AD&D games and Doctor Who audio

I’ve blogged about AD&D gold box games a couple of times in the past. I finally got around to buying a bunch of them from GOG last week, when they had some game bundles on sale for 50% off. So I only spent $10 and got about a dozen games.

The last thing I bought from GOG was Neverwinter Nights, which I started playing over this summer, but got sidetracked from at some point. I haven’t played it in more than a month (though I do really want to get back to it).

So I’m probably not going to actually play any of those gold box games any time soon. But that’s OK. They’re DRM-free and multi-platform, so they’ll be there whenever I get around to it. And they include PDF files of all the cool extras that came with these games, so I’ll have some fun browsing through them at some point. It’ll bring back some fun memories.

I’ve also recently started listening to Big Finish’s Doctor Who audio dramas again. I hadn’t really listened to any of them at all this year, so it’s fun to get back into those. I’ve still got 4 or 5 of them that I haven’t listened to yet, so I’m in no danger of running out. But they had a Halloween sale this weekend, so I went ahead and bought one more: a box set of Fourth Doctor “lost stories.” I haven’t listened to any of Big Finish’s Tom Baker stuff at all, so I’m looking forward to that.

So I’ve got plenty of nerdy entertainment options to get me through the fall and winter!

Mac Sierra Accessibility Tip – Zooming

Here’s a quick accessibility tip for macOS Sierra: If you rely on the “zoom” function as much as I do, you might notice that it doesn’t seem to work as well after upgrading to Sierra. Everything looks blurry when you zoom. The issue is just that the Sierra upgrade, for some reason, turns off the “smooth images” option. Turning it back on gets things back where they should be. (I’m not sure if the Sierra upgrade always does this, or if it was a fluke. But it definitely did it in my case.)

And if you’re not familiar with the zoom function: it’s great. Better than anything I’ve tried on a Windows PC. It’s one of the main reasons why I still like my MacBook and macOS. Despite all of the silly changes they’ve made over the years, which I won’t get into right now, as I don’t want to go off on a tangent… Anyway, you can find it in the “accessibility” options, along with some other cool stuff.

On Windows, the built-in screen magnifier is ok, but really not that useful for me. Mark Russinovich’s ZoomIt is pretty good, but it’s more of a presentation tool than an accessibility tool.

accessibility options

Veep Head Writer David Mandel Builds a Private Museum

Mr. Mandel […] now has two homes in Los Angeles: one where he lives with his wife and two children; and another, his former bachelor’s apartment, that houses his extensive collection of comic-book and “Star Wars” memorabilia.

Source: The ‘Veep’ Head Writer David Mandel Builds a Private Museum – The New York Times

I read this article, and now I’m super-jealous of this guy. He has the best of both worlds: a nice house, with a wife and kids, and a spare apartment on the side, filled with comic books and toys! Meanwhile, I’ve still got just the apartment: no house, no wife, no kids. And I donated most of my comics to charity, so I don’t even have them to keep me warm at night.

I’m also jealous of his original art collection, which he started putting together in the 90s, at San Diego cons, when prices were (relatively) low. I, too, spent some time at those cons, but, for me, original art was always outside my budget. He was writing for Seinfeld at the time, so his budget at SDCC was likely a bit larger than mine. He talks about spending $5000 at the show on art; my budget for a given con was never more than $500. (I usually came home with a big bag full of discount trade paperbacks and random single issues out of the dollar bins.) Of course, if I knew how much some of that art would appreciate in value, I would have taken a loan against my 401(k) and bought a bunch of it. I’d be selling it about now, and taking early retirement.

I get a kick out of the fact that this was published in the “Men’s Style” section of the Times. (Not a section I would normally read; it only surfaced for me due to my keyword search on “comics.”) I’m not sure when having a spare apartment full of comics and toys went from “disreputable eccentricity” to “admirable lifestyle choice,” but I’m glad it did.

The cost of a good education

After wringing my hands recently about the cost of a Pluralsight subscription ($300/year), I came across this article about the cost of a master’s degree in computer science. Georgia Tech is currently offering an online master’s in CS for only $7000, which is apparently astonishingly inexpensive. As the article points out, a master’s in CS from USC would cost $57,000. (I just went back and reread the article, and realized that they never mention how much an on-campus degree from Georgia Tech would cost. I’m guessing it’s much less than USC’s cost, so it would have made a less startling contrast. But it would have been a more relevant comparison. Oh well.) Anyway, I guess I shouldn’t complain about the cost of the kind of “continuing professional education” that you get from a service like Pluralsight, when you compare it to an actual college education.

Over the years, I’ve occasionally thought about going back to college and getting my master’s degree. In the past, before online education took off, I considered doing it part-time, locally, at maybe someplace like Rutgers, NYU, NJIT, or Stevens. I could never quite talk myself into it, due to the cost and amount of work that would be required. If this Georgia Tech program had been available ten or twenty years ago, I might have considered doing it, part-time, over several years. Now, I don’t think I’d ever be able to do it while also holding down a full-time job. I just don’t have the energy to spend a couple of hours on the computer every night, programming and reading books and watching lectures, after a full day of work. (And, at this stage of my life & career, I’m not really interested anyway.)

Meanwhile, I’ve been bookmarking even more Pluralsight videos that I want to watch. And I keep seeing interesting stuff in the EdX and Coursera emails that I get every week. Maybe I’ll manage to pick up on some of that stuff soon. There’s so much new stuff I want to learn!

Pluralsight and SharePoint

I recently started working on a new SharePoint project at work. This project is basically replacing an old SharePoint 2003 solution with a new SharePoint 2013 one, making a number of improvements along the way. The requirements for this project are a bit beyond my current level of expertise with SharePoint. (Which is a fancy way of saying that I don’t know what the hell I’m doing on this.)

When I last worked on a major SharePoint project, I’d bought a few books on SharePoint 2010 and 2013, and read through them. (Or at least the parts that were relevant to that project.) That was more than a year ago, though, and I’m pretty rusty now. And the new project is a lot more complex than that previous one. So I went back and reread some sections of those books, and did some typical internet research, and stuff like that.

I also remembered that Andrew Connell had a series of videos available on Pluralsight covering SharePoint 2013 development, and that you can get a 3-month Pluralsight trial account through the Visual Studio Dev Essentials program. So now I’ve got a free Pluralsight account that will last me through to the end of the year, and I’ve been watching the Andrew Connell videos in my spare time. When I’m through with those, Sahil Malik has a bunch of SharePoint 2013 videos on Pluralsight too.

I’ve been watching the SharePoint videos on my desktop PC at work, but Pluralsight also has iOS apps, including one for the Apple TV. So I need to download that, and see if the developer training videos are at all effective when watched on a regular TV, from my couch. (I was going to do that on Sunday, but my migraine intervened.)

I’ve thought about paying for a Pluralsight subscription occasionally in the past, but I’ve always decided against it, due to the cost: $300/year or $30/month. So, a good bit more expensive than Netflix, though maybe that’s not a fair comparison. There’s a lot of other stuff on Pluralsight that I’d love to watch, but it’s so hard to find the time to start learning anything new. So I don’t know know if I’d really get my money’s worth out of the subscription. Maybe if I could talk myself into watching Pluralsight videos instead of NCIS reruns once in a while, I could finally learn AngularJS.

surprise Anniversary Update

Over the past weekend, I blogged about trying to get a good backup done on my PC, so I could take a shot at installing the Windows 10 Anniversary Update. To make a long story short, I did get a good full image backup done on Sunday.

So my plan was to maybe try to install the update next weekend. I had expected the update to download and install on its own at some point over the last couple of months, but it never did, so I figured I’d have to do it manually, maybe after uninstalling my anti-virus software, or something like that. Well, I turned on my PC tonight, to check something in Quicken, and I got a pop-up saying that Windows would be restarted for software updates soon. It didn’t really say what the updates were, so I figured they were just normal run-of-the-mill updates. But now, seeing how long it’s taking and what kind of messages are appearing, I’m pretty sure it’s trying to install the Anniversary Update.

I wish Windows 10 would be a bit more transparent about this stuff. The pop-up I got didn’t make any mention of the fact that the updates it wanted to install would tie up my PC for… however long this is going to take. It looks like it might be quite a while. And if I hadn’t gotten that backup done, I’d now be installing a major OS update with no backup to fall back on, if something goes wrong. (And I guess I’m not going to get a chance to check on that thing in Quicken tonight either.)

another migraine

I haven’t had a serious migraine since August, so I was starting to think that maybe the problem had somehow resolved itself. No such luck. I got a doozy today, with an aura and everything. Since my last post on the subject, I’ve been trying to learn about migraines, and I’ve been keeping an eye on certain things, so I could maybe figure out my triggers.

Today’s migraine is making me toss out a few of my ideas. All my previous migraines have happened on weekdays, on sunny days, where I’d done a fair bit of walking. Today is Sunday, it was raining for most of the day, and I engaged in very little physical activity today. So it doesn’t really fit the pattern.

I took an Imitrex right after the aura hit. This was my first time trying it. I’m really not sure if it helped at all. The aura went away after about 20 minutes, which is, I think, fairly typical. And the post-aura headache was probably a bit milder that my previous ones, but that may just be because I was at home, and could just lay down for an hour.

The really annoying thing about this migraine is that it happened as I was reading through the first several issues of the recent Detective Comics relaunch. Specifically, I was just getting ready to read Detective 939. So I had to stop for a couple of hours until my eyes and brain started working well enough to read comics again. (I have now finished that story, and I enjoyed it a lot!)

upgrades and backups and stuff

I decided to spend some time today messing around with my desktop PC and my MacBook. Specifically, I wanted to get full backups done for both of them, then upgrade the MacBook to macOS Sierra, and apply the Windows 10 Anniversary Update on the desktop PC.

I succeeded on the MacBook. I used Carbon Copy Cloner to update an image backup I made a few months ago. I also ran a Time Machine backup. Then, I downloaded and installed Sierra. Downloading it took quite a long time. The update itself was pretty quick. Maybe a bit less than an hour. I’m not seeing anything really new or exciting in Sierra. I didn’t turn on the new iCloud File Sync feature, mostly because I don’t need it, but also because it scares the crap out of me. I really don’t want my OS to randomly start deleting files off my hard drive, thanks. Even just the purgeable storage thing is a bit scary. Please don’t tell me that there’s free space on my hard drive, when it’s not actually free! Anyway, it’s all working fine.

On the PC side, I didn’t get very far. I tried making a new image backup with Macrium Reflect, but it ended in failure twice. I think the external drive I’ve been using for backups may be failing. I started a full chkdsk on it, and that’s been running for hours. Depending on what that reveals, I may run out to Costco tomorrow and pick up a new external drive, or order one from Newegg. The drive in question is probably ten years old, and it’s just a 1 TB drive, so it’s only big enough to hold a single image backup. So replacing it with a 4 TB drive might be a good idea regardless. Oh, and my other external drive, that I’ve been using for Windows File History backups, is also a bit flaky. I keep having to unplug it and plug it back in to get Windows to recognize it. (Other than that it seems to work fine.) So maybe it wouldn’t be a bad idea to replace that too. Heck, if I get a 4 TB external drive, I can partition it into two volumes, and use one for image backups and the other for File History. Of course, that leaves me with a single point of failure, so maybe that’s not a good idea.

Archbishop Peter L. Gerety Dies at 104

…he had erased a multimillion-dollar deficit in the archdiocese, in part by selling a lavish archbishop’s mansion in a gated community in West Orange and settling instead in a rectory in the North Ward of Newark, a city still scarred by the race riots of the 1960s.

Source: Peter L. Gerety, Oldest Archbishop Who Preached Social Justice, Dies at 104

I kind of remember Archbishop Gerety from back when I was a kid. He probably came to our parish once or twice. I didn’t know much about him then, but, reading his obituary, he sounds like the kind of archbishop the Church can be proud of. (Unlike this guy and his fancy retirement house.)

Not at NYCC

New York Comic Con started today, and there’s already a lot of buzz about it on Twitter and elsewhere. Even The New Yorker is getting in on the action.

I missed out on getting a full four-day pass this year, so I decided to skip the con entirely. (I could probably have gotten a single-day ticket for Sunday, but I wasn’t really that interested.) But right now, I’m thinking it would have been nice to have gotten that four-day ticket, and have taken today and tomorrow off, and have a nice four-day weekend in the city. On the other hand, I’m suffering from some backache and headache issues right now, so it’s probably for the best that I didn’t spend the day trudging around the Javits Center, carrying a backpack full of comics.

There’s a lot of stuff on sale right now at Comixology, related to NYCC, which you can see at this Oktoberfest page. I will likely be spending some money on digital comics this weekend, though I probably shouldn’t. But hey, it’s the best of both worlds, right? Cheap comics, and I don’t have to carry them around with me all day.