The obligatory round up
A good weekend, all in all. On Friday night we played host to
november_girl and
ephraim as they were down to the metropolis for a wedding. It was good to see them and we managed to make our way through a number of bottles of wine and some port. Not enough for a hangover, but enough to feel pleasantly tired at the end of the evening.
Saturday’s attempts to play World of Warcraft were scuppered by Furtle’s PC throwing an unexpected wobbly. It decided to display a number of supposedly hidden icons on the desk top, refused to recognise either the keyboard or the mouse and did something inexplicably confusing to its own antivirus software.
As you may or may not be aware, Furtle is not at her best when dealing with recalcitrant technology, in much the same way I am not at my best dealing with call centres or telephone banking. To this end, our hero (me) had to step in with his uncertain knowledge of technology and get it working again. This was achieved by stealing the mouse from my PC, and digging out an ancient keyboard that we keep for such emergencies. Both these items run off cables, unlike the cable-free setup she normally prefers. This meant that I could do such things as get the machine operating in safe mode while we reset it to a start point from three weeks ago, which together with re-synchronising the wireless seemed to sort out most of the problems.
Of course, with the anti-virus program having become corrupted, we found ourselves in the position where it would neither work, nor uninstall. Happily, with a bit of mooching around on the web, we found a solution, removed the program and installed an updated and clean version. All is now well.
Of course, buy this time, it was too late to think about playing before dinner, so we stopped and ate and watched an elderly but still quite funny Doris Day/James Garner movie. It had its moments and was entertaining, but cor lumme, you can tell things have moved on in then past half century. Some of the attitudes that underlay the comedy would have start a shit storm of complaints if they were allowed into a contemporary production.
Sunday was relatively Warcrack-free too. Or at least it was for Furtle. Having made the PC bow to our will, she received an email from Blizzard notifying her of the log in details for the beta test of Mists of Pandaria, which we are both signed up for. Since Furtle has been playing a couple of years longer than me, we were expecting her invite to arrive before mine and so it has proved.
Unfortunately, it also involved a download of a dozen or so GB of data on a client that can only be described as flaky. Plus download speeds are not at their best during a weekend afternoon and evening when the entire world is online. We managed to get in and look at the start area for the new expansion – or at least the current beta version of it, but the full download didn’t complete until sometime during the early hours this morning, so we shall have to explore more closely over the next few days.
In the meantime we got some more gardening done – by which I mean that Furtle put in most of the work because my knee is still dickey, but I sorted out the irrigation for the back garden and will look at the same for the front tonight. Before anyone says anything, we’ve checked: firstly there are no hosepipe restrictions in our area – yet. For some reason our little bit of Essex is damper than the surrounding areas, which are officially in drought. Plus it seems that even in those areas with hosepipe bans, trickle irrigation is still allowed. I guess it’s the high pressure hoses pouring tens of gallons onto the gardens that cause the trouble, rather than relatively slow water deliver over ten minute spells twice a day. Anyway, it should stop the plants dying on us.
It being the weekend, we completely missed any April Fool jokes the media might have been playing. I shall have an online search at lunchtime. Were there any good ones that people saw?
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Saturday’s attempts to play World of Warcraft were scuppered by Furtle’s PC throwing an unexpected wobbly. It decided to display a number of supposedly hidden icons on the desk top, refused to recognise either the keyboard or the mouse and did something inexplicably confusing to its own antivirus software.
As you may or may not be aware, Furtle is not at her best when dealing with recalcitrant technology, in much the same way I am not at my best dealing with call centres or telephone banking. To this end, our hero (me) had to step in with his uncertain knowledge of technology and get it working again. This was achieved by stealing the mouse from my PC, and digging out an ancient keyboard that we keep for such emergencies. Both these items run off cables, unlike the cable-free setup she normally prefers. This meant that I could do such things as get the machine operating in safe mode while we reset it to a start point from three weeks ago, which together with re-synchronising the wireless seemed to sort out most of the problems.
Of course, with the anti-virus program having become corrupted, we found ourselves in the position where it would neither work, nor uninstall. Happily, with a bit of mooching around on the web, we found a solution, removed the program and installed an updated and clean version. All is now well.
Of course, buy this time, it was too late to think about playing before dinner, so we stopped and ate and watched an elderly but still quite funny Doris Day/James Garner movie. It had its moments and was entertaining, but cor lumme, you can tell things have moved on in then past half century. Some of the attitudes that underlay the comedy would have start a shit storm of complaints if they were allowed into a contemporary production.
Sunday was relatively Warcrack-free too. Or at least it was for Furtle. Having made the PC bow to our will, she received an email from Blizzard notifying her of the log in details for the beta test of Mists of Pandaria, which we are both signed up for. Since Furtle has been playing a couple of years longer than me, we were expecting her invite to arrive before mine and so it has proved.
Unfortunately, it also involved a download of a dozen or so GB of data on a client that can only be described as flaky. Plus download speeds are not at their best during a weekend afternoon and evening when the entire world is online. We managed to get in and look at the start area for the new expansion – or at least the current beta version of it, but the full download didn’t complete until sometime during the early hours this morning, so we shall have to explore more closely over the next few days.
In the meantime we got some more gardening done – by which I mean that Furtle put in most of the work because my knee is still dickey, but I sorted out the irrigation for the back garden and will look at the same for the front tonight. Before anyone says anything, we’ve checked: firstly there are no hosepipe restrictions in our area – yet. For some reason our little bit of Essex is damper than the surrounding areas, which are officially in drought. Plus it seems that even in those areas with hosepipe bans, trickle irrigation is still allowed. I guess it’s the high pressure hoses pouring tens of gallons onto the gardens that cause the trouble, rather than relatively slow water deliver over ten minute spells twice a day. Anyway, it should stop the plants dying on us.
It being the weekend, we completely missed any April Fool jokes the media might have been playing. I shall have an online search at lunchtime. Were there any good ones that people saw?