lost a filling a week-and-change ago, and I can't go get the tooth pulled until I've got another keyholder. I'm doomed. Doomed, I tell you.
I hate working on Saturdays.
Posted by: Wonderduck at
11:26 PM
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1
Sounds like you've been shot at and missed.... Corporate cutbacks deeming the bookstore sales too low to rate an ass man (as Laura puts it)? Why do I also have the feeling that you're salaried and get no overtime?
Good luck with scheduling the dentist, amigo....
Posted by: The Old Man at December 07, 2013 05:47 AM (JFB5K)
2
Salary indeed. I can neither confirm nor deny your cutback thought.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 07, 2013 08:36 AM (Izt1u)
3
Dang. They're luckier than they deserve that you haven't just walked away.
Posted by: RickC at December 07, 2013 12:51 PM (swpgw)
4
So, basically, they're going to flog you until you drop, and then what? Find some other willing body to brave that kind of schedule?
Grrrr. I did the open-to-close, Mon-Sat thing for a couple years. I was in my 20s at the time, though. Still it nearly killed me.
Posted by: GreyDuck at December 07, 2013 06:17 PM (CUkqs)
5
GD, open-to-close wouldn't be so bad... that's just 830a to 530p, most of time (half hour on either side for getting cash in and out of the registers).
What I've been doing is more like 815a to 7p or so, more or less every day for the past four-and-a-half months, all while under a particular stress that I dare not speak of yet.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 07, 2013 07:47 PM (Izt1u)
6
Blurgh. Sorry, man. I hope there's relief of some kind, and soon!
Posted by: GreyDuck at December 08, 2013 10:07 AM (CUkqs)
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December 04, 2013
To The Mun!
FINALLY!
Sure, maybe everybody else has already managed to get into orbit around Mün, or landed there for that matter, but I never pulled it off. Until tonight, courtesy of my
Delta-K rocket, some seat-of-the-spacesuit piloting, and a metric fsckton of luck. Even better, I think I'll have enough go-juice to get Jebediah back, to boot!
The next step?
Land on the darned thing,
and get back. I think the Delta-K will have the oomph to get the lander up... I hope. I have high hopes.
Posted by: Wonderduck at
11:05 PM
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The best I've managed so far was to orbit the Mun, and run out of fuel on the way back, ending up in an orbit with a periapsis of around 150 meters, and an apoapsis that was about halfway back to the Mun. I've actually got that game saved aside as mounting a rescue would be an interesting challenge.
That rocket probably had enough delta-v to get back, but I messed up my maneuvers, breaking Mun orbit in a way that added total velocity to my orbit which I then had to cancel, and I tried to rush that, rather than wait for the most efficient time.
Compared to your Delta-K, my rocket had more in the lower stages, but less in the middle. I had five of the big fuel tanks with fuel cross-feed, so I drop two fairly quickly, drop another two just before achieving orbit, and use the fifth to put me on the mun transfer orbit. Then the upper stage handled mun orbit and return. My upper stage was smaller than yours. The rocket's I've seen with landers on them have more upper stage than you do, with lower stages in line with what I had or larger.
Posted by: David at December 05, 2013 11:32 AM (vtKcn)
2
Ah, I've cracked up quite a few Mun landings.
Nothing like that moment when you realize '
Oh crap, I'm coming in waaaay too hot!'...
Here's a screenshot of one of my less than successful landings (though with repeated rocket pack smackings, I did get the habitation module upright).
Posted by: DrHeinous at December 05, 2013 11:35 AM (/Y+Yb)
3
I'm still orbitally challenged. I can get a rocket up there safely, but my orbits continually end up being elongated and outside the second moon's orbit for the apoapsis (I'm mangling the word, I know it)
Posted by: Dreamshadow at December 05, 2013 11:45 AM (T5fuR)
4
As it turns out, Jeb
did have enough go-juice to get back home... if CapCom had any idea what they were doing. Instead, Jeb wound up in a lovely solar orbit, tilted about 15° in relation to Kerbin's orbit.
After watching something around 20 full orbits, the closest Jeb ever got to Home was roughly halfway between Kerbin and Mun. Rescue... is probably not an option.
Posted by: Wonderduck at December 05, 2013 09:05 PM (Izt1u)
5
I've been playing around in the free demo for a while, and the tutorial they added helped me immensely. That and some youtube videos finally got me sorted out and making regular Munar trips.
Posted by: Will at December 11, 2013 12:46 AM (1EtXn)
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