2013年1月28日星期一

Complete quests in runescape


This quest can let you have the opportunity to help or assist the goblins to choose their new armor color with your runescape accounts cheap.

1 Go into the Falador Park. Ask Wyson, the head gardener, if you can buy woad leaves. Get two leaves from him.

2 Go all the way to Varrock's south east mine. There are some bushes nearby; pick three red berries off from a bush.

3 Go back towards Falador, going through Lumbridge. Stop by the sheep pen in Lumbridge and you'll see an onion patch. Pick two onions.

4 Walk west to Draynor Village. Ask Aggie (the witch) if she can make you anything you need. Select the option of dyes. You'll need to pick all three, red, yellow, and blue. As she is making the dyes, the items will disappear from your inventory and little bottles of dye will appear.

5 Combine the potions to make color. Combine the red and yellow dye to make orange. Use the orange and blue dye on the goblin mails. You'll end up with a brown, orange, and blue one in your RS account inventory. To enjoy more fun, you can buy runescape accounts on farmer100.

The Goblin Diplomacy Quest in RuneScape


It will also end up the dispute between them, so the Runescape world doesn't have to worry about goblins rioting.

Steps
1 Travel north of Falador. Take the left fork road to the Goblin Village (the right fork will lead you up the mountain). And you can also buy runescape account to have more fun.

2 Speak with either General Wartface or General Bentnoze. You'll then get into the middle of an argument about armor colors. Ask them if you can suggest a color for them. You will be asked to get an orange, blue, and brown mail.

3 Go kill goblins until you get two goblin mails. Search the crates in the Goblin Village for the brown one with your runescape accounts cheap.

2013年1月13日星期日

something feels different


Im laying in bed, slowly waking up and adjusting my eyes to the winter sunshine as I glance out the window, when I decide to do some visualization exercises with my legs and feet. I go through the usual exercises that I’ve been doing as frequently as possible in my free time: flex my feet, bend my knee, rotate my legs in and out. Since my accident, I don’t get any movement in my lower body when I do these exercises but I’ve stubbornly and consistently kept at it. The reason why everyone – from the nurses in the ICU to my spine surgeon to my acupuncturists – has emphasized the importance of visualization is the belief that there is enormous value in sending a signal from the brain to the lower body and by thinking and trying to move those limbs, one can repair the neural pathways and reestablish that damaged connection.
This time though, something feels different. I lift myself up to sitting with my legs straight ahead of me on the bed and I throw off the covers to get a better view. Something just feels different, like there’s movement and it’s not just a spasm or reflex (which I have frequently as well). I stare at my right foot and see that my pinky toe is slowly moving in and out. To make sure this isn’t a fluke, I stop and do nothing. Pinky toe doesn’t move. I try again and there it goes, immediately responding to the signal I’m sending. This can’t be right, it’s been months and months of having my legs and feet dangle lifelessly as I’ve dragged and lifted and bumped and dropped them from place to place in this strange new world of life post-Spinal Cord Injury.
I do it again, this time to confirm that what I thought I had been seeing could actually be real. “Wiggle little toe, wiggle”. Wiggle wiggle it says, as it dances back and forth, proving to me that for the first time in almost six months, I have regained motor control of a part of my lower body.
What a development for the new year, what a way to show me that 2013 really will be a special year, one in which I hope to achieve all of my recovery objectives and kick this damn injury’s ass! It’s only one pinky toe, on only one foot and it’s still a long ways to go I’m sure before I can move my legs around like I used to, but that pinky toe gave me so much hope for the future of my recovery. To go from feeling that moving any part of my lower body is the equivalent of moving a table with my mind, to then finally seeing a flicker of hope in a tiny little pinky toe is an indescribable moment. Now, I can move this toe 10,000 times if I have to until it leads to me being able to control my other toes and then my foot and then my ankle and then my legs… My fire of recovery has been fueled, my conviction has been confirmed and my dream to reach my ultimate goal has entered into the realm of reality.

2013年1月9日星期三

Christmas Photos Through the Years

Each December my family sends out a letter, handmade card and family picture to about 70 people. We always save one copy of each to put in a scrapbook. When we got home from school, my sister and I found ourselves looking through the books (yes, there are three), reading the old letters and laughing at the pictures. Here are some of our favorites. 




1989: This is Coho, my parents' first child. Probably more photogenic than all of us combined. Rumor has it he got to go on his very first trip to the mall in order to take this photo.  

















1990: Look! It's me! These were the good old days. Also, isn't my mom pretty?


















1993: Still rockin' the only child thing. Look at those bangs! Also, tights. Also, I wish I had that dress in my current size. Also, I wish I had a german shepherd to cuddle with.






















1995: Holy digital camera, Batman! Also, what is that other child doing encroaching on my territory? And why can't I tan like that now? I'm pretty sure we had this picture on a mousepad in our den for about ten years. So 90s.













1996: Umm... so now there are six of us. Clearly nobody consulted Reilly on adding two boys to the family. Michael is in the blue and Steven is in the yellow (I think). 










1997: So this is the year we acquired Photoshop, in case you hadn't guessed. My parents were really proud of this card because they made it on the computer! With such beautiful Christmas colors! Little known fact: Steven's head was photoshopped on from another picture because in the original he wasn't looking at the camera. Magic! 



















2001: JAKE!! Isn't he cute? So attentive. My mom was probably standing behind the camera with a biscuit in her hand. Why is there a dolphin hanging out of my hair? Why does Reilly's shirt look like cake frosting? Why do Michael and Steven look like they actually like each other? So many questions from the year 2001. 


















2002: FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL! FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL! Matching outfits! So much awesome in one picture. The names had to be added to the bottom because Michael and Steven look so damn alike. In other news, SPIKY HAIR!! 















2004: Oh my god, I don't even know where to begin. Can you say AWKWARD? Clearly we were running out of time and needed to take a Christmas picture. Even our fat labrador looks uncomfortable. Nevertheless, Reilly looks adorable as always. Sigh, this was a dark day in our family's history. Also, SPIKES ARE STILL COOL?






2006: After a string of predictably stiff photos, we decided to change scenery and take the picture while on vacation in Cannon Beach, OR. My hair looks awesome. I just realized it looks like we are standing in front of a green screen! Perhaps the colors were enhanced with Photoshop. Sneaky sneaky. 








2008: This is the year I went to college so of course we all wore WSU clothing for our picture! This was taken on a rare sunny day in Seattle. Also, Jake. So stinkin' cute. I guess the boys are okay, too.















2009: This might be my favorite. Also taken at Cannon Beach, we took about 50 takes before this photo was chosen. I like everything about it. Especially Reilly's hair.











2010: Five minutes before this photo was taken:

Mom: "It's snowing! Everyone get outside so we can take a picture!"

Everyone else: "Really? Do I need to put on shoes for this?"

Mom: "Hurry up! I want a picture in the snow!"

Five minutes after this photo was taken:

Mom: "See, the snow is melting.                    Aren't you glad we got that picture?"

                                                                                                       Everyone else: "Thrilled."

So there you have it. This year's picture was a boring collage of pictures from our Alaska cruise. Nothing too exciting to report there. As we get older, it gets harder for us to all be in the same town at the same time, let alone the same room.

I hope your holidays are filled with family, friends and awesome Christmas photos that you can laugh at years later

Misunderstood Words in the book

On a recent flight, the annoying teenage girl in front of me was looking at the safety information card that can be found in the seat pocket in front of you.  I glanced at it and saw what I thought were special instructions for a "Tall Exit."  At once amused and outraged, I pulled out my own card and looked at it again.  Then I snapped a picture of it, thinking, Wow, so now tall people can't even escape from a plane the normal way?


It wasn't until I put my camera away that I noticed it actually said, "Tail Exit."

That's why I love the written word.  You can read something over and over again and it may not be until the third time that you finally get it.  When it's written down, you have time to mull it over to make sure you're understanding the message, which you don't always have a chance to do with spoken conversations.  That's also why I never liked text messages.  There's still plenty of opportunity for misunderstanding, but the immediacy encourages you not to think about things first.  Then of course you have the results of the miscommunication right there in front of you to read over again.  And again.

2013年1月7日星期一

An offline printer is affecting the performance of your printing.

When you hit “print” in Office, Adobe, or any other program, does it take 30-45 seconds or more to come up with the printer selection screen? Chances are, an offline printer is affecting the performance of your printing.
To solve this issue:
In XP:
  1.  Go to Printers and Faxes
  2. Highlight any “offline” or “unable to connect” printers
  3. Hit the Delete key, or right click and select Delete
In Windows 7:
  1.  Go to Devices and Printers
  2. Highlight any “offline” or “unable to connect” printers
  3. Hit the Delete key, or right click and select Delete
This should solve the issue. If not, please let me know so I can provide further fixes!

EEBO is ultimately an invaluable resource


The EEBO database consists of thousands of early titles originally published between 1475 and 1700 (the periods covered in the short-title catalogs of Pollard & Redgrave and Wing), which were formatted onto microfilm in the 1930s by the University of Michigan and have since been digitized. After a centuries-long journey through manuscript, print, microfilm, and digital media, the text images are sometimes poor in quality and therefore hard to read. Below is an example of the kind of “show-through” you can find in an EEBO document (this is taken from the 1644 edition of John Milton’s The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce:
Milton, EEBO Text

Despite these occasional exigencies, EEBO is ultimately an invaluable resource, and it continues to grow. Beginning in 1999, a collaborative effort between ProQuest LLC, the University of Michigan, and Oxford University known as the TCP (Text Creation Partnership) began to key the full texts of first-editions in order to make them searchable by keyword. Now in its second phase, the TCP seeks to bring its total to 70,000 titles and includes the collaboration of over 150 libraries. I’ve had the pleasure to hear Martin Mueller speak recently on EEBO, and I share his enthusiasm for a project that certainly has its “noise,” but that probably promises more good than ill. In fact, it opens up a new generation of scholars to the textual and editorial practice that has been mostly taken for granted in the academy for decades. It does matter what editions we read.

And yet. We must temper our enthusiasm, for although EEBO is an invaluable resource, it does not and will not replace archival research. At least, not yet. There are physical aspects of rare books that cannot be fully conveyed through these digitized microfilm copies, such as watermarks, physical dimensions, and bindings, each of which offer important clues about the production, consumption, and circulation of a given book. Additionally, EEBO images (often from copies in the British Library and the Huntington Library) represent a very small sample of the surviving copies of a given publication. Far from being identical, copies of early books often have very subtle differences in terms of press variants and error corrections. Fortunately, scholars and librarians are becoming increasingly aware of the value of retaining “duplicate” copies of early books in the effort to digitize them. Claire Stewart recently pointed me toward this HathiTrust duplicates report, which acknowledges the value of “duplicates” for scholars in certain fields (see p. 6). It’s my belief that the effort to digitize our cultural heritage will lead us back toward the material, the physical, and the artifact, and I’m thinking more about this after reading Bethany Nowviskie’s MLA 2013 paper, published just yesterday.

EEBO is not alone in its home-delivery of rare books to readers and researchers. Other projects including GoogleBooks, HathiTrust, and the Internet Archive contain millions of printed books from earlier eras, and in some cases allow readers to download the whole artifact. I want to use the rest of my time here to show some of the potential and limitations of the Internet Archive, however, mainly in order to call attention to some of its unusual features. Here is what you find when you search for John Milton’s The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce: a copy of the 1645 pirated edition held by the Boston Public Library. I came across this in November while researching Milton’s pamphlets:
Milton, Internet Archive
The Internet Archive allows you to do with this book some of the same things you can do in EEBO. For instance, you can page through the artifact in its entirety; you can download it to your computer; you can peruse the ASCII text (although EEBO’s TCP project currently only has available first-edition keyed texts, so this one would not be there). However, this online archive allows you to do some different things as well that come slightly closer to the archival visit. For instance, the images of the artifact appear in color, as opposed to black-and-white (although you have the choice to download the PDF here in color or in black-and-white). The resolution of the images is not excellent. There is, however, a two-page layout and a page-turning animation effect that you can opt for, which I have found found for modern texts in iBooks, but less commonly among early modern digital archives. You can also “play” the book as a slideshow and watch the pages turn rhythmically, one after another. It’s a bit mesmerizing. I admit I’m not sure how useful it is to be able to “play” and “pause” a book like this, though. Below is an image of the “page-turn,” although you have to see it in action to really get the full effect.

Milton, Internet Archive (page turn)


The final aspect of this interface I’ll consider here is perhaps among the most promising, but the least successful. If you press the sound button in the top-right corner, you can hear a simulated, female voice read the text. This could be a useful feature, but the OCR delivery of the text is confused by the typography of this early modern book, and systematically garbles the “long s” into an “f” sound. There are other problems with it as well. Olin Bjork and John Rumrich have recently collaborated on a Paradise Lost audiotext, and their work suggests that the visual and the aural can indeed work together productively in a hypertextual archive site. The Internet Archive’s current “iffues” suggest that we still have many years and hard work ahead of us, but we should not sacrifice the effort on account of the “noise” we will inevitably encounter.

2013年1月6日星期日

Sand Castles by Calvin Seibert

Sand Castles by Calvin Seibert

Evgeny Hontor Shop

Evgeny Hontor Shop

I started painting again last year after a 6 years hiatus.

Image


I started painting again last year after a 6 years hiatus. And I almost forgot how therapeutic art can be. Well, I’m not one who makes new year’s resolution but I agree with myself that I deserve some sense of serenity after those hectic days at work. Therefore, I shall make it a point to paint more this year. After all, how can a girl ever get enough of pretty flowers?

Table and Chair by Bodo Sperlein













2013年1月3日星期四

I Missed My Exit Again

I was trying to insert a picture I had taken and downloaded to my computer (which was an amazing feat of its own due to my technological challenges) on my blog page. WordPress has changed things, without my permission, and so I once again found myself taking another random exit off the technology freeway, driving around without a map. I have found some very interesting neighborhoods to explore by doing this, but that wasn’t my plan.
So, I’m clicking here and there and nothing happens.  At least the something that I wanted to happen didn’t happen and so I concluded nothing happened.  Until I went to preview my blog and viola!  Here is my picture on the main page of my blog.  Looks good. Not where I wanted the picture, but it looks good.
Unfortunately, I don’t remember which turns I took to get here and now I’m not sure I can now find my way back to the freeway.