2008-02-22

More Ding!

A few weeks ago, one of my friends in WoW typed this in guild chat:


Well, this week Scott made that into a strip for Ding!

2008-02-02

Ding! is up!

You can view the first strip here. The female character in that strip is the one named after my Paladin, LilGalKills. Hisuji, from the second strip, is the name of one of the other officers in our guild, and a good friend of mine. In case you didn't know, Hitsuji means "sheep" in Japanese, and a Mage in WoW can polymorph enemies into sheep, making them lose control of their character for a short time. In the comic, Hitsuji "collects" enemy players.

There are 3 comics up right now, and more on the way. The third one, with the pumpkin, actually happened to our guild a few years ago. We raided an alliance area, and at one point we hid in a pumpkin. Anyone who looked would see that we didn't fit, but it surprisingly worked out for a while. Everyone was already in complete silly mode, so the whole thing generated far more laughter than it warrented. The last panel of that comic should have several giggles coming out of the pumpkin.

2008-02-01

Trying to 'asplain WoW to a non-player: Part 1 - Getting Gear

The short answer: Nothing else can provide so much entertainment for $15 a month. Very few things in my life can provide more joy or more frustration. Of course, the lows are usually me swearing at the screen and pounding my desk. The highs often result in me silently smiling at what I/We've done. If you have tried it and didn't enjoy it, there are good odds that you've been "presented" it in the wrong way, or you have already made up your mind that you wont like it, or a combination of the two.

The long answer: We need some term like "Muggle" to describe those who don't play. Maybe Wuggle? Does that mean anything that I'm not aware of? With my luck it's some slang that only those deep in the drug underground would know, and my blog is now being "watched" by the government.

Well, for all you wuggles out there, World of Warcraft (or WoW), is the single greatest creation in the history of mankind. Sliced bread truly sucks in comparison. The wheel is only a "meh" when placed next to this technological wonder. Over 10 million people play, about 1/4 of those are in the US. It works out to be about 1 in 120 people in the US that play WoW, and that number is rising. Each of those people pay $15 per month to continue playing. That works out to be about 150 Million dollars a month that Blizzard is making off this game. I would estimate that 80% of that is pure profit.

So, how do I convey the entertainment that Warcraft brings? I think we do it a disservice by thinking of it only as a game. I'm not saying that it isn't a game, nor am I saying that it's greater than a game. It's that this software can be so much more than a game. I think a better classification would be to call it a hobby. When people learn how much I play, they think it's kinda wierd. But those same people wouldn't think anything is wrong with the model railroad guy who spends just as much time working on this train set. Think of how many hours of TV the average American watches each day. I replace TV with WoW (but I still watch about 2 or 5 TV shows each week). I consider each of my characters as a project I am working on. I spend a lot of my play time trying to get better gear for them and perfecting how I control them.

That's not saying that everyone takes it at the same level. For some people, it really IS just a game. You play for a half hour, maybe 3 times a week. That kind of player may or may not ever see level 70 (the highest level in the game currently).

Other people have multiple 70's and have them geared up rather well with good armor and weapons. For those people, each character is the end result of dozens of hours of work. For example, I put about 300 hours, spread over a few months, into getting my latest character to level 70. And once you're 70, that's just the start. Now you have to get all your gear. And by the time you have that gear, Blizzard will have announced new content or a new expansion, and that means you can work to get more gear.

The way most people get gear is from running "instances" or "PvP".

"Instances" are special zones that have some computer controlled creatures for you to fight. These creatures sometimes drop "loot". The instances also have a few difficult to fight "bosses", which have much better loot, and at least one item is guaranteed to "drop", or be looted from them. But each boss has several items that may drop, and since they drop only one or two things each time they are killed, you may not get your desired item, even after many attempts.

PvP is another way to get loot. PvP stands for Player versus Player combat, and it is when you get to fight character controlled by another person, somewhere else in the world. Every time you defeat an enemy player, you receive "honor points". Honor can be spent like currency towards very nice equipment. There are designated areas that people can go to in order to participate in PvP combat. These areas are called Battlegrounds, and have objectives that can give bonus honor and/or help your team win the match. The smallest PvP battleground allows for 10 player on each team, and the largest allows for 40 players on each team. The encounters can result in 1 on 1 fights, or 40 on 40 battles. Sometimes it's incredibly fun, especially when some punk kid "jumps" you unexpectedly, but you are able to defeat him. Few tings are more exhilarating than coming out ahead when your opponent had every advantage.

I'll write up some more points in another post. I'll probably cover the crafting or social aspects of the game next, and have another post about the coordination required for some of the fights in various instances.

2008-01-19

Another 15 minutes of WoW fame

Thanks to my guild leader, my Blood Elf Paladin's name will be imortalized in his new web comic Ding!

The other day Scott asked me if he could use LilGalKills for the name of the Blood Elf Rogue in the comic. Of course I said yes. It should be starting soon, I'll make another post at that time.

2008-01-05

American Airlines

In regard to American Airlines allowing BAE Systems to test an anti-missle defense on test airliners:

"Fort Worth-based American, a unit of AMR Corp., has said anti-missile defense is best handled by stopping terrorists from getting missiles that could shoot down commercial jets and by improving security around airports."

That could be the most ignorant statement possible with regard to this situation. Both "solutions" are naieve.

The first aspect is considering how many shoulder launched missle systems are in the hands of underpaid soldiers in former-Soviet countries. If you aproached one of those units and said you'd pay 80,000 for a single launcher, what do you think they would do? 80k and all they have to say is that one was destroyed by a forklift in a warehouse, or in a training accident. This reeks of the same ignorance that thinks guns can be kept out of the hands of criminals.

The second, airport security, is full of dumb when you consider that these launchers have at least a 5 kilometer range. That includes straight up. So if they stood 10 miles from an airport, directly under an ingress path or holding area, they just have to point up, and any plane aproaching will be vulerable. This is a system that could easily be transported in a small car, truck, or even a motorcycle if the bad guys were bold enough.

American and BAE aren't using live flights or live weapons in the tests. Right now it's just testing the system to see if it can withstand the workload of an airliner. I presume one of the next steps will include a remotely-operated empty aircraft, and live missiles.

I do take my hat off to them for allowing these tests. But I can't help think American is getting some kickback for this. The DHS awarded this contract to BAE, and there is almost surely a provision in the contract that rewards airlines for participating.

BTW, I bet I jsut tricked Annie into reading this, just from the title.

2008-01-04

Iowa was funny!

Obama beat Hillary, Hahahahahaaaa! She couldn't even win the female voters, and that was supposed to be her core. Of course Iowa is just one state, but the political types seem to think it's a big deal, so I guess it is. They say New Hampshire could really solidify Obama as the lead Democrat, and I'd love that.

Tonight, as I read about his victory, I realized time that if he wins the Democratic nomination, for the first time in over 15 years, I won't be upset if a Democrat takes the office. This doesn't mean I'm voting for Obama, I'm still undecided and it will depend on the Republican candidate. But for once I won't be voting in an attempt to keep someone else OUT of office. It will be nice for a change.

However, if Hillary gets the nomination, I will definitely be voting Republican. I honestly don't think my vote will make a difference, but I'll be damned if I'm going to do nothing about it.

If you think about that last statement, it would really be wise for the Democrats to pick Obama as their choice. Republicans who are on the fence, may vote for him. But Democrats who would be on the fence with regard to Hillary would probably not be on the fence if Obama were a choice. I could see the sway go to the left, but not to the right.

2008-01-03

My 2007 CD

We did another album for Christmas, and as usual, I didn't get the print out done that I wanted to. I was going to have Kinko's print out a little booklet that would fit in a CD jewel case, but didn't prepare enough in advance. So I'm blogging about my track selection instead.

My 2007 Tracklist:
1. Tegan And Sara - The Con
2. Tegan And Sara - Dark Come Soon
3. TNP - Myriad Harbour
4. TNP - Adventures in Solitude
5. Silversun Pickups - Checkered Floor
6. Silversun Pickups - Little Lover's So Polite
7. Silversun Pickups - Dream At Tempo 119
8. PJ harvey - When Under Ether
9. Iron & Wine - Carousel
10. Iron & Wine - Innocent Bones
11. Iron & Wine - Wolves
12. Iron & Wine - Boy With A Coin
13. The White Stripes - 300 M.P.H. Torrential Outpour Blues
14. The White Stripes - Little Cream Soda
15. Led Zeppelin - In the Evening
16. Stevie Ray Vaughan - Little Wing
17. Aerosmith - Back Back Train


Now the details:
1. Tegan And Sara - The Con
This is just an incredible song, it shouldn't need explaining. Hands down my favorite song from this album. What I love most about it is the energy of the vocals, guitars, synthesizer and the drums. I think they could have even sped it up a few BPM more.

2. Tegan And Sara - Dark Come Soon
I added this song mostly to try to put something on the album that I thought would have a broader appeal to the rest of the family. The guitar it starts out with is interestingly simple and pleasant, the kind of fun picking style that mom likes.

3. TNP - Myriad Harbour
I can't explain what it is about this song that I like so much. The vocal cadence at the begining is intruiging to me. That caught my attention almost immediately. The "question and answer" (even though no questions are asked and no answers are provided) style of having the rest of the singers join in with the lead is another aspect of what I like about it. It's really difficult to describe actually. Just listen to it and enjoy it for whatever reasons you find.

4. TNP - Adventures in Solitude
This is a happy-sad kind of song. It has a sad sound, and describes welcoming back the veteran of a war who feels guilt for surviving when their friends did not. But it does so with the tone an understanding friend would use when they welcome you back. I think it's the empathy in the song that sells it for me.

5. Silversun Pickups - Checkered Floor
I picked 3 SSP songs from Carnavas that were not regular radio songs, not that I have much of an idea what's on the radio. I was really expecting Marianne or Clayton to have a few SSP songs on their albums. Had I known they wouldn't, I'd have put on about 8 SSP songs total. Maybe it's good that I didn't know. Carnavas is an amazing album. It falls into the very exclusive category of albums that I can listen to more than a half dozen times in a row without growing tired of. I usually only change from this album because I fear that I will grow tired of it.

6. Silversun Pickups - Little Lover's So Polite
It's just got a good tempo and energy. After looking up the lyrics, it may not be the best topic though. I still love it.

7. Silversun Pickups - Dream At Tempo 119
I'm confident that Brian (the lead singer) is at least partially insane. This song is my proof. But it makes me wish that more singers were insane.

8. PJ harvey - When Under Ether
I almost didn't include any PJ Harvey songs for fear of everyone thinking I'm wierd. Well, more odd than you currently think I am. PJ Harvey is the kind of singer that you probably won't like from one song. You have to listen to a few, prefereably an entire album, over and over, to come to appreciate fully. I picked the song that, in my opinion, was the most accessible. Yes, the other ongs on White Chalk were even more odd. This at least had a pretty piano part to it.

9. Iron & Wine - Carousel
Have you heard this song. If so, then you know why I included it. You wouldn't even need to know English to appreciate how great this one it. That brings up a good point, do you have any music that you appreciate without being able to understand? The frist that comes to mind for me is Beethoven's 9th. I've looked up a translation, but that one symphony makes me want to learn German.

10. Iron & Wine - Innocent Bones
Just a nice slow smooth song. Odd lyrics. I enjoy it, like Carousel, without needing to listen to the words at all. A really cool banjo part fits in perfectly without making it "Ozark". Of course I'm a sucker for the pretty, whispy, background vocals that his wife provides.

11. Iron & Wine - Wolves
If you don't like the beat of this song, I can forgive you, but will probably never like you more than I like a passing stranger. All kidding aside, it's just fun to listen to.

12. Iron & Wine - Boy With A Coin
See the notes for track 11. I really didn't intend to have 4 Iron & Wine songs on this disc, but after picking a few, I found it difficult to remove them.

13. The White Stripes - 300 M.P.H. Torrential Outpour Blues
This is a great example of a modern blues song. It starts slow, crecendo's as it builds to it's climax, and then backs off slowly as the song ends. I almost added "A Martyr For My Love For You" from the same album, but I couldn't verify if it was singing about an inapropriate relationship or not. He was either too old to be dating the girl that is the focus of the song, or he just didn't consider himself worthy of her. Another great song, but my first impression of it was the age issue, and I didn't want to creep anyone out.

14. The White Stripes - Little Cream Soda
This is a great example of what The White Stripes mean to me: lo-fi and loud, fast and fun.

15. Led Zeppelin - In the Evening
A classic from one of Led Zeppelin's later albums "In Through The Out Door". I almost took this song off to make room for something more modern, then slapped myself for ever considering such a crime against classic rock.

16. Stevie Ray Vaughan - Little Wing
This is possibly my favorite SRV song ever. And this is easily my favorite version of his take on the Jimmy Hendrix classic (he has at least 3 versions of this song). If you listen to it, really listen, you can feel the sorrow bleed from his guitar.

17. Aerosmith - Back Back Train
A few years ago Aerosmith put out a mediocre album of electric blues. On that album was this gem (and at least one other song that made the album worth buying). This is electric blues at it's best; mean, dirty, and loud. It has an aural "momentum" to it, you feel like the song has the energy and innevitability of a train bearing down on you. Whatever the outcome of that approach, the train passes you as the song decrecendo's on it's way to another victim.

2007-12-29

Lyrics

A-Z Lyrics is a pretty cool lyric site. It's not overloaded with ads like so many other sites. Seems to be largely user edited, so it may not always be correct, but it should be good enough for anyone who's already consigned themseves to a lyrics site.

2007-12-14

My guild seriously rules

Today, on our 4th attempt, we got Al'ar to 2% before he enraged and wiped us. We have come so far so fast. We have all of Serpentshrine Cavern (SSC) clear except for Lady Vashj. And by the end of January I expect to have SSC and Tempest Keep (TK) on farm, and making shots at Mount Hyjal. I'm very proud of our raiders. Don't tell them I said that.

A while back, when we were struggling, I asked a friend in a more advanced guild, what he thought we were missing, what we could change to possibly do better. His answer was kinda funny: "You're all too nice, you need a 'bad guy' sometimes".

He was right, we have always been too accommodating, and our members were taking advantage of almost no repercussion for poor performance. In response to this, I decided to play the bad cop. I really like it actually. If the raid doesn't seem to have enough focus, I get mean and make it know they had better perform. It's an interesting little amateur psychology experiment seeing how people react to being yelled at for performance in a video game. About 90% of the time, they start performing substantially better.

If people screw up with anything other than legitimate mistakes, I rip them apart. I was once so mean that I got a guild member to quit the guild on the spot, and about a week later, the game. In my defense, he was being superbly stupid, and nobody really liked the guy. His mistake was that he was trying to save his own life, at the cost of EVERYONE else in the raid, including himself. I definitely overreacted, and in hindsight, should have handled it differently. And I've learned from that.

But our guild is now progressing rapidly, and it feels good to make significant steps forward. We should have people in full tier 5 soon, and a few pieces of tier 6 not long afterwards.

2007-12-07

Crazy work hours

I work from 1 am to 9:30 am, which are hours I love. Wednesday through Sunday, with Monday and Tuesday off. But it leads to some oddities.

It's really strange to drive to Beatos for lunch, and pass a few of those insane early morning joggers. Here my day is half over, and they are doing the 5 am complete-lack-of-common-sense-jog. Do they know it's 5 am? I feel an urge to purchase some inexpensive watches to hand out so they don't have to exercise at such stupid times. And it's winter! You should see them all bundled up, moreso than I've sometimes prepared for snowboarding.

Another wierd part of working these hours is my interaction with other humans. Of paramount importance is how this schedule affects World Of Warcraft (WoW). What I do is go to bed soon after work (ok, so I will usually do the PvP-daily and then go to bed). Then I get up at about 6 pm on raiding nights (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday), and run an instance with the guild (BTW, we are now on Vashj!) Then, after the raid, I will try to get another 1-3 hours of sleep before work. It really feels like I'm living just to work and play WoW, which is a shame. I should just be living to play WoW. I need a "sugar mama" to facilitate my need to play WoW unhindered. Or maybe find some way to play WoW professionally, and then I can have a normal wife. Of course, I don't want a "normal" wife, I want a wife that plays. We have a few couples in our guild that play together. It's seriously full of win.

Sadly, one of my days off (Tuesday morning) is on WoW weekly maintenance. That's 7 hours, in the middle of my "day", that the servers are offline. It's seriously boring. I usually play Guild Wars or organize music or something. The real problem is that servers come back online just about the time I should be starting to sleep. "But my arena points just rolled over! I can't go to bed NOW!" This leads to miserable Wednesdays at work.

But one of the nice aspects of this life is that when I get off work, everything is open. All the stores, banks, etc. So it's really easy to get chores done, I just do them after work, and I have the entire "normal" workday to get them done. It's like potentially having every day off in that regard (if I'm willing to sacrifice sleep, which I am). And even though I work on Sunday, all I have to do is go home and put on a tie, then I'm ready for church. But often I go home and fall asleep, unintentionally or not.

All in all it's a great schedule for me. The positives outweigh the negatives, and it's uncommon which makes life interesting.

2007-12-02

Harry Potter

Driving to work today, it was cold and the ground was misty, like a low fog was rolling through. I immediately knew what this meant.... DEMENTORS!
So that means I finally finished the Harry Potter series. Really good books, though I didn't read them, I listened to the entire series on my iPod.
My first experience with Harry Potter was from the first movie, and in hindsight, that was unfair to the series. After finishing each audiobook, I would watch it's associated movie, and they really don't do justice. Such is the case with most books converted to movie.
As good as the books are, there are lots of issues that I have with them. The first is with Harry. He's too emo. Although he's portrayed overall as being fiercely loyal, his faith in his friends and family falters too far and too often for my taste. James (his father) and Albus Dumbledore seem to bear the brunt of this more than most. There are points in the 6th book that Harry goes so far as to hate Dumbledore (even with all the failed occlumancy and other external influences aside). There were times I just wanted to slap the little punk. You can't have it both ways. You can't have a young man with amazing strength of character that later loses all faith in one of his dearest friends. I would have preferred if he dealt with his misgivings in a less "emo" way. This was just a way of trying to show that he's "human".
Rowling uses "incredulous" far too often, by the 5th book it was bugging me. She seems to have backed off the word a bit at the 7th book. I also didn't like how dreary most of the 7th book was. I know this was meant to be a dark time for the series, but it was too much. Maybe this was partly due to the change in narrator that I had for this last book. My greatest problem with the books was my own idiot fault. I kept reading Wikipedia articles to get more information about things that I had missed or misunderstood, and kept reading spoilers. So I highly recommend that nobody read anything until done with all the books.
My favorite characters were Luna, Ginny (3rd book and later), and most of all, Kreacher the house elf. I think to really appreciate this character, you would HAVE to listen the Jim Dale (the US audiobook) narration of the Order Of The Phoenix. There were times when I laughed out loud. His voice was PERFECT, and his mumblings were even better. If I had read the books, I would not have done Kreacher the justice that Jim Dale did him.
I can't say enough good things about Jim Dale's work on the audiobooks. He has a very good range, with few character voices "overlapping" in traits (the younger characters being the rare exception). For book 7, I listened to the British audiobook narrator, Stephen Fry, and was rather disappointed. Hermione sounded a bit like Ron, almost every adult female sounded the same, and Kreacher wasn't nearly as fun to listen to. I would go so far as to say that Jim Dale is probably responsible for 40% of my enjoyment of the series. Had I listened to the first audiobook narrated by Fry, I might not have gone on to the second audiobook.
So, if any of you are interested, I've got the first 6 books by Jim Dale, and book 7 by Stephen Fry, that I could get to you (all in digital formats). I'm going to try to get book 7 by Jim Dale as well. I really need to listen to Kreacher's part in that book done properly.

2007-10-30

WoW on Linux

I was able to get World Of Warcraft running under W.I.N.E. under Ubuntu Linux v7.10 tonight (this morning). In OpenGL mode it looks as good as it does under Windoze. But I still don't have audio working right now. Hope to get that going after work later today.

2007-10-21

More about the new jorb

Ok, so the description that I previously gave about my new job is a bit off. The equipment that I'm supporting is NetApp storage systems. I'll be a support tech for OnTap storage devices. These are computers that manage large hard drives for companies that need a lot of storage (several terabytes), and needs it to be very fast (firbre channel drives) and very safe (fast backups and restores, mirrored servers). They run an OS very similar to Unix, but the OS will not be the focus of the support. The OnTap software is what most calls will be about.

Some of NetApp's clients include the US government, Yahoo (mail), Google, and the LDS church (genealogy). The portion of the market that they cover is the mid-high end. They don't try for the absolute top-end, nor do they focus on the lower end.

I work directly for Convergys. NetApp will be sending us support calls, and NetApp is doing the first 3 weeks of the 5 week training. The training that I'm getting now is very valuable, so I'm really excited. This sort of experience is very desirable for many employers. And I will probably take the certification tests at some point in the future.

2007-10-03

I got the job

I got the job, I got the job, I got the job, I got the job, I got the job, I got the job!

It pays double what I'm making now, so I'll go from barely being able to live, to having some extra cash left over after bills are paid.

2007-10-02

My boss thinks I'm destitute

So, at work I've mentioned more than once that the current job isn't paying the bills. I did this in order to set my co-workers and bosses up for my eventual departure, but today I realized that my boss thinks it's worse than it really is. Embarrassment is when your boss offers to share her lunch so you can save money.

But you have to know her to fully understand the situation. For family members, imagine my mom in her place. There you have it. She even looks about the same. So the offer was with genuine compassion, the way a mother would care for her child. She really does seem to consider all of her employee's not unlike her children.

Anyways, I have an interview tomorrow that could lead to a better paying job. This job is for Unix tech support, so it will look better on a resume. Wish me luck.

2007-09-18

Most embarrassing way to lose a job

We had a guy work with us for about 2 weeks. He asked us to call him "Thorn". We found out soon that His 'full' name was "Thorn Briar". This is not the name his parents gave him, it's the name he and his D&D friends use when they play Dungeons and Dragons. Yes, old-school D&D without a computer. Nerds sitting around a table spinning a tale of adventure!

He was rarely seen without his D&D "sourcebook", which is a book about the size of a large magazine, that outlines all the rules. He claims that anything you can imagine actually exists. He also claims to regularly have out-of-body experiences, and is working on personal levitation through rigorous meditation. When he was young, he turned into a white Siberian tiger and mauled a friend so bad that the friend nearly died. Oh, and he claims to be a "Pixie". Maybe he meant to infer that he was a member of the 80's-90's alternative band.

Anyways, Thorn had BO that would gag a European teenager! This guy was rank. You couldn't be within 10 feet of him without wanting to move. Tabletop gamers, and to some extent all gamers, are notorious for not bathing enough.

So, our boss politely asked him to bathe, which he did, and the next day was fine. But that was possibly the last time he cleaned himself. About a half week later he was punishing our noses again. So the boss told him that he has to bathe regularly, which he refused to do, so he was asked not to return.

I thought that his reason for no longer working there was stupid office rumor, but two days ago we were talking about him with the boss, and it was confirmed.

Now I know that I'm not entirely "mainstream". I embrace the title of "gamer". But how out of touch with reality do you have to be to not have social basics down, like bathing?

2007-09-17

Greeceland


I wore my "Greece" shirt on Friday. Not a single person laughed or commented on it. Do none of them know the Union Jack, or is my shirt not as funny as I think it is?

2007-09-06

Ding!

My mage ding'd 70 a few days ago. This makes 5 World Of Warcraft characters at level 70 now.

Lunch at work

At work today, I ate lunch outside with some of the employee's. One of the ladies there is in her mid 20's, has been married about 6 years, and is expecting her first child. She's due in January, and has only been "showing" for the last week or two.

About a week ago I got the impression that I should say something nice about her looks. You see, her complexion has broken out recently due to the hormonal changes she's going through, and I could tell by the way she dresses and carries herself that she is feeling self-conscious about her appearance. I didn't say anything, for fear of sounding flirty towards a married woman. Now I know a possible reason for that impression.

Last night, her husband told her something along the line of not being attracted to her anymore. Both her complexion and her weight gain were reasons, with other possible reasons. I guess it was the second time he's done so.

When I got outside, one of the other ladies said "let's ask Adam and see what a man thinks". So I was asked by one of the other ladies if it's ok for a man to say something like that to his expecting wife. I said "of course not", and then went on, hopefully redeeming myself for not acting a week earlier.

I sad that I feel that I've been given a gift. I can see the beauty in almost anything. Not just that, but I can see through things that might otherwise hide beauty. I told her that no matter what her pregnancy may do to her body, she has a beautiful face and an attractive figure. Her husband just may be one of the guys that can't see past those things.

She started balling after that, and one of the ladies consoled her. I presume she cried because she was appreciative of the comment or moody, and not because she was again mad at her husband. I didn't feel like I had crossed any line of decency, so I'm chalking it up as having done something nice.

2007-07-31

Work

So, not one of the many resumes or interviews that I've gone on have worked out. I blame you all for not praying enough for me.

Now that culpability has been established, I'm not giving up on getting a good job, but I've had to pick up temp work to pay the bills. I went to Manpower, a temp agency, to fill out an app and see what they had. Let me make this clear, Manpower doesn't mess around. About 10 minutes after filling out the application, they were telling me about my new assignment that I would report to the following morning. I was expecting a few days at least.

The job is simple manufacturing for a craft company in Orem, QuicKutz. The work is bearable, and the people are nice. But the time is horrid! Work starts at the inhumane hour of 7 in the morning! That means I have to get up at about 6. Six AM for a gamer is about the equivalent of 2 AM for the rest of you. A half hour lunch means we are done at 3:30 PM. At least that leaves me a good chunk of the day to game like humans are meant to.

Oh, and my Druid hit 70 last week, so this should also be a "ding" post. Most of you wont understand that last sentence, and I encourage those who don't know to research for yourself what it means. A lvl 70 Druid is very fun to play. You should all try it sometime.