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Does Blanc get to do the happy dance?

by Rindis on September 30, 2005 at 11:24 am
Posted In: MMO

Blizzard posted the test realm notes for patch 1.8 recently. This info was not part of them, however:

Blue: Out of sync with the server bug
Mordsidhe | 9/29/2005 3:03:45 PM PDT
Level 60 Night Elf Warrior
Guild: The Eternal Covenant
Realm: Cenarion Circle

Occasionally when my warrior charges she gets out of sync with the server. This becomes apparent when mobs she tries to fight show a ‘out of range’ error, and npcs completely vanish. If I continue to play, then my warrior will continue to be aggroed and hit, fighting back is almost impossible as the mob hitting her is invisible. The only way to get back ‘in sync’ is to log out, and log back in again immediately after it happens. Failure to do so will give you other error messages such a being ‘unable to log out at this time’. The only way to fix it is to force the game to crash by rebooting the pc.

I understand this bug has been around since Beta, and I’m wondering if there are plans to address and fix it.

Tseric | 9/29/2005 3:08:30 PM PDT
Blizzard Poster

This has been something of a recurring issue and we have taken various steps to address it. There is a current solution which hopefully addresses this completely in 1.8.

I’m glad I missed the launch of WoW, and missed a lot of really bad bugs and instability that caused a lot of grief. I’ve gotten to see fairly regular content patches, and only three annoying long-term bugs. They got rid of sinking boats. Now there may be an end in sight for the charge bug. Are fixed mining and herbalism nodes far off?

└ Tags: MMO
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Back to Uldaman

by Rindis on September 26, 2005 at 4:33 pm
Posted In: MMO

Well, the guild continues to grow. Got two new members last night. I guess we’re still spreading the word to our friends about how much fun we’re having. ^_^ This puts us at… 11 people with active characters, plus three others who helped get the guild official, but aren’t currently playing on the server. (I think I counted everybody….)

We also did an Uldaman run on Saturday. Every available higher-level character showed up (seven people). For three of us it was the second run, and we were going ‘Back to Uldaman‘.

So we broke up into two groups and started getting everyone caught up. We eventually ended up with a second run later that evening that involved the three old hands plus two of the more aggressively-leveling newer characters (Dunain’s the second-oldest character in the guild by quite a bit, but he may well be the third or fourth to hit Level 60).

Dunain and Blanc had visited Uldaman once before. Everyone else had been there before on other servers. So the two highest-level characters knew the least about what to expect. This got farcical when we reenacted Raiders of the Lost Ark and opened the Hidden Chamber — only to be confronted with a Level ‘??’ giant. Fortunately, she’s slow, and gave the party time to reorganize. This wasn’t nearly as much fun when the party got overwhelmed by an insane number of scorpids. I then got to learn about a neglected Hunter Area of Effect ability, and then paniced when the survivors decided they didn’t like me more than they didn’t like the tank.

We eventually did all the current round of quests for Uldaman, after a detour down to what looks like the final room of the instance. We looked around, and decided we wanted no part of that. An insane number of ‘vibro golems’ all ringed around one gigantic one. After running into a few of these upstairs, my guess is that you fight the entire outer ring of them, one at a time (I think about 32 of them), then the inner ring of eight, one at a time, and then the big guy in the center, plus the two standing outside the room. The trick is to keep the party up and running for the entire length of the combat. We’ll find out on a later run.

We’re not done with Uldaman yet, there’s further quests to be done, not to mention helping more guild members get through the quests we completed Saturday. It’s a big place, we’ve seen most of it, but not all…. It also encompasses a fair number of levels: The early part entirely held gray creatures for Dunain (generally, 5 or more levels below his, not considered a challenge or worth experience), the middle had greens (3 or 4 levels below), and the ending sections had constant yellow critters (+/- 2 levels). Considering this was an instance, almost everything was ‘Elite’: extra challenging and tough. And I was the second highest character there; our lowest level character was having problems doing anything offensive by the end, and was being regarded as a tasty snack by many of the monsters. Fortunately, she could still heal us quite fine.

By the time we left and did all our quest turn-ins it was… 3 AM. Starting earlier is going to be imperative, as I understand that the instances keep getting bigger and more complicated at the higher levels (short of focused encounter instances like Blackrock Spire). I’d be happy for a few more instances about the size of Blackfathom Depths.

└ Tags: MMO, WoW
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Readable non-fiction….

by Rindis on September 12, 2005 at 5:19 pm
Posted In: Books

Been meaning to get to this for ages. I try to leaven all my fiction reading with some non-fiction. As my primary interest is history, I generally end up reading something about the past. I don’t care for dry academic studies (important, but I’m reading, not researching), so I’m interested in the books that are more for the general reader, but deeper than an introduction. So, here’s some of what I’ve read over the last couple months.

Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War by Robert K. Massie
This nice little doorstop is a good book, and a good read. Do note that the subtitle is much more accurate than the title. HMS Dreadnought was a remarkable new direction in capital ship design, and Massie does spend some time focused on it, but the book is about the political process that lead to Britain and Germany’s collision in WWI, rather than the arms race the politics engendered.

Most of all, it is a book about personalities. Whenever the history takes a step forward, Massie spends a loving amount of detail on reconstructing the personality of the new central figure diving into the words and works he left behind and his relationships with other people in the narrative.

A very good book. Quite readable, and well worth reading, but very dense in it’s information, don’t try to read it in a distracting environment. I plan to get his other books as soon as I can.

“A description of the next five years of Churchill’s life reads more like the plot of a ‘tuppenny’ Victorian novel than a true account of the adventures of a young British officer. Somehow, in this short span of time at the high-water mark of European colonialism, this young man managed to place himself under fire in four different wars in four widely separate corners of the earth.”

So it was appropriate that the next book I read was one of Winston Churchill’s books about his own adventures. The River War is a history of Egypt’s (under British leadership) campaign to win back the Sudan from the uprising seen in the movie Khartoum. Churchill himself was only present for the climatic campaign that culminated with the battle of Omdurman, and the four chapters where he is present have a much different tone than the rest of the book.

Considering that it is written about events where the author was an eager participant, and in an age before political correctness, it is entirely written from his, or at least, the British viewpoint and talks intelligently of the problems of supply and logistics, ever important in that harsh climate, as well as the military maneuvers. The next time someone wants to write of the archetypal massive evil hordes in an epic fantasy novel, it might be worth looking up Churchill first:

“It seemed to us, as we looked, that there might be 3,000 men behind a high dense zeriba of thorn bushes….
Suddenly the whole black line which seemed to be zeriba began to move. It was made of men, not bushes. Behind it other dense masses and lines of men appeared over the crest; and while we watched, amazed by the wonder of the sight, the whole slope became black with swarming savages. Four miles from end to end… this mighty army advanced—swiftly. The whole side of the hill seemed to move.”

Currently, I’m reading The Isles: A History by Norman Davies. Another massive book, it tells the story of the (as he points out, wrongly named) British isles from prehistory to the present day in a readable format. He is enamored of language and nomenclature.

While an overview at best, thanks to the scope, he spells out his commitment to spreading the knowledge of history to the common man (and therefore writing so as to be understood and engaging the attention of such) in the introduction, and does his best to uncover all those nasty tendencies that lead to poor assumptions.

“…One of these [observations] would refer to the widespread, unthinking, and unshakeable belief in the unbroken continuity of ‘our island history’. The belief is so strong that it crushes any sense of the need to change the names to match the changing reality. England is assumed to be fixed and eternal. Hence many historians do not hesitate to talk of ‘England’ in those centuries of the first millennium long before the creation either of an English state or nation. And they continue to talk of ‘England’ as a mistaken synonym for the United Kingdom long after England had been merged into a wider unified state.”

└ Tags: reading
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Out of the frying pan and into the fire…

by Rindis on September 11, 2005 at 1:55 pm
Posted In: MMO

Well, as some of you are already aware, my main WoW characters are now part of an active guild on Uther.

This spells the end of a long-running annoyance: guild spam. Not that I ever encountered too much of it, but it got pretty bad for Blanc on occasion.

So, now Farmishi (my second character on Uther) had two people ask her, ‘can i join ur guild?’ yesterday.

Arg.

└ Tags: MMO, WoW
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Adventure; or It’s a Good Thing I Already Have a Late Dinner

by Rindis on September 8, 2005 at 11:11 am
Posted In: Life

Slept through my stop on CalTrain last night. Considering my penchant for taking naps when riding in any moving vehicle, only twice in a year and a half is not bad.

Last time, it was a limited that stopped at the next station. This time I got to go all the way to San Jose before my train stopped. And of course, a conductor came by to check tickets right after we pulled out…

Fortunately, he believed me when I explained that this was NOT part of the plan…. Something confirmed when I pulled out my schedule to see what my options were. Good news: the next north-bound train was a mini-bullet straight back to Mountain View (my stop). Bad news: I’d have a twenty minute wait for it. Just as well, the train which had been on time all the way down to Mountain View was ten minutes late into SJ (it caught up with the previous local train; apparently they need to tweak this part of the schedule).

So, I got to see what the SJ station was like. I am Not Impressed. Considering that it’s *the* major stop on the south end (some trains do go further), I was expecting something like the San Francisco terminal. Instead, it’s an ugly spread out thing that’s so noisy yelling is obligatory. There’s just two tracks (one north, one south) like the rest of the minor stations in between. Up a couple miles there’s a area with a half-dozen tracks, some of which are still in use with freight, but not here.

So I was quite happy $3.50 later when the doors closed, instantly cutting the noise level by two thirds. Still irritated as heck about getting home 50 minutes late, but it’s my own fault (well me and the extra-quiet PA announcements they had that day).

└ Tags: life
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