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LtEarthworm's Scribble Pad |
Just random things. |
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LtEarthworm
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Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 @ 08:26am
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Posted: Sat Mar 31, 2007 @ 09:18pm
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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Posted: Sat Mar 31, 2007 @ 04:22am
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Posted: Wed Nov 01, 2006 @ 03:47pm
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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Posted: Fri Oct 27, 2006 @ 11:10pm
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And so my adventure ends
It sure was interesting too, and I never saw it coming. It started with Media Player crashing when it tried to play a movie. I thought it was the pre-rendered DirectX 10 videos at first though, so I didn't pay it any attention. Then Visual Studio lost half of my keyboard (as in it didn't respond to backspace/arrow keys/tab/anything useful that wasn't alpha-numeric). After a few reinstalls of Visual Studio I decided to get some anti-virus software and do a scan. It said that there were some errors in some .exe and other files. So I ran the .exes it reported about, and they crashed in the same way Media Player did. So I ran Media Player and opened a movie I had made and knew worked, and it crashed. I ran one more scan with on the most sensitive setting so it would pick up anything. After the scan, it reported some files that the "system could not open". That didn't sound good. One of those was an Oblivion mod so it was easy to check. I ran Oblivion, and on the pre-load before the main menu it froze. Fun. At this point it started to become clear that these were hard drive problems. So I ran ScanDisk to repair any bad sectors. It reported quite a few, many of which matched up with the files the anti-virus couldn't open. Cool. Oblivion worked fine now. But after another reinstall of Visual Studio, nada. Same deal, half missing keyboard. Not cool. This was pretty bad. The next day (today) I ran a disk check from the BIOS. Well, you know how those work. They always have weird codes for everything that you have to look up, but I knew it was bad when the result of the scan had the word "fail" in it. Really not cool. I had already begun backing up for a reformat, so I just updated the backup folder, compressed it and put it on my flash drive. I went to the school's tech guy and got my hard drive replaced. So now I get to reinstall everything!
crying
PS: Firefox 2 has spell check! It's so cool!
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Posted: Tue Oct 24, 2006 @ 12:47pm
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 @ 08:36pm
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Immortality
Througout history humans have longed for immortality. Whether it be by divine power, science, alchemy, or an afterlife, it has been sought by many people. In this day and age however, it seems that most people have accepted our mortal nature. But people still strive for the immortality of the human race. Even if a person dies, he expects humans to live beyond him indefinitly. I've most recently seen this in a Global Warming debate. People will do whatever than can to ensure the suvival of humans. While that isn't a bad thing, It's kind of naive to think we as a species will live on forever. At some point we will end, whether it be with the universe, or far before then.
Someone in that debate stated that the planet will deteriorate even without us. In response, another person asked "Why must the planet deteriorate?". Because that is the nature of the universe. Living beings can be described as entropy machines of varying magnitudes. We expend energy and ultimatly turn it into it's most innefficient form. Even without us, the molten core of the Earth would someday cool and the planet would, in a sense, die.
Oddly enough, the most suitable quote I can think of is from the Matrix: "everything that has a beginning has an end." We have a beginning, and someday, we will end.
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Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2006 @ 07:34am
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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LtEarthworm
Community Member
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Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 @ 09:12am
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