Sam

So welcome back everybody. A new year and a new shuffle up of my blogs. A few things have happened here:

I’ve deleted all my posts containing original prose.
The main reason for this is that I’d like to take my writing offline for a while. Like onto lined paper and good old hand cramp.

All WoW-related posts are heading over to Need Relish.
Need Relish ( www.needrelish.net ) was always supposed to be my main WoW blog, so I’ve set it up again and am intending to try and keep it updated. Bookmark me if you looking for WoW -related content. :)

This blog is now going to be a rambling one.
If I want to write about it (and it’s not WoW-related) it will live here. I can’t be bothered having a mountain of blogs anymore. Two is enough.

Just felt like I needed a mission statement. Enjoy :)

Since this is a pretty big post, I’ve put it behind a link. LJ users should have an LJ-cut, Solace readers should get a “Read More” link. Image heavy, though there’s a Flikr slideshow at the end which rotates most of the culprits! Enjoy! Continue reading »

Recently, as some of you may have seen, I launched into a rant about Second Life. Something intrigued me about it, it still does. I just hadn’t found it yet. I decided to chronicle my journey as I found stuff to do and found my niche in a virtual world. My post, however, got a comment along the lines of “I’m really excited about Blue Mars”. (Cheers for that btw ;) )

Hmm, thinks I, what is this Blue Mars? What I saw took my breath away. Simply speaking, Blue Mars is a virtual world, much like Second Life. However, it’s using the Crysis engine, so everything’s really quite pretty. I immediately signed up for a beta, debating being a pioneer in this strange new world.

It is beautiful.

I quite happily spent an hour exploring one of the cities. The only reason I haven’t explored more is because my IP is a bit rubbish if it doesn’t know I’m playing a game. But if I go there in quiet times, there’s no issue. The shops are pretty awesome, letting you examine a product in detail before you go about buying it. Worlds are static, and if they change you need to patch. In Second Life, the client is always on the look out for in-world changes. The way Blue Mars handles it is like loading a level in a game. You know it won’t change. You don’t need to waste computations to check if stuff changed.

I’m excited about this. My tweets have been obsessed with it (sorry guys! xD) and I want to see the direction it takes. It looks like it’s going to be a much more “quality” product than Second Life, with maybe a slight restriction on the creative side. You need to specifically sign up as a developer, and there may be costs that it incurs. I’d be tempted though. Just to experiment.

If anyone else is playing the beta, look me up. My username’s Anakiro and my toon name is Taylea Dinzel (same as SL!). I dunno which you need to find friends, but the friends list was just implemented, so go nuts!

Here’s a quick and dirty guide for tweaking the client’s requirements! It’s for Crysis, but Blue Mars uses the same engine.

I shall be making a few posts in the coming weeks (with video and pictures, hopefully!), exploring the various areas and UI-options that exist just now :)

A little while ago, I asked a guildie on WoW “how do you get into Second Life?” She promptly spent a few days showing me the ropes, inviting me into her group of friends and showing me the best places to get cheap gear. Through this new network of friends I’ve found stuff, things to do and things to learn. As a result, I’ve decided to go ahead and make this blog, keep a record of the stuff I see and learn in Second Life and my thoughts on it.

It’s a little bit different from the first time I tried it. I wandered around the tutorial area, with that horrible waddling animation and run-of-the-mill clothes. I had no friends, and my first encounter with other people seemed to be a requisition for cyber-sex. So, needless to say, I didn’t go back. the idea itself, however, continued to intrigue me. You could use a platform like that for so many things, so much creativity.

I mentioned to my boss that I was having a go of Second Life and he started asking me questions.
“What do you do?” – I dunno.
“What makes it fun?” – Not sure.
“Does it cost money?” – It can.
“Why do you keep playing?” – …?

I really don’t know. But it keeps pulling me back.

I’m Taylea Dinzel! I live in Second Life.

Went out today with the intention of timing myself for a 3km race in my local park next week. You don’t pre-register, you just turn up with your two shiny pounds and run around a few times. I figured I’d time myself to see if it was worth entering. The slowest time on the last 2 races has been around 21mins. In theory I can make that, 7min/km isn’t new to me. Maybe a stretch, but not new.

I made 1km and threw in the towel.

I’m gutted, but I think I started out a tad fast. I’m going to get out and have another go tomorrow. The park still stinks from all the flooding too. The mud’s also thick, but I still don’t want to run on the pavement too much. I did manage a 6:45-ish kilometre though. I guess it’s not all bad.

I’ll have another go tomorrow. Hopefully I can will myself the whole way around :S

Here’s the graph!

Gyms are a foriegn place to me. I only stepped foot in a gym for a few weeks while I was in uni, in a desperate attempt to “turn myself around”. Obviously, I didn’t stick at it. Though, to be fair, I had lots of studying and gaming that needed to be done.

So a few months ago I did the gym induction at my local gym. I think my reasoning was that when the weather got worse I’d have somewhere to retreat to and no excuse not to do my running. Well over the past few days the weather has been atrocious. I’ve been there, hard at work on the treadmill. I’ve also noticed one or two things about gym users. Like the ones who give me dirty looks when I’m just plodding along, slowly eating up the kilometers. They jump on, pound away for 15mins and then jump off. I’m there for at least 25mins more than them, and I want to keep my knees and lungs. Also, nobody wears the safety cord on the treadmills. It’s a cord that clips onto your top, so if you fall off it pulls the emergency stop on the machine. Going at the speed some of them do, I’d imagine that’d be a concern.

Running on treadmills also seems to be deceptively easy. I can run 30mins on a treadmill, while I struggle to make 20mins outside. Maybe it’s because you can set your speed and you have all this information in front of you. Who knows? I just don’t want to get too comfy with it. I’ll think I’m amazing, and then when I come to run I’ll struggle horribly.

I should probably weigh myself now…

The story so far:

Brown Linen Robe
Robes of Arugal
Frayed Robe
Woodland Robes
Acolyte’s Robe
Beaded Robe of the Whale
Elder’s Robe of the Whale
Lovely Black Dress
Sleeping Robes
Red Linen Robe
Fur Covered Robe
Bloody Apron
Azure Watch Robes
White Woolen Dress
Simple Dress
White Linen Robe
Robe of Doan

I feel pretty, oh so pretty!

I’d been thinking for quite a while about how a move to an RP server would affect the way I play WoW. Would I really get into it? Would I have other pursuits than hitting the level cap and raiding until my eyes bleed for the newest loot? Well, truth be told I hate progression raiding. Everything’s still so difficult and nobody’s geared for it. That’s not to say that there aren’t people who enjoy it, I just prefer to take the game at a more leisurely pace. It’s why I get frustrated when people claim Blizz have been handing out gear. However, that’s a discussion for another day, possibly another post. My point is, I wouldn’t be immediately raiding.

My latest idea (in a long line of ideas, might I add -_-) is I’m going to try and collect robes.

Crazy right? I figure on an RP server of all places, having a nice wardrobe could come in handy. I’m also planning on making a list of robes that share textures/models too. I’m not going all out to collect every single robe out there. Just every ‘look’.

So my Alliance priest Taylea will be my dress collecting minion. I’ve also settled on my “Alliance” server: Argent Dawn (EU). I know, I know it’s busy and what have you, but my Dearest has friends on that realm. It seemed a decently sensible choice :P

I’m planning to put together a list of robes I need to grab, and might post it here as a guide. It’s from an Ally’s POV, but I imagine it would help Hordies who are looking for that perfect look too!

Yes, it is possible to play ‘pretty princess dress me up’ in WoW too! :P

Also, regarding the creative guild. It’s still not out of the question. I’m just not sure if it’s going to be a guild anymore. Or on Darkmoon Fair. It’s on the backburner for a tad while I sort out my priestling (I’m on the RAF triple exp for a month and planning to make the most of it before I transfer her to my main account.) I’m still needing to get my head round the idea.

So, I came up with an idea last week or so. Why not gather creative people in WoW into a guild, where we can share comments, ideas and knowledge. It would be a guild I’d love to be a part of, and I’d love to see some exciting stuff come out of it. So, off I went, determined to make this guild a reality.

But then I came across a problem. While the WoW addon system is very flexible, it doesn’t allow for much for what I wanted to use it for. To be honest, the only things you could really do inside the WoW client would be the voice chat services (or would Vent possibly be better?), and chat services. Nothing else, usually associated with a guild, would be of any immediate use. And I couldn’t really think of any addon applications that would be useful. I mean, what is there to really do apart from scheduled gatherings to compare works stored at an external site?

It’s a shame because this was something I really wanted to do. And I still do, I just refuse to put myself out on a limb with the limited ideas I have. I’m planning to create some sort of portfolio addon, which if you download a “pack” of things we’re going to look over and critique before loading up the client, you should be able to view them within the client itself. However, all that really does is eliminate the need for alt+tabbing between WoW and your browser (which, argueably might be incredibly useful for some attendees).

I also kind of wanted to make this guild a Horde guild. However, most of the feedback I’ve had on my chosen server (Darkmoon Fair (EU) for those interested) has been from Alliance players. Most of the pre-scheduled RP events seem to come from Allys too.

Also is the fact that there’s been interest in making these things public events. I’m assuming bi-weekly might be a start, with alternating weeks for each faction. Then if people wanted to attend weekly they could roll up an alt and do that.

I’m just running low on ideas for this. I wanted it to be an awesome guild that was super busy (RP guild events did spring to mind!), but now it’s looking like just scheduling public writer’s circles (since I’m bearly qualified to run those let alone ‘artist circles’ or whatever).

So how it seems to stand at the moment:

  • Homebase guild
  • Bi-weekly/monthly writer’s meetings
  • (And other disciplines if we can get ‘officers’ to lead them)
  • Alliance/Horde alternate weeks (can attend whatever they want)

Anyone who’s interested either in helping me run this, or just being part of it, please be sure to get in touch. I’ve already posted about this in the WoW forums and am planning to throw a post up on WoWGamers.co.uk (Darkmoon Fair (EU)’s RP events hub – from what I can tell) when I get something more concrete to propose. You can hit me up on Twitter (@anakiro) or ingame on Darkmoon Fair (EU) on (H) Zulkek or (A) Taylea. You’d probably be better sending me mail in-game, since I flit around so many characters, actually catching me might be a chore! :P

So, the addon that’s been on everyone’s lips lately has been TweetCraft. It’s a client that allows information from outside the WoW client into it, and vice versa. It reminds me of a great(!) idea I had one time, that was a plugin for MSN (or !Y or AIM, whatever) that would let you converse with your guild/friends list in-game. Turns out I wasn’t the first one to have such an idea, but the software limitations made it impossible.

But back onto TweetCraft. It’s treading on dubious ground. It’s (in theory) violating Blizzard’s EULA.

D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through the Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by the Game to store information about a character or the game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;

E. modify or cause to be modified any files that are a part of the Game Client in any way not expressly authorized by Blizzard;

This being said, how does it work? Well, reading the article linked at the top will give you those answers, but essentially it’s reading and writing to variables via a third party tray application. Then, when it wants to refresh the tweets it forces a reload of the ui, which reloads all the addon variables as well. However the idea that it’s exchanging data with the outside internet brings the EULA into question. Personally, I won’t be intsalling it (I’ve spent far too much time and money to risk it!) but I find the principle very interesting. There are, of course, other addons that exchange data with the outside. Things like dps trackers and the like. This is the first time I’ve seen a communication addon that works outside the game. xFire doesn’t really count, I don’t think, since it’s not really a direct client.

Food for thought, I think :)

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