Commodore 64 update!
-Well, I'm poking around with the programming language, just for old ActionScript-t
-I found a place onine that still makes and sells C64 stuff, which is uber-cool because we could do with another joystick (we have two, but one is short and awkward and the button-press doesn't register, the other fits to the hand perfectly and is awesome but doesn't go left).
-Today we were playing and discovering, when suddenly the thing kept telling us that it can't find the diskette-drive
Gah, the geekdom. I actually joined the ET geeks forum yesterday and read through all the old postings... It must have rubbed off on me. :P
Stuff of today:
Quoth my newest cool awesome person to know:
"We are like a collective intelligence. Without the intelligence part."
Heh <3
Then also I'd like to share a fun thing I did with my sister. We fixed our old Commodore 64! It's in my room, plugged to the tv (the legendary tv that hosted Son-Son). So far we're just re-discovering old games we used to play ages ago, but in the manuals I've noticed mention of possible visual arty -stuff too, which sounds interesting. So I'll be faffing around with that alot. :B
I wanted to share this story that [Hedda] told a long time ago somewhere (Damn I love reading old forums).
But one late night when there was only two of my friends and one other guy in the other end of the 10 rooms with computers they build a script that logged into the computers one by one and turned on the screen and made it go "beep". So it become a big wave of beeps that travelled from room to room.
The other guy came running to them and said "Was it you that did that???" ;-)
So what is a Man Thing, our special reported [ally] sheds light on the issue:
"I reckon it's a thing men have and women don't otherwise it would just be a thing."
Sob T_T So... beautiful...
<diary:957426>
Then for the interest of English friends (Engelska vanner)
http://www.the
You know I have a fixation with all things nuclear, right? Nuclear power, nuclear war, nuclear winter, nuclear waste... it all interests me. Because it's invisible and so dangerous. It's an ugly malevolent beast, and I find it beautiful. I love to read about it all. Now I've been reading Arthur Koestler's "Ghost in the machine" for a very long time, and if you know the book, it prattles on all over all possible subjects. And now, near the end, it has reached the nuclear bomb. The author paints horror images of nuclear war, saying it is only a matter of time. And I tell you, if I had the control over this nuclear power, I'd detonate it, right now. Just to make it happen. Just so it wouldn't be a war-effort that brought about the destruction of the old world. I say old world, because I'm fairly certain a new world will emerge from it all.
I also find myself agreeing more and more with F. T. Marinetti (which makes me question my sanity).
http://www.unk
The fact is that the futurists had a point (with the downside that they all happened to be fascists :/)
In my degree show I had a note that read "I'm in the unfortunate position of being a futurist stuck in the future" - and now I mean it.
Today's YouTube find (you betcha it's Barenaked Ladies!)
http://youtube
Now you know that I mostly hate all that yaoi-crap, but... Did you spot the hottest thing ever? (I actually paused the vid, screen dumped and saved on my network hard-drive :9)
*addment*
I love the fact that the guys in BNL aren't typically attractive men - it makes me feel happy that I love them so much even though they are very normal-looking
*ish happy with this observation*
Today's ominous scene by [Viking] -quote:
"Hello little girl! Are your parents home?"
"They're in the attic. Sleeping."
"Oh, perhaps I should come by later?"
"No, they'll still be sleeping in the attic."
Today's philosophical quote by [Viking]:
"Is anyone ever prepared to have their boggle blasted?"
Today I walked down the corridor in uni and underneath the stairs that lead to the office of a teacher of mine I stopped and knew that he was in (he's supposed to be on holiday). Then later I walked past again and he came out of his office. And I knew because I recognised his smell in the corridor. >_> That is scary, because I try very hard to not obsess over him. <_<
Art project underway that kind of needs participation from all you people! :D It involves you receiving a free piece of typographical art. :3 I'll elaborate at the end of next week or something like that.
Addment:
Harporn!
http://www.har
http://www.har
T_T
1268 unread. 95 Forum replies.
*has... no... time...*
Sorry, I keep spammering you all with this stuff :P But then again it's your own bloody choice to watch my house.
I'm in a different computer room today and wheeemz (sorry ally) YouTube works so I'm watching... stuff. o.O
Here's stuff:
http://nl.yout
52 forum replies.
Am I going to click them all now?
No. :)
For the attention of American friends (and also for the information of friends all over):
Please save Net Radio: http://www.sav
Contact your Congress representative
Today we had a lecture by David Crystal ( http://en.wiki
Notes from the lecture given by David Crystal: 19th June 2007
(Intro)
-When ever new technology emerges, there is opposition.
-The CMC (computer mediated communication) has developed for about a decade, really. Yet we are already completely infused with it.
(Did internet have an impact on language?)
-Not really: The web added about 500 new words to English language (over a million words in the entire language in total). Text-type abbreviations aren’t that common. No changes in grammar. Web uses punctuation to express emotion instead of syntax or grammar. Old medieval manuscripts didn’t have punctuation or capital letters, so it’s not new to leave it out. Two new-ish plurals: old form ‘en’ (oxen, children) used for a lot of new web-type plurals and ‘z’ instead of ‘s’ for “warez” (not the same as “wares”) and “gamez” etc… Other than that, no massive effect on language and no effect on formal language (people agree that you wouldn’t use text-type where formal language is needed, and people have mutual tolerance for text-type in informal setting)
-Yes, in a way: Internet can save endangered languages. (Language can survive as long as teenagers are interested in it. Teenagers like internet.)
(Internet is constantly called "revolutionary)
-CMC is ‘revolutionary
Not like speech:
-Uses metaphors of speech (chat)
-Speech uses simultaneous feedback, this isn’t there in CMC, even with IM there is a lag.
-Conversation is two-ways. Email is one-way conversation – what an oxymoron!
-In a chatroom you can pay attention to several conversations at once, easily. No way to do that IRL.
Not like written language:
-Something written on a paper never changes. Online text does all the time (updates, scrolling text, pop-ups…)
-Hyperlink! WWW could not exist without it, without it there is no ‘web’! Books have cross-referenc
-Copy-paste. What an absurd idea IRL (someone sends you a letter, you cut out part of it, paste it on a new sheet of paper, write your letter on the same paper and send it back…?)
(General language/inter
-English is no more the dominant language of the internet: 2003 less than 50% of website hosts were in English.
(Closing)
-Future of the web-language: introducing dialect and accent through audio maybe?
-How interesting for language blogs are: it is pure text from the author, no editors, nobody interferes with it! It’s the most naked form of language!
(Answers to questions)
-People don’t know how to use emoticons, there is no emoticon-gramm
Some things I'd like to mention to him are:
-Finnish people type their dialect.
-People in Finland actually say "ex-dee" (XD) to mean "so funny"
-lolcats mess with grammar (I has a flavor)