October 31, 2020
Hills of Silver Ruins (1/23)
Without these conveniences, getting to the top of a Ryou'un Mountain would be like climbing the Matterhorn. That's why Taiki and Risai couldn't just land on any Ryou'un Mountain when they flew from Kei to Tai above the Sea of Clouds. They fortunately found one that had been previously occupied.
Labels: 12 kingdoms, black moon, fantasy, japanese, translations
October 24, 2020
Hills of Silver Ruins (1/22)
In Old Testament terms, a kirin is like the prophet Samuel when God tells him to choose a successor to King Saul. "I am sending you to Jesse of Bethlehem. I have chosen one of his sons to be king." After rejecting all of Jesse's other sons, Samuel settles on David and God gives him the go-ahead. "So Samuel took the horn of oil and anointed him in the presence of his brothers" (1 Samuel 16:1-13 NIV).
The private revelation expresses the Divine Will. The public pronouncement reveals the Word of Heaven.
Labels: 12 kingdoms, black moon, fantasy, japanese, religion, translations
October 17, 2020
Hills of Silver Ruins (1/21)
Large cities are castle towns surrounded by a loop road accessible through twelve gates. Each gate is identified by a member of the Chinese zodiac: rat (子門), ox (丑門), tiger (寅門), hare (卯門), dragon (辰門), serpent (巳門), horse (午門), ram (未門), monkey (申門), rooster (酉門), dog (戌門), boar (亥門).
Labels: 12 kingdoms, black moon, fantasy, japanese, translations
October 10, 2020
Back to the AT future
During those ten years when the PC came of age, the computer was truly personal. You simply couldn't live a life online at a few thousand baud. Even in 1995, soon-to-be online colossus AOL only had around three million active users.
Ah, an era now gone for good. For a stroll down memory lane, it's enough for me to browse though old issues of PC Magazine. But then there are those dedicated Dr. Frankensteins devoted to bringing hardware long thought dead back to life.
As his YouTube channel title suggests, 8-Bit Guy focuses more on the Stone Age. Clint Basinger takes us up to the Medieval Period. In the two videos below, he unboxes and upgrades an IBM AT from 1988, still sealed in its original packaging.
As Crocodile Dundee would put it (there's another 1980s reference for you), "Now that's a PC."
Clint Basinger paid $500 for the AT on eBay. The IBM AT cost five times that in 1988, ten times as much when adjusted for inflation. By contrast, a thirty dollar Roku today has orders of magnitude more memory and computing power.
In the following episode, Basinger plays Indiana Jones exploring a warehouse crammed full of computer equipment dating back to the 1970s.
Call it the excavation of a PC Pompeii, a look back at a once thriving past now relegated to landfills, museums, and our memories.
Related posts
The future that wasn't
The accidental standard
MS-DOS at 30
The grandfathers of DOS
Labels: computers, tech history, technology
October 03, 2020
Hills of Silver Ruins (1/20)
Labels: 12 kingdoms, black moon, fantasy, japanese, translations