For the past two weeks Oui and I have been experiencing higher than usual latency in WoW making the game practically unplayable and in a moment of weakness we tried out Smoothping. While it did seem to stabilise our latency it didn’t provide anywhere near the benefit advertised and most importantly it didn’t give us latency similar to what we had before our problems started. It did provide some benefit when soloing or during 5-mans, but everything else was impossible.
Talking to our ISP is bad enough, but communicating with Blizzard via email is an exercise in frustration because they suffer from what I like to call email lag. Email lag is the inability to send more than one email a day, so when you send them anything you want to give them as much information as possible to cut down on wasted time. Of course they don’t work weekends either.
Friday night I’d logged off after send my alt some money to watch the first three episodes of Torchwood: Children of Earth (which was awesome), followed by the final two the next morning, so when I logged on in the afternoon I was surprised to find I wasn’t where I’d logged off. I thought perhaps Oui had logged me on after I went to bed, but he hadn’t, so I logged on again to find that I was again not in the same place I’d been the previous logon. My heart was racing and I quickly opened the account management page (which seemed to take forever) and changed my password because it was obvious that my account had been accessed by someone other than me.
I’ll save you the long story of what followed and just say that everything is in the process of being restored but I am now extremely paranoid about how they got in. That is, how did they find out my password and what else do they know. I’ve thought about it and come to the conclusion that it was either a Flash trojan, or Smoothping as I run nothing else. Obviously I don’t want smoothping anymore (especially as its benefits seem to have disappeared). My system has been reformatted back to Vista and two authenticators are making their way to us, much to Oui’s chagrin.
These two things have made us question if we really want to play WoW anymore. Latency frustrations are not fun and while it’s no fault of WoW (I think) Oui is completely uninterested in playing while the problems persist. Having my account compromised has made me extremely paranoid and it’s a shame that this feeling all stems from a game that is supposed to be fun. Worse is the knowledge that in the past when I’ve heard of other peope in situations such as the one I’m in right now I’ve always considered them to be a right idiot, so that must make me an idiot too.
Oui was talking with me tonight that he would post on the forums to tell everyone he’s taking a break because of the latency, so how ironic was it that I logged on and everything was back to normal. No latency problems whatsoever (well, the latency was back to ‘normal’). He’s sceptical that it will still be bad tomorrow so I’ll check in the morning, but we’re riding the thin edge of quitting here.
Today’s random MSN Messenger conversation stared with Oui asking me how to spell something and ended with “BITCH! GET MY KATAMARI!” from me, all in a matter of about 10 lines.
Oui went for an interview yesterday and they must have liked him because they offered him the job on the spot, begging him not to tell the other staff how much money they’re giving him. Surprisingly they called him today to ask him to come in again tomorrow for another interview for a higher position.
When I first got onto the internet dialup was king, the information superhighway was a twinkle in someones eye and broadband wasn’t even a word (it still isn’t). The slow speeds made me hesitate with every mouse click because I was constantly concerned about the amount of time it would take for wherever that click lead.
You see, I was quick to realise that the internet held more content than I could ever hope to possibly digest in my lifetime, and as there were only so many hours in the day that I could devote to it I had to choose wisely to make the best use of the time I had.
During a raid recently it came to my attention that there are people who don’t know how to tell if a mob ability can be interrupted. I can’t recall exactly when Blizzard added in the ability to distinguish between abilities that can and cannot be interrupted, but here you go:
Example: Ability cannot be interrupted
As seen above, the shield around the ability icon indicates it cannot be interrupted. No shield means it can be interrupted.
While I don’t think I’ve mastered Drupal I’m past the worst of the learning curve, but there were a number of things that I never saw explained anywhere which caused me many a headache. Many a time I would update some css but after uploading and forcing a page refresh the changes wouldn’t appear and I’d spend the next 20-30 minutes trying to see if I’d mispelt something (which is often the case).
Occasionally it would happen that I didn’t make a mistake though leaving me extremely perplexed and thoroughly unconfident in my ability to learn the intricacies of Drupal, only to have my original changes suddenly appear on the site without me doing anything.
I’ve noticed since yesterday all trackers to the torrents I’m downloading of various televions shows have gone offline or aren’t working. Has anyone else seen this or is it just me (if it’s just me I need to make a phone call to my ISP.
It’s not that my torrents aren’t downloading though. DHT, Local Peer Discovery, and Peer Exchange still work perfectly.
Most people don’t realise it but there is a standard out there for reporting to various search engines such as Google and Yahoo what pages they should and should not index, including the ability to give weight (importance) to individual pages. In Drupal a module called XML Sitemap has always handled this and I’m happy to say that today it has finally reached version 1.0 for Drupal 6.
Even though XML Sitemaps is a contributed module everyone uses it and I really can’t imagine a scenario where this module wouldn’t be wanted. We’ve been quietly twisting our panties at having to use a development version for so long in fear that if we said something to upset the module maintainer he’d drop the project leaving it in limbo. It has only been the organisation of some very respected members of the Drupal community who stepped in after seeing the mess it had become that has seen it reach 1.0.
The upcoming release of Drupal 7 is seeing some major changes in the look and functionality due to the attention that has been given to the user experience. Like WordPress, Drupal 7 will have an administration theme which will take away many of the layout, design, and customisation headaches that currently exist.
When Drupal 6 was released contributed modules such as CCK and Views were not ready due to major rewrites for both, which meant most people couldn’t upgrade. There is a push behind Drupal 7 to make sure this doesn’t happen again. Continue reading Drupal 7 Is Cool