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Planet Lisp (Free subscription) | 2 hours ago
I’m getting married in a few weeks, and one of the final tasks was to make some favors for the guests. Heather and I decided on coffee mugs with a cute logo. We quickly came up with the concept of a heart with gears inside, as we’re having a steampunk/victorian themed wedding. After one very frustrating evening with the gimp (which ended in a crash before I saved the file), I decided attempt two would...
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GayGamer.net (Free subscription) | 11/29/2008
Ryan Davis of Giant Bomb is reporting that the sequel to Ubisoft's critically-mixed stealth title Assassin's Creed is moving a few hundred years into the future, from the 12th century middle east to somewhere in the 1700's. His information comes from Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan analyst and possible videogame provocateur. Although he was pretty certain about the time change, Pachter...
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The Daily WTF (Free subscription) | 11/26/2008
Having just inherited a mammoth, ASP-based ecommerce application created in a developmestuction by a handful of different consultants over several years, Ryan Davis found himself asking one question, over and over: why? Why didn't they use some off-the-shelf ecommerce site? Why aren't there any comments, anywhere?? Why did anyone let the original developer near a keyboard, let alone...
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Kotaku (Free subscription) | 11/27/2008
... Pachter dropped those details during a taping of GameTrailers' Bonus Round — in which I and 's Ryan Davis took part and futilely attempted to match wits — saying that Assassin's Creed 2, or whatever Ubisoft will eventually call it, might take place during the 1700s.Host Geoff Keighley, Davis and I were more than a tad surprised to hear Pachter speak so casually (and seemingly...
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Kotaku Australia (Free subscription) | 11/27/2008
... Pachter dropped those details during a taping of GameTrailers' Bonus Round — in which I and 's Ryan Davis took part and futilely attempted to match wits — saying that Assassin's Creed 2, or whatever Ubisoft will eventually call it, might take place during the 1700s.Host Geoff Keighley, Davis and I were more than a tad surprised to hear Pachter speak so casually (and seemingly...