Archive for September, 2006

Project Proposal

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

Hey. It may seem somewhat odd that someone other than Heather is posting here. Take note — I’m not Heather — I’m me. Now that we’ve got that cleared up, I’ve got a question for you. I’ve been reading up on Ruby on Rails, and now I want to develop a web system just to play with it. I know I’m supposed to pick a nice safe, boring project like yet another photo gallery or guestbook, but I think I’m supposed to get a prescription for that strong a sedative. I always thought it would be cool to have those nifty meditative powers where I could slow my heart rate and breathing enough to survive being trapped in a downed submarine with only the oxygen in the compartment to survive on until help arrives. But working on some HelloWorld-ware would carry a big risk being declared dead. Which, of course, might be preferable if I were trapped in a downed submarine with a photo gallery and a guestbook script.

Oh so where was the question? Well, I have an idea I wanted to bounce off you: a collaborative RPG campaign world development system. If you have $.02 you’d like to throw in, or if you just want to pretend you’re a big shot Vice President of Product Development who hears pitches and shoots them down with biting sarcasm and a savvy understanding of the marketplace, read on…

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Woot! Pirates!

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

I found this one via Nouns and Verbs:

My pirate name is:
Iron Prudentilla Flint

A pirate’s life isn’t easy; it takes a tough person. That’s okay with you, though, since you a tough person. Like the rock flint, you’re hard and sharp. But, also like flint, you’re easily chipped, and sparky. Arr!

Get your own pirate name from piratequiz.com.
part of the fidius.org network

Arrrr, matey!

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Warcraft Fashion Rules

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

My husband and our friend Richard were hanging around on-line, and I was sitting nearby. Somehow it turned into us coming up with the following list of fashion rules for World of Warcraft:

  • Never wear Lightforge after Labor Day.

  • It’s in poor taste to wear Felcloth in the Cathedral.
  • One size always fits all.
  • Everyone looks stupid in a Gnomish mind control cap.
  • Wearing a big blue dress doesn’t make you look that gay… Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
  • Mooncloth doesn’t mean pants that start below the thigh.
  • Twill goes with everything.
  • Shoulderpads go with nothing.
  • If it looks hot, cool, or sharp, it probably is.
  • Helms are meant to be worn, not seen.
  • The higher the armor rating, the tinier the chainmail bikini.
  • You know you’ve accessorized well when the set bonus kicks in.
  • If it doesn’t glow, burn, freeze, or protrude ominously, it probably isn’t in fashion.
  • Paladins, warlocks, and warriors should never wear pink.
  • A succubus is not a fashion accessory.

So, this being me, I then turned it into shirts and prints and stuff at cafepress. I got my shirt last night, before actually deploying the whole thing, because I wanted to make sure the smallish print would come out clearly on a shirt. It looks very cool:

           

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Two Reviews and a New Cat Design

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006

Review #1 is my husband’s review of Programming Ruby: The Pragmatic Programmers’ Guide, Second Edition, by Dave Thomas with Chad Fowler and Andy Hunt.

Review #2 is my own review (finally!) of the Pet Supply Factory 78″ Cat Tree Condo House.

The new cat cafepress design answers the question, what do your cats think of their bigger and more powerful “cousins”?

I think I have 19 housecat’s dictionary designs deployed or queued up so far, and there are sure to be more. They make great gifts, so if you know anyone who might want one, or you think a link from your site might be appropriate, please pass the word! I’m really enjoying making these designs; even if they don’t sell well I’ll have gotten my amusement’s worth out of them. If they do well enough I might split our cat related designs into their own cafepress shop just to keep our own shop from getting unwieldy, but we’ll see.

I should really read a lot today but I’m still in a shirt-creating mood. Maybe I’ll do some of both. And, now that we have the ice creams made for testing out the sundaes cookbook, I should make toppings!

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Unveiling the new super-secret Cafepress designs!

Monday, September 18th, 2006

Sometimes I get a little strange, and the latest proof of this is our new series of designs: “A Housecat’s Dictionary.” These ultra-secret designs were copied at great personal risk from a housecat’s picture dictionary! The first three are up, and more are sure to come:

       

These are the definitions for hors d’oeuvres, leftovers, and self-activated cat toy.

Traditional edit part 1: Yes, there are more designs to come in this series. At least 15 total so far! I’ll deploy them one at a time and eventually make a calendar via cafepress out of 12 of them.

Traditional edit part 2: Check out this great cat laser chase with music!

Traditional edit part 3 on November 27: All Housecat’s Dictionary designs moved to our new Caffeinated Chicanery store.

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Arcane Arts

Monday, September 18th, 2006

Today’s writers’ exercise was inspired by the inlaid wooden boxes I mentioned in yesterday’s blog post about the Renaissance festival.

Today feels a little scattered and I’m having trouble getting down to anything. I’m reading two review books. We’ve started making ice creams and such out of the Sundaes cookbook in order to review that, and we promised the friend who’s visiting us that we’d make cheesecake this week, so we’ll probably do that today. I also want to review that piece of cat furniture we had such excitement assembling, and there’s some other cooking I’d like to do as well.

There’s a two-inch-long cricket hiding in this room somewhere–and I do mean that the body alone is two inches long; the legs are apparently an added bonus. I’m trying to avoid getting surprised by it; I handle bugs much better when they don’t startle the hell out of me. Of course I am getting much better about them in general, again as long as I don’t find them on me; we have a nice big garden spider (black and yellow argiope) spinning her web right next to our front porch, and I’ve managed to not freak out about having her there. (Judging by the info posted on the linked page it’s most definitely a female–she’s huge.)

I think I’m rambling, which probably means I’m trying to avoid deciding what to do next. Cook? Read? Review the cat furniture? Hmm… Or, work on cafepress designs?

Oh, this is the type of CAD I love best, second only to some of the poking-fun-at-games moments: Ethan causing random trouble.

The Renaissance Faire Report

Sunday, September 17th, 2006

We made our annual pilgrimage to the Maryland Renaissance Festival. Of course I make this sound like a huge trek, when at most it’s a half-hour drive. We always go when a friend of mine is visiting from Massachusetts, so she can go with us. The place is pretty amazing; it takes place in a permanent location, so it’s like going to a whole village full of shops and people.

We spend the first half of our visit strolling around, window-shopping and making mental notes of things we want to come back to. Sometimes we stop to watch an event or show, and of course we grab some bad-for-us faire food. Finally we do a pass back through to buy things we wanted earlier in the day, so we don’t have to carry them around the whole time. We always know we’ll spend more than we should, but we’ve been good about spending a whole lot less than we want to. What we really would love to get is a dining room table made by W. Gerry Grant, who takes slabs of dead trees and turns them into the most gorgeous natural-looking tables you’ve ever seen. Of course, it’ll be years, if not decades, before we can afford that (especially if major systems like the furnace keep breaking down!).

There’s so much nifty stuff to look at. We try to look at almost everything, and of course we have our favorites. We always have to drop by and visit the Bee Folk, who produce the most amazing honeys ever. Normally when you see, say, blueberry honey, it means it’s ordinary clover honey with artificial blueberry flavor. With their honey it means it’s made from blueberry blossoms. This makes for subtler differences in flavor, but they’re delicious, natural, and wonderful. The Bee Folk also sell candles, soaps, and other wonderful things made from beeswax.

Then there’s the awesome dude who makes wood inlay items. He saws different woods into these intricate patterns in boxes, art pieces, and so on. The artistry is incredible, and the boxes would make incredible props for a D&D game. Apparently this is just something he does in his spare time!

The Catskill Mountain Moccasin company custom-makes boots to fit your feet; the process takes months once they’ve measured your feet. We skipped them this year because that was our insane splurge last year, and one pair should be enough at those prices. But boy are they comfortable for long walks around the festival grounds!

The food is okay, but you really can’t expect wonders from stuff that has to be preserved and sold all day on hot festival grounds. It’s fun to get things like “steak on a stake” just for the amusement value, and we found some sweet potato fry-like things that were very tasty. They also had Scotch Eggs that were probably the yummiest discovery this year–hard-boiled eggs wrapped in a mixture of sausage and bread crumbs and fried. Or something like that. Hardly healthy, but at least we were getting our exercise.

In the past we’ve watched jousts or our favorite stage-show, “Fight Club,” which is comedy combined with demonstration sword fights combined with a history lesson on swords and sword-fighting. It’s very clever and very fun. Today we mostly felt like wandering, so we skipped the shows.

For the first time I walked out with pseudo-garb. I call it pseudo-garb because it’s hardly period-accurate, but it’s nifty, and that’s fun. We kind of agreed to go to a costume party next month after all, and I suck at costumes, so that made a fun excuse. The hard part is finding things that fit me; I really don’t feel like having to hem any skirts or dresses by half a foot to a foot because they’re all made for tall people.

…Okay, to be fair, I’m quite short.

Last year I also got a coin minted–there’s a company that lets you choose among dozens of designs and you put one on each side, in bronze, silver, or gold. Then you can have it strung on a cord to wear.

People-watching is fun. Some folks wear truly gorgeous garb. Then there was the guy oh-so-randomly dressed as a box of McDonald’s fries. No, I’m not joking. There are the folks who seem to be trying to do something creative, but mostly have succeeded in doing something… disturbing. Plenty of folks take “garb” to mean “costume” and dress up as things that have nothing at all to do with the theme of the festival, but that just adds to the surreality of the whole thing. Then there are the women of all sizes who use it as an excuse to show off most of their bodies (truthfully, I envy the confidence and body-comfortableness of large women who feel comfortable doing that), and then the women who use it as an excuse to present their breasts as though on a platter shoved out over tight bodices–which just kind of amazes me. Watching someone in garb chatter away on a cell phone induces a unique sort of cognitive dissonance. But the only real negative is all the folks walking the byways smoking like chimneys. My eyes still itch.

So, eventually we walked out with garb, intricate wooden boxes, and honeys of various types. And we look forward to going again next year!


Elixir of Coffee Large Mug

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Who knew cat furniture could be so exciting?

Saturday, September 16th, 2006

“Assembles in minutes” my ass. Well okay, to be fair, as the friend we picked up from the airport said, “minutes as opposed to years.” And the whole lack of “simple step by step assembly instructions” bit is why it doesn’t take minutes. I almost believe that if the big sheet of hand-drawn pictures and numbers came with some sort of explanation, it might very well take minutes. We printed out the photo, which does help a bit, but it’s taking both my husband and our friend to put this thing together (I’m trying to stay out of the way, as I expect I’d mostly help to confuse the issue). Listening to them try to puzzle this thing out is an adventure. Not a single piece of this thing is labeled or numbered in any way.

On the other hand, it isn’t even assembled and our cats are going nuts over it. So, hopefully it’ll be worth it. The faux sheep skin is delighting them, as is all the sisal rope. Being Cornish Rex cats, they’ll adore the whole 3D jungle-gym aspect of it.

I can’t wait to see the cats clambering all over this toy!

Traditional edit: Oh boy, is this going to make an interesting review. Yes, I’m going to review the cat furniture. Or in this case, more the process of assembling the cat furniture. In happy news, after I think at least 1.5 hours of assembly, the cats don’t want to leave their new toy for more than two minutes at a time.

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Cats in the bath and a Level 60 Nerd

Friday, September 15th, 2006

Okay, I just had to pimp the “Cats in the bath” design when I found it on Cafepress, because it made me giggle (found via Pentimento):


Also, our latest design is up. I hope you’ll enjoy the little details of the “level 60 nerd” design:

   

Traditional edit: This does leave me to wonder what you’d end up with if you combined cats in the bath with a level 60 nerd. Some very perplexed cats? One very injured nerd? A couple of level 60 cats with a taste for pizza and chips?

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New article on writers’ exercises

Friday, September 15th, 2006

I was reading “Novelist’s Boot Camp” and noted the author’s belief that writers’ exercises merely distract people from accomplishing their actual objectives. And honestly, this is often true. So this morning I wrote an article on How to Use Writing Exercises… And How Not to Use Them.

Well due to various reasons we never ended up doing grocery shopping this week. We certainly have food in the house, but I admit I’m a creature of whim and whimsy, and sometimes I just crave certain combinations of flavors. When you crave something cold and sweet and you have nothing that really matches that description in the house, it can make you slightly stir-crazy. Somehow when I get these cravings I can eat just about anything else and I’ll still feel hungry even if it’s enough that I should feel full. People are strange. Or maybe, as a friend of mine likes to joyfully assert, I’m just a freak. (It’s okay for her to say that–she’s a freak too.)


Character Dictation Large Mug

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