|

|

Content

0 comments

Photoshop



So, after a long time of admiring the work of people I didn't know, I decided that it was time I made my own wallpaper. You know, Alias style. Because, frankly, those are the only pictures I have.

So, wandering around aimlessly clicking buttons in Adobe Photoshop 7 I managed to make this wallpaper. It's my second attempt... and judging from the improvement after the first... I'd go so far as to say I'm actually getting the hang of this.

Anyway, think of this as a before and after. One day, I'll post another wallpaper and you can all look back to this and see how crude it was.

Ps. I tried to upload the picture as the original size (wallpaper size) but Photobucket won't let me. So all you out there who are dying to make Michael your desktop background, you'll just have to get me to send you the file. Please, please... no need to push and shove. You'll all get your turn, just form a nice line to my right.
Read more »
0 comments

Sly

Oh, Sylvester.

/shakes head

Sylvester and I haven’t known each other all that long. It’s been a little over a year since this Dell was FedEx’d into my life and in that short time we’ve had a fair amount of trauma.

I take full responsibility for the first incident. It was my clumsiness that resulted in his premature gutting and refacing… but he was “as good as new!”

After the Cider Slider we’ve had a few hiccups. Mostly along the lines of frozen screens and burnt wrists. Maybe I ask too much of him. I know he’s not a gaming machine, and I certainly have learned that he needs his cool-down time… and sometimes I deny him that. But, in the end, I feel that what I take from him I more than return in appreciation and adoration.

So why am I here today writing my blog on Ryan’s computer? Why has he failed me?

If only I knew.

It started as a few error screens on start-up. Then, yesterday, a day like any other, he froze and I rebooted. The error screen returned but this time – it wouldn’t start. Nine, ten successive restarts resulted in a variety of blank screens, error messages and prompts… but never anything past the desktop wallpaper. Once I saw a mouse, but couldn’t make it dance. And so, the good people of Dell were notified.

I’m not exactly sure what was happening on the other end of the phone line but from where I was sitting I got the impression that Ryan was talking to a dog.

“No,” he said loudly and clearly.

“No. NO.”

There would be noise on the other end and then Ryan would respond just as forcefully, “yes.”

I think I liked it better when you just had to press numbers.

The phone did a few basic tricks and we were all rewarded with the entrance of Sandra.

English is not Sandra’s first language and computer is not mine. I assure you that if I had to deal with this without Ryan’s assistance it would be frightful at best. After managing to communicate our issue, Sandra told Ryan to reboot and press a series of keys which resulted in some odd diagnostic screen that I didn’t know existed. It’s as if he delved into the depths of Sly and found a side I had yet to dust off. At first I was impressed… but then came the test.

Sandy instructed Ryan to run some sort of test of the hard drive to check for errors. She informed him that it could take 25-30 minutes and so he should put her on speaker-phone and go about his business. We thought this was a little odd, but did as instructed, moving about the room as ghosts in the night as the phone sat on the desk – a microphone. When Ryan wanted my attention he would clear his throat and motion to me. I’d head across the room and he’d whisper in my ear, anxious not to let Sandra hear our business. After about thirty minutes her voice broke through the silence.

“Hello, Sir. Sir, are you there?”

Ryan jumped up and snatched the phone, informing Sandra that we were only 9% into the test.

“Yes,” she confirmed, “takes long time. Relax. Put on speaker-phone.”

We did as instructed – or as close as we could come to relaxing with the phone sitting ominously on the desktop, connecting us with Sandra’s ear.

Thirty minutes later:

“Hello, Sir. Sir, are you there?”

This test was not progressing as quickly as we had been told it would. She informed us that it takes time and she would wait. Ryan suggested that maybe since this looked like it was going to take hours we would get her number and call her when it was done. Apparently, the instruction manual does not allow her to abandon the customer mid-test.

This went on until about four in the morning and the three of us were on edge. Ryan tried again to ask Sandra if perhaps he could go to bed and call her in the morning. She told him that she wanted to give it fifteen more minutes and then we would reevaluate the situation.

“Get comfortable. Get coffee,” she suggested.

A while later, we reevaluated and she decided to let us go to bed. She said she would call us back in the morning.

“What time I call?”

“How about ten pacific?”

“Earlier.”

“Eight?”

“You be awake?”

“Yeah, we’ll get up.”

“It is four in the morning?”

“Yeah, it is.”

She told us she’d call at eight to check on the status of the test and we thankfully headed to bed.

It’s a little before nine and the test has finally concluded but Sandra has not called and the extension she gave us is “no longer in service.”

Again, Ryan speaks to the dog.

“No. NO. No. Yes. No.”

We’ve got human life now and from what I can hear it speaks fluent English. He’s clicking buttons and now yet another side of Sylvester is revealed. Who knew he had so many sides.

HOLD.

THE.

PHONE.

The prompt that just hit the screen actually made my stomach churn.

“Press OK to continue. All data will be lost. If you do not wish to continue Cancel now.”

/weep openly

Mr. All American Tech Support has cavalierly stated that we are to continue with the restoration.

There’s a buzzing in my head and a sickness forming in my stomach. I can’t think of anything on my computer that I’m going to miss, and I’m wondering if it’s some sort of defense mechanism. Perhaps I’ve erased the existence of anything pertinent that I may have created in the past year.

Yeah, it was a defense mechanism.

It’s all flooding back.

I don’t feel so good.

In the background I hear Ryan telling Techie that he works in the entertainment industry and that he’s headed to law school… I’d ask wth he’s doing but I need to get back in bed.

Oh, Sylvester.
Read more »
0 comments

Creepy

Hey everyone check out www.creepshow3.com and see Creepy!Ryan.... you can even set his ugly mug as your desktop wallpaper.
Read more »
0 comments

Give to the Needy

'Tis the season to be jolly -- and to get into a virtual fist fight with your virtual friends.

Don't act surprised... and don't act like you're above it. I'm not the only person in the world who has a friend they've never met. Please. This is the 21st century. E-Friends are human too!

And yes, like all relationships, you have your ups, your downs and your all-out-brawls.

Last night my friend and I had a little spat. Apparently -- according to Mr. Suddenly Turned Psychologist (who shall heretofore be referred to as Bob, to preserve anonymity) -- my disposition is "affected negatively" by Ryan’s absence. No, I couldn't get him to elaborate on that. Bottom line: he thinks I’m codependent. Well, duh Bob, duh. I’m a needy person with an unendurable hatred of solitude who requires constant maintenance and attention. I know it, and lord knows Ryan does too. Yeah, it’s a flaw – but you’re not supposed to point it out!

Anyway, my point is not to get into our fight, but to discuss why I believe internet relationships are more tumultuous than "real" relationships - especially ones involving me.

What it comes down to is really one simple word - sarcasm. Sarcasm, though an invaluable tool, must be used with extreme caution when carrying on a virtual conversation. It seems that it's a bit hard to determine when it is being applied if it is delivered in text. This puts me, a student of the School of Sarcasm, at a severe disadvantage when communicating electronically. I cannot effectively use my greatest weapon... and it gets me into trouble. It seems that sometimes when I'm being sarcastic, people don't know that I am not being serious. This leads to a cacophany of miscommunication, hurt feelings and other things you should not have to deal with as a result of an attempt to be funny.

My options are either to stop the sarcasm in its entirety, write [sarcasm] and [/sarcasm] around every sentence I type, or to just do it and deal with the aftermath. The first option would result in a very dull version of E-Allie, the second would just pour a cold bucket of water on all of my comedy and the third has turned out to be quite a lot of maintenance.

Hey… maybe this is what it’s like to be Ryan…

Maybe Santa will put Sarcasm Font in my stocking...
Read more »
1 comments

Yar

Um... totally disappointed in you people. I know you lurk. Where are your slang sentences? Hmm???

Adam - dude. Appreciate the effort but your sentence made no sense. Nice work on the incorrect spelling though... that was right on.

Ryan and I are headed back to Oregon for the holidays... and I'm afraid. Not of being home. Of the drive. I fear driving.

I used to be a good driver - I swear I did. Driving around in lil' old Shadow I was outdriven only by Lauren and Mario himself (Andretti, not Kart). Then I got the 4Runner. And, let the record reflect, I loved the 4Runner. We were buddies, pals. All was fine and dandy until that fateful afternoon when I got in an accident. Man, was that a ride.

Picture if you will...

Me, Ryan and Ryan's girlfriend at the time, Kelly. Ryan and Kelly were in a fight. This made our little roadtrip up to Spokanne in the dead of winter even chillier. They were not speaking with one another, nor were they speaking with me. Ryan, however, paid me the courtesy of writing an apology on the back of a receipt. There we were, driving along... then ice, slide, cars... blah blah blah crunch.

It shook me to the core.

I couldn't even fully appreciate the cliched plumbers crack that the tow-truck driver was sporting.

That's how messed up I was.

Anyway, after that I lost all confidence -- a horrible thing to happen to a driver --the following years were filled with much jumping of curbs. (Never could handle those corners...)

This inability to drive has stuck with me, and as a result I have Ryan drive everywhere. Even if he's just running in somewhere and it would be so much easier if I just dropped him off and circled the block... he drives.

In an effort to get back into the swing of things we tried the circle-the-block technique yesterday. I drove the mile and a half to his bank and circled while he used the ATM. I think I got two, 'Um...go's, one 'what are you doing', an 'any day now' and one 'you honestly don't know how to get there from here' all before we hit the bank.

Stellar.

Needless to say he has decided we'll go back to him driving.

But this brings me back to why I'm scared. We're taking two cars to Oregon... and I'm driving one of them. All the way. Straight.

YAR.

/crosses fingers

Scared yet?
Read more »
2 comments

Allie's E-Slang Dictionary

Odds are you already know the meanings of the basics – w00t, brb, wtg, stfu, afk – so we’ll cut to the lesser knowns. If there are any words out there that I don't touch on and you'd like defined... just let me know.

ftw
abbr. for the win.
When something gives the winning edge.

Famous quote: “Cold milk ftw.” – David Basulto

gah
interj.
Used to express displeasure or disappointment.

Famous qutoe: “Gah!” – Ryan Carty

gank
v. ganked, ganking
To steal or take unjustly.

Famous quote: “Help tehy ganking me!” – Anon.

haxxorz
v.
To hack or cheat.
n.
A hack or cheat.
Commonly used when addressing someone who is frequently winning things.

*The xxorz suffix can be added to any words ending in ck. Suxxorz, Roxxorz.

heh
interj.
1. Used to humor people who like to talk. A filler.
2. A sarcastic laugh.

n00b (noob, newb)
n.
Someone who is inexperienced or makes a rookie mistake.

pwn
v. pwned, pwnage
To come out on top. To win.

roar (rar, wraa)
interj.
Used to express elation or excitement.

Famous quote: “Can I get a /ROAR?” – Thaddeus

soga
interj.
Used to express understanding.



Now that you have a bit more vocab… try applying it. Make sure to use abbreviations whenever possible – and for an added bonus try misspelling here and there. Grammatical errors a must. To express emotion, preface the verb with a backslash.

Example: “i r the suck. ganked by a n00b. /shame.”

Go ahead and give it a try in the Comments section.
Read more »

The Fam

Ryan and Allie
Cael | 10
Finn | 8
Declan | 6

|

|
Powered by Blogger.

:)

:)

Search This Blog

Blog Archive