Ducks In Anime: Duck And Pandahamster IISome time ago, I wrote about a wonderful little trifle from the geniuses over at Kyoto Animation entitled Baja no Studio. Sadly, I first saw this delightful story about a hamster-blob-thing and his toy duck friend shortly after the terrible arson that consumed KyoAni's Studio 1 that killed 36... including the director of Baja no Studio. As it's set in an anime production building that was based on Studio 1, it was doubly hard to watch.
Earlier this month, Baja no Studio: Baja no Mita Umi (Baja and the Sea) was available for streaming for a limited time... and now it's available at all the usual places one can hoist the black flag!
...and it's just as incredibly cute as the first one. This time, Baja and Quacky are told by Magical Girl Coco about "the sea", and magically takes them there. It's as insanely beautiful as anything KyoAni has ever done.
Yes, that's them on top of the water sphere. It looks even better in motion. Anyway, all is right with the world until the baddy, the evil Dr Doom wannabe Gi shows up and literally pulls the plug on the whole thing. Whirlpools ensue.
The show then becomes about Gi trying to turn poor Baja into his evil minion by... mistreating Quacky. The utter cad.
Quacky does try to fight back, however, like any brave duck should.
But is soon banished to a stormy sea, leaving Baja all alone. It's a heartbreaking moment, and I won't reveal how the situation is fixed, but rest assured all is right with the world by the end. Because that's the way it should be when a duckie is involved.
I'm not going to go tell you to watch it right away. I'm going to tell you to save it for a day you're feeling down. I won't claim to say it'll make everything great, but for 25 minutes or so, you'll feel better. Because that's what duckies do.
Before Civilization.
A few weeks back, I was chatting with Ben from MidniteTease about pretty much nothing in particular when the discussion turned, as such discussions between two relatively healthy red-blooded American males often do, to the topic of videogames.
Why, what did you think I was going to say?
Anyway, Ben is currently learning how to create mods for Fallout 3. Considering that I can use my computer to open e-mail, this amazes me to no end. He had said something about making Deathclaws wear party hats... I think? I might have that wrong. Anyway. He's doing that, and I'm still playing Fate Grand Order. Still have yet to miss a log-in from when I began around the New Year, in fact. I've gone from being a total clueless n00b in the game to being a total clueless vet at the game with a roster that's strong enough to carry my lame tucus to victory.
No, no, what I meant to say is that I've actually learned how to play, how to use the mechanics to my advantage, all that sort of thing. I've spent hours reading and watching videos on the thing, and without a doubt my favorite part of the game is... a daily webcomic that gets posted on Reddit. I've linked to Rednal's imgur album so you can read it if you want. It just put up its 500th consecutive comic a few days ago, and also finally gave it a name.
However. FGO is not the only thing I've been playing of late. God help me, I've begun playing Getting Over It with Bennett Foddy. As the creator of the game says, "I created this game for a certain type of person. To hurt them." I don't know if I'm the certain type of person mentioned, but it does hurt. So very much.
But during that conversation with Ben, somehow we veered off topic briefly to floppy disks. No, I don't know either. But as we chatted via text, I went looking through a box of old Sony disks I have here... from my RadioShanty days, no less. Over 20 years old, in other words. Poorly labeled if at all, they just sat there with no way for me to access them. And there, at the back of the box, was something that honestly took my breath away for a moment. Or maybe it was the hot sauce on the burrito, one of the two. Lets go with the thing in the disk box, shall we?
1987. I had a 286 around about that time. I couldn't tell you how much RAM it had... probably 640kb. I'm pretty sure I bought this when I was in grad school, though. 1991, then. Either way, holy crap. You've maybe played the remake that came out in 2004 which is available on Steam, and it's really quite a faithful "cover" version. But just think about this for a moment. When Sid Meier made this game, he was still four years away from the release of Civilization.
That means it was literally "before civilization." And, for all you kids out there, yes, it's before your knowledge too. You never experienced floppys.
This is very nearly archaeology, certainly in computer terms. How weird it is to say that. Anyway. Thought you might be interested. If not, eh, sorry to waste your time. If you were, great, happy to waste your time!
1
I think what I love most about this is the implication that the Tandy computer line was distinct from an "IBM PC/XT/AT-compatible" system...
Posted by: GreyDuck at September 14, 2020 08:10 AM (rKFiU)
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GreyDuck - they were! Tandy graphics mode had four times as many colours as CGA. Before VGA, a lot of PC games specifically targeted Tandy graphics.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at September 14, 2020 07:01 PM (MqQvv)
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This post made me feel happy.
Also, I'm not the only person alive who is older than Civilization.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at September 14, 2020 07:34 PM (sF8WE)
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Tandy was very definitely a "boxed-in" subset of PC-compatible. Many a Tandy user would try to share their favorite game with a friend who had some other kind of PC only to find the disk wouldn't actually read, or at least not finish loading, or the game would crash after starting.
But Tandy graphics were the salvation of budget color gaming for a few years, although you would still need to upgrade the sound card.
Posted by: Ben at September 15, 2020 08:55 AM (tS/RO)
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Ben, yeah, that's why for a while software went from being labelled "IBM PC and compatibles" to "IBM PC and 100% compatibles".
Then we got the whole mess of sound cards, where you had to run a separate program before you ran the game for the first time to tell it what kind of sound card you had, or you didn't get audio. Despite all the warts, that's one thing Windows does better: abstracting away the actual hardware so software doesn't care which sound card or video card you have.
Posted by: Rick C at September 16, 2020 07:21 AM (eqaFC)
Posted by: Mauser at September 17, 2020 07:56 PM (Ix1l6)
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Oh, EFFING SOUND CARDS. Honestly? To this very day, handling of sound is something that "PC compatible" systems still do very, very poorly. Even when it's built into the motherboard, even when basically only two chipset vendors are even still in the mix so you'd think they'd have nailed down all the quirks, even in this post Plug-n-Play world.
I spent two months late last year trying to convince my work computer not to "put the sound device to sleep." Because then I'd miss work calls because instead of actual-phones we have "soft-phones" which, you guessed it, rely on the computer making some kind of noise all of a sudden to let you know a call's coming in, but if the computer hadn't made any noises in a while, Windows just decided "oh, I guess you don't need that device anymore" until you fiddled with the volume a bunch and it decided "oh, maybe you do" and woke it up again.
My actual "working" solution was to set MediaMonkey to queue up 9 hours (8 to 5 workday) of random music and make sure the volume was loud enough that Windows didn't decide I still didn't really need the audio anymore. Which, yes, still happened even though music was being played, gorramit, unless the volume was high enough, WTF Windows?!? Ahem.
Posted by: GreyDuck at September 20, 2020 07:36 PM (rKFiU)
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Wow, that's seriously messed up; I've never heard of Windows putting the sound device to sleep before. Maybe a batch job that plays a short media clip (say, 1 second of silence so it's not annoying), set to a scheduled task that runs every 3 minutes?
Posted by: Rick C at September 21, 2020 09:07 AM (eqaFC)
All Of Them, Really.
You may remember a while ago, I was lamenting over the length of my hair and how badly it needed to be cut. Of course, with the Plague-19 going on getting out to a place of haircutting was difficult if not potentially fatal. This left me with two options: let it grow or cut it myself. For a while, I continued to let it grow... and grow... and grow...
But then came the issues. First, it was having to clean my hairbrush every few days. Then it was my bathtub drain clogging almost bi-weekly. Then it was random hair in my metaphorical (and sometimes literal) soup. But the real tipping point was being woken up by a literal mouthful of hair. It had gotten so long that what would have been a ponytail had I tied it was migrating to cover my face during the night. This could not stand, and so I made the decision... I had to do the deed.
Being nearly as impulsive as a block of concrete, I had to make sure I wasn't going to mess up. I have a very nice Remington beard trimmer...
No, not that Remington. At least, I don't think it's the same company. If it is, that's the weirdest case of business diversity I can think of. Anyway, beard trimmer. It's quite good for an entry-level model and it lets me remove my beard in about a fifth of the time it takes me to shave. Even better, I've had it long enough now that its now saving me money on the cost of razor blades! Win win all around! However, please notice the name: beard trimmer. I had no idea how well it'd do when it came to the overgrown field that was my hair. Its blade is less than one-and-a-half inches wide, and my head is much larger than that. Further, I didn't want to shave it all off, and the trimmer did have a guide that'd keep it an inch over my head. That'd still be short, but not oh-my-god-what-did-you-do short. So, I practiced.
Right in front, dead-center of my hairline.
Because where else would you practice when the possibility exists that screwing up would make you look incredibly stupid and would be obvious to everybody that looked at you? Then I doubled down on the stupid by not cutting flat, but at an angle so the resulting length was actually quite a bit less than 1" tall.
Yeah, about like that. Fer the luvva crepe. Before I continued, I did the one smart thing I'd done since the decision to shear myself had been made: I hopped onto the Chicago Cubs website and ordered myself a new Cubs ballcap. Because your hair can't look stupid if nobody can see it! That accomplished, I went back and got to work.
It's more exciting if you imagine a hair-cutting sequence occuring with this playing in the background. No seriously, imagine scenes of long hair dropping to the floor, close-ups of the trimmer blade deforesting whole rainforests of red, all in dramatic cinematic dramaticness. You picturing that? Pretty cool, isn't it? Heck yeah it is.
That's not what it was like. Instead it was me trying to get my hair to just all be the same height and failing miserably. For the next three days, every time I was in the bathroom, I'd see another patch that was clearly too long and work at it some more. Eventually I just set the trimmer to the very lowest height that wasn't blade-on-skin and said screw it. I'll be honest, it wasn't a good look for me. I didn't quite look like the sort of big dumb muscle you expect to see in a bad crime movie, but it was pretty close. It's been a couple of weeks now, and while it's still very very short... I can brush my hair just as well with my hand as I can an actual brush, and drying it after a shower takes about two rubs of a towel... it's not as horrible as it was. At least now you can tell I have actual hair.
Better than choking on it every morning, I'll tell you what.
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Much, much better than choking on it in the morning, I'm certain of that!
Posted by: GreyDuck at September 04, 2020 10:56 PM (rKFiU)
2
There's a scene in the movie Her Alibi that has got to be the sexiest haircut scene I've ever seen.
It's also the *only* sexy haircut scene I've ever seen, but (waves hand) details.
Posted by: Kathryn at September 05, 2020 04:30 PM (rWZ8Y)
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For the record: my haircut was not sexy in any way, shape or form. Unless you think Looney Toons is sexy.
Posted by: Wonderduck at September 05, 2020 05:43 PM (D9Okp)
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" I can brush my hair just as well with my hand as I can an actual brush,
and drying it after a shower takes about two rubs of a towel"
Well, that is one advantage of really short hair.
Posted by: Rick C at September 05, 2020 06:30 PM (eqaFC)
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I started shaving mine when I turned 33. I was going from a pony tail to a rat tail, and my temples had fought a pincer movement and defeated my bangs. I could have donned Klingon makeup without needing a bald wig.
It was a pretty unique sensation at first. I could feel the air on my scalp when I walked down the hall.
Posted by: Mauser at September 05, 2020 08:10 PM (Ix1l6)
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> No, not that Remington. At least, I don't think it's the same company. If it is, that's the weirdest case of business diversity I can think of. <
It hasn't been the same company in a legal sense since maybe 1886, but historically, it actually is a direct descendant of the firearms manufacturer. Therein lies a dizzying 200-year tale of diversification and mergers and acquisitions that went from flintlocks to computers and has been tangent to things ranging from air traffic control to Radio Shack.
Spun-off descendant Remington-Rand (maker of the electric shaver) even got back into the firearms business during WW2 as the largest maker of the Model of 1911 .45 pistol.
Posted by: Ad absurdum per aspera at September 05, 2020 11:28 PM (dWQPF)
Posted by: Wonderduck at September 07, 2020 09:29 PM (D9Okp)
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Klingon hair, huh? I once saw a dude who could have been a Romulan with no makeup needed. He had the olive skin tone, the dark, severely cut hair, and the slightly pointy ears. That was probably 15-20 years ago, and I still remember it very clearly, because I looked up and *there was a Romulan*!!
As for me, I don't look like any aliens at all... I hope!
Off topic - I don't know if you're still following F1 at all, Wonderduck, but in case you are interested, Vettel just signed with Tracing Point (to be Aston Martin next year, so maybe he gets to wear British racing green instead of pink...). (And Renault is going to be Alpine next year. So that's four teams starting with A.)
Posted by: Kathryn at September 10, 2020 06:25 AM (rWZ8Y)
Thanksgiving Coming A Day Early This Year
In one of the bigger out-of-nowhere announcements I've heard in the anime/manga world, Kadokawa and Nagaru Tanigawa released a statement revealing that Light Novel #12, The Intuition of Haruhi Suzumiya, is being released on November 25. Note that this will be #11 in the States, as the last two Japanese novels were combined into one here. In Japan, it's been nine years since the last release.
Providing us with more evidence that Yen Press loves us and wishes us to be happy, they put out a tweet stating that they'll be releasing the digital version in English simultaneously. And, because that simply wasn't enough good news they're intending to reprint all of the light novels in physical form as well. Which is great, because old copies are selling online for stupidly high prices. It's not unusual to see the full US sets of 10 books selling for over $500.
Which is, of course, patently absurd.
I am greatly amused by the timing of the announcement here in the States... August 31st is, after all, the last day of the Endless Eight time loops.
1
I know it's crossing the streams a bit, but I'm put in mind of that rotating hypno-lamp in A:TLA as they brainwash people with "There is no war in Ba Sing Se."
There is no war on Haruhi. There is no war on Haruhi. There is--
Posted by: GreyDuck at August 21, 2020 08:27 AM (rKFiU)
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I wonder if I have any model glue hidden away somewhere.
Posted by: bouff at August 22, 2020 03:58 AM (pJ2Io)
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Did you stop, or are we all now stuck in a time loop.
Posted by: bouff at August 26, 2020 03:24 PM (pJ2Io)
1
Ah yes, the great big oaken stake right through the heart of rampant Haruhiism.
What's amusing to me about this now is that just yesterday I received and read through Rascal Does Not Dream Of Petite Devil Kohai, the 2nd LN installment of the Bunny Girl Senpai series. While the time loop in Kohai doesn't surpass even a dozen iterations, it feels like this story arc/loop owes a debt to Endless Eight nonetheless.
(I can't remember if you have taken in the Bunny Girl Senpai anime yet, but if not then I highly recommend. I know that at first glance it seems harem-y but it's so very not. Mai is always & forever best most awesome girl.)
Posted by: GreyDuck at August 18, 2020 08:21 AM (rKFiU)
2
Yeah.. Looping 2 weeks worth of 2020 15,000+ times is not on my Bucket List. Anywhere on that list. There are a few other time periods that might be interesting, but definitely not 2020.
Posted by: StargazerA5 at August 18, 2020 10:09 AM (qsUzh)
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I like the Endless 8 storyline, but by far my favorite part is Kyon understanding instinctively that Nagato will know what's going on once he starts figuring out *something* is wrong.
Posted by: Ben at August 18, 2020 10:22 AM (F12Cs)
4
Thanks! I knew there was something important I'd forgotten yesterday!
Posted by: Ed Hering at August 18, 2020 05:01 PM (/cXdK)
Derecho's Trumpet
Over at college graduate Brickmuppet's place, he tells a tale of a disappointed tastebuds as he recently had to deal with a cheeseburger made with cheez wiz. His disgust is entirely understandable. A mouthful of such a monstrosity when one is expecting a wonderful beef patty with ketchup, mustard, a small amount of relish, and a delightful amount of proud midwestern-made cheese, would be a horrible experience, akin to expecting a Chicago-style Hot Dog and discovering it topped instead with ketchup and raw wheatgrass.
This tale is bad enough, but he then goes on to mention something about a derecho that brought hurricane-force winds through Iowa, Southern Wisconsin, and the entirety of Illinois last Monday. The National Weather Service defines a Derecho as "a well-organized and long-lived complex of storms producing a family of particularly damaging downbursts." Tornadoes are a thing involved with these massive storm fronts, and indeed, two were involved in the Rockford area when the beast rolled through around 3pm.
I've helpfully placed an arrow pointing at the rough location of Duckford and Pond Central. The NWS did a great job with this thing, as they began warning those of us in the path of the storm that we were in for a spot of bother around 9am. A couple of hours later, they issued something I had never seen before: a "Particularly Dangerous Situation Severe Thunderstorm Watch". I had slept in that day, having been up very late playing Fate Grand Order.
It wasn't until 130pm or so that I finally noticed the frantic reports coming from the NWS and the decidedly less-frantic heads-up coming from the best weather team in the area, the good folks over at WREX, the local NBC affiliate. It was that rather calm unconcerned nature from them that fooled me into thinking this wasn't going to be a big deal, just another thunderstorm, ho-hum. This is odd, as they are usually quite good about getting their point across when it's going to be a bad one. Well, it didn't take much longer before my complacency was blown out of the water... almost literally.
While that photo above was taken in Chicago, that same wall o' clouds pretty much came through Duckford. Seriously, it was well-defined enough that when it passed overhead it felt very much like the space station crossing the terminator line in orbit... one moment it's sunlight, the next it's pitch black. Remember how I mentioned there were two tornadoes that hit the city? The larger of them was an EF-1 with 100mph winds that touched down just to the north of Duck U and traveled Northeast, eventually causing more than $500,000 in damage to Duck Valley College, the local JuCo, when it ran over them. This wasn't a glancing blow, this was a direct hit that went through a number of residential areas.
Duck U is at the orange arrow, the estimated tornado path is the purple line. Just offscreen to the bottom left is the busiest intersection in the city, State St and Alpine Rd (which is that north-south street just to the left of the tornado start point). Duck Valley College is top-center of the map. The rest of Duckford got away with only 75-80mph wind gusts, torrential rain... after it was all over, I saw a report of rainfall rates of up to three inches/hour... and much trees and roofs blown around. State and Alpine is approximately the half-way point between Pond Central (far offscreen to the bottom) and The Old Home Pond (well offscreen to the left), so fortunately both locations were spared the worst of it. But it did get a little exciting there for a while. At one point here at Pond Central, I had breezes coming from opposite sides of the apartment at once, which has never happened before. The weatherstripping on the apartment door couldn't keep the glancing wind gusts out, and the floor-to-ceiling windows/sliding glass door to the balcony are like a huge wind magnet. Thing is, the windows face south, and the door is in the northwest corner of the apartment, facing west, at the end of a hallway. Usually the wind has to be coming from the dead north to get in there, and it REALLY has to be blowing for it to leak around the door. But when THAT is happening, the windows to the south are shielded by the building. I think it's safe to say that the winds were... "confused" during the storm. I did prepare my emergency nest in the hallway, just in case of Really Bad Things.
Timelapse of Merely Bad Things from the GOES-EAST weather satellite
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Great googly moogly, what a storm. Glad you weathered it (ahem) okay!
Posted by: GreyDuck at August 17, 2020 08:12 AM (rKFiU)
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Wow. That's definitely the kind of storm that's better to read about than to experience. Glad you came through OK. Even if you are some kind of freakish monster that prefers midwestern cheese to good Tillamook.
Posted by: David at August 18, 2020 02:52 AM (ZVBMd)
3
Ouch. Two states away, we just had remnants roll through, which were not all that bad.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at August 19, 2020 06:33 AM (sF8WE)
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David, "Tillamook" is a pedigreed dog's name, not a type of cheese. As much as I rag on my neighbors to the north for being Packers-Loving Subhumans (though I repeat myself), they make good cheese.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 19, 2020 04:13 PM (D9Okp)
5
Hey now. Seeing as how Tillamook County and its lovely cheesemakers' cooperative are just a couple of counties away from where I sit, I am honorbound to defend their delicious dairy-derived comestibles.
Posted by: GreyDuck at August 20, 2020 08:25 AM (rKFiU)
Air Penguins Redux
In these trying times, when all around us is going insane, when hiding in one's house for a month seems normal, when nothing really makes sense anymore, we need to be reminded that, once upon a time, this was a thing:
I first mentioned them ten years ago, but c'mon... flying penguins! I only wish the video was longer... I could watch it for hours. The same company has done many other flying things, including a very impressive (but nowhere near as fun) SmartBird, eButterflies, and... OH! I just found a longer Air Penguin video!
I want to say something inspiring, like "be like an air penguin", but I can't think of anything. Oh well.
दिवि सूर्यसहस्रस्य भवेद्युगपदुत्थिता। यदि भाः सदृशी सा स्याद्भासस्तस्य महात्मनः।।॥११–१२॥
75 years ago on July 16th, 1945, the Trinity Device was detonated and the world became a different place. Whether that was for good or ill, I leave as a rhetorical question for the reader.
The title of this post is from the Bhagavad Gita, and is what Robert Oppenheimer originally claimed to have thought when he saw the result of his work:
If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty one.
1
In a way, history is just a long string of demarcation points between What Was and What Is, points after which Nothing Is Quite The Same. The Mun Moon landing springs to mind on the anniversary of the Apollo 11 launch.
This is... definitely one of the bigger, grimmer demarcation points. We'll be living with the consequences of this for the rest of civilization (however long that may be, at this rate).
Posted by: GreyDuck at July 17, 2020 08:20 AM (rKFiU)
Grant Imahara
If you read The Pond, you've almost certainly seen Mythbusters, right? I know I loved the show for most of its run, and while it couldn't really be called "science" it was certainly in the vicinity thereof.
Less than an hour from when I began typing this, news had broken that Grant Imahara, member of the so-called "Build Team" on Mythbusters, had suffered a brain aneurysm and passed away at the age of 49. He was known for being the "team geek", the one who specialized in high-tech gadgets and anything needing computers. Over his entire career, he would probably be best called a roboticist. He first became known to the public for his appearances on Battlebots, but he also worked for Industrial Light and Magic for years. Indeed, he was the one in charge of refreshing the old R2-D2s from the original Star Wars trilogy for use in the prequels. He was also a skilled movie model builder with a list of credits as long as your arm.
However for me, without a doubt, his finest creation has to have been Geoff Peterson, the skeleton-robot from The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Which brought us this moment of incredible hilarity that even after having seen it dozens of times cannot fail to bring me to tears laughing.
Thank you for being part of my television life for so long, Grant. Momzerduck liked you the best on the show. I tended to watch for Kari, but you were indispensable.
1
Absolutely horrible news in an already horrible year. One of the best things the kids & I did together when they were youngsters, along with playing Diablo II, was to hang out and watch Mythbusters. And we all adored Grant. What a guy, and what a loss.
Posted by: GreyDuck at July 14, 2020 08:11 AM (rKFiU)
2
I met him briefly when I did Battlebots (Seasons 4 and 5 of the Comedy Central run). He seemed honest and genuine and real. And 2020 can really just go the fuck to hell.
Posted by: Mauser at July 17, 2020 12:21 AM (Ix1l6)
Adventures In Going Outside
Had to break quarantine today to go out and get my Keep Wonderduck Alive and Happy Pills. 90 degree heat with 65% humidity meant the experience was like existing in a damp fire.
Because I'm a lazy bum... and other reasons... I got a lift from a taxi, which meant wearing my handy-dandy face mask. Nothing out of the ordinary, that's just what life is like in the world of the evildeathbatplague. One difficulty... I have a goatee that's probably three or four inches long.
Kinda like that, but bushier. My mustache isn't as majestic either. Oh, and the goatee is now two-toned... more on that later. The entire trip only took a half-hour, hardly what anybody would call a long time. The heat was hot, but hello! Summertime! It tend to do that here. But here's the thing... my goatee was tucked inside the mask. Once I got home and took the mask off, my goatee was pointing straight forward. And it would... not... lay... down. I'm not one to worry overmuch about looking stupid. It's kinda normal for me, truth be told. But this was too much for me to take. I immediately soaked my chin in water and brushed until I couldn't stand it any longer. It's sorta behaving itself now. Sorta.
Now then: the two-toned thing. Not too terribly long ago I realized, much to my horror, that my hair is beginning to show my age. Now as you can guess, I am not at all vain about my appearance... that'd be horribly stupid of me all things considered. However, I do have one thing that I'm extremely proud of, and that's my hair. It's a red-gold color, particularly in the sunlight, except for my mustache which is and hopefully always will be red. Back in the days of grad school, I had a friend whom we'll call Tweeter. I may have mentioned her somewhere in the past 15 years, but the search function being what it is, I can't find it. Anyway, she and I had happened to bump into each other at the library (she wasn't in the theater department) so we grabbed some lunch and began walking towards my office in the theater building. It was one of those rare wonderfully pleasant days you get in Minnesota during the week-long stretch they call "spring" up there.
Yes, exactly like that, 100%, Anyway, we're walking along and Tweeter suddenly gets this weird look on her face. I mean, weirder than I usually got from women. Finally she goes "Holy crap Slick," because that was the nickname she gave me, "you really are a redhead, aren't you? You look like your head is on fire!" The sun had turned my hair into a shining halo of glorious red-gold. Anyway. I'm inordinately proud of my hair.
This actually is what my hair color looks like when the sun hits it like it did that day. That I'm 52 and show no sign of grey in it that anybody could possibly detect just makes me even more proud. Until a few days ago, when I realized something terrifying: my goatee had grey in it. Worse, I had a reverse-skunk going on. Instead of a single grey stripe, the middle 50% of my goatee is red, and the 25% on either side is grey... or at least something that isn't red. It made me feel really really old... and now today, when it made me feel old and stupid looking. I'll tell ya, it doesn't make for a great experience. But I've got my pills, the a/c here at Pond Central is still doing its thing, and I can always shave off the goatee. My fear is that it'll grow back ALL grey. That'd be a disaster! "Anyway, here's Wonderwall."
This is Pink Floyd level of lighting. When I stumbled upon it, I was flabbergasted... then I watched the whole concert, and was even more blown away. Forget the quality of the songs... I'm not big on a lot of them... but pay attention to the way the designer plays with the light curtains. Kudos to Trent Reznor for working with LeRoy Bennett, the designer, to get this look. It's friggin' beautiful in a way a lot of the songs aren't, and the combination is wonderful.
1
Yeah, I hear you. I've worn a full beard and mustache since I was 17. When the skunk streak started coming in, I couldn't stand it. The Mr. Fantastic look at the temples and the growing bald spot, no big deal, but Not The Beard.
These days there's not a lot of brown left in the beard, but I never got an acceptable salt-and-pepper look, so I still dye it. Not so much the past few months, but as lockdowns recede and job interviews resume, I broke out the dye again this week. I was tempted to keep the disposable mask from my haircut yesterday, though, since it has enough hair clippings on it to blend with my beard. :-)
-j
Posted by: J Greely at July 03, 2020 05:50 PM (ZlYZd)
2
I literally cannot imagine even the most talented colorist successfully matching the hair on top of my head to the hair on my chin. Short of a full dye job of all of it, that is.
Then again, my hair is long enough that, like you, I could take the cuttings and spirit-gum it in place on my chin for an insta-beard... and since it's been 16 months since the last haircut, it'd be darned impressive to boot.
Posted by: Wonderduck at July 03, 2020 07:34 PM (UdIkr)
3
Yeah, Red would be tough. I use the Medium Brown Just for Men beard coloring. Fortunately it's just a goatee, and I shave my head because most of it is bald anyway.
Posted by: Mauser at July 03, 2020 10:29 PM (Ix1l6)
My dad was full gray by age 40, and I figured I'd follow in his footsteps since I get most of my looks from his side of the family, yet here I am pushing 50 with just a few strays here & there to show for it. (Mind you, I also don't grow out my facial hair, maybe those are grayer? We may never know.)
Posted by: GreyDuck at July 04, 2020 11:05 AM (rKFiU)
5
My first gray hair showed up the day after my 31st birthday. I haven't had to dye it yet, but the time is coming. I plan to go blonde just long enough to thoroughly piss my sister off (she always wanted to go blonde, but she has extremely dark brown hair and is olive-skinned, so she can't. I, on the other hand, have medium brown hair with natural blonde and red highlights, very fair skin, and blue eyes, so I can totally pull it off), then I'll probably do a nice dark reddish brown.
It'll be interesting to see if I get more male attention while blonde. I actually prefer my current situation, where I have the freedom to wear whatever I want while still receiving absolutely no male attention whatsoever, but it would be interesting to spend a few weeks seeing how the other half lives.
Posted by: Kathryn at July 04, 2020 04:01 PM (rWZ8Y)
Union Pacific was the only railroad to use the 4-12-2, and it was apparently a maintenance nightmare due to a third cylinder powering the second driving axle. Why was that a problem? Because it was directly under the firebox, in the center of the engine. That aside, it is an intimidating-looking beast.
Sometimes, even classic steam engines need a little help. Here, Norfolk & Southern's 611 gets exactly that... a little help.
I'm a twain! Choo choo! It's a Swiss railroad battery-powered shunter from the '20s, apparently rated for a whoppin' 5 h.p. Of course, you don't need much to move cars around, you just need to get 'em moving.
Ever wonder how they keep the switches clear of ice and snow during a Chicago winter? Yup, they set 'em on fire.
1
That 4-12-2 at the top looks like an artist's rendition of the most complicated steam locomotive they could think of, but no, apparently someone actually built that thing. Yegods. (Also, I'm unable to craft a suitable DBZ "9000" joke here. I miss my wit.)
At first I wondered how that shunter could get the job done, then re-read and noted the "battery powered" bit. Aha, not much top-end but just the right amount of torque.
Posted by: GreyDuck at June 27, 2020 11:38 AM (rKFiU)
Mind Savers
No matter how well we may (or may not) be coping with Introvert Celebration 2020, staring at the same four walls (more if you have access to more than one room) can begin to get anybody a little bugnutty. I've come across a number of yootoobers that allow me to take virtual journeys to get me out of Pond Central, at least mentally.
It all started, of course, with Rambalac. I began watching his videowalks long before Social Distancing Is A Thing 2020 kicked in, and he's still my favorite of all of these people I'll be mentioning. What he does is so uncomplicated that nobody else that I've found does it half as well, which confuses me. All he does is load up a high-end videocamera with a swell microphone on a stabilizer-like rig, and he goes for walks. That's it, that's all. He doesn't talk, there's no music overlaid on it, it's just ambient sound. And I simply adore having his vids playing while I do my FGO runs, or have dinner, or just to get myself ready for bed.
In search of something new and exciting, a few months back I stumbled across Railfan Aunz. Consisting of mostly cab rides of trains, this yootoober leans more toward the not-Tokyo side of Japan, though they spend a lot of time outside of Japan too... there's videos from Australia, Italy, England, Hong Kong and others, too. Two of my favorite videos are a roundtrip between two fairly rural areas, one out, one back... and during the four hour round trip, the weather changes from heavy snow to zero snow on the ground. Of course, during the trip back the weather gets bad again. Throw that onto some rather stunning terrain and you've got a great way to spend a night or two. The video I've included here is easily my favorite, however. It looks like a regular train ride in dense-pack Japan somewhere... and then you reach the 3:40 mark.
Yeah. Not a bad way to commute.
Compared to the first two, Wingin' It With Paul Lucas is totally different. He's a flight sorta guy, and he literally does nothing but flight reviews for a living. Fortunately for him, he had a backlog to work through during the Coming Of The Quiet Time 2020. While I'm fascinated by the Business/First Class flights he's been on, he's not afraid to sit back in the cattle section with the unwashed masses. He's done everything from 747s to teeny-tiny puddlejumpers in the Caribbean, as well as the occasional train and even a submarine once. His style has changed radically from the beginning of the channel, for the better I think.
Finally, in stark contrast to the other three's exotic locales, we come to CTAConnections, the official yootoob channel of the Chicago Transit Authority. About half of the channel is stuff that nobody will ever watch... the monthly CTA Transit Board meetings... but the other half is filled with historical footage of Chicago's light rail system, as well as real-time ride-alongs of every "color" route... the Purple Line, the Blue Line, etc etc etc.
Around about 20:30 or so on this Red Line video, you may see something really really gorgeous off to the right.
There's plenty of other channels out there that I've taken virtual trips on, but I'll leave those for your own adventures... and if you have anything like this that you like to watch, like a bus trip from London to Paris, let me know in the comments! Enjoy!
1
I know it's a job like any other with its ups and downs and joys and frustrations and the novelty would wear off almost instantly, but part of me would love to have a commuter rail operator gig somewhere scenic.
That Fuji run, for instance. I'd be willing to find out how long it would take for me to tire of that view, and I wager it would take more years than I have remaining.
Posted by: GreyDuck at June 15, 2020 08:18 AM (rKFiU)
2
WildEarth. Nothing but streams from various safari lodge areas in South Africa, with commentary from various guides. They drive around for three hours, sunrise and sunset times, and they cut back and forth between streams when guides find something. It could be elephants, giraffes, leopards, meerkats... or butterflies, or birds, or interesting plants.
One stream is from the Kalahari, a couple are from a plains area, and one from a rolling mountainous area.
I have learned a lot from watching, and the "kids ask questions" hour is pretty good fun.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at June 19, 2020 10:25 PM (sF8WE)
3
WildEarth now has a bunch of new viewers behind the Great Chinese Firewall. Apparently the big Chinese discount store consortium, Tencent, has its own video platform, and WildEarth is now streaming there.
So some of the "kids ask questions" hours have been replaced by "Chinese folks from Tencent ask questions" hours.
Sadly, the live chat/comment on YouTube doesn't cross over with Tencent's question line, so the community can't embrace the Chinese newbies. (And realistically, most of them would have been posting in Chinese, even if they weren't captives of a totalitarian government.)
OTOH, the questions are pretty interesting. Some of it is just basic newb inquiries, like "Why don't the animals attack the guide vehicles?", but some of it reveals cultural differences and individual quirks.
Anyhow, it's interesting because these "apolitical" things can turn out to be surprisingly subversive. (And the guides work a month on, a month off, so that will blow the Chinese viewers' minds. It kinda blows mine... but yeah, they deserve the cash and the rest for all their hard work and study.)
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at June 23, 2020 09:16 AM (sF8WE)
4
Ha! A WildEarth guide went to see the hyena cubs, and a bunch more hyena cubs from other families came out, and spent several minutes sniffing all around the vehicle, running away, coming back, running away....
It's toward the end of today's sunset stream, so you can watch it on the repeats.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at June 23, 2020 09:37 AM (sF8WE)
5
What have you done! For 2 months now I've been watching Japanese train cams.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at August 17, 2020 09:48 AM (LZ7Bg)
6
...and there are so MANY channels to choose from.
Posted by: Wonderduck at August 17, 2020 03:29 PM (D9Okp)
1
Ugh. Going into "lockdown time" I thought:
1. "I can hack this, I am a total introvert/hermit"
2. "I've got so many craft projects lined up, it will be great!"
Yeah no. It's not been great. I didn't realize how important the tiny daily interactions - with co-workers, at church, whatever - mattered. And how easily I can worry-spiral.
I am worse company for myself than I realized. I feel now like it's a good thing I never married: I am a profoundly boring person.
Everything *else* going on doesn't help.
And for someone as touch-averse as I normally am - well, one of my greatest desires right now is for someone bigger than me just to hug me and tell me everything's going to be all right in a way that actually convines me.
Posted by: fillyjonk at June 09, 2020 07:09 PM (+MBAo)
2
Yes and no. Which... yeah, not the most helpful response but it's where I am at this point.
The intense cabin-fever part is (mostly) under control now, and I'm adjusted (mostly) to the work-from-home routine. It's manageable. I'm also abso-flogging-lutely fighting the brain weasels tooth and nail day in and day out. Between the terror over catching the covid bug, something that has a good chance of outright destroying my body, and watching the world kinda burn (in varying degrees of literal/figurative), I haven't been able to follow through on any of the things I planned to half a year ago or so. Breadmaking? Too many fiddly bits and my hands are jittery (-er) now, so that's kind of out. (I know it's "easy" and "simple" but tell that to the broken parts of my brain.) 3D stuff? With as easily frustrated as I am, trying to climb that learning curve is a non-starter right now. Writing? Yeah right.
I am immersed in books and shows and some music. I am keeping my head above water day by day. It's all I can do so I hope I can keep doing it.
Posted by: GreyDuck at June 09, 2020 09:55 PM (rKFiU)
3
I found Satisfactory about two weeks ago. It scratches the same itch as Factorio, but with vigor. And hit at a good point with the FF14 lull...
Overall I'm okay. I've got work, I've got books, I have no real trouble keeping myself busy. My personal stress levels are pretty low.
Posted by: Avatar at June 10, 2020 01:39 AM (v29Tn)
4
Myself, I'm fine. However, my opinion of Homo sapiens has never been lower.
5
I work in a remote office for an out-of-state company anyways, so working from home full time isn't that big a change for me. And my company is doing well, so I don't have that kind of stress to deal with. I was just realizing the other day that I'm actually interacting with my co-workers *more* these days than before. Mostly because most of them are going stir-crazy and reaching out on our conferencing software just to talk to somebody, and I'm the one that's usually available.
I miss my few out of home activities more than I would have expected though. I'm very much looking forward to being able to sit down and just chat with people that are actually really there, not pixels on my screen.
Posted by: David at June 10, 2020 10:20 AM (UmjNG)
6
When I was in quarantine for two weeks, I was fine. Ever since then, I've had to deal with people responding to everything, and that's brought me quite low.
7
My employer is "essential", so for me not a whole lot has been different day to day. The first couple weeks when just schools shut down were a bit odd with the sudden disappearance of any appreciable traffic, but otherwise things were fairly normal. Then the mandates started rolling down from on high like a flood of diarrhea, and the HR busybodies got to exercise their inner 1984 fantasies: demanding masks, temperature screenings (a complete CYA maneuver, official company policy does not allow for sick days, so people naturally feel compelled to come in sick so as not to burn their vacation days), MiniTru signage everywhere, and just a large helping of general bullshit.
It's been nice to actually sit down and eat away from my desk occasionally as restaurants begin to open up, but all the national fast food chains are still drive-thru only.
8
WFH in and of itself is no big deal; I miss seeing my coworkers, but being productive away from my desk is not a problem. I spend a decent amount of my time working with people in another state anyway.
However, I haven't gotten to be ALONE for...months? Not that I got a lot of alone time with two little kids anyway, but I occasionally had the office to myself, and if I happened to WFH some day, I'd be alone. But with not having childcare for the 8yo, I haven't been separated from him for more than maybe five hours total for the last three months, and let me tell you, I need a break from that kid.
I'm also really, really sick of my work day being 14 hours long because I have to start work before the kids get up and continue work after Will gets home (his company refused to allow any WFH, so it's all fallen on me) to take over the kids in order to get my tasks done. I have 20 hours of meetings in a good week, and often as many as 50 hours (overlapping, so I have to find coverage for the ones I miss), so most of my day is spent fitting in the 8yo's needs around the meetings, then the actual work happens at night.
As for the depression and OCD, I'd say this is the third-worst it's been. The suicidal ideation is only a little above the baseline (which is not zero), so really not too bad considering, and the nightmares are about the same level. I haven't had to go on meds or go to the mental hospital yet, so I'll probably make it this time too. (I'm terrified of meds because it's so hard to get off them, and from what I can find, the long-term effects of taking meds over 50+ years are not well understood. A "long-term" study in this area is maybe 18 months.)
Posted by: Kathryn at June 10, 2020 10:13 PM (rWZ8Y)
9
As another person who is able to go on WFH, that's really been the only change. My biggest issue is that I sort of lose track of what day of the week it is without the daily commute to give me some daily segmentation.
Posted by: Really Bored at June 11, 2020 02:25 PM (7vK48)
10
We were shut down about a month at the airplane mines. But we're "Essential" so I'm still in the same body-destroying routine, and management has been blindly trying to maintain schedule with rampant absenteeism.
So about the only difference for me is a vastly faster commute, and weird supermarket shortages that have slowly abated and been replaced with price increases.
Also, gas did NOT get that much cheaper.
Posted by: Mauser at June 11, 2020 08:41 PM (Ix1l6)
11
I'm thriving. There were some changes: we stopped going to a store for groceries and as a result stopped eating apples. The InstaCart delivers too much rot. Had to switch to apricots and oranges, which are not as affected. We still have to visit home improvement stores though. So, had to learn to pack the mask and take it off in such a way as not to make a mockery of the whole idea (not touching the outside, putting it into a plastic bag). Dealing with gloves well is also an acquired skill. But beyond that there was nothing noteworthy happening.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at June 11, 2020 10:43 PM (LZ7Bg)
12
Doing well here. I'm a librarian, so I can still do some of my job online, and now I don't have to deal with the students directly! Yay!
So aside from working from home, nothing much has changed. I'm in rural Texas, so the whole mask thing has been pretty much optional, and I've opted out. A few weeks when TP was scarce in the stores, but I already had enough, so no issues there.
I've even lost weight! Finally got serious about maintaining a caloric deficit (flavored rice cakes FTW!).
Posted by: jabrwok at June 12, 2020 05:21 AM (T4WaI)
13
Regarding the WuFlu, my DayJob is in a hospital pharmacy, so no change at all there. When I had deliveries to the Chicom Lung Rot Wing I'd take my clothes off in the garage when I got home, just in case (wife is 2x cancer survivor with compromised immune system). Otherwise at home still drinking and writing books.
Regarding the Bolshevik-led riots? We're in a bedroom community of Columbus so just a few, quiet talks with reliable neighbors. Some plans and drills with the fam if a van-load of antifa/diversity shows up in our neighborhood. I did tell my two friends in the city that if things go south for them they can use our basement as a temporary bolthole.
Wish the spring anime season was better. Only watching Bookworm, Wave, and Arte.
Posted by: Clayton Barnett at June 12, 2020 12:20 PM (ug1Mc)
My routine did not change very much, other than the mandates. I also maintain sizeable amount of supplies so I could have easily sheltered in place if I needed. I had to deal with less traffic on the roads during commute, more people at the places that are open - so basically, like when the schools let out for summer vacation. The only things that sucked was that the places that were closed included places that I had a needed to visit, like barbershops.
On the other hand, I live in a state with a governor who is/was both slow, incompetent, ineffective, and hypocritical with his actions, so I still have to deal with the effects of that. Yes, he's a Democrat.
Posted by: cxt217 at June 13, 2020 09:49 PM (4i7w0)
15
I was pretty fortunate in that my company decided to close down my physical office early last year and converted us to work at home, so I'd already been doing it for a bit over a year when the lockdown started (and I've had experience with it already at previous jobs.) Plus, mostly through lucky timing, I guess, I wound up getting a just-longer-than-a-buzzcut right before, so I'm still good on that front. Also, as soon I heard rumors of shortages I went to Walmart and picked up a big multipack of TP, and by the time that was getting low, it was fairly widely available in Dallas again. (I've got a friend in Maine who said last week that the stuff *still* disappears off the shelves up there just as soon as it gets stocked, which is just crazy.) Ditto for enough food supplies.
It's been kind of boring, admittedly, so I've gone on a bit of a cheap-video-game buying spree (I just ordered the bundle Pixy mentioned, for example), and got a couple of neat things I've had my eyes on for a while; I just picked up a 3D printer this morning, and a couple of weeks ago I ordered a neat 40% layout keyboard that's taking up a decent hunk of my brainpower (it's an OLKB Planck if anyone cares to look it up. 47 keys the way I've configured it.)
Posted by: Rick C at June 14, 2020 03:48 PM (Iwkd4)
Thankfully, Baseball
The KBO, Korea's professional baseball league, is playing out their season these days over on ESPN. For those of us starved for the sport, it's something of a blessing. And even in this day and age of Evildeathbatplague, they've got great attendance!
You could almost say the stadium is... um... stuffed.
...and then I stumbled upon something called the Elfstedentocht, or Eleven Cities Tour in English. For those of you who, like me, have never heard of it, the Elfstedentocht is a 200km long speed-skating event held when the weather allows in the Netherlands. As can be guessed by the name, it runs through "the eleven historic cities of the province of Friesland" via canals, rivers, and lakes, beginning and terminating in the city of Leeuwarden, which I'd only heard of because it was the birthplace of the noted spy Mata Hari.
The race has only been held 15 times since 1909, with the most recent having been in 1997. See, the entire route must have at least six inches of good ice on it... no thinning ice, no mush, and at least a 12-day stretch of sub-zero Celsius temperatures preceding a race. As you can guess, this is A Big Deal; there's usually just 48 hours warning that the race will actually occur. Apparently in 2012, the last time conditions appeared perfect, it hovered right below the target for long enough that any tiny temperature increase would have nixed the race. On the day the "go" would have been given, organizers said "no" for safety reasons, disappointing the 16000 casual skaters, 300 racers, and the entire nation.
In 2013, the Elfstedentocht organizers, as part of a Leeuwarden festival, contacted Public Service Broadcasting and asked them to write some tunes about the race using historical footage from earlier events. Of course they said "yep!"
From what I've read, the 1963 race, shown in this second video, was held in absolutely brutal conditions: overly cold, strong winds, and snow gunking up the ice. Only 69 out of 10000 people were able to finish it, and the winner did not realize he had actually crossed the finish line due to being snowblind. Broken bones and eye damage were common that year.
I had no idea these tracks existed until they fell into my lap. A rare bright spot on another shut-in sort of day. Enjoy!