Month: February 2002

  • A full decade of wedded bliss

    Ten years ago today, in a church somewhere in southeast Portland, I managed to stutter “I do” to the woman formerly known as Wendilynn Bailey in front of friends and family. Ten years later, I’m still “do”-ing.

    Over the last decade Wendi and I have spawned two of the most wonderful children ever to walk the planet, moved at least a half-dozen times, owned three vehicles (or four, if you count my Subaru), argued thousands of times, kissed and made up almost as many times as that, and generally weathered most of the things life can throw at a young couple. We’ve never been rich, we haven’t always been happy, but we’ve always been together. On brightest day, in blackest night (to borrow a phrase) our stubborn refusal to give up has seen us through to a phase in our relationship where we actually like each other all over again.

    What are we doing to celebrate, you ask? Probably just dinner and a movie. As I said, we’re not rich. Much as I’d love to do something flashy and expensive, since I lean in that direction anyway, I’ll have to settle instead for giving her the dubious gift of my continued company. Let’s hope it’s good enough for her.

    I love you, Wendi. ‘Nuff said.

  • Taking the redesign stuff seriously

    If you need proof that I’m serious about restructuring this journal system, take a peek at this page. It’s kind of mangled, and will always be in various states of “mangled-ness” while I experiment with stylesheets and the removal of table code.

    I’ve created test includes, a test stylesheet and the test document so I can use the database content of this site without breaking the main page itself. As I find tricks that can be migrated back to the main page, I will do so. (Actually I already have; witness the newly-grey search widget.)

    I’m having a lot of fun with this, and learning a tremendous amount. If all goes well, greyduck.net will be a fabulously cool website some day.

  • Behind the scenes, some prep work on the site

    In a frenzy of reading source code, I reconfigured this site to use an external stylesheet. This will allow me to experiment with a variety of different stylesheet tricks to achieve various effects.

    The idea that I can exercise more control over the elements on this page is just too attractive to let go of. I will make it work, and it’ll look damned cool.

  • Aftermath of a three-day weekend

    When there’s been a three-day weekend, all hell usually breaks loose here at Entercom Portland the day we get back to the office. Today the “all hell” consisted largely of having to go to various computers and type in short arcane commands to make everything “all better.”

    Of course, there’s also the major overhaul taking place in DubEdit room #2. There’s now an ATI All-in-Wonder card in that computer, as well as all kinds of neat audio/video cable hookup magic.

    And I’m still working on that ripping/burning/editing superbox that Nik Miles asked for. It’s almost done, honest!

  • Books, TV, computer games?

    When I was building this website, I tried to come up with better channel definitions than I had used on the old Zero site. In terms of Media Reviews, the only viable category was Books, so that was carried over while the other Media channels were dropped.

    This time around I’ve added TV and Games, and the next time I actually see a movie in the theater you can be sure I’ll add a Movies category. In the meantime, feel free to peruse the one existing entry under Games: Links LS 1999.

  • Links LS 1999

    I’ll have to preface this review, the first I’ve done of any software package, by pointing out that I’ve been playing golf on PCs and game consoles for years. Not all the time, perhaps, and I’ll go months without swinging a virtual club, but I keep coming back to the digitized-golf genre again and again.

    It’s kind of sad, really.

    About five years ago, give or take, I won a website design contest put on by Microsoft. To be more accurate, I was one of a number of winners. The prize was, oddly enough, $100 worth of Microsoft products. I picked up Windows 95, a Sidewinder Pro joystick, Fury^3 and Golf 3.0 out of that deal. The Sidewinder Pro won’t work with machines that have 100MHz-and-up bus speeds, Fury^3 is a lame rehash of Terminal Velocity, and I’ve long since given up Win95 for Win98SE and Win2K.

    Golf 3.0, however, still gets a spin on our machines. It’s sadly dated, of course, as the graphics quality is so-so in its best moments. Putting is pretty easy, and you only get two courses so after a while the only challenge is in not screwing up the swing. (When you get right down to it, that’s probably the main challenge in any golf game, digital or otherwise.)

    So we’re at the outlet mall yesterday, stopping in at the Kay-Bee Toys outlet for a laugh, when I notice a copy of Links LS 1999 in the software dumpster. “Hmm,” I say to myself, “What have we here?” A few minutes later we leave the store with a brand-new $7.99 copy of the game.

    What did I get for my money? Vastly improved graphics. Four courses. The ability to conjure a variety of view windows in which I can aim my shot. Instant-replay that actually looks good and is useful. Much, much more realistic physics. A wide variety of gameplay “modes,” mainly consisting of fun rules/winnings changes.

    If you’re a golf-gaming nut, you’ll obviously have better software than this on your PC. If you’re a much more casual digi-golfer like me, then go out and find a copy of Links LS 1999 for a few measly bucks and be happy. I certainly am.

    (Final note: Access Software was purchased by Microsoft, and the next version of this game is Links LS 2000, a virtual re-release that only adds some courses and the ability to connect to Microsoft’s gaming zone. Yay. For my money, stick with the cheaper and identical product and duck the Microsoft empire once again.)