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Risking WWII

by Rindis on March 28, 2010 at 12:37 pm
Posted In: Boardgaming

Had the gang over for gaming yesterday. Well, some of it. Jason came down sick at the last minute, which left us at four. We could have had Zjonni over, but we were already scheduled for a 5-player day, and I found out about Jason well after I told Zjonni to get some more sleep after staying up all of finals week.

We stuck with the original plan though, and tried out Origins of WWII, a 1971 AH game designed by Jim Dunnigan. It is indeed very simple and short, and we got in two rounds before lunch. We took the four-player option of just ignoring the US.

We took the powers we happened to be sitting in front of the first time, which gave me France. With the lowest number of PFs and going first (without the Americans involved, at least), it was a challenge. The Baltics and Romania fell to Russia (Mark) early, while Poland went to Germany (Dave). I managed to start a movement that preserved Czechoslovakia, with French, British and Russian Understanding with the country at the end. Dave tried kicking the British (Patch) out of the US towards the end, but Patch managed to re-acquire an Understanding with them. Patch won at the end with 22 points, and the rest of us tied at 16.

We drew randomly for powers the second time, and I was happy to note that no one got the same power as last time. I drew Russia, and lost a bid to share Control of Poland with Patch’s Germany. Disastrously, Germany also got Control of Romania while I was working on an Understanding with Germany. Patch also got control of Czechoslovakia early, leaving the east pretty well locked down with me taking the Baltic States. The bad news for Germany, was that he was stymied in the Rhineland for the entire game, and had to pour a lot of PFs down that hole against the quite able alliance of Britain (Mark) and France (Dave). I kept miscalculating slightly for the last couple turns, which damaged my plans, but with very few positive objectives left, I started booting the other powers out of positions, mostly Understandings with me and Italy. The game ended with Patch getting 20 points, me getting 15, and Mark and Dave tied at 14. I claimed a small moral victory for only scoring one point less than the first game, while everyone else dropped two.

After lunch, we tried out the Risk: Black Ops game that Dave got for Christmas. We were hoping to have time for more Origins afterward, but despite steps taken in the new edition to shorten the game, it didn’t get that much shorter.

We used the ‘Basic Game’ set up provided, and I had blue with forces mostly in North America and Asia, and my capital in the Northwest Territory. The idea is to go after ‘objectives’, and the first to collect three of them wins. I took one fairly early, by holding all of North America. I had decent border forces in Iceland and Central America, and started consolidating a position in Asia. Patch had South America and a position on the Europe/Asia border, while Dave had Africa and parts of Europe. Mark had taken Australia early, and was spreading across Asia.

I had three turns where it looked like I was doing well, and then both Patch and Mark broke through my defenses, Mark getting all the way to my capital. This began a very long back-and-forth that lasted the rest of the game between me and Mark, where I would occasionally retake NA, and move back out into Asia, but I just could not hold the border for very long. Mark held my capital about as often as I did. Mark also managed an early turn in of cards for the new maximum value: 10 stars on 5 cards to get 30 armies. A full half of that disappeared into Irkutsk where my defending dice beat him for 8 solid rounds. He had enough to keep going after that, but much of the force was out of his offensive. (To be fair, the dice hated Mark during most of the game.)

During my later recovery (two turns where I seemed to be getting places again), I did get the objective for having 18 territories, barely beating Mark to taking it. As time ran short, both Patch and Dave had gained one objective, and me and Mark both had two. Dave ran riot with a good turn in, but couldn’t quite get what he wanted. Patch had reserved a fair amount of force from an earlier turn in, and with a new turn in, and me and Mark both weakened by Dave, he finished off Mark to take his objectives and take the game.

Without the die luck, Mark probably should have won that one, but as it is Patch won all three games. There’s no real idea what we’re doing next time, though both Origins and Republic of Rome are looked forward to the next time we have a 5-player day.

└ Tags: gaming, Origins of WWII, Risk
 Comment 

The First Punic Skirmish

by Rindis on March 27, 2010 at 6:13 pm
Posted In: Boardgaming

Well, ended up putting this one off a bit, mostly because I’ve been having shoulder trouble, and have been avoiding the computer.

But, last Sunday, had Mark over for our usual monthly FtF. It was my month to choose, and I decided it was time to tackle the big First Punic War scenario from Carthage. Thanks to the fact that it’s been a year, and it’s a bigger scenario, we only got through three turns. I had been hoping for a bit better, but we will be continuing this through Vassal

Since I had Carthage in the last go-round, I took the Romans this time. Carthage started with the usual opening of blocking the Straights of Messana, but the Roman consular army in Rhegium made it across anyway.

I then proceeded to fritter away my good luck by staying in the city of Messana when Hiero of Syracuse came up and accepting the siege. With the Carthagninian fleet blocking the harbor, my siege attrition was pretty nasty the first turn. The second wasn’t as bad as the Carthaginian navy didn’t put in an appearance, but two of the three siege attrition markers came up before any Roman LAMs did at all. Eventually, Hanno’s Carthaginian army came up after taking a string of towns on the north coast of Sicily, assaulted the walls of Messana, and slaughtered the starving defenders. He has since landed at Rhegium and taken it. The south of Italy is in a state of serious crisis.

The Romans aren’t doing nothing. They spent 263 BC building an 8-squadron navy at Cumae. This is larger than the entire starting Carthaginian fleet, so in 262, Carthage built an 18-squadron navy at Carthage. The good news for me is that any secondary port can handle my force, but Carthage is the only place the Carthaginian fleet can winter in. He’s more susceptible to poor die rolls, but until then… I need to stay out of his way.

Also, second Consular Army headed north to subdue cities that were friendly to Carthage. I took Genua, and have been besieging Massilia for the past year. Sadly, there are Carthaginian reinforcements in Massilia, so it has not been an easy matter.

I attempted to build a new Consular Army to replace the one lost in Mesanna, but only got permission to raise one legion from the Senate. A second legion was authorized during the year, but it was forced up to Arminum to deal with troublesome Gauls, and to settle the region with good Roman citizens [random event].

So, in two more turns, the automatic victory conditions kick in, and at the moment, it would be a Roman loss. It’s a loss that part of the Senate would not be too unhappy with, since the control of northern Italy is being assured, but that wouldn’t do me much good. My best bet at the moment is to finish up in Massilia and cause problems in Corsica. In the mean time, I need another army….

└ Tags: Carthage, gaming
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Updating the File Server

by Rindis on March 22, 2010 at 3:23 pm
Posted In: Life

Well, I’ve been using Windows 7 for a couple weeks now, and I’m happy. It has fewer compatibility problems with older software than I’d been led to expect, the UI is (mostly) better, and so far it’s been as stable as a rock.

It’s also nice using an OS modern enough to know what all your hardware is on install.

The UI is nicely cleaned up. Some/all of this presumably came with Vista, but I haven’t really dealt with it. The min/max/close trio of buttons look far better than what XP did, and go to the top of the window (I find it interesting that this is the place I consider the major failing of OS X, since in any version I’ve seen, they ignore their own advice and make these tiny little gem-buttons that are hard to distinguish from each other or select). The taskbar now just shows program icons, instead of going for the window title. Not quite as handy, but those titles have been becoming less relevant over the years. Extra windows on a program are shown with kind of ‘pages’ symbol with the main icon. The neat bits are that hovering over one of these will show a miniature version of the window(s), and you can click on them to switch, or even close a window without switching to it (handy for ‘pop-under’ browser windows >.<). Now if they could just get those undeclared dialog boxes to show up there (I’m looking at you Adobe Updater…).

I’ve never been entirely happy with the double-pane style of start menu that came in with XP, but it’s not bad. The one thing that has changed this time that I’m not happy with is that hitting Start and then ‘up’ does not take you to the Shut Down command. More to the point, I’m not sure how to get there through the keyboard at all.

When I first installed it there were a few ‘compatibility patches’ in Windows Update, and last week another showed up. I looked at the info for that one, and it was a list of all sorts of older software that they improved Windows 7 (and other versions) ability to run. I noticed some productivity software, older educational software (which tends to have very long life cycles), and some games, a couple of which I recognized as being pretty old. This is dozens of titles in that one patch, a lot of effort is going into this, and it’s really nice to see.

The one thing that didn’t go well is that Win7 cannot talk to a Win2K system on the network. It’ll see it, it’ll see the various shared items, but the password protection/log in will not work. However, a Win2K system can talk to a Win7 system just fine.

Our place had three Win2K systems, Goriki (my old system, now replaced by the Win7 Horo), Micca (Smudge’s system, due to be put on Win7 in a few months), and Argentum (the house file server). We also have a NAS, which works fine with Win7, but migrating all the data from Argentum to Alexandria seemed too much like work. The other option was to get Argentum off of Win2K before Micca was upgraded and Smudge could no longer talk to it.

Since it didn’t need anything fancy, I figured that XP would probably be enough to get the network talking correctly, and I might be able to score an unused copy cheap. I mentioned this to, since I figured he would be a good bet at scrounging up something.

I didn’t expect him to drop an unopened XP box on my lap as soon as I mentioned it.

So, on Saturday, I worked on modernizing Argentum, which drove home just how old he is. Dual processor Pentium II with an absolutely creaky CD-ROM drive and the last InWin A500 case left in the house (my favorite, it has a slide-out backplane that I just can’t find in modern cases). I had already contemplated doing something about the hardware when I found a problem. The BIOS is too old to know what to do with a USB keyboard, so I couldn’t tell it to boot off the CD drive.

So, I pulled out Goriki and and rearanged his drives. At first, I tried using a leftover drive that had been skunked when the drive controller on Haruhi went, but the BIOS stopped seeing it after some initial success. A dive into the parts box came up with the old main drive for Utena (still tried to boot Win98), which I reformatted and turned into the new boot drive. Everything went fairly smoothly (some trouble getting Windows Update to agree to work with XP SP 1), and I plugged in the Library drive from Argentum.

I also renamed Goriki to Argentum, so none of the existing network mappings even realize there’s a new machine on. Since this is a fast Pentium 4, I think power usage will be up a bit, even from the two-processor system, but the fan noise is way down, which is nice.

└ Tags: Argentum, life, Win7
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Windows 7 compatability

by Rindis on March 7, 2010 at 3:57 pm
Posted In: Design and Effect, Life

I’ve heard all sorts of horror stories about Vista and Win7 not supporting a bunch of older stuff, notably early versions the productivity software we use. Thankfully, it hasn’t been that bad, though I’ve got a bunch of Win95 and 98-era games that I don’t hold out much hope for.

Here’s everything I’ve found so far (for Win7 64-bit):

Current, free/open source software (should all be strictly up to date, and none of them have given any trouble):
Adobe Reader 9.3.0
Firefox 3.6
FreeCiv 2.1.11
FreeCol 0.9.1
OpenOffice 3.2.0
OpenTTD 1.0.0-RC1 (has a 64-bit executable)
QuickTime 7.6.5
SeaMonkey (nee Mozilla) 2.0.3
TeamSpeak 3.0.0-beta16
Thunderbird 3.0.3 (I just upgraded from the 2.x series, a lot of changes)
VASL 4.8.1
Vassal 3.1.13

Productivity Software: (the truly important stuff)
CorelDraw 8 – Installed fine. Need to test, and try updating. – Update: Went crash-happy fairly quickly and started crashing on launch. Now updated to X4.
Dreamweaver 8 – Installed and runs fine.
PhotoShop 5.5 – Installed fine. Have had one hiccup, looks like the system was just being slow.

Games: Organized by year of release….
1996
Age of Sail – Will not install *1
Command & Conquer Gold – Will not install *1,3
Command & Conquer: Red Alert – Will not install *1,3
Star General – Will not install *1,5
1997
East Front – Installed and runs fine (!!)
Heroes of Might and Magic Compendium (I & II+expansion) – Will not install *1
Imperialism – Will not install *1,2
Panzer General II – Will not install *1,2
Total Annihilation – Installed and runs fine – However, the two expansions refuse to install *1
1998
Jeff Wayne’s War of the Worlds – Installed. Game only works a lowest resolution (640×480) – otherwise it crashes when it changes modes. And it did crash once during play.
People’s General – Installed, has graphics problem where map does not display, only controls *4
Warlords III: Darklord Rising – Will not install *1,5
1999
Heroes of Might and Magic III – Installed and runs fine. Though it did advise I needed NT 4 SP 2.
Imperialism II – Installed and runs fine.
SimCity 3000 – Installed and runs fine.
2000
Starfleet Command II – Installed. Will not accept keyboard input for entering CD-key. (USB issue?)
2001
Europa Universalis II – Windows 7 warned of compatibility problems. Need to check on latest patch.
2002
Master of Orion 3 – Installed. Seems to run fine, Win7 was worried that it didn’t install correctly.
2005
Civilization IV – Win7 warned of compatibility problems. Installed, ran fine, and then I used the in-game patching service, whereupon it died. I need to reinstall without patching and try it out.
2008
World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade – Had trouble with initial patching the first time, but a uninstall/reinstall sorted it out. Runs fine.

(This list will be updated with more titles for a while yet.)
1 cannot start or run due to incompatibility with 64-bit versions of Windows.
2 Error: Didn’t work: Result:216
3 The program, INSTALL.EXE could not be found
4 Win2K had this issue
5 Hitting ‘Install’ on the autorun menu causes it to go away, and never do anything again. No error is presented.

└ Tags: horo, Win7
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A Year in the Making…

by Rindis on March 7, 2010 at 12:42 pm
Posted In: Life

Okay, I should have given this tale in installments instead of saving it up. But then I would have had posts with little more than complaining, which I detest doing.

It all started nearly a year and a half ago. During my 2008 trip to my parents, my machine, Haruhi, started acting up. You can read about that here.

I did get some warning, and received much-appreciated parts of systems from two people. Drew came through first with parts of a system a little more advanced than Haruhi had been, and I completed it by looting Haruhi’s parts and creating a temporary back up system, Goriki.

Goriki (It is surprisingly hard to find images of him.)
Intel D875PBZ motherboard
Pentium 4 3.4 GHz processor
2GB PC3200 RAM (looted from Haruhi)
eVGA GeForce 6200 (looted from Haruhi)
Sound Blaster Live (looted from Haruhi)
CD-ROM drive
WD1200 120 GB hard drive

That temporary back up system ended up being my machine for more than a year….

The other collection of parts came from Brian Delaney, and were much more modern… and as it turned out, much more problematic.

There was an Intel Core2 Quad and motherboard combo (nice…), a good, manufacturer-overclocked video card, a case, a power supply and two monitors.

As a quick time out, we had another computer adventure in December 2008. Smudge’s beautiful 24″ widescreen Acer monitor, which we paid $900 for died. For the second time. In three years. In fact, it seems to have had the same problem as the first time, the chip that controls the signals that propagate across a LCD screen to provide an actual image died. This time, it was just outside of warranty, and after a long phone call to Acer after an email went unanswered, it turned out that they had just stopped servicing monitors out-of-warranty. In their defense, my guess is that this is because they’re too busy servicing the ones under warranty to have any sort of decent turn around time. I got the clear impression from the people I talked to at Acer that they were seeing a lot of monitor issues, mostly dealing with the control chip. So: I don’t care how good it looks, do not buy Acer monitors, they’re made of fail.

With that monitor dead, Smudge was using my (17″ LCD) monitor, and I was on the emergency backup. Which functions, but but is very dark and has color issues. So, we went out and got a new LG W2241T 22″ widescreen monitor for Smudge (she does graphics for a living, she needs the better monitor, sigh) for a third of the price of the Acer.

And then two months later we got two monitors dropped on us. If only I had known…. One of them was a 22″ widescreen LG of the generation previous to the one I bought. I used it for a bit, but found it had color issues. Namely, some important light green and yellow colors were wanting to blend together on me (which happened to be a big issue for me because of my peculiar gaming habits: VASL boards use light green for normal ground level, and yellow for roads…). Eventually, I snagged the LG I bought from Smudge and put her on the 24″ widescreen Dell that also came in the deal, and it has been doing fine for her.

So, computer parts. The plan was to build the Core2 Quad system for myself, but put the new more powerful graphics card in Smudge’s Micca. Since it needed a a lot of juice, I put the power supply in the nice insulated tower case provided and transferred Micca from his old case to the new one.

Or tried to. This turned into a 6-month saga. The case uses drive trays and drive bays, and not all of that came with it. No problem, it’s made by Antec and they sell spare parts. The power supply has a thick rope of power cables for all the motherboard connectors, and then four plug-in slots for the rest of the power cables. It didn’t arrive with any of those. No problem, it’s made by Antec and… they don’t sell spare parts. I contacted them with what I needed, and made offers to pay, and they were willing to send it out to me free, when suddenly the rep I’d been talking to shut up, and I never got another peep out of him. Eventually, Drew came through with a spare cable of the right type he located, and Kris fabricated a couple more off of other parts. But that took a while to happen, after I’d had a couple other tries at solutions shot down.

But in the end, it worked, and Micca now has an overclocked GeForce 8800 GTS. I could now concentrate on building my new system, using the case that Micca used to be in.

Except that Micca had been having boot issues, and general software crankyness. So I did a reinstall of Windows 2000. That was a disaster. I had recently gone in and repartitioned the main hard drive, taking advantage of a bunch of space that Win2K did not want to take advantage of. What I didn’t anticipate was that while Win2K operated just fine this way, the installer became unhappy, and I lost the bulk of the file system on both drive C and D. The D drive (with the data files) mostly looked intact, but the files were worthless crap that would not open properly.

That made me think a lot harder about the fact that we were going to have to get off of Windows 2000 someday. The problem is that we have a lot of essential software that is nearly 15 years old now, that we can’t afford to replace. Especially while paying for new copies of Windows. Another motivator is that Smudge now has a dual-head graphics card, and we have a spare good monitor. But we can’t get both monitors on at the same time. My guess is that the Win2K drivers have never been updated to support it.

I built out my new machine (relatively easy, I just had to buy new RAM), installed Win2K on it (which proved it worked), and then let it sit. This was right as Windows 7 was coming out, and I decided that I’d wait for my next three-paycheck month, get a copy for myself, put it on the new machine, and find out just how bad our compatibility issues were. If we could work our way around all the essential software, we’ll get a copy for Smudge, and update Micca.

Affording it was made easier when I found out you could buy the OEM version direct from NewEgg. My copy of Windows 7 showed up last Monday.

So, at long last, meet Horo:
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
Intel DX48BT2 motherboard
Intel Core2 Quad Q6950 3 GHz
3 GB DDR3 1333 RAM
GeForce 8600 GT graphics card
WD WD600AB hard drive
ST380811AS hard drive
Asus DRW-2014L1T DVD-RAM drive

I’ll be doing another post soon that will be filled with what is, and isn’t, working with Windows 7.

└ Tags: goriki, haruhi, horo, life, micca
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