Proper updates are for sissys!
By Giania • Nov 25th, 2008 at 12:04 am • Category: Recursion| Hot: |
Boy o boy have I ever been busy! After claiming second prize at the Third Annual Ghetto Dinner Party, I paused to reflect deeply on my victory in a deeply meditative state that to the casual observer would look like a miserable hangover. Of course, those are for lesser, unenlightened creatures. I and my newly acquired Robert Goulet record could easily ward off such maladies by the sheer force of our presence alone.
Nevertheless, my period of contemplative repose is past, and it will soon be time to unlease new and exciting things upon you like the fury of a thousand suns. Or at least more than a few posts per week, eh? As a primer for this, I’ve gone back and fixed the post featuring It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia’s original appearance of the Night Man, and added tips on how to get a bigger Sunny fix, if it turns out that Sunny’s your kind of thing.
If you’re lucky, you’ll soon hear from some of RKNet’s favorite people, giving you the lowdown on both the Xbox 360 and PS3 experiences of Fallout 3. If you’re less lucky, you’ll just get the 360 perspective. If you’re even LESS lucky, it won’t be either, or at least not until I’ve gotten to play. All I have to say after catching a few glimpses here and there (I won’t watch, avoiding spoilers you know) is that it is DEFINITELY a Bethesda game. Something about the visuals just screams Elder Scrolls. Well, post-apocalyptic Elder Scrolls if you wanted to get fussy about it, but still. That, and I appreciate that it looks like they took the time to incorporate a little more voice acting variety than was present in Oblivion (for spoiler-potential cast list, clicky clicky).
I’m still looking forward to answering your Android/Googlephone related questions, so fire away. (Please don’t make me pretend to ask questions at myself!) And I’m also looking forward to finishing up the extremely detailed exploration of… my Twitter friends’ favorite colors. It’s so thorough it’s damn near scientific!
Oh and Thanksgiving is right around the corner, so while I’m gorging myself I hope to have some manner of a Words To Know come to me during sweet, tryptophan-induced dreams. Wikipedia says the tryptophan in turkey is no greater than any other kind of poultry AND lists a bunch of other stuff – some fairly common foods – with greater levels of tryptophan. I wonder, is the tryptophan in turkey more bioavailable, or is the sleepiness more easily attributed to the activities leading up to what’s described as “the itus“? (Caution: Auto-starting music on that last link.)


