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Started by panda, September 17, 2005, 04:24:10 PM

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Chocofreak13

cool. :3

@leaf: ahhh, okay, sorry. i was talking about buying music right before you mentioned that, so logical train of thought connects the two. though how much would it kick ass if i could buy it in person here...?
click to make it bigger

stewartsage

I've played way more Ponymon then I've played Touhoumon.  Yeah...


> My face every time my criminology professor talks about the mental healthcare system
> Also my face when I walk outside at 8AM and the sun is blazing in my face

LeaflameSD

#19022
@Bella: Touhoumon is...
Spoiler: ShowHide
... like your regular Pokemon Firered/Leafgreen game but with some text changed, some new music and well this doesn't need to be said but anyways, characters from the Touhou universe. Pretty cool hack.


@Kari: Don't you have a store geared towards Japanese entertainment in your area? In the UK anime and jargon is virtually invisible so... yeah.

Chocofreak13

what? no, of course not. what is this, New York? the closest thing to an anime shop in the area would be Harrison's Comics and Collectibles in The Mall of New Hampshire in Manchester (about a half hour from here by car, less without traffic). they sell both Anime goods and stuff from American Comics, but they have a rich collection. someone said they went out of business, but i don't believe it. i don't even habeeb it.

there's then Tokai, a Japanese good shop in Cambridge under my old school. they don't really sell anything that could be considered "entertainment", though, unless books and origami is counted. most of their wares are traditional Japanese goods, such as Yukata and Tea Ceremony stuff.

Star Music is in Chinatown in Boston (right across from the bus station i would come into every day!), but the majority of their stuff is Sanrio or Bootleg Items. then there's Otaku Shop and one or two other places, but the only place out of all of those you could even HOPE to find something like that at would be that video rental place i went to about 5 years ago, idk where it even is in china town or if it's still in business. @__@;

@simon: the first one i clicked on was from this documentary Cockleshell posted a couple months ago in Top(ic)less. so i was like lolwutkthxbai
(#30)

@stew: 3
HOURS
DUNGEON
click to make it bigger

Simonorged

Simon was here :P

Raffaele the Amigan

#19025
Hello girls and guys.

Unfortunately I had a TIA and I am in hospital since friday performing routine analisys course...
Howewer still alive and unique symptom is a minor problem with moving tongue and speaking... I was lucky...
Pegasos computer: CPU PPC G3 600MHz, RAM DDR 512 MB PC3200, Graphic Card ATI 9250 256 MB videoram. SO MorphOS 1.4.5
;011 -(Caramba! El nuevo Peggy computador es Amiga compatible y muy Mejor!)
[/color]
"God, what an incredible thing we did!"
(R.J. Mical, engineer of original Amiga developing team at Amiga Inc. 1982-1985).
[/color]
"When the Amiga came out, everyone [at Apple] was scared as hell."
(Jean-Lous Gassée, former CEO of Apple France and chief of developers of Mac II-fx, interviewed by Amazing Computing, November 1996).
[/color]

Nichi

I hope you get better soon :[

Raffaele the Amigan

Thanks... :)


And thanks to smartphones I am still in contact with you TAN people and all the world... :)
Pegasos computer: CPU PPC G3 600MHz, RAM DDR 512 MB PC3200, Graphic Card ATI 9250 256 MB videoram. SO MorphOS 1.4.5
;011 -(Caramba! El nuevo Peggy computador es Amiga compatible y muy Mejor!)
[/color]
"God, what an incredible thing we did!"
(R.J. Mical, engineer of original Amiga developing team at Amiga Inc. 1982-1985).
[/color]
"When the Amiga came out, everyone [at Apple] was scared as hell."
(Jean-Lous Gassée, former CEO of Apple France and chief of developers of Mac II-fx, interviewed by Amazing Computing, November 1996).
[/color]

LeaflameSD

Ooh, sound rough >_< Hope you get better soon ^z^

@Choco: Really? I thought Japanese jargon was all over America. ALL OVER.

Bella

Quote from: Raffaele the Amigan on March 04, 2013, 12:30:59 PM
Hello girls and guys.

Unfortunately I had a TIA and I am in hospital since friday performing routine analisys course...
Howewer still alive and unique symptom is a minor problem with moving tongue and speaking... I was lucky...

Oh my god, I just looked up TIA ... you had a small stroke, then? That sounds really scary, but I'm glad you're doing well and are recovering.

Nichi

@Leaf: Not really. Around bigger cities (LA, New York, etc.), I'm sure they are, but it's much less common in the corners of the country we live in

@Raffaele: Smart phones are always nice to have on hand, and other such things. I often like to carry my iPod Touch with me when my mom goes grocery shopping, so I can use the store's wifi to chat with people :3

Raffaele the Amigan

Quote from: Bella on March 04, 2013, 01:27:38 PM
Quote from: Raffaele the Amigan on March 04, 2013, 12:30:59 PM
Hello girls and guys.

Unfortunately I had a TIA and I am in hospital since friday performing routine analisys course...
Howewer still alive and unique symptom is a minor problem with moving tongue and speaking... I was lucky...

Oh my god, I just looked up TIA ... you had a small stroke, then? That sounds really scary, but I'm glad you're doing well and are recovering.

Brain TIA... Wow...
Pegasos computer: CPU PPC G3 600MHz, RAM DDR 512 MB PC3200, Graphic Card ATI 9250 256 MB videoram. SO MorphOS 1.4.5
;011 -(Caramba! El nuevo Peggy computador es Amiga compatible y muy Mejor!)
[/color]
"God, what an incredible thing we did!"
(R.J. Mical, engineer of original Amiga developing team at Amiga Inc. 1982-1985).
[/color]
"When the Amiga came out, everyone [at Apple] was scared as hell."
(Jean-Lous Gassée, former CEO of Apple France and chief of developers of Mac II-fx, interviewed by Amazing Computing, November 1996).
[/color]

SleepyD

Quote from: LeaflameSD on March 02, 2013, 05:08:07 AM
@Sleepy: Scamming in conventions is something new to me.
Quote from: PentiumMMX on March 02, 2013, 09:55:19 AM
@Sleepy: Wow, that would have been a terrible convention to go to. Let's hope my first con is a lot better than that, whenever I actually get a chance to go :\
Quote from: Chocofreak13 on March 02, 2013, 02:29:40 PM
@sleepy: as long as that took me to read, it was damn scary. makes me think twice about attending any small/new cons. .__.;

@leaf: the katy coope method is for getting things started. it's SUPPOSED to be generic, since if you start looking into books like the one i posted, you won't know where to start. you want something general at first. but if you didn't find hers helpful, you might try this one instead; i've had it just about as long as my katy coope one and it proved to be rather useful from the start. it's thicker, too. :3
don't overwhelm yourself at first. if you want my advice, stay as basic as possible. and work on your proportions and basic (BASIC) anatomy. when i first started out, girls looked like lego bricks i stuck half-gumballs onto for boobs :p
The Las Pegasus con issue kinda pisses me off though. Even though I don't attend said convention, it leaves a bad impression on people that could color their views on the many, many other reputable cons in the area, particularly for those who were first-time con goers. There is a LOT of work that goes into running a good con, and despite all the complaints we staffers get, I want attendees to know that we do care about making their experience the best as we can possibly make it.

Art:
Katy Coope's book was one of the first I ever used (probably the first I've ever seen, even), but I can't say I got much mileage out of it. I've used the How to Draw Manga books, and what they do is they translate similar books made by different Japanese artists. As such, their quality varies depending on the artist writing the book guide in question. Some artists are more represented than others. So if you can, I really recommend just finding the books at a bookstore and previewing their contents to see if it's a good fit.
Also, there is nothing wrong with copying an artist you admire for learning purposes. Doesn't need to be tracing, but doing things like, say, imitating how the artist does lineart, or how the artist draws in the anime eyes. I can see elements of my sisters' styles in my drawings, even though I've never made any conscious attempt to imitate them, so even just looking at other people's artwork can work to your advantage.

If you need a quick reference, Majnouna's (formerly cedarseed) tutorials have often helped me:
(these are gigantic jpg files, btw)
Human body: http://majnouna.com/creation/humantut.jpg
Hands: http://majnouna.com/creation/handstut.jpg
Feet: http://majnouna.com/creation/feettut.jpg

Quote from: LeaflameSD on March 04, 2013, 11:31:38 AM
@Kari: Don't you have a store geared towards Japanese entertainment in your area? In the UK anime and jargon is virtually invisible so... yeah.
Quote from: Chocofreak13 on March 04, 2013, 12:12:00 PM
what? no, of course not. what is this, New York? the closest thing to an anime shop in the area would be Harrison's Comics and Collectibles in The Mall of New Hampshire in Manchester (about a half hour from here by car, less without traffic). they sell both Anime goods and stuff from American Comics, but they have a rich collection. someone said they went out of business, but i don't believe it. i don't even habeeb it.

there's then Tokai, a Japanese good shop in Cambridge under my old school. they don't really sell anything that could be considered "entertainment", though, unless books and origami is counted. most of their wares are traditional Japanese goods, such as Yukata and Tea Ceremony stuff.

Star Music is in Chinatown in Boston (right across from the bus station i would come into every day!), but the majority of their stuff is Sanrio or Bootleg Items. then there's Otaku Shop and one or two other places, but the only place out of all of those you could even HOPE to find something like that at would be that video rental place i went to about 5 years ago, idk where it even is in china town or if it's still in business. @__@;
I am lucky to live here in California, where even people that aren't anime fans at least have a basic knowledge of what anime is. Once you go further east from the Pacific coast, it gets a little harder.

San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego all have a sizable Japanese population, along with the small businesses that cater to that population. We have Book-Off, Kinokuniya, J-List, Japanese grocery stores, and a number of other smaller specialty stores, some of which are indeed otaku-oriented. I doubt there are many places in the US where I could walk into a physical store and look at real, imported figures on the shelves.  Or aisles of old 80s/90s anime laserdiscs. Heck, sometimes people cosplay in the Japanese towns for no real reason.

But yeah, this is more the exception to the rule. Your options are indeed limited to conventions and big cities if you're looking for places to nerd out away from the computer, otaku-wise.
Quote from: Raffaele the Amigan on March 04, 2013, 12:30:59 PM
Hello girls and guys.

Unfortunately I had a TIA and I am in hospital since friday performing routine analisys course...
Howewer still alive and unique symptom is a minor problem with moving tongue and speaking... I was lucky...

Oh my, that's scary. I'm glad you're okay. Hope things get better for you. Stay healthy!

NejinOniwa

Man, sorry to hear, Raff. Something like that happening to me would make me paranoid as fuck >__>
YOU COULD HAVE PREVENTED THIS

Bella

Indeed. o____o

Anyway I was going through a beginner's Python tutorial when I saw this:
QuoteIf you are reading this book and flipping out at every third sentence because you feel I'm insulting your intelligence, then I have three points of advice for you:
    1.    Stop reading my book. I didn't write it for you. I wrote it for people who don't already know everything.
    2.    Empty before you fill. You will have a hard time learning from someone with more knowledge if you already know everything.
    3.    Go learn Lisp. I hear people who know everything really like Lisp.

tHE CATTINESS HAS MADE ME PHYSICALLY NAUSEOUS AND I don't think I'll be reading this guide since I don't like reading sass. Or rather, I don't think sass is proper in a LEARNING environment. Especially when it's a dig directed at another group of programmers. Specially-especially when it's a dig directed at another group of programmers who are traditionally stereotyped as arrogant.

That would be like opening up a guide on using Windows and seeing some bitchy comment about Unix / Linux / OS X users, like, whoa man can you not vent here please?