[syndicated profile] daily_illuminator_feed
Bill & Ted's Excellent Board Game
Note: If you are wondering where Part 1 is, you can find it here. But you don't have to read them in order!
 
Another excellent favorite . . .
 
Another project I had a big hand in working on was Bill & Ted's Excellent Board Game. This one was SO fun. Besides being based on a favorite movie from my childhood, I also enjoyed watching it on repeat as I colored the cards! The licensor was very particular about wanting the scenes colored to accurately reflect what was shown in the movie, which, of course, meant I was very likely annoying all my coworkers by repeating, "69, dudes!" far too often while I worked on this. To top it off, the mechanics of this game are super fun and dizzying. While your damaged telephone booth flies around the game board haphazardly through time, you must continue to try to collect as many historical figures as you can before the clock runs out. If you reach the edge of the board, you simply re-enter at the opposite side to complete your movements. The more figures you collect, the more chaotic your journey is. 
 
While I look back at the game now and think, "eesh, that font is HUGE," I still have no regrets – I had a great time creating that one, and I'm proud of how it turned out. And the fact that it's actually a fun game today makes me even happier.
 
Unfortunately, this one is out of print. While you can still find copies on eBay or various game-trading sites, not many are still in the wild. I have played my copy too many times to count!


Sabrina Gonzales

Warehouse 23 News: The City Never Sleeps Because Of All The Action

There are a million stories in the city, and they're all exciting! GURPS Action 9: The City shows how you can add GURPS City Stats to your GURPS Action campaigns. It also features six sample cities to use with your own action-packed adventures. Download it today from Warehouse 23!

(no subject)

Nov. 19th, 2025 05:31 am

Wednesday's Comic

Nov. 19th, 2025 12:07 am
marycatelli: (Default)
[personal profile] marycatelli posting in [community profile] girlgenius_lair
I'LL go

Now there's a pair to strike horror in the heart.

El Goonish Shive - falsekings-072

Nov. 19th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] egs_comic_feed

New comic!

Today's News:

"Okay, but still. What are some of the magic defense options?"

"One makes the door ask you riddles before you can get inside."

"Really? So, like, riddles you arrange for it to ask, or..."

"It's entirely up to the door. There's every chance it won't let you in if you aren't clever. Or cheat."

"Cheat?"

"It can't tell if you're checking the answers on your phone."

"So... It's annoying... And easily beaten?"

"There are reasons we aren't using these options."

--

- Tuesday EGSNP

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Meet, Greet, and Startlement
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1380


:: Marise Hazelton is a mentor for a private care system, and today, she is meeting a woman and four children who have cobbled together an impromptu family of refugees. Part of the Polychrome Heroics universe, this story was suggested by [personal profile] mama_kestrel for the November of 2025 Magpie Monday, with my thanks. ::


:: Author’s notes: 1. The :: words :: in the story indicate telepathic communication. Also, 2. The last story with these characters (the Clowder Connections story arc) was Feline Negotiations. ::




Marise Hazelton paused to straighten the cuffs of her burgundy blazer, worn over a simple gray knit dress with a boat neck. Then she raised a hand to ring the doorbell.

Somewhere inside the house, cats began to yowl. It wasn’t chaos; they seemed to be repeating the noise deeper and deeper into the house. Someone opened the door. An older woman smiled, offering a hand. “Hi. I’m Jackie.”

“I’m Marise Hazelton. I represent Sedna Connections. I coordinate the needs of children and young people who need… safe adults,” the woman with fading red hair explained. “I’ve been told that you’ve taken responsibility for three girls and a younger boy? We can offer support specific to each child’s needs, and I can explain the resources offered to you, but… It’s a fairly long conversation.”

“You’re not from DFS?” Jackie asked, her grip tightening on the doorknob.
Read more... )

fashion devil job (filler)

Nov. 18th, 2025 12:45 am
[syndicated profile] pilliadventure_feed

Posted by pillia5_wp

super tired -, sorry to be late I spend all day to renew my drivers license

[syndicated profile] assignedmale_feed

Thank you all for reading! You’re all giving me so much strength to carry on. What a privilege to have you as interlocutors. Unfortunately, I also have bills to pay, especially in the next few weeks, so I must do a bit of self-promo, even though I really hate it.

My work is entirely powered by you, dear readers! If you want to support my goal of making a living from these comics, the best way is to subscribe at www.patreon.com/assignedmale . It can be for any amount, you can get a yearly discount, and you can cancel anytime. If you wish to show your appreciation for the work I’ve been doing lately, you can send me a coffee at www.ko-fi.com/sophielabelle .

You can also get yourself some nifty gear with my designs on it at https://sophielabelle.dashery.com . Best way to ruin the Holidays, guaranteed!

Another great (and free!) way to support my work is to react to this post and leave a comment to make sure that more people see it.

Either way, keep shining, stay hydrated, and watch your posture. Love you all!!
Sophie

Conservation

Nov. 18th, 2025 04:45 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
New directory of 125+ tree-planting nonprofits makes it easier to contribute to reforestation around the world

The Global Reforestation Organization Directory provides standardized information about the public commitments and transparency of more than 125 major tree-planting organizations, making it easier for donors to compare groups and find the ones that match their priorities.


Save the world, plant some trees! :D Coming into the holiday season, watch for organizations that offer gift options where you can plant trees in someone's name.

Birdfeeding

Nov. 18th, 2025 01:58 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is cloudy and cool.  It rained most of last night and into this morning.  :D

I fed the birds.  I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

It's been raining on and off.

EDIT -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT -- I did more work around the patio.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.

Books

Nov. 18th, 2025 01:27 pm
[syndicated profile] the_daily_wtf_feed

Posted by Remy Porter

One of the things that makes legacy code legacy is that code, over time, rots. Some of that rot comes from the gradual accumulation of fixes, hacks, and kruft. But much of the rot also comes from the tooling going unsupported or entirely out of support.

For example, many years ago, I worked in a Visual Basic 6 shop. The VB6 IDE went out of support in April, 2008, but we continued to use it well into the next decade. This made it challenging to support the existing software, as the IDE frequently broke in response to OS updates. Even when we started running it inside of a VM running an antique version of Windows 2000, we kept running into endless issues getting projects to compile and build.

A fun side effect of that: the VB6 runtime remains supported. So you can run VB6 software on modern Windows. You just can't modify that software.

Greta has inherited an even more antique tech stack. She writes, "I often wonder if I'm the last person on Earth encumbered with this particular stack." She adds, "The IDE is long-deprecated from a vendor that no longer exists- since 2002." Given the project started in the mid 2010s, it may have been a bad choice to use that tech-stack.

It's not as bad as it sounds- while the technology and tooling is crumbling ruins, the team culture is healthy and the C-suite has given Greta wide leeway to solve problems. But that doesn't mean that the tooling isn't a cause of anguish, and even worse than the tooling- the code itself.

"Some things," Greta writes, "are 'typical bad'" and some things "are 'delightfully unique' bad."

For example, the IDE has a concept of "designer" files, for the UI, and "code behind" files, for the logic powering the UI. The IDE frequently corrupts its own internal state, and loses the ability to properly update the designer files. When this happens, if you attempt to open, save, or close a designer file, the IDE pops up a modal dialog box complaining about the corruption, with a "Yes" and "No" option. If you click "No", the modal box goes away- and then reappears because you're seeing this message because you're on a broken designer file. If you click "Yes", the IDE "helpfully" deletes pretty much everything in your designer file.

Nothing about the error message indicates that this might happen.

The language used is a dialect of C++. I say "dialect" because the vendor-supplied compiler implements some cursed feature set between C++98 and C++11 standards, but doesn't fully conform to either. It's only capable of outputting 32-bit x86 code up to a Pentium Pro. Using certain C++ classes, like std::fstream, causes the resulting executable to throw a memory protection fault on exit.

Worse, the vendor supplied class library is C++ wrappers on top of an even more antique Pascal library. The "class" library is less an object-oriented wrapper and more a collection of macros and weird syntax hacks. No source for the Pascal library exists, so forget about ever updating that.

Because the last release of the IDE was circa 2002, running it on any vaguely modern environment is prone to failures, but it also doesn't play nicely inside of a VM. At this point, the IDE works for one session. If you exit it, reboot your computer, or try to close and re-open the project, it breaks. The only fix is to reinstall it. But the reinstall requires you to know which set of magic options actually lets the install proceed. If you make a mistake and accidentally install, say, CORBA support, attempting to open the project in the IDE leads to a cascade of modal error boxes, including one that simply says, "ABSTRACT ERROR" ("My favourite", writes Greta). And these errors don't limit themselves to the IDE; attempting to run the compiler directly also fails.

But, if anything, it's the code that makes the whole thing really challenging to work with. While the UI is made up of many forms, the "main" form is 18,000 lines of code, with absolutely no separation of concerns. Actually, the individual forms don't have a lot of separation of concerns; data is shared between forms via global variables declared in one master file, and then externed into other places. Even better, the various sub-forms are never destroyed, just hidden and shown, which means they remember their state whether you want that or not. And since much of the state is global, you have to be cautious about which parts of the state you reset.

Greta adds:

There are two files called main.cpp, a Station.cpp, and a Station1.cpp. If you were to guess which one owns the software's entry point, you would probably be wrong.

But, as stated, it's not all as bad as it sounds. Greta writes: "I'm genuinely happy to be here, which is perhaps odd given how terrible the software is." It's honestly not that odd; a good culture can go a long way to making wrangling a difficult tech stack happy work.

Finally, Greta has this to say:

We are actively working on a .NET replacement. A nostalgic, perhaps masochistic part of me will miss the old stack and its daily delights.

[Advertisement] Picking up NuGet is easy. Getting good at it takes time. Download our guide to learn the best practice of NuGet for the Enterprise.
[syndicated profile] ohjoysextoy_feed

Posted by Matthew Nolan

MorMe Original Stroker by DarkChibiShadow

DarkChibiShadow is BACK with a thought-stroking review of the MoreMe Original Stroker! DCS puts it through it’s paces, and askes if it’s possible to find the perfect stroker. MoreMe is making some really cool toys and prosthetics; that you gotta go check out. Truly delighted we’ve gotten one of their items up and reviewed for […]

Pool Open!

Nov. 18th, 2025 12:01 am
ysabetwordsmith: Damask smiling over their shoulder (polychrome)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
[personal profile] fuzzyred is hosting a pool for the half-price sale in Polychrome Heroics. Targets include the whole Finn Family thread and whatever else will fit in the budget from the Big One thread. The latter includes a triptych about Josué and Aidan, as well as two poems about Frank the Crank, for those of you following either of those characters.

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