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Moonlight meanderer

Rant, moan, rave and share - for all your chatter, natter, ETCETERA!

Niccea
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Christmas was a bit disappointing for me. I turned on my laptop, and it wouldn't come on. I am now on my replacement computer which is a Windows 8. I opperates like a computer and a tablet had a baby. Takes a lot of getting used to with out the traditional Start menu.

Ozoneocean
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skoolmunkee wrote:
Hello sweeties!
Well hey-low sexsay!
 
Niccea, they say the trad start menu can be enabled in Win 8 machines. Though I wouldn't really know since my new comp is Win 7… Got it just before they started sellin the Win 8 stuff. I didn't want to chance it with the new OS.

Ironscarf
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Still using Windows XP - there's no way they're getting me on to Vista.
 
Hello Skool' :)

gullas
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aw Iron… I miss XP :'( to bad I'm stuck with 7 at the moment. Maybe when I've got enough dough, I'll build myself one and use linux or something…. the dreams <(^_-)>

Lonnehart
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Been watching elementary schools for a couple of weeks now.  Very stressful.  I mean… during the daytime they are wonderful places where children play and learn.  But at night…
 
They are freakin' creepy.  If you wanted a perfect zombie apocalypse setting, they're one place you should have.  Strange noises I have not heard anywhere, cain toads hopping out of nowhere behind me, geckos dropping onto my shoulders…  and spying on my coffee when I'm not looking…  brr…
 
Well… time to relax to some music.  Namely..
 
Robert Miles - Children (Dream Version)

bravo1102
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Lonnehart wrote:
Been watching elementary schools for a couple of weeks now.  Very stressful.  I mean… during the daytime they are wonderful places where children play and learn.  But at night…
 
They are freakin' creepy.  If you wanted a perfect zombie apocalypse setting, they're one place you should have.
Empty apartment buildings, especially lower levels that have the walls and electrical wiring pulled out because of flood damage.  Wandering with a flashlight through hallways full of wires and cables and great big holes in the walls is super creepy.  Then checking the hallways of the empty rooms with the huge "X" on each from the mandatory evacuation and everything looks like the people vanished right in the midst of things.  Somebody leaves stuff out as if they'll be right back and there are always unexplained wrappers.  

And here I am the security guard armed only with flashlight and the zombies are around there  awaiting the usual first victim; the security guard armed with only a flashlight.  Yeah, let's hook the laptop up to the emergency power and watch horror movies.

Genejoke
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I would have thought you'd be armed bravo, that's what TV tells us about america.  every fucker is armed.

Lonnehart
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Genejoke wrote:
I would have thought you'd be armed bravo, that's what TV tells us about america.  every fucker is armed.
We're definitely armed.  We have been taught by the Military how to kill with guns, fists, or anything we find.  So what makes zombies so dangerous?  A lone zombie can be taken down hand to hand easily.  Two will be a problem, though.  And a horde… we might as well let them eat us.

bravo1102
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Genejoke wrote:
I would have thought you'd be armed bravo, that's what TV tells us about america.  every fucker is armed.
Every fucker is armed.  It's the fucked who are not.

Ozoneocean
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bravo1102 wrote:
Every fucker is armed.  It's the fucked who are not.
 
 
Hahaha! That made me blow snot out of my nose ^_^
 
The only people I've seen with guns while I was in the US were the police… But I've only been in California, New Orleans and New York…
My mum has been all through the middle states, Texas and up. She tells me guns were a much MUCH bigger thing with those people- people openly carrying rifles and shotguns in their cars, people carrying rifles into shops, in some places even wearing pistols on their hips quite openly.
That's a real SPECIAL sort of no-dick syndrome! You'd really have to work up to that one.
 
The scariest people I saw weren't in the states- they were the federales in Mexico.VERY intimidating.

Genejoke
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I can't imagine going around carrying a gun, or any large visible weapon for that matter.I've be very conscious of it and probably tempted to use it on annoying people :)
So, yeah not been around a lot and I keep trying to change that, so i made the decision to make a proper effort, not only to post here more but to get lite bites back out of the doldrums.  i can't do the latter alone so if anyone is interested in helping follow this link to the lite bites forum and volunteer.

http://www.drunkduck.com/forum/13064/
yeah i know, it's kind of spammy but maybe I can get people talking too.
Tomorrow I attend a stag do, where I am also the bast man.  On saturday I shall mostly be a vegetable, maybe even a dribbling one.
Other than that… i've been working lots, christmas was brief as i work commitments kept me away from home and the family. :(

gullas
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A mix of hangover and the flu… eugh…

lba
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I regularly carry a sidearm when I'm on duty because I'm an MP. It's honestly not all that weird of a feeling, but you do get the impression that everyone is going to make a lunge for it as soon as you take your eye off of them for the first week or two. After a while though you almost forget you're carrying and I've never felt the urge to pull it or do anything dumb though.

It actually occurred to me the other week that the current standard issue desert boots we get are literally the exact same design as the old canvas sided panama style jungle boots they used to issue. Now they're suede instead of green and black but they're identical otherwise. And I know about the whole lectures on proper boots and socks. I'm a hardcore believer in it myself, and I'm obsessive about my guys having the right size and type of gear to the point that I'm pretty sure I drive the civilians who issue it to us insane.

As for ComicCon, it boils down to that I was supposed to have several thousand dollars available of free cash, but because of various things like my bed getting water damaged while I was away ( I'm currently sleeping with my bivvy sack on my bedroom floor with an air mattress until I can get to the nearest major city to buy a new one. ) I'm down to hundreds instead. I'm just going to try and save up for next year instead. It's kinda lame but that's how it goes.

bravo1102
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Jungle boots and desert boots are different in that jungle boots have cooling/drainage vents in the side.  The original ones were leather and green canvas and in the 1980s out came the speed lace all black ones with the top in nylon.  Which I still wear at work.  Canvas and nylon dries faster than all leather. 

The cooling vents were removed on desert boots to keep the sand out.  (at least the ones issued in 1991 just in time to leave Saudi after DS1) The Germans used suede and canvas boots in the Western Desert. British officers often wore suede loafers.  Leather cracks and loses it's finish fast in abrasive desert sands.  Naturally it took fifty years for the US Army to come up with something the Germans had had in 1941. Wearing jungle boots in the desert meant getting sand in the boot.  As a tanker I wore tanker boots except the one time I tried wearing Israeli boots which are entirely canvas and looked like nothing so much as Converse high tops but the First Sergeant wouldn't have it.  

The Army had been trying to go to rough out suede boots since the end of the Vietnam war.  It took Desert Storm to finally convince the general officers that shined black boots weren't always practical in combat. 

I could go on with an entire disertation on military footwear through the ages, but I'll spare you.  

Ozoneocean
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I bet your feet still stink! :)
 
I had an awful headache yesterday, my sister drove me to the afterhours doctor it was so bad. Got some anitbiotics for my sinus infection (which is causing my current round of headaches), some anti-vomit pills and some strong pain meds. >;[
 
What's good and funky…? Well, I'm trying to put together a cool artpiece based on a Muslim medieval helmet, made of Fanta cans, sheet metal, old dental slides, a paper mask and a bikini.
If it gets selected for the exhibition I'm going to price it at about $750, or maybe $800. WOULD be $1000+ but my parter who I'm working on it with reckons that's arrogant… :P

bravo1102
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ozoneocean wrote:
I bet your feet still stink! :)
Naturally.  

Last week I had a liver biopsy.  That's where they put a long needle in your abdomen to get some tissue samples.  It's directed by CT scanner and sonogram and the interesting part of my liver is in the middle.  It's really weird feeling something inside you and hearing this loud *snip* and a pulling inside as the sample is taken.  Now comes the fun part, waiting for the results!

bravo1102
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ozoneocean wrote:
GROSS!
Could not agree more.  The only good part about going to the hospital is watching Turner Classic Movies. 

Ozoneocean
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When I was sitting around waiting in the hallway of the afterhours section of the hospital yesterday all they had on was a cricket testmatch between Australia and SriLanka…
Mind NUMBINGLY dull at the very best of times but with a migraine it's like audio torture- sounds specifically engineered to make you go slowly insane.
 
Oh lord how I hate televised sports… I do understand why people get into them and I can sort of tolerate it when I'm watching it with someone who is enthusiastic about it, the enthusiasm bleeds over. But on its own any sport is so effffffffffin boring to watch. Sport was never meant for TV, the only stuff that is are those stupid gladiator things and Japanese gameshows etc.

bravo1102
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ozoneocean wrote:
Sport was never meant for TV, the only stuff that is are those stupid gladiator things and Japanese gameshows etc.
Exception: American Football.  It was designed to be televised.  There were rule changes in the 1950s to make certain it fit perfectly with a commercial television schedule.  American baseball also easily allows for commercial television because of all the pauses that pitchers and batters take.  In fact, baseball games have noticably lengthened since they started to be televised.  The batter often signaled to step outside the box when the commerical is playing.  It really stinks when a runner decides to steal a base during the break and all you get is the replay.
NHL hockey had rule changes in the 1970s(?) to make it easily televisable.  It's strange going to a game and watching the play suddenly stop with a new face-off a minute or so later to allow for a commerical break.

I rarely is ever watch sports on TV but I listen to sports reports and even like the history of sports.  I've learned over the years how valuable it is to always be able to BS about last night's game.  

lba
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The new boots are identical, vents and all. Most guys these days won't wear them though. Ever since the army started allowing all soldiers to buy their own footwear, the majority of what you see guys wearing are after-market boots they buy themselves though.

I don't ever remember there being breaks in hockey games for commercials ever since I was a kid. Growing up watching the Red Wings all I remember is that they usually just played the game and the game was chopped up and edited to add commercials afterwards. I might be wrong, but at least I never saw them stop for a commercial break or recognized it as such since I rarely ever watched the game on TV instead of just going to the arena.

bravo1102
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The new boots are identical, vents and all. Most guys these days won't wear them though. Ever since the army started allowing all soldiers to buy their own footwear, the majority of what you see guys wearing are after-market boots they buy themselves though.
According to the AR 670-1 (wear and care of the military uniform) going back to the 1960's soldiers were allowed to wear after market boots at the discretion of the unit commander.  In the 1980's it was generalized to any black laced boots that could be worn bloused with BDU trousers with non-laced boots only in armored units at the discretion of the unit commander.  In around 2001 all soldiers were granted non-laced boots at the discretion of the commander taking another distinction away from tank crewmen.  In order to become an NCO you had to go to class on wear and care of the military uniform so you could correct others.  When in schools I had to have a note from my company commander allowing me as a combat vehicle crewman to wear strapped boots.
I don't ever remember there being breaks in hockey games for commercials ever since I was a kid. Growing up watching the Red Wings all I remember is that they usually just played the game and the game was chopped up and edited to add commercials afterwards. I might be wrong, but at least I never saw them stop for a commercial break or recognized it as such since I rarely ever watched the game on TV instead of just going to the arena.
I noticed it attending Devil's and Rangers games since they were broadcast live on commercial television.

lba
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Very rarely have I ever seen anyone being allowed to wear unlaced boots. Most commanders still don't allow that one, but everything else you said pretty much sums up what I know. OCS requires more or less the same class, but it's taught a little less formally than an actual class. We were just expected to read the regs and know them on our own time to be quizzed on it.

And speaking of the Army, I've gotten released from one unity to find out that apparently nobody in my old unit kept track of where all their officers were, so nobody within my division seems to know exactly where I'm supposed to report or what unit I belong to. I've spent the last three days calling everyone and anyone so I can turn my packet in, but all I get is "we don't have you on file". The closest I've gotten is that I have to turn it in to the RSA office, which as far as I can tell apparently doesn't exist because nobody seems to know where that is. It's almost as if they completely forgot that they shipped me to another installation for training and now they just don't have anywhere for me to go.

bravo1102
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lba wrote:
OCS requires more or less the same class, but it's taught a little less formally than an actual class. We were just expected to read the regs and know them on our own time to be quizzed on it.
In Primary Leadership Development School (the old title for initial NCO school) there was a formal class.  It included how to do on the spot corrections.  I know the cirriculum has changed since then.  It changed within two years of my attending the school because of the experience of Desert Storm.
It's almost as if they completely forgot that they shipped me to another installation for training and now they just don't have anywhere for me to go.
Excess officers without a home have been part of the Army since at least George Washington.  You actually may not have a unit assignment and will have to make noise until someone decides to add you to their establishment.  Some types occasionally use the system to coast for a time until someone notices they are drawing pay and rations and have no unit assignment because no one forwarded their orders.  

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