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drunk asian neighbor posted:remember when memes were still called image macros? Memes can spread through image macros, but memes are the message and image macros are the medium. Trust me; I'm an epimemeticist.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 11:46 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:42 |
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Correct all image macros are memes but not all memes are image macros you goddamn newb
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 11:48 |
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thathonkey posted:all image macros are memes I just made three image macros in MS Paint and then deleted them. Were they memes?
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 11:50 |
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Technically yeah
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 11:53 |
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Who remembers the SA created BF1942 mod where you could ride rockets and segways? Good times
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 12:17 |
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if a meme falls in the woods is it rare
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 12:57 |
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BelgianWaffle posted:Who remembers the SA created BF1942 mod where you could ride rockets and segways? It was a rocket jesus statue that shot lasers from his eyes. I think it was called the total retardation mod
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 14:22 |
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the act of making and disseminating an image macro is a meme, and certain image macro templates are memes, and referring to image macros as "memes" is a meme, and every second i am alive is torment.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 14:48 |
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And we have Dick Dorkins to thank for the word 'meme' getting traction. So gently caress him, again.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 14:49 |
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feedmegin posted:I miss just the base Battlefield 1942. It had a goofy lack of seriousness the modern ones don't, and you could sail around in battleships! Fabulousity posted:Battlefield 1942 was magical. I'll admit that's some nostalgia speaking but the other half is the pure chaos of a server crumbling while dozens of idiots on 56k modems dangle off of it. Exactly what makes it wonderful and the best game. the simple physics and vehicle system are a hoot. I think that is what EA intended to do with Battlefield Heroes. I was a beta tester for BF: Heroes, they took it just a little too far though and it wasn't nearly the same. Buttcoin purse posted:Nice! Are those like glasses you can't see through or something? I just had a PC version of this so never knew it came with so much stuff! Yes, those are the peril sensitive sunglasses. Mine are broken it seems, they are stuck in peril mode. You'd be surprised how much info they fit in that little book its ~500 pages. I dug mine up last night, probably haven't looked in this thing for 20+ years now. It's a 3rd edition from 1993 so I either got an updated one at some point or got it later than I remember. The hard drive spec section is ~90 pages of very small print. There are some names in there that I've long since forgotten. The PC Industry Phone Book is ~150 pages, and there are allot of companies in it that are long gone now. As I was leafing through it I literally when I found the 3/4 page dedicated to just phone numbers at Word Perfect Corp. I even found notes I'd scrawled in it with model numbers, jumper settings, The BBS phone number for NEC and two file names that I needed to download at some point apparently. Last night I also dug out my Battlefield 1942, Road to Rome Add On, and Secret Weapons Add On CDs and installed them. After using the patches I found here: http://answers.ea.com/t5/Battlefield-1942/Battlefield-1942-on-Windows-10-64-Bit-System-Won-t-launch/m-p/4708890#U4708890 Everything ran perfectly and I found that there are still ~100 servers out there. I installed Forgotten Hope 0.7 and at first the maps wouldn't load but, I found a patch here http://megagames.com/download/309082/0 that fixed it. I just did the compatibility patch did need the wide screen fix as that seems to work fine. The FH Mod graphics still looks pretty awesome even by today's standards I must admit. If that wasn't enough a quick Google turned up forum post some one made just yesterday that they had put up a FH server because they couldn't find one in the U.S. anymore. When I connected to it there were 6 players already on it. Played for about an hour and a half, smooth as silk. Sitzkrieg FH .7 Server IP: 216.244.76.132 Port: 14567 I am living the dream baby!!! FU Battlefield4!! I got battleships!! seriously, if you've still got the CD's you should load it up and play. Ziptar has a new favorite as of 15:19 on Feb 11, 2016 |
# ? Feb 11, 2016 15:12 |
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mng posted:And we have Dick Dorkins to thank for the word 'meme' getting traction. Though at least he doesn't pronounce it "Me-Me".
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:23 |
Ziptar posted:Yes, those are the peril sensitive sunglasses. Mine are broken it seems, they are stuck in peril mode. I got bad news for you, they're working just fine
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:28 |
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My old boss pronounced them "mims" and nobody ever corrected him. Boy was that fun.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:29 |
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computer parts posted:Though at least he doesn't pronounce it "Me-Me". Uuuuuggghhhh, I know a guy who does this, and I don't understand why EDIT: Wait, no, he actually says 'meh-meh', which I think we can all agree is worse.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:39 |
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When I was but a wee child, my parents had one of the precursors to the "for dummies" book. It was something like "PC Building and Repair For Beginners". It was about two inches thick, and the chapters went like this: * Chapter 1: This is a computer. It draws power and can play solitare. * Chapter 2: This is the monitor which is discrete from the actual computer. Do not call them the same or you are a dummy. * Chapter 3: Setting hardware IRQs and the BIOS interrupt table for writing device drivers.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:41 |
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insta posted:
More often then not, almost without exception, every single person whose computer I worked on back in the day referred to it as "My CPU" or "The CPU". For a brief period I tried to explain it to them but, it was pointless.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:46 |
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Oh, yeah. I had a teacher who wouldn't let us use the classroom computers at the time because she turned on just the monitor and got the "no signal input" message (while it sat on the horizontal-form-factor Gateway PII-233 underneath it). I was heralded as a computing genius TWO WEEKS later when I finally poked the power button on the chassis when she wasn't guarding them. My point about the book chapters was mostly that it went 1,2,10 in terms of complexity. I actually used the interrupt table in the back to write a 'mouse driver' in QBasic.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 16:59 |
I don't know what it was about the customers at that old ISP I worked at, but without exception they were all coming from AOL, and without exception they all called it "American Online". Not America, American. Not a single one ever said it right. It drove me bugfuck wondering where they were all getting this from, like they were all issued a book on How To Internet, 1993 Edition that they read cover to cover. I presumed there was a chapter on going into USENET groups and posting "me too". E: One lady actually said she was on "American Airlines"; maybe that's a clue
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 17:23 |
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Ziptar posted:More often then not, almost without exception, every single person whose computer I worked on back in the day referred to it as "My CPU" or "The CPU". For a brief period I tried to explain it to them but, it was pointless. In the dark days of my beginnings in IT doing desktop support I had several people who would refer to their tower case (which was usually on the floor) as "the hard drive"
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 17:43 |
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My IT friend once had someone hand him a CRT monitor believing that was the "computer"
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 17:48 |
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Stop it, you're giving me traumatic flashbacks to my phone support days, desperately trying to explain to the nurse that you have to hold the power button on the computer to force it to turn off after a bluescreen and they repeatedly just turn their monitor off and on because they don't know what the box under the desk is for
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:04 |
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What do I do with this confounded foot petal? I got this question a couple of times. They were, of course, referring to the mouse.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:08 |
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OOPS, wrong thread.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:09 |
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The first time I encountered any kind of DRM was a copy of the Settlers I borrowed from a friend. The manual had sequences of runes or symbols on each page, and every time you fired the game up it would prompt you to enter rune 2 from page 19, rune 1 from page 30, and so on until it was satisfied. The only other one I remember was Earthbound I think, which would let you progress pretty far and then delete your save.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:17 |
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kecske posted:The first time I encountered any kind of DRM was a copy of the Settlers I borrowed from a friend. The manual had sequences of runes or symbols on each page, and every time you fired the game up it would prompt you to enter rune 2 from page 19, rune 1 from page 30, and so on until it was satisfied. I always liked the games that would get creative about it if you failed. Like the code wheel for good old Starflight: If you put in the wrong code when you launch your spaceship, a little while later the Interstel Corporate Police would catch up to you. They'd give you one more chance to put in a valid code, and if you fail that they'd blow you out of the sky. In the same kind of thing, Gold Rush! would have you look up a word in the manual, and if you got it wrong, your character got hanged for claim-jumping before the game exited back to DOS.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:33 |
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I think Earthbound let you get to the last boss then it would declare you a pirate.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:35 |
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Turdsdown Tom posted:for me that was those guys couldn't use an irc client
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:44 |
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Powered Descent posted:I always liked the games that would get creative about it if you failed. Like the code wheel for good old Starflight: The issue with that is the same issue with modern DRM - the false positives are much worse than the false negatives. There was a shooter released around 2000 I think that would silently degrade your character so that it was impossible to win if it detected piracy. The issue was that enough people pirated it that they thought it was just a lovely game, and so the game wasn't that successful.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 18:45 |
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Alceste posted:In the dark days of my beginnings in IT doing desktop support I had several people who would refer to their tower case (which was usually on the floor) as "the hard drive" This is prevalent enough to be referenced during Jen's interview in the first episode of The IT Crowd.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 19:03 |
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How do I change my screen saver? You know, that picture behind all of my icons.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 19:08 |
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Cojawfee posted:I think Earthbound let you get to the last boss then it would declare you a pirate. Even better, it would jack up the monster spawn rate for the entire game to make it nearly unplayable, and then during a line of dialog in the final boss fight it would lock up and delete all your saves
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 19:08 |
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Rupert Buttermilk posted:How do I change my screen saver? You know, that picture behind all of my icons. Help, I think my son uploaded a virus to the modem and now none of computers at home are working! source: my father six years ago
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 19:33 |
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computer parts posted:There was a shooter released around 2000 I think that would silently degrade your character so that it was impossible to win if it detected piracy. The issue was that enough people pirated it that they thought it was just a lovely game, and so the game wasn't that successful. Soldier of Fortune? Good ol'TAGES. I bet it slowing down a game caused many pirates to howl how the "game ran baaad". Then rumors of poor performance spread to the mainstream gaming media and hurt overall sales for a lot of games. My favorite was with the original Deus Ex. The pirated version, whether intentional or not, lacked the boat to leave the first level. You could always tell who pirated by having people asking why they couldn't get to the second level. "They said there's a boat but there's no boat!".
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 19:54 |
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BelgianWaffle posted:Who remembers the SA created BF1942 mod where you could ride rockets and segways? if you're interested in total nonsense deathmatch, there's a mod for HL2 that's been in development for a few years called Jaykin Bacon: Episode 3 which sounds a lot like the crazy mod you're describing. best weapon in the game: the Fart Cop, who is actually a player model and not a weapon. to kill enemies, you've got to run up to them and immediately do a 180 and point your rear end at them, then right click to release a death fart. it is fuckin good
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 20:05 |
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 20:06 |
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My first real IT job was working for a small computer shop in '96 doing some sales and bench work. A women comes in panicked that her computer won't boot. "It says it can't find my hymen!" Turns out HIMEM.sys wasn't loading. 3 years later I found myself working as Jr. Admin for a local, 500 user ISP. I was also the tech support guy and got a call from a guy who was having trouble loading our CD. We gave out CDs that ran a script that configured Dial up Networking and updated IE with some bookmarks and updated the homepage. Everything I try won't get this drat CS to load. I finally have him eject it and have me read me the print on the CD in case he got the wrong one. "There's nothing on there. It's just all blue." He was looking at the business side of the CD-R we gave out. Yes. I have actually gotten the "CD shiny side up" tech support call.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 20:23 |
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This is a good game.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 21:36 |
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I liked Raptor up to the point until Tyrian went freeware. Cygnus' next game, DemonStar is very good, tho. Speaking of DOS vertical shooters: https://youtu.be/bjZ_67Ttznk
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 22:55 |
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Turdsdown Tom posted:if you're interested in total nonsense deathmatch, there's a mod for HL2 that's been in development for a few years called Jaykin Bacon: Episode 3 which sounds a lot like the crazy mod you're describing. best weapon in the game: the Fart Cop, who is actually a player model and not a weapon. to kill enemies, you've got to run up to them and immediately do a 180 and point your rear end at them, then right click to release a death fart. Speaking of absurd mods: Rocket Crowbar for HL1. Fairly standard deathmatch gameplay, but with a dizzying array of bizarre weaponry: exploding scientist shotguns, laser snarks, gravity grenades, and of course the rocket crowbar itself.
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# ? Feb 11, 2016 23:36 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:42 |
That image fills me with tremendous nostalgia. I loved that game. I even liked the wheel. The wheel was more fun than the Chuck Yeager Advanced Flight Simulator method of making you look for word #x on page #y in the manual. For years, I couldn't find anyone who knew what I was talking about when I mentioned Starflight. Now, it's recognized as an all-time classic computer game. I think it made a big splash when it first came out, and got a lot of praise and positive press, but something happened where it faded into obscurity for a couple of decades before people suddenly started remembering it. It is also still available for purchase: http://www.gog.com/game/starflight_1_2?pp=e7ee3efaf77443c04473b4a88385f8f7806071d5 There is no publisher about whose games I have more or fonder memories than Apogee. Not that long ago, I played all the way through Cosmo's Cosmic Adventure, and some of the Commander Keen series. Holy poo poo were video games brutal in those days! Beyond the Titanic, Kingdom of Kroz, Crystal Caves, Duke Nukem I and II, Major Stryker, Monster Bash, and on and on. I would read their ANSI catalogs and squirm with excitement at the idea of owning one of the games that had "Over a megabyte of detailed, high-resolution graphics," and "parallax scrolling." Twenty or thirty bucks was a total pipe dream to me or my family for most of my childhood, but I could dream. Remembering that feeling makes me briefly a little less disappointed to still be breathing.
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# ? Feb 12, 2016 03:11 |