
gran rey de los nekkid |
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gran rey de los mono wrote:So bad. I already had fetched your outfit for the Arde Lucus...Kileanna wrote:Oh, then I guess I should stop planning a trip to Spain.Arde Lucus, a historial recreation fair celebrated all years in Lugo, begins today. It atracts many tourists, both from Spain and from abroad.
Since yesterday we have at least triplicated our drug and alcohol tests made, and the fair has not even begun.
Half of those tests are made to people who (judging by the names) come from other countries.
Principal touristic attractive from Spain: cheap alcohol!
Yeah, if I wear that, no-one will EVER go to Spain. In fact, all you natives would probably emigrate too.
Edit: Yep, nekkid might be even worse.

lisamarlene |
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gran rey de los mono wrote:I probably have a significant advantage here. Any game in the forseeable future is likely PBP, so it's much easier to both rapidly draw facings on a map in GIMP or CC3, and time to complete actions is far, far less of an issue. I think some GM management software will even compute facings for you in real time. Virtural...Rosita the Riveter wrote:It is a good idea, and I had a GM who tried to implement something like that. However, in practice, it slowed everything down so much trying to figure out exactly what was and was not visible. And since combat in 3.5 was not the fastest thing possible (especially with some of the players in that group), we had to abandon it pretty quickly just to keep the game playable. Now, different players and maybe a different system and it would work well. For instance, if your players are fine with a loosey-goosey, hand-wavey way of determining visibility, it could work well. But we had 3 players who NEEDED everything to be precisely defined so they could make the 'optimal' choices.You know, the Light spell should royally screw with your night vision. Sure, anything near the light should be brightly lit, but everything else should be barely visible, if at all. Lindybeige has a great point about this, though with torches. You need something to keep the light away from you (like a flashlight shaped handle you put the object with the spell cast on it into, which should be a no-brainer for any mage to accomplish) to direct it specifically where you want to go if you want to see anything, and that means restricting your field of vision. Plus, the range on them is pretty crappy and whatever you are fighting knows where you are now.
I like the idea of capitalizing on this. It makes night adventuring much more dangerous, especially somewhere like the West that is a massive, undeveloped frontier without a whole lot of light pollution and with a whole lot of monsters
Why not just pick up a couple of scraps of colored acrylic sheeting from the nearest TAP Plastics and cut them into the standard area patterns? Then you can just lay it over the battle mat and move as needed.

The Game Hamster |
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One of the Kickstarters I backed a while ago finally shipped. About an hour ago, I got the email telling me that it had shipped. When I checked the tracking, it shows it shipped like 3 days ago, and is supposed to be delivered today. I'm glad it's almost here, but it seems like they could have gotten the notice out a little sooner.
Let me get this straight... Your upset, 'cause a package you just found out was shipped is arriving today?
...Okay.

gran rey de los mono |
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gran rey de los mono wrote:One of the Kickstarters I backed a while ago finally shipped. About an hour ago, I got the email telling me that it had shipped. When I checked the tracking, it shows it shipped like 3 days ago, and is supposed to be delivered today. I'm glad it's almost here, but it seems like they could have gotten the notice out a little sooner.Let me get this straight... Your upset, 'cause a package you just found out was shipped is arriving today?
...
Okay.
I'm not upset, this time. But I was going to be out of town today, and wouldn't have been able to change delivery. I'm only going to be able to be here for delivery because my friend's kid is sick so I'm not going to visit. So, no, I'm not upset, but if not for a (thankfully mile) case of food poisoning I would have been.

The Game Hamster |
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The Game Hamster wrote:I'm not upset, this time. But I was going to be out of town today, and wouldn't have been able to change delivery. I'm only going to be able to be here for delivery because my friend's kid is sick so I'm not going to visit. So, no, I'm not upset, but if not for a (thankfully mile) case of food poisoning I would have been.gran rey de los mono wrote:One of the Kickstarters I backed a while ago finally shipped. About an hour ago, I got the email telling me that it had shipped. When I checked the tracking, it shows it shipped like 3 days ago, and is supposed to be delivered today. I'm glad it's almost here, but it seems like they could have gotten the notice out a little sooner.Let me get this straight... Your upset, 'cause a package you just found out was shipped is arriving today?
...
Okay.
That makes more sense, it messes with your plans, got it. (or would've if it hadn't worked out)

NobodysHome |
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So, my vacation balance just hit "0", so in theory I am now on "infinite vacation" time and no longer have to report it.
I am joyful and at the same time wary.
At other companies where they've tried it, total vacation time taken by employees has gone down under the "unlimited vacation" protocol.
My guess is that my company will try it for a year, total vacation time will skyrocket, and they'll go back to the, "You get 18 days a year, but we're mandating when you can take 4 of them" approach.
EDIT: Ah, there's the rub: I just checked the 2018 holiday schedule and there are no holidays. In other words, if it isn't an error/omission on HR's part, you get "infinite" vacation, but you have to get your manager's approval to take holidays off. Hopefully it's just laziness on HR's part in getting the schedule up in a timely manner, but that sort of behavior would be just like my company. "Oh, you wanted Thanksgiving off? Well, you should have let your manager know 2 weeks ago! Sorry!"

lynora |
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This was the last big one I did, about 5 years ago.
Edit: Actually, I think it was more like 3 years ago. Either way, it's been a while.
All of those patterns look awesome! I love cross stitch, although not as much as knitting :)
My problem is always what to do with the piece when I'm done. I tried framing them and hanging them up as art, but that really doesn't work for me. I have several pieces just sitting in a drawer until I figure out how to use them. How do you display your finished pieces? Also any suggestions are appreciated if anyone has any brilliant ideas. :)
lisamarlene |
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gran rey de los mono wrote:This was the last big one I did, about 5 years ago.
Edit: Actually, I think it was more like 3 years ago. Either way, it's been a while.
All of those patterns look awesome! I love cross stitch, although not as much as knitting :)
My problem is always what to do with the piece when I'm done. I tried framing them and hanging them up as art, but that really doesn't work for me. I have several pieces just sitting in a drawer until I figure out how to use them. How do you display your finished pieces? Also any suggestions are appreciated if anyone has any brilliant ideas. :)
Some friends back in Wisconsin had a reading corner that was just a big padded bench in between bookshelves, but it was piled up with a ludicrous number of cross-stitched pillows. They threw the most boring dinner parties, but I loved going anyway so I could sit in that reading nook.

aatea |
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On the insurance front, it seems that the company switched providers a while back, and I simply fell through the cracks. Not a pleasant feeling.
Okay, as a HR professional, I have to jump in and say that sometimes stuff like this happens. You'd think in this day and age, systems would talk to each other, but I can't tell you the number of times I've had to go through a spreadsheet and update the payroll and insurance carriers' websites (all 4 of them!) separately. Mistakes happen; we're all human. :)
Now that your HR department is aware that your coverage was missed, they should reinstate it to the beginning of the year and your hospital charges should be covered. If you'd like more help, please feel free to PM me, and I'll do what I can.
Okay, lurking again...

NobodysHome |
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You'd think in this day and age, systems would talk to each other...
LOL. One of my specializations is training system integrators to do their jobs correctly, rather than with duct tape and baling wire. And you'd be surprised how resistant they are to the basic idea of, "Take the extra time to do it right the first time." (Probably because follow-on support is money in their pocket.)
Integration is a multi-billion dollar industry. Because it ain't easy. And yep, mistakes happen. Or, more often than not, sloppiness happens.

NobodysHome |
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Then he finally got a job he loved, building an IT system for a refrigeration company. He got to build it from the ground up, so he did it all right: Uninterruptible power supplies, RAID drives, daily backups, backup checks, everything Linux-based to avoid the vagaries of Windows, but with Windows integration so all the end users could use Windows...
...it took him 3 months of hard work to put together the best darned IT system he possibly could.
And it never had any issues at all. No downtime. No crashes. No issues whatsoever.
So two months later the manager called him in to the office and said, "I'm sorry, Hi, but we don't know what you do here. As far as we can tell, the system runs itself and you don't really do anything."
And they laid him off.
One more reason never to do your job right.

Freehold DM |
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Dealing with that at the first job. Oh man. I got chewed out because someone in a building miles away saw something on someone on my caseloads file went unsigned and it was now clogging up their screen- and would until I fixed it. Integration is a necessity to make things easier and make sure these errors aren't overlooked, but yeesh....talk about making a mountain out of a molehill.

lynora |
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lynora wrote:Some friends back in Wisconsin had a reading corner that was just a big padded bench in between bookshelves, but it was piled up with a ludicrous number of cross-stitched pillows. They threw the most boring dinner parties, but I loved going anyway so I could sit in that reading nook.gran rey de los mono wrote:This was the last big one I did, about 5 years ago.
Edit: Actually, I think it was more like 3 years ago. Either way, it's been a while.
All of those patterns look awesome! I love cross stitch, although not as much as knitting :)
My problem is always what to do with the piece when I'm done. I tried framing them and hanging them up as art, but that really doesn't work for me. I have several pieces just sitting in a drawer until I figure out how to use them. How do you display your finished pieces? Also any suggestions are appreciated if anyone has any brilliant ideas. :)
I definitely considered making them into pillows, but my predilection for beading and metallic threads in my cross stitch projects makes that less than ideal. Also why I decided against piecing them all into a quilt. They're scratchy. Pretty, but scratchy. :/

Limeylongears |
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Romanticist sounds less creepy.
And a cool archetype for Kiniticist.
You get a supernaturally flouncy shirt, a laudanum habit (1/- DR, -2 Wis) and an innate talent for writing stories about maidens trapped in tombs beneath ruined abbeys in Italy while thunderstorms rage overhead.
SIGN ME UP CAPIATAN.

captain yesterday |
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Captain Yesterday's family: Hey let's schedule everything over Facebook, pick a day Captain Yesterday has to work (which is pretty hard considering I work one day a week or so) and then not tell him until he can't get off and spend the rest of the week trying to Facebook guilt him.
It must be a holiday.
They're also STILL trying to get me to death tubing on the Sugar River (if the unusually large number of leeches don't suck you dry below the water line the mosquitos from the farm runoff will finish you from above.
Oh yes, their will be fecal matter.

gran rey de los mono |
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gran rey de los mono wrote:This was the last big one I did, about 5 years ago.
Edit: Actually, I think it was more like 3 years ago. Either way, it's been a while.
All of those patterns look awesome! I love cross stitch, although not as much as knitting :)
My problem is always what to do with the piece when I'm done. I tried framing them and hanging them up as art, but that really doesn't work for me. I have several pieces just sitting in a drawer until I figure out how to use them. How do you display your finished pieces? Also any suggestions are appreciated if anyone has any brilliant ideas. :)
It depends. I have a few framed and hung on the wall. They don't do a lot for me, but they are nice to look at from time to time. Also, my mom likes to see them when she comes over. Smaller, cheaper patterns (like this one, I've done it like 4 or 5 times with different sayings) I give away.

gran rey de los mono |
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lynora wrote:Some friends back in Wisconsin had a reading corner that was just a big padded bench in between bookshelves, but it was piled up with a ludicrous number of cross-stitched pillows. They threw the most boring dinner parties, but I loved going anyway so I could sit in that reading nook.gran rey de los mono wrote:This was the last big one I did, about 5 years ago.
Edit: Actually, I think it was more like 3 years ago. Either way, it's been a while.
All of those patterns look awesome! I love cross stitch, although not as much as knitting :)
My problem is always what to do with the piece when I'm done. I tried framing them and hanging them up as art, but that really doesn't work for me. I have several pieces just sitting in a drawer until I figure out how to use them. How do you display your finished pieces? Also any suggestions are appreciated if anyone has any brilliant ideas. :)
My "reading corner" is wherever I happen to decide to read. My "reading Nook" is the Barnes&Noble e-reader.

Tacticslion |

gran rey de los mono wrote:So bad. I already had fetched your outfit for the Arde Lucus...Kileanna wrote:Oh, then I guess I should stop planning a trip to Spain.Arde Lucus, a historial recreation fair celebrated all years in Lugo, begins today. It atracts many tourists, both from Spain and from abroad.
Since yesterday we have at least triplicated our drug and alcohol tests made, and the fair has not even begun.
Half of those tests are made to people who (judging by the names) come from other countries.
Principal touristic attractive from Spain: cheap alcohol!
And now I know what that NPC in that game looks like, thanks!

gran rey de los mono |
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As soon as I have a name I can be your paladin, my lord Punniculus. Following the tradition of bards that pretend to be something else.
Hmm...Google translate offers "angarius" as a possible translation for messenger or public courier. It also sounds vaguely like "angel", which could work for a Aasimar/Angelkin. So maybe something like "Angaria", which also has the benefit of being a type of postal system used by the Romans for important messages (wikipedia entry. Does that sound interesting, or do you have something else in mind?

Freehold DM |

Captain Yesterday's family: Hey let's schedule everything over Facebook, pick a day Captain Yesterday has to work (which is pretty hard considering I work one day a week or so) and then not tell him until he can't get off and spend the rest of the week trying to Facebook guilt him.
It must be a holiday.
They're also STILL trying to get me to death tubing on the Sugar River (if the unusually large number of leeches don't suck you dry below the water line the mosquitos from the farm runoff will finish you from above.
Oh yes, their will be fecal matter.
nexus Christ man, what does tour family do for fun?+