http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=GrwuzP-7W
This game is seriously made of PURE AWESOME. The big thing is that it totally does not take itself seriously. I would say Koei should learn a thing or two from Capcom but I don't want them copying them. :P
- Mood:
awake
Not copies. Not prints. ORIGINALS.
It took me weeks to make the decision to get rid of most of these. I found it very difficult to decide to part with them. But I have to make money so I can keep working and making even more beautiful things.
The best bit? They are going FOR CHEAPS!
...and here are the original pieces for sale:



And the very first (and only) hand-painted KinokoFry strip:

If you send me an email letting me know you'd like something signed, or dedicated to your dog or your grandma, or perhaps a love note to your sweetie (or your dog or your grandma), it shall be done.
I can post my scanned 208 Clone Wars cards without fearing the wrath of my editor and LFL! :D So here ya go, for your viewing pleasure...

( More CLONE WARS sketchcards under cut... )
*****
New auctions:
Badass Smile Anakin Skywalker
General Grievous
Tweeny Bopper Ahsoka Tano
Obi-Wan Kenobi with hair in the wind
Not so Tweeny Bopper Ahsoka Tano
Padme and Anakin, Coy Eyes
Previous posted auctions:
Kit Fisto
Padme Amidala
Ahsoka Tano
*****
Replies to previous post:
- Location:home
- Mood:
chipper - Music:Boston - Peace of Mind
Randy Pausch has passed away. Crucial in initiating Alice, among other crazy and wonderful things, he struck me as one of those people who can change your life. Some of you might have seen his last lecture on youtube where he speaks about his childhood dreams. It was one of the most inspiring thing I've seen.
Looking back, I was a little surprised at how few my childhood dreams are. Growing up, I didn't really have a figure I look up to, the TV that was available ran government program and the closest person I looked up to was my grandfather. I wanted to be what he was, though I didn't quite know what exactly what it was at that time. Something between a businessman, an entrepaneur and a man who happily dressed up as Santa every Christmas. At the same time I really wanted to do something creative, though I have no idea how the two could be merged.
Fast forward ten years and somehow the two did, in a way that I would not have expected. Along the way I met a mentor who showed me that creative thinking, diplomacy and a stubborn streak of "why not" can wear down a number of walls.
Watching the video made me a little sad that I found my university and most of my high school years rather uninspiring. They were nice, but nothing made me sit up and thought "oh wow, this has just opened a whole new world for me". I actively disliked book learning though I was fairly good at it, and a large part of it was because I never see the real life benefit. A lot of things didn't make me a better or more creative thinker, but I ended up being damn good at writing summary notes.

Wandering down the colleges in Cambridge made me wonder what it would have been like to study there as a student. Back then, subconsciously I was waiting for was something that would make me believe in something and passionate about it. Despite the amount of pain that I went through in the last couple of years, I did ended up finding out what I love (campaign systems, things that makes sense, communications) and things I hate (inefficiencies, static, non existing systems). A "why not" attitude helped me to drag myself across the world on a wing and a prayers in the belief that there is something better and that I believe in myself enough to do so.
- Music:Henrietta
It's quite fun hahaha.. but felt abit scary at first 'cos I wasn't expecting the accelerator pedal to be that sensitive XD
Changing gears was confusing at first especially when you have to keep your eyes on the road, listen to the instructions through one ear and carry out the instructions ^^;;;; Thank goodness the instructor was patient ^^
Towards the end of the lesson, we left the carpark where I was practising in and he got me to drive back to the train station.. that was slightly scary 'cos suddenly there are so many things happening at once lol .. the driving instructor kept grabbing hold of the steering wheel to help adjust hahahhahaa
Looking forward to next lesson ^_^
Then soon it will be time to go back to New Brunswick and the cutest music festival in the country. Here is a tip, if you are anywhere near there next weekend, Sackville will be the place to be. You will be so overwhelmed with adorable things! That is my advice for you today.
- Mood:
full

Gotou...?
saw this over at
http://new-moon.tv/
looks like DSRAIDOU2 but I admit I will be pretty upset if it is, just because I want to see something entirely new from SMT! Black cats are a pretty common theme in SMT games I guess but the green eyes suggest gotou I guesssssssss
I just died in Persona4 after not playing it for a week sob I have no will to try again OTL will shower and sleep, maybe cry a little about it :'D
When will I ever finish this game if I only have like 2 hours to play it a week, by this week's standards?!
Also re:Hetaria anime: what
- Mood:
exhausted - Music:Ian Livingstone - Kakistos Theme
I AM THRILLED. IN
MY
PANTS.

THIS BETTER BE WHAT I FUCKING THINK IT IS.
KAZUMA KANEKO YOU BIG, BEAUTIFUL MANNNNNNn.
*ditches Klavier model and starts up again on all my DS art*
(I think the ad points to it being another devil summoner game, with the black cat with green eyes and the yin yang reference, that's gotta be it. I WILL DIE HAPPY. HAPPY FOREVER IF IT IS ANOTHER RAIDOU GAME AHHHHHHh)
edit:
http://new-moon.tv/
WHAT IS THIS
WHAT IS THIS
THOSE ARE DEFINIATELY DS DEMONS.
I bought 2 new pairs of jeans for $40. A bargain!
Also, baw on raidou haters, gb2 p4.
Grilled hams. Bunny fluffs.
Martha Stewart. Fishy nuffs.
Auction bidding. Rerun cats.
Dusty 'chillas. Kitty hats.
Marmie bits. Otter pause.
Bamboo pandas. Al-pa-cas.
Monkey mohawks. Mugshot pugs.
You may suspect the mod's on drugs.
(For the record, no I'm not. Strung-out Theo?? ...scary thought!)
“Ah, but mine can do this! will soon be heard in every cafe and bar.” Stephen Fry is back with an extended review of the iPhone 3G and its downloadable apps
Column “Dork Talk” published on Saturday 26th July 2008 in The Guardian
“Well worth the wait” - The Guardian headline
I’m so happy to be back. My thanks to all those who were kind enough to be in touch to say that you missed me. You were well served by my distnguished stand-ins, however, and thanks go to them, too, for keeping Dork Talk alive. But let’s get straight to business: an extra-long column for openers, for this month sees another Apple launch.

A happy customer at the Apple store in London (Photograph: Sang Tan/AP)
Whatever one’s view of Apple as a manufacturer of digital equipment, as an author of operating systems and designer of software, as a multinational corporation, as a lifestyle statement or as a quasi-religious cult, it remains a matter of ineluctable fact that the introduction of the iPhone just over a year ago changed the smartphone market for ever. An incredible three-quarters of all mobile web browsing is now done on the iPhone, despite its market share being far smaller than that of either Windows Mobile, BlackBerry/Java or Nokia/Symbian devices. iPhone users report an unprecedented level of customer satisfaction (between 82% and 90%, compared with the second placed BlackBerry at 50%). This is not a surprise to anyone who has lived with an iPhone for even a short while, and even less of a surprise to anyone who has also had to work with a WinMob phone.
Let’s be clear about the iPhone’s shortcomings, however: this unparalleled success has been achieved by an expensive device with only a 2 megapixel camera, EDGE rather than 3G data speeds, no video, no GPS, no contact search, no file or text manipulation, no Enterprise or MS Exchange capabilities, no third-party applications and a locked-in network operator deal. I said at its launch that this revolutionary implement would thrill early adopters but be prohibitively expensive and under-functional for many others: “Wait for iPhone Three,” I wrote, “that’ll be the one that gets it right.”
A year of living with iPhone One has proved to me that the camera lens and its operation is good enough to produce better photos than phones with twice the resolution, that EDGE speeds allow swift email and full browsing in most areas of the country, that the Google Maps implementation and music, video and photo playback are stunningly impressive, and that other deficiencies are made up for by the sob-worthy beauty, elegance and lovability of another Jonathan Ive-designed Apple masterpiece.
Nonetheless, we want it all, and huge numbers of people have been fretfully awaiting iPhone Two: queuing began in New York a week and half before launch date; O2, the sole UK network provider, had its site go down hours after announcing pre-booking; the BBC’s technology site is so afraid of looking as though it “favours” Apple in some way that it has been failing to file legitimate stories for fear of the anti-Apple community, because, believe it or not, there are people out there who think the launch of yet another Nokia or WinMob Apple-a-like should be given equal prominence.
Well, finally, here it is, the iPhone 3G, hardly different at all in look or feel from iPhone One. The back, available in black or white, is now plastic, which offers better reception for the 10 radios hidden inside - four GSM (your standard quad band), three UMTS/HSDPA (your 3G) plus one each for A-GPS, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. A standard earphone socket replaces the unpopular recessed jack and the switches are now metal.
This new phone’s greatness is not revealed in its outer lineaments, however, gorgeous as they are, software is crucial. Simultaneous with its release comes Version 2.0 of the operating system. Exchange and enterprise capability (for BlackBerry-style “push email”) has arrived, meaning that the iPhone is now a serious corporate contender: employee pester-power will see to it that it becomes the tool of choice for medium to large businesses that aren’t so pompous and deluded as to think dullness and bad design are a sign of probity and business acumen.
What else is new? The camera is the same. Contacts are finally searchable, a fuller range of email attachments can now be read and saved, a server-side push system for mail, events and contacts called Mobile Me has been introduced (subscription required) and, most importantly of all, Version 2.0 users (including those with original iPhones) will find an “Installer” icon on their home screen. This will be familiar to rebellious criminals like me who “jailbroke” their original iPhones months ago. It means that the power of the iPhone as a beautiful, smooth and function-rich handheld computer can now be realised. Anyone may now write for the iPhone. Existing applications (games, utilities, ebooks, dictionaries and so forth) already written for other platforms can be ported into Apple’s elegant and intuitive developer’s kit with astonishing ease. All applications have to be downloaded through the iTunes store. Believe me, in a very few weeks you will see things being done on an iPhone that will make you gasp and stretch your eyes. The built-in accelerometer alone will inspire people to amazing new heights of ingenuity. The accelerometer is a sensor that knows which way up the iPhone is: you can expect pedometer software, software that plays you music chosen according to how fast you are walking and where you are walking (thanks to the GPS), spirit levels, pinball games with tilt, games in which the iPhone itself is the steering wheel, apps that show you on a map where friends are - we cannot even guess what is coming.
I should digress here to point out that the latest HTC Touch Diamond (HTC is a wonderful manufacturer permanently hamstrung by its devices all being Windows Mobile) has an accelerometer, too, and comes with a ball-manipulation game that provides tactile feedback - you can actually feel the weight and bounce of the ball as you manoeuvre it. For the rest, it is yet another iPhone wannabe: it is too small, its multi-touch interface is too slow on the uptake and the whole experience is rather fiddly. It does have the best browser on a pocket PC I’ve yet seen, however, and for those determined not to go Apple, it is (thanks to the market-changing influence of the iPhone) a superior model of its kind (RRP £499, htc.com for stockists).
Unlike the iPhone 3G, the Diamond also has a front-facing camera (for video calls and video IM). What else is the iPhone 3G missing? No text manipulation (not even basic cut and paste), no Flash plug-ins for the browser, no video recording, no voice memos. Third parties will probably address these software issues, but it would have been better if Apple had solved them itself.
Perhaps the most significant development of all, however, is price. Apple, in harness with its network providers across the globe, has slashed the cost of both the 8GB and 16GB models. O2 in this country will offer the phone for less than £100, or free, according to tariff and other criteria (from Apple, O2 and Carphone Warehouse stores. The iPhone 3G 8G is free on the £45 and £75 tariffs, £99 on the £30 and £35 tariffs; the iPhone 3G 16GB is free on the £75 tariff, £159 on the £30 and £35 tariff, £59 on the £45 tariff. Go to o2.co.uk/iphone/paymonthly for full details). You are tied to their network, but the all-you-can-eat data package works out as excellent value, given the amount of browsing and downloading you are likely to do. 3G is of little interest to me, as it happens - by the time coverage arrives in rural Norfolk, the rest of the world will be 6G.
In conclusion: some will be disappointed by the phone itself, because they will have expected greater and more fundamental physical changes and improvements. In fact, I still maintain that the third iPhone will be the perfect device. But that is to take nothing away from what July 11 heralded: not evolution but revolution. Now that the Applications store is up and running, you will soon find it a very common sight indeed to see people crowded around each other’s iPhones showing off the latest impossible, breathtaking and groundbreaking application. “Ah, but mine can do this!” will be heard in every cafe and bar. Satirical sketches will be written and performed on Channel 4 mocking the trend. Once again, Apple has changed the rules, and nothing will ever be quite the same again.
Acronyms of the week
UMTS: Universal Mobile Telecommunications System; HSDPA: High Speed Package Data Access Both protocols of the near-broadband mobile speeds generally called 3G, or third generation.
GSM: Global System for Mobile communications The standard cellphone technology used for voice calls.
GPRS: General Packet Radio Service As above, but allowing data communications, such as email and web browsing.
EDGE: Enhanced Data rate for GSM Evolution I know, hopeless acronym. As GPRS, but now fast enough to be called 2.75G… nearly as good as 3G, in other words.
A-GPS, GPS: (Assisted) Global Positioning Satellite For satellite navigation. ‘Assisted’ refers to new versions that allow for better urban signals by utilising cell sites and other clever tricks.
IM: Instant Messaging (Skype, iChat, Jabber, AIM etc).
© Stephen Fry 2008
...Don't take that the wrong way. I love Adam Hughes. I worship him. I don't know why I almost started crying. It was partially joy and partially "Oh fuck, my stuff will never look that good". I found his gallery after I decided to look at Kaori Tanaka/Soraya Saga's gallery again in near tears with the same feeling. Though, I had had a double dose of that. I went to her gallery after flipping through some of the doujinshi I happen to own of her work (...before any of you even ask....yes, it was the rauchy stuff. Elements Unplugged and 6' Rodeo for the collectors wondering, because I ALWAYS GET SOMEONE EMAILING ASKING LEAVE ME ALONE DAMMIT NO I'M NOT SELLING THEM :[)
In other news, the neighbor's cat has been a sweetie. He keeps coming by looking for our dog. She had pretty much adopted the cat as her puppy, and they were so sweet together. It's been really sad. But Darren (that's the cat) has been mewing at me asking about Xena and then coming and sitting on my lap when I'm outside.
- Mood:sad
Tell me a canon and I shall respond with my...
1. One True Pairing Ship:
2. Canon Ship:
3. "If this happens I'll stab my eyes out with a spork" Ship:
4. "You are one sick bastard" Ship:
5. "I dabble a little" Ship:
6. "It's like a car crash" Ship:
7. "Tickles my fancy but not sold just yet" Ship:
8. "Makes no canon sense but why the Hell not" Ship:
9. "Everyone else loves it but I just don't feel it" Ship:
- Mood:sheepish
- Mood:
content
For those of you who CAN'T GET ENOUGH XTreme Puppeh Schnozzle Action, there's this page of Noses.
Your daily requirement has now been fulfilled. Thank you.
Panda: OK! OK! [Paws up]
I was only going to Nom a small amount—I SWEARS!
You better get a otter lawyer Susan W.!
[UPDATE -- ohhh I'm reprehensible, but CLICK HERE for Reality-Casual Flashback... - Ed.]



