I’ll just get out of the way and point you to the following entry at collision detection.
‘Nuff said.

I’ll just get out of the way and point you to the following entry at collision detection.
‘Nuff said.
With a week and a half to go, I have… two sponsors for this year’s Blogathon? C’mon, people. You have a golden opportunity to shell out a few dollars for a worthy cause, and contribute to my sleepless misery. What more could you want? Rubber ducks performing Shakespeare?
Okay. I understand that not everyone can a) spare the cash or b) get behind my choice of monetary recipients. I understand. But you will be around to cheer me on, right? Right?
(And yes, you can expect at least a couple more reminders posted here between now and the 6th of August. Hey, it saves me having to come up with original content for a couple of days…)
The aforementioned pics from the recent trip out to the Gorge are now posted in the Gallery.
That will be all.
(Yes, I’ll get on those captions. Later.)
Like many folks, my initial impression upon seeing trailers for the Michael Bay-directed summer flick called “The Island” went something like this: “Oh, they’re doing a ripoff/remake of Logan’s Run. How nice. Next!”
I then discovered that Logan’s Run has nothing to do with it. No, instead they’re remaking an entirely different movie… “Parts: The Clonus Horror.” (Or just “Clonus” if you prefer.)
Wait a minute! Are you telling me that really bad movies, bad enough to be riffed by the MST3K crew, are now fodder for big-budget remakes? What’s next, Tim Burton’s “Manos: Hands of Fate”? (Note to Johnny Depp: Don’t do it!)
This is horrifying in a new and not-particularly-delightful way.
I love the fact that someone can save a file in PowerPoint, end up with a corrupted file (at least, corrupted enough for PowerPoint itself to throw up a cryptic, useless error message when someone tries to open said file), and I can come along with OpenOffice.org to save the day by opening the supposedly-corrupt file and saving it to a new, working copy.
…from my Linux box.
Sure, some of the font and formatting information is gone, but at least the AE hasn’t lost the fruits of their labor. Heck, it’s not even their fault… I mean, they are “saving often” like we tell them to, after all. It’s PowerPoint itself that seems to have issues.
Go, OpenOffice.org!
Apparently I’ve been living under a rock for quite some time now, because I did not know about Konfabulator. How does a geek like me get this far without knowing these things? I love eyecandy, and even more so when there’s useful eyecandy to be enjoyed. If you’re running Windows on a reasonably powerful hunk of hardware, you owe it to yourself to give this baby a whirl.
(Yes, I did already know about SuperKaramba, which appears to be the Linux variant… I found it all of a couple of weeks ago. *cough, cough*)
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