You're a bloody puppet! You're a wee little puppet man!

Spike ,'Smile Time'


Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?  

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Allyson - Aug 09, 2005 9:06:30 pm PDT #3942 of 10003
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

So I should write all this shit down, then?


Ginger - Aug 10, 2005 2:39:52 am PDT #3943 of 10003
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Do the batteries last longer, now? I find mine drains after ten minutes, right now, because you know, old.

My cellphone is ancient, but I like it. When it started not holding a charge, I went to Batteries Plus and got it a new battery and now it's fine.


evil jimi - Aug 10, 2005 3:17:14 am PDT #3944 of 10003
Lurching from one disaster to the next.

I got this teeny Motorola C115 for $39.95 with $30 of call credit. Of course, Vodafone ran out of the phones within a few weeks and aren't getting any more in. Plus, in Australia, so not as much help to Allyson as one might think.


§ ita § - Aug 10, 2005 3:55:57 am PDT #3945 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

So I should write all this shit down, then?

That's safest.

And Ginger has a good point -- replacing the battery (I've never done it with a mobile, and when I did it with my cordles the phones ate the new one too anyway, so I replaced the whole thing).


§ ita § - Aug 10, 2005 4:16:59 am PDT #3946 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

The Fallacy of "Logical" Design -- or why no one changes settings on their digital cameras. The guy has a point -- some of these things are so very far away, and can't be done while you're looking through the viewfinder.


DXMachina - Aug 10, 2005 4:29:39 am PDT #3947 of 10003
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Also, if the options are hidden away in menus, you may never realize you have them. If there's a knob on the side of the camera, you at least know it must do something. Curiosity is piqued. Learning follows.

It's also makes it easier to know when you've accidently changed a setting. I used to get frustrated with my Olympus digital because the photos were often really dark. When I finally got around to investigating the menus, I discovered that on some previous foray into the menus I must have accidently changed the exposure compensation, because it was set two or three stops off normal. The knob on my Minolta SLR would've told me that at a glance.


§ ita § - Aug 10, 2005 4:40:01 am PDT #3948 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I am looking forward to buying myself a digital SLR for Christmas/my birthday, for much of that reason. There will still be a bit of a menu hell, but being able to experiment quickly (why not take four variations on the picture quickly, especially if you can evaluate them right there?) will be great.


sj - Aug 10, 2005 4:43:43 am PDT #3949 of 10003
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Is there an easy way to transfer saved e-mails from one e-mail provider to another?


Sue - Aug 10, 2005 5:03:36 am PDT #3950 of 10003
hip deep in pie

I do use the options on my digital camera, but they are a pain. And Manual would be used a whole lot more if there were knobs and dials instead of menus.

There's a kind of muscle memory that happens when I use by SLR for the first time in a while. Sometimes my fingers start adjusting the dials before my brain has remembers where the dials are.


Jesse - Aug 10, 2005 6:34:31 am PDT #3951 of 10003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Random question -- I have a ~4 year old Dell laptop that doesn't work all that well. Would someone buy it for parts? If so, how much would they pay? It's just occurred to me that instead of having it sit in my living room, I could try to sell it on craigslist.